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Greyhound, Jefferson moving bus operations to Ramp B in downtown Minneapolis

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Starting Friday, passengers traveling on Jefferson Lines and Greyhound buses will catch their rides at a new stop in downtown Minneapolis.

The companies, along with Flixbus and Land to Air Express, are moving operations from a bus station at 950 Hawthorne Avenue to Ramp B on 2nd Avenue N. near Target Field.

“We feel that will provide for a better customer experience,” said Kevin Pursey, a spokesman for Minneapolis-based Jefferson Lines.

At the new stop, passengers will have easier access to light-rail trains and other transit options. And for buses, the location on the lower level of Ramp B will allow for easier and quicker entries and exits from downtown, Pursey said.

It is not immediately clear what will happen to the current depot, where buses have stopped for more than 20 years. The space is owned by the city of Minneapolis.

“The city is examining potential uses for the space,” said spokeswoman Sarah McKenzie.

Jefferson operates 24 buses in and out of Minneapolis each day, serving between 400 and 500 riders, Pursey said.

Greyhound, Flixbus and Land To Air, a shuttle service that runs between Mankato and the Twin Cities, collectively operate another 20 trips.

“Greyhound is very excited to begin service from the 2nd Avenue location,” said John Young, Greyhound’s District Manager for Minnesota. “Customers will have access to multiple restaurants and hotels within a short walk from the station. That’s what is great about being in the middle of downtown Minneapolis.”



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Star Tribune

Unlicensed driver going 100 mph before deadly Minneapolis pileup

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An unlicensed driver is now charged on accusations that he was speeding and under the influence of alcohol when he set off a chain-reaction pileup on an interstate exit ramp in Minneapolis, leaving one person dead and several others injured.

Talon Covie-Cardell Walker, 29, of St. Paul, was charged late Thursday afternoon in Hennepin County District Court with criminal vehicular homicide in connection with the seven-vehicle pileup about 9:15 p.m. Wednesday after exiting from eastbound Interstate 94 toward Lyndale Avenue.

Walker remains held without bail ahead of a court appearance Friday afternoon. Court records do not list an attorney for him.

A search warrant affidavit was filed in court by the State Patrol that cleared the way for Walker’s blood to be collected to measure his degree of intoxication. Results are pending. The affidavit said Walker was “pushing 100 mph when taking the ramp, [and] it appears no braking took place before the crash.”

Walker was driving without a valid license, according to the state Department of Public Safety. In late 2019, his license was suspended, then it was revoked in spring 2021, the agency said.

Court records in Minnesota show Walker has traffic convictions for careless driving and operating a motorcycle without a license. State records also show convictions for illegal weapons possession, disorderly conduct, a minor drug offense and twice for violating a court no-contact order.

Walker’s passenger, 20-year-old Taniyah Randle-Smith, was taken by ambulance to HCMC with life-threatening injuries, according to the patrol. A hospital spokeswoman said Thursday afternoon that she was in critical condition.

Killed in the crash was Natalie Gubbay, a 26-year-old SUV driver from Minneapolis, whose vehicle was struck by Walker’s. Her passenger, Molly Elizabeth Brenton, 28, of Virginia, Minn., was taken to HCMC with noncritical injuries.



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Juvenile found dead inside Red Wing correctional facility

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A juvenile has died while in detention at the Red Wing correctional facility in southeastern Minnesota.

Officials with the Minnesota Department of Corrections said staff on Saturday found an inmate who was unresponsive. Authorities attempted life-saving measures, which were unsuccessful. Paramedics arrived and the resident was pronounced dead at the scene, said spokeswoman Shannon Loehrke.

An investigation is underway to determine how the inmate died, she added.

No information about the identify of the deceased was released.

The Red Wing facility has a capacity of 88 inmates.



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Defamation lawsuit against “The Fall of Minneapolis” faces legal hurdles

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Michael Moore’s “Fahrenheit 9/11″ became the highest-grossing documentary of all time under a spotlight of controversy over its accuracy about the Sept. 11 attacks. “Leaving Neverland” won an Emmy for Outstanding Documentary or Nonfiction Special before being sued by the estate of Michael Jackson, alleging it was full of fabrications. There’s a cottage industry of films and books questioning the accepted narrative of the assassination of former U.S. President John F. Kennedy.

The number of individuals accused in “The Fall of Minneapolis” of manipulating the public, producing misleading facts or testimony, or advancing their career via the murder of Floyd, the conviction of Chauvin and unrest in Minneapolis is extensive. It includes Baker, Blackwell, Cahill, former Minneapolis Police Chief Medaria Arradondo, Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison, Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey and Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, among many others.

Blackwell is the only person in the film to have filed a lawsuit for defamation.

Her lawsuit highlights the final line of “The Fall of Minneapolis” which reads: “If we don’t stand for the truth, we’ll fall for the lies.”

“Plaintiff agrees wholeheartedly with this statement,” the lawsuit reads. “However, at least with respect to Blackwell, the Defendants lied.”



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