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Family pleads for answers after veteran dies from assault on Nicollet Mall

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Jimmy Quigley, 53, had been out with friends earlier in the night for a concert. After the assault on May 4, Quigley was taken off life support 10 days later.

MINNEAPOLIS, Minnesota — A family is pleading for answers after their brother was assaulted in downtown Minneapolis and died 10 days later. It happened in May and according to the Minneapolis Police Department (MPD), no arrests have been made. 

James “Jimmy” Quigley, 53, had been out with friends earlier in the night for a concert. 

“You don’t think you’re going to go out for a night with your friends to go to a concert… and you’re going to have the life beaten out of you,” said Michelle Swanson, Quigley’s sister. 

On the night of May 3, Quigley went to a Charlie Parr concert at First Avenue. Swanson said based on a picture found on Quigley’s phone, he then went alone to Gluek’s Restaurant and Bar. 

Swanson said the next part is unclear but she believes he went to Nicollet Mall to catch an Uber back to his home in Spring Park. 

Surveillance video shows the assault but Swanson said the family has not been able to view it. However, Swanson said an officer described it to her and said, “As he (Quigley) walked by the bus shelter at 925 Nicollet, there were some people in there… a couple of people. There was some type of a verbal altercation. I don’t know what it was about. Jim kept walking but then turned around to say something, or go back and then turned, and when he turned, then he was jumped.”

Someone called 911 and Quigley was taken to Hennepin County Medical Center. 

According to the police report, it happened around 12:45 a.m. on May 4 and there was at least one witness. 

“His mouth was pretty badly cut. He hit the back of his head on the cement and he was intubated that evening. Then he was getting better during the week. But then he started to decline and on Sunday, Mother’s Day, he was taken into surgery to have a shunt put in his brain. That’s at the point he had a massive stroke in the back of the brain where the brain injury was,” Swanson recalled. 

May 14, Quigley’s six siblings decided to take him off life support. He died 15 minutes later. 

The Hennepin County Medical Examiner’s Office released Quigley’s report Wednesday, stating the manner of death as homicide and the cause as “complications of blunt force craniocerebral injuries.” 

“We need some answers,” Swanson said. “Jim was the peaceful one. You know, he was the happy guy. He was the baby of seven.” 


Quigley was a Gulf War veteran who served on the USS Orion and the USS Stark. 

At the end of June, the family held a celebration of life for Quigley at Fort Snelling National Cemetery. 

Swanson described her brother as a “lifelong bachelor” who lived downtown for 20 years before moving to Spring Park. For most of his career, he worked downtown in security. About two months before his death, Quigley started a new job with Nationwide Organ Recovery Transport Alliance (NORA). It was his job to drive donated kidneys to the hospital. Ultimately, the family was able to donate Quigley’s kidneys — one to a 70-year-old man and the other to a 54-year-old woman. 

“At the end of his life, Jim was still giving,” Swanson said. 


Swanson said the family has been frustrated over the lack of answers. 

“We’ve asked if they’ve used facial recognition or any type of AI and they’ve told us, no they can’t. They’re not allowed to at Minneapolis police, which is unfortunate. We know there’s cameras all over the city. It was a busy weekend in the city,” Swanson said. 

According to Minneapolis Police Sgt. Garrett Parten, MPD is prohibited in any shape or form from using facial recognition software. In 2021, the Minneapolis City Council voted to ban the city from buying or using facial recognition technology and data, with limited exceptions. The city stated among its concerns that facial recognition technology has been shown to lack accuracy in identifying people of color and women.

“Someone had to see this; someone knows what happened,” Swanson said. “We want justice for him. This should not have happened.”

Anyone with information about that night, that could help the investigation, should contact Minneapolis police or Crimestoppers at 1-800-222-TIPS. 



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Former secret service agent reacts to latest Trump apparent assassination attempt

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Mike Olson served in the Secret Service for over two decades and has some thoughts on what went wrong and what could be done better by the Secret Service.

