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Charges filed over Fourth of July fireworks melee in Minneapolis

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More than a dozen people have been charged with participating in riotous behavior and shooting fireworks at other people the night of July 4 in Minneapolis’ Dinkytown neighborhood.

So far, the Hennepin County Attorney’s Office has charged at least 16 people, with offenses including second-degree rioting while armed with a dangerous weapon — a felony — and fleeing police.

According to the criminal complaint, police initially responded to reports of a crowd shooting fireworks at others in Dinkytown on the night of Fourth of July.

Drone footage showed people shooting commercial-grade fireworks “into the air, toward others, toward vehicles, and eventually at uniformed officers when they moved into the area,” according to the charges.

Following the July 4 celebrations, more than two dozen young adults were arrested at midnight Friday in Dinkytown.

Some who deliberately targeted people with the fireworks will be charged with felony-level assault, Minneapolis Police Chief Brian O’Hara said the day after the arrests.



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How Anoka-Hennepin schools could close a $21 million budget gap

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If approved, that approach would drop the district’s fund balance to 6% of general fund expenditures. The current board policy is to maintain a fund balance of at least 10% of general fund expenditures.

Anoka-Hennepin’s current operating referendum brings in about $1,154 per student, but the state-allowed cap is about $2,200 per student. If increased to the cap amount, a referendum would bring in another $40 million, McIntyre said.

According to community feedback collected through surveys and community meetings over the last month, nearly 90% of respondents said they supported a referendum. Parents and families also expressed concern about growing class sizes as a result of cuts.

The two options have already been revised based on board members’ requests to reduce cuts that would mean fewer teachers at schools, McIntyre said.

At one point in the discussion, the district floated changes to middle and high school class schedules to save money, but that was removed after board member feedback. At the board’s meeting last month, several board members thanked district staff for transparency about potential cuts and responsiveness to board and community feedback.

“I would encourage people to keep asking questions,” Board Member Michelle Langenfeld said at the September board meeting, “because as we unfold more information, the opportunity becomes greater for us to make the most informed decision under these very, very difficult circumstances.”



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Minneapolis’ Third Precinct police station barriers are finally coming down

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On Monday morning, contract workers began snipping razor wire and removing it from fencing that was propped atop concrete barriers along the perimeter of the former Third Precinct police station, which was set ablaze during the uprising over George Floyd’s police killing.

Finally, the concrete barricades will come down, after 4.5 years. As private security guards looked on, contractors began removing the security measures put in place to secure the building at 3000 Minnehaha Av. after it became a focal point of protests.

For the past three years, Third Precinct police officers have been based out of a city building in downtown Minneapolis, with plans to eventually bring them back to a south Minneapolis Community Safety Center just down the street at 2633 Minnehaha Av.

What to do with the former police station – home to what has been called a “playground” for renegade cops – has been the subject of heated debate, with the Minneapolis City Council and Mayor Jacob Frey at odds.

While the city debated its future, some conservatives jumped at the chance to use the charred building as a backdrop to hold press conferences and news reports in which they blasted the city and its leaders. Most recently, vice presidential nominee JD Vance made a campaign stop in front of the building earlier this month to blast his opponent, Gov. Tim Walz, for his handling of the 2020 riots and portray Minneapolis as a city overrun with crime.

GOP vice presidential candidate Sen. JD Vance speaks outside the former Minneapolis Police 3rd Precinct building in Minneapolis on Oct. 14. (Leila Navidi)

After that, several council members expressed frustration at the city’s failure to clean up the site. Despite signs saying “cleanup efforts are underway,” concrete barriers, fencing and razor wire remained all summer.

Council Member Aurin Chowdhury said earlier this month that the blight makes people feel uncared for and gives opportunists a backdrop to manipulate the scene for political gain.

Council Member Linea Palmisano blamed some of her council colleagues for the delays, accusing some members of being “desperate for any objection” to Frey’s proposal. The council passed a resolution saying that the building should not be used for any law enforcement functions again. Palmisano called it disgraceful that the building remains, scarred and secured, over four years later.



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Northern Minnesota woman faces felonies after signing late mom’s name to absentee ballots

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A northern Minnesota woman who signed her late mother’s signature on two absentee ballots faces three felony charges for illegal voting in Itasca County, according to court documents.

Danielle Christine Miller, 50, told authorities that her mother, who had died in August, was an “avid Donald Trump supporter” who wanted to vote for him in the 2024 Presidential Election — but she died before she received her ballot in the mail. Miller, of Nashwauk, Minn., faces two charges of submitting intentionally false certificates and another for casting an illegal vote or aiding another.

Her first appearance is via Zoom Dec. 4 in Itasca County Court, which is based in Grand Rapids.

According to the complaint, the ballots were still sealed when they were flagged by the Itasca County Auditor because one envelope had the signature of Rose Marie Javorina, who had died. An officer from the sheriff’s department who reviewed the ballots found that Javorina’s name was signed on the witness section for Miller’s ballot; Miller was listed as the witness for Javorina. The signatures, according to the lieutenant who reviewed them, were similar and done in the same ink.

Miller admitted that she had filled out her mother’s ballot and signed her name on the signature envelope, in addition to signing her mother’s name as a witness to her own ballot.

Absentee ballots were mailed to residents of Itasca County on Sept. 20. Javorina died August 31, according to court documents.



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