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Ricky Cobb II family attorney accuses state of leaking $25 million demand letter

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The civil rights attorney for the family of Ricky Cobb II sent a letter to the state seeking $25 million for Cobb’s death at the hands of a state trooper last summer, their attorney confirmed Wednesday.

But the attorney, Bakari Sellers, said that amount was a negotiation starting point and blamed someone on the state’s side of leaking the confidential letter sent last month. He said the leak is unfair to Cobb’s family.

“It’s unfortunate and it’s unprofessional. And this family doesn’t deserve that,” said Sellers, a lawyer from South Carolina who is representing the family with attorneys Harry Daniels and F. Clayton Tyler.

Cobb was killed during a traffic stop last July 31. Troopers attempted to remove him from his vehicle after learning he’d been accused of violating a domestic order for protection. As Cobb shifted the vehicle into drive and took his foot off the brake, the car lurched forward, dragging another trooper positioned at the driver’s side. Trooper Ryan Londregan fired twice from the passenger side, striking Cobb twice in the torso.

Sellers said he plans to file a civil suit on behalf of the family in the coming weeks alleging Londregan used excessive force.

“We sent a very long, lengthy demand based upon our legal theories. There’s an initial demand there, yes, and that was $25 million. But as you know how negotiations go, that was the starting point. Regardless, all those conversations pursuant to Federal Rules of Civil Procedure are confidential.”

Asked who he believes leaked the letter sent to the Attorney General’s Office in February, he said “Either the State Patrol or the Attorney General’s Office. And regardless, if the State Patrol sent it out, it’s still the responsibility of the Attorney General’s office because that’s their client. So the buck stops with them.”

Request for comment from the State Patrol and Attorney General’s Office were not immediately returned.

Sellers said he found out about the leak Tuesday night.

“I haven’t seen something so unprofessional,” he said. “I try to be courteous and I try to be respectful to people … I feel like in the criminal process, the defense attorneys, the officer are trying to bully this family. I feel like now the attorney general’s office is trying to bully this family. And I’m not going to stand for that.”

Sellers declined to provide a copy of the letter to the Star Tribune, but confirmed its contents.

The letter was first obtained and reported by Alpha News, and then later by KARE 11.



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Proposed nightclub in Willmar, MN, draws opposition

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Many residents in the apartments next to the proposed nightclub are visiting workers such as travel nurses or farm laborers, he said. “It makes no sense to have a nightclub that has concerts next to a place where people need to rest to work in the community,” Zuleger said.

He has said that the company also partners with addiction centers and women’s shelters to house Willmar’s most vulnerable residents, and some of these tenants would be too close for comfort to the new nightclub.

Instead of a nightclub, the site should be used for a Somali community center where children from the nearby apartments can play, Zuleger said. Willmar, a city of about 21,000 people, is about 24% Hispanic and 11% Black, with 16% of the city born overseas, double the average rate in the rest of Minnesota. About 43% of the company’s tenants are Somali, and Zuleger called them his “best-paying renters.”

But Doug Fenstra, the real estate agent helping sell the property at 951 High Av., said he had never heard about the possibility of a Somali community center before Zuleger brought up the idea at an October planning commission meeting.

On Wednesday, the planning commission deliberated whether a nightclub would fit the character of the neighborhood. They noted that there was already a brewery in the area.

They passed a motion granting the conditional-use permit.



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FBI investigation spurs debate over possible kickbacks in recovery housing

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“DHS and our state and federal partners have seen evidence that kickbacks are happening in Minnesota,” Inspector General Kulani Moti said in a statement. “That’s why we brought an anti-kickback proposal to the Minnesota Legislature last session. We will continue to work with the Legislature next session on ways to strengthen the integrity of our public programs.”

Nuway Alliance, one of the state’s largest nonprofit substance use disorder treatment providers, pays up to $700 a month for someone’s housing while they are in intensive outpatient treatment, the organization’s website states. The site lists dozens of sober housing programs clients can choose from.

Nuway leaders said they got an inquiry from the government about two and a half years ago indicating they are conducting a civil investigation into the housing model.

But officials with the nonprofit said in an email they believe what they are doing is legal and clients need it. More than 600 people are using their assistance to stay in recovery residences, Nuway officials stated. They said having a safe, supportive place to stay is particularly important for the vulnerable people they serve, more than half of whom reported being homeless in the six months before they started treatment.

Health plans knew about, approved and even lauded their program, Nuway leaders said, noting that health insurer UCare even gave it an award.

“The state of Minnesota has been fully aware of our program for a decade,” the organization said. “Since payors are fully aware of, and support the program, we struggle to see how anyone could argue it is improper, let alone fraudulent.”



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100 racist deeds discharged since Mounds View required it before sale

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Mounds View, the first Minnesota city to require homeowners to discharge racist language buried in deeds before they sell their homes, is celebrating a milestone: at least 100 homeowners have completed the process.

Officials say discharging the language is a symbolic step, but an important one.

“How could we call ourselves an inclusive community with the words ‘This home shall not be sold to a non-white person’ buried in the deeds?” Mayor Zach Lindstrom said at the state of the city address Monday.

Racially restrictive covenants, found in deeds around the Twin Cities