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. — It’s no secret that the agency tasked with protecting former president Donald Trump are constantly on the lookout for threats, especially following the assassination attempt in July. 

The heightened level of concern has former Secret Service agent Mike Olson questioning the actions of Secret Service agents on Sunday. Olson was in the Secret Service for over two decades, and now runs his own security firm, 360 Security Services. 

“I have been a part of those golf outings in my career and typically there is much more security on those outer roads outside of the fence line,” Olson said. 

Ryan Wesley Routh, 58, faces charges of possessing a firearm despite a prior felony conviction and possessing a firearm with an obliterated serial number. He did not fire any shots and never had Trump in his line of sight, the Secret Service’s acting chief said.

Routh appeared briefly in federal court in West Palm Beach, kickstarting a criminal case in the final weeks of a presidential race already touched by violence and upheaval. Though no one was injured, the episode marked the second attempt on Trump’s life in as many months, raising fresh questions about the security afforded to him during a time of amped-up political rhetoric. It prompted Republican allies and even some Democrats to demand to know how a would-be shooter could get so close.

The Secret Service’s acting chief said the golf outing was ‘off the record’ and not released a part of the former president’s public schedule. 

“True off the record is going without all the cars and trying to go undercover so to speak,” Olson said.

Routh was arrested Sunday afternoon after authorities spotted a firearm poking out of shrubbery on the West Palm Beach golf course where Trump was playing. He was spotted by a Secret Service agent assigned to Trump’s security detail who opened fire. Routh sped away before being captured by law enforcement in a neighboring county, the authorities said.

Olson said in his experience, there were few levels of protection in off the record outings, usually meaning there wasn’t a massive outside perimeter around the location. This is the part he has questions about, considering the predictability of where the former President likes to golf in West Palm Beach and the day of the week he usually golfs. With heightened level of threat following the first assassination attempt at a rally in July, Olson thinks even ‘off the record’ outings need to be treated as a normal event. 

“I am saying across the board, we need to really step things up between now and the election,” Olson said. 



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U.S. Surgeon General issues health warning on parental stress

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The U.S. surgeon general calls parental stress an urgent public health issue that requires the nation’s immediate awareness and action.

MINNEAPOLIS, Minnesota — We all know parenting can be stressful but the U.S. surgeon general said it goes beyond that. 

U.S. Surgeon General Dr. Vivek Murthy has issued an advisory on parental stress, calling attention to an “urgent public health issue.” Murthy said. “advisories are reserved for significant public health challenges that require the nation’s immediate awareness and action.” 

Dr. Murthy said there are many factors affecting parents today. Beyond the traditional challenges, he mentions “there are new stressors that previous generations didn’t have to consider. These include the complexity of managing social media, parents’ concerns about the youth mental health crisis, and an epidemic of loneliness that disproportionately affects young people and parents, just to name a few.”

Meghan Tompkins of Golden Valley is a mom to three — ages 5, 3 and 11 months. 

“My husband and I were just talking about it the other day, actually… deciding if we want to have another kid or not. We’re almost at this point, even with a 5-year-old and a 3-year-old and just their kind of basic activities… there’s kind of an expectation to put your kids in all these things and try everything and you want them to. But then we also feel like we’re kind of capped out almost,” Tompkins said.

According to the surgeon general’s advisory, 41% of parents say most days they are so stressed they cannot function. 

“I try to talk to my mom about it and tell her that it’s different, that it is more stressful and the stresses are different, and she doesn’t really understand it,” said Emma Skala of Minneapolis.  

Skala’s kids are ages 7 and 4. Skala homeschools her boys, citing school shootings as one of the main reasons behind her decision. 

According to the report, school shootings or the possibility of one are a significant source of stress for nearly 75% of parents. 

“I can’t fathom putting a small child through an active shooter drill. I just, it breaks my heart every time I hear about it. I cry every time I hear about any kind of school shooting that happens. That’s I think one of the main things is the safety of our children,” Skala. 

