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New Burnsville shooting details, co. atty. says force justified
Three Burnsville officers fired their weapons during the shooting that killed two fellow officers and a firefighter/paramedic on Feb. 18.
BURNSVILLE, Minn — The Dakota County Attorney has determined three Burnsville police officers were legally justified in using deadly force during the February shooting that killed two of their fellow officers and a firefighter/paramedic.
Burnsville police officers Paul Elmstrand and Matthew Ruge and Burnsville firefighter/paramedic Adam Finseth were shot and killed while responding to a domestic call on Feb. 18. The gunman, Shannon Gooden, later took his own life.
Burnsville Police Sgt. Adam Medlicott, Officer Daniel Wical and Officer Javier Jimenez fired their weapons during the course of the incident, and Medlicott was injured. Minnesota law requires an investigation into any law enforcement use of deadly force, prompting the Minnesota BCA to review the situation and submit its investigation to the county attorney.
“After my review of the investigation, there is absolutely no doubt the officers were justified in using deadly force to protect themselves, other officers and first responders, and members of the public from death or great bodily harm,” Dakota Co. Attorney Kathy Keena said in a statement.
In explaining the reasoning for her determination, the county attorney’s report (NOTE: link contains graphic content) also provides new details about what happened that day.
According to the report, Burnsville officers met the woman who called 911 outside the home, who said she was concerned Gooden was abusing one of the children in the home. She informed officers that Gooden had access to guns and had begged her not to call 911.
The report states a responding officer initially attempted to call out to Gooden from an open door in the garage, but Gooden refused to follow instructions and leave the home. Officers then entered the home through the open garage service door, but could not see Gooden upstairs because it was dark in the home. Officers did see a child in an upstairs doorway and determined they should attempt to negotiate with Gooden due to the presence of the child.
Officer Ruge was among the officers who entered the home and led efforts as the department’s primary negotiator. According to the report, Gooden “repeatedly reminded the officers he was near his children and officers should not shoot,” but he also denied having any firearms.
After nearly three and a half hours of negotiations, the report said Gooden began firing at officers from the upper level of the home. Medlicott was hit and fell to the floor, using his ballistic shield to cover his head. While on the ground, he spotted Officer Elmstrand injured and bleeding. Other officers then came in to evacuate Elmstrand.
“According to Sergeant Medlicott, to provide protection for the evacuating officers, he discharged his pistol approximately five times up the stairway towards where he believed Gooden was shooting from,” the report stated. Medlicott then ran out of the home when he believed Gooden was reloading, leaving Officer Wical as one of two remaining officers in the home.
“Officer Wical believed Gooden was preparing to re-engage officers with more gunfire thereby placing his life, the lives of officers, the children and the general public at risk,” the report stated. “Officer Wical also heard officers attempting to drag Officer Elmstrand out of the house and feared if Gooden returned to the top of the stairs, the evacuating officers would be unable to protect themselves.” Wical then fired multiple shots at what he believed were Gooden’s legs.
Outside the home, Elmstand had been brought to a SWAT Bearcat, where firefighter/paramedic Adam Finseth began to provide medical care and Officer Ruge appeared to say he’d been shot. As officers and medics were tending to Elmstrand and Ruge, the report states Gooden began firing at the Bearcat from an upper-floor window, striking Ruge and Finseth.
The report states Gooden was shooting out of various windows for nearly 13 minutes. Officer Javier Jimenez, a sniper with the department’s Emergency Action Group tactical team, observed flashes of gunfire and spotted Gooden through his rifle scope.
“Gooden began shooting rounds in high succession at the officers in the driveway as they attempted to take cover behind the Bearcat,” the report stated. “According to Officer Jimenez, he feared for the safety of the officers and medics positioned on the driveway, as well as citizens in the nearby residences, so he fired one round at Gooden.”
The report states Gooden then retreated into the home, and only one additional gunshot was heard; one of the children inside reported Gooden had killed himself.
“The use of deadly force by a peace officer is justified to protect the officer or another person from death or great bodily harm. It is my conclusion that given the facts and circumstances of this incident, most notably that Gooden fired first and continued firing causing the tragic loss of life of Officers Elmstrand and Ruge and injury to Sergeant Medlicott, it was objectively reasonable for Officer Jimenez, Officer Wical, and Sergeant Medlicott to believe Gooden posed a deadly threat to them, other officers and first responders present at the scene, and to members of the public when they fired their respective weapons. Accordingly, all three were legally justified in using deadly force in this extremely harrowing incident,” Keena concluded.
In a news release, Keena also paid tribute to the three fallen responders.
“All three men embodied the spirit of a public servant as they selflessly acted to protect seven children from the hands of Shannon Gooden,” Keena said.
The woman who called 911, Ashley Dyrdahl, has since been charged with illegally buying the guns that Gooden used in the shooting. She has pleaded not guilty.
More coverage of the Burnsville shooting
Watch more of KARE 11’s coverage of the Burnsville shooting in this YouTube playlist:
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MPRB wants your thoughts on cannabis use
The board is accepting public comments until late January.
MINNEAPOLIS — The Minneapolis Parks and Recreation Board (MPRB) is looking for public input on two draft policies concerning cannabis use and THC products inside the park system.
The first policy is an update to the tobacco policy, which bans tobacco products of any kind on park land or facilities. This potential change would add smoking or vaping cannabis or THC products to that policy, banning it from park land and facilities.
“The tobacco portion of the policy does go more deeply into other forms of tobacco, but the cannabis portion just focuses on smoking and vaping,” Jennifer Ringold, the deputy superintendent for the MPRB, said.
The second proposed policy would create protocol for how vendors or permit holders could sell THC products within the park system. Beverages and edibles would be capped at a potency of 5 milligrams of THC per serving.
You can read both policies by clicking here. Public comment on both started this past Monday, and will last into January.
“We’re just trying to move through with where the commissioners views are of what they want to see happen within the Minneapolis Parks,” Ringold said.
Ringold says this wouldn’t add any sort of penalties if the cannabis element is added to the tobacco policy.
“I think it’s fair to say the commissioners are choosing a policy approach which doesn’t establish any type of penalty or any type of violation with it,” she said. “It does rely on, you know, park staff, community members, kind of self monitoring and doing the work that would would be done to discourage smoking or vaping within public spaces in the same way we currently do around tobacco, smoking and vaping in public spaces on the THC edibles and beverages side.”
With public comment still underway, we asked dozens of people Saturday their thoughts on the potential changes.
“When I come out to the park, I want it to be clean,” Sidney Grimmett said. “I want it to smell like nature.”
“I prefer none of it in the park,” Elizabeth Unger said.
Others say they don’t see what the issue is.
“It feels vindictive to me to make a big deal about the occasional person that’s going to be walking around making a, puffing away on it,” Val Baertlein said.
Ringold says as of Friday, they’ve had over a thousand people comment on the two policies.
Public comment will run through January, and in February, MPRB will look at those comments and update policies. In March, a public hearing will be held on the two, and commissioners will decide on the two that same month.
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Squash, Caramelized Onion and Gruyere Tart from Farm at the Arb
Chef Shelagh Mullen from the Arboretum’s culinary program whipped up this seasonably wholesome dish for the KARE 11 Saturday Holiday Cooking Show.
CHASKA, Minn — Food is usually best when it goes right from the farm to the kitchen.
And that’s exactly what happens at the U of M’s Minnesota Landscape Arboretum. Chef Shelagh Mullen is at the helm of the Farm at the Arb program, where they plant, grow and harvest produce and herbs and then create seasonably wholesome fare.
Chef Shelagh invited the KARE 11 Saturday crew into her kitchen to whip up a Carmelized Onion and Gruyere Tart, perfect for Thanksgiving and the entire holiday season.
Squash, Caramelized Onion and Gruyere Tart
- 2½ cups all-purpose flour
- 2 teaspoons sugar
- 1 teaspoon kosher salt
- 1 cup unsalted butter, cold and cut into cubes
- ½ cup + 2 tablespoons ice water
- 4 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil, divided
- 2 medium onions, very thinly sliced*
- Kosher salt
- 3 garlic cloves, thinly sliced
- 1 tablespoon Dijon mustard
- Pinch of cayenne pepper
- 4 oz. coarsely grated sharp cheddar or Gruyère
- 2 delicata squash (about 1½ lbs), halved lengthwise, seeds removed, very thinly sliced* (half moons)
- 1 small sweet potato, very thinly sliced* (half moons)
- 1 small red onion or shallot, very thinly sliced*
- 2 sprigs fresh thyme, leaves removed
- 2 tablespoons unsalted butter
- Flaky sea salt
- An 11″- or 12″-diameter fluted tart pan with removable bottom
- Mandoline or food processor (or a very sharp knife)
Place a rack in the lower third of the oven; preheat to 375°.
FILLING: Swirl 2 tablespoons of oil in a large skillet to coat bottom and add the onions; season with kosher salt. Set the skillet over medium heat and cook onions, stirring occasionally and making sure to scrape the bottom of the pan, until very soft and deep golden brown, 20-30 minutes. Add garlic and cook, stirring occasionally, until onions are caramelized and deeply browned, 5-10 more minutes (if onions get super dark and stick to the pan, a few drops of water should dislodge them). Let cool.
CRUST: Place the flour, sugar, and salt in the bowl of a food processor, fitted with the metal blade. Add the cubed cold butter and pulse a few times, until the butter is evenly mixed in and resembles peas. Slowly add the water and pulse until the dough becomes crumbly and starts to stick together. Remove the dough from the food processor and put onto a clean surface. Form the dough into a ball and cover with plastic wrap. Chill the dough for at least 2 hours in the refrigerator.
Roll out dough on a lightly floured surface to about ⅛” thick. Transfer to tart pan. Lift up the edges and allow the dough to slump down into pan, don’t stretch the dough. Gently press into corners and trim excess. Freeze until firm, 15–20 minutes, or cover and chill in the fridge for up to 12 hours.
Cut sweet potato and red onion in half lengthwise, then thinly slice crosswise with mandoline or food processor. Drizzle remaining 2 tablespoons of oil over vegetables and season with kosher salt.
Brush mustard over chilled dough, then sprinkle with cayenne (from up high, but more even distribution). Layer in the cheese, then top with the caramelized onions in an even layer.
Arrange vegetables (alternating the squash, sweet potato and red onion) in concentric circles, with rounded edges facing up, starting from the outside edge, leaning slices against the crust, and working your way inward.
Loosely cover with foil and bake tart until edges of vegetables are browned (a few spots may even get deeply browned) and crust is golden brown, 60–75 minutes. Melt thyme and butter in a small saucepan and cook just until butter is bubbling. Baste the tart with the butter and thyme mixture a few times while it bakes. Sprinkle with crunchy salt, place back in the oven, uncovered for 10-15 minutes until the crust is golden brown and veggies are soft.
*Use a mandoline, a very sharp knife, or food processor, to thinly slice squash, sweet potatoes and onions.
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Cooks | Bellecour serves up suggestions for the perfect gravy
You can tell by the quote above that Cooks|Bellecour co-owner Karl Benson does not take the responsibility of making gravy lightly. Here’s his time-tested recipe.
GOLDEN VALLEY, Minn. — It is pretty clear that Cooks | Bellecour co-owner Karl Benson does not undervalue the sides and accouterments that may not bask in the spotlight but can make or break the holiday experience.
For example, Benson calls gravy “the sauce that ties the whole (Thanksgiving) meal together.” Whether it’s topping the mashed potatoes, elevating the stuffing or adding a new dimension to a pile of turkey, a good batch of gravy can push you from zero to HERO.
Karl dropped by the KARE 11 Saturday Holiday Cooking Show for a demonstration. Take a run at this recipe to see if it’s what the doctor ordered.
Karl Benson’s Gravy
- ¼ cup turkey fat and drippings
- ½ cup all-purpose flour
- ½ cup white wine
- 4 cups of homemade turkey stock (see note)
- 5 leaves fresh sage
- 3 sprigs thyme
- 1 sprig rosemary
- Salt and pepper to taste
- 1/4 cup of whipping cream for a creamy version
- 2 tablespoons apple cider for a nuanced fall flavor
- zest of an orange for a citrus undertone
- If using the drippings after roasting a turkey, remove the turkey and place onto a resting rack or cutting board, leaving the drippings and fat in the bottom of the pan.
- If making ahead of time, use the drippings and bits from roasting the turkey bones for stock.
- In a medium saucepan or the roasting pan itself, heat fat and drippings on medium heat until simmering. While whisking constantly, sprinkle the flour over the whole bottom of the pan, making sure to scrape up anything stuck to the bottom of the pan while whisking out any flour clumps.
- Continue to cook, over medium, whisking constantly, until the flour mixture gets thicker, homogenous, and lightly browned.
- Add the white wine and continue whisking until the flour has absorbed all of the liquid.
- Begin slowly adding the stock, still stirring constantly, approximately ½ cup at a time, to make sure the mixture stays smooth. Once all of the stock has been added, add the herbs and reduce to low so it can simmer until fragrant and thick. Optionally, finish with a small amount of cream.
- Serve warm.