The advisory also mentions nearly 70% of parents say parenting is now more difficult than it was 20 years ago, with children’s use of technology and social media as the top two cited reasons.

“I let my 3.5-year-old scroll YouTube and I’m nervous about that. Should I really be letting him do that? How much control do I have on that? And you know that we need to limit screen time, and yet that’s an easy go-to when I’m trying to make dinner… I’m trying to do my part-time job from home,” said Kristi Thao, who also has a 3-month-old baby. 

Thao also mentioned how social media and access to so much advice can put more pressure on parents. 

“Then we try all these different things but it’s like, then there’s so many options. I think having too many options can also make things more stressful. There’s too many choices,” Thao said. 

The advisory acknowledges an “intensifying culture of comparison—often propagated by influencers and online trends—with unrealistic expectations around the milestones, parenting strategies, achievements and status symbols that kids and parents must pursue. Chasing these unreasonable expectations has left many families feeling exhausted, burned out, and perpetually behind.”

Lena K. Gardner became a mom three months before the pandemic. 

“In my personal journey, I am a single mom by choice,” Gardner said. “And I thought I could do that because I have a big support network but COVID took that all away.” 

The advisory states, “This high level of stress among parents preceded the COVID-19 pandemic, and the pandemic notably contributed to additional stressors on parents and caregivers.”

During the pandemic, Gardner isolated with her daughter. At the same time, her daughter would only sleep for 1.5 hours at a time before waking up. 

“I became so sleep-deprived, I started having hallucinations. I called my therapist and I was like, ‘That’s it. Motherhood has broken me.’ And she said, ‘No it hasn’t. This is the first sign of extreme sleep deprivation.’ And she’s like, ‘You need help,'” Gardner recalled. 

Once her daughter was in daycare, Gardner said she had to navigate daycare closures or exclusions during the pandemic. 

“It still happens. Your kid gets COVID. They’re excluded for how many days and you’re left to bear the brunt of it,” said Gardner, whose parents have both passed away. 

The report said social isolation and lack of social support can lead to heightened stress. On top of that, parents, on average, are working more than before. 

“Most people are required to be at their jobs from something like 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. But schooling is from like 7 a.m. to 3 p.m., and it just doesn’t make logistical sense,” Gardner said. 

She went on to say, “There are a lot of solutions and it baffles me why we’re not doing them more.” 

Dr. Murthy mentioned the need for a cultural shift that recognizes the importance of raising children. 

At the same time, he also pointed to the need for policy changes. Among his recommendations include promoting and expanding funding for programs such as Head Start and the Healthy Start program, establishing a national paid family and medical leave program, and ensuring parents and caregivers have access to affordable and high-quality mental health care. 

The full advisory can be found, here



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Wood Lake Fire grows in Minnesota Boundary Waters

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Crews in northern Minnesota are still battling the Wood Lake Fire in the Boundary Waters Canoe Area.

ELY, Minn. — A wildfire in Minnesota’s Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness has grown to 27 acres, causing the closure of more areas and portages. 

According to the U.S. Forest Service, there was a small amount of rain overnight, and fire activity is minimal. Firefighters are working to suppress and contain the blaze. 

The fire was first detected last Tuesday morning on an island within Wood Lake, north of County Road 18. The fire at the time was about three acres in size. 

Starting this Tuesday, the Forest Service will close more lakes, portages, and campsites to visitors, including Wind Lake.  

“We understand that this will impact visitors, cooperators, and communities near the restricted area. This emergency closure is necessary for the safety of our visitors, our wilderness rangers and our firefighters,” states a press release from the Forest Service. 

The closures will most likely be in place until the fire is declared out. 

Northern Minnesota has been experiencing drought conditions. The Forest Service said fuel conditions continue to be dry in the area, and new fire starts are possible. 

You can find the most recent list of closures by clicking here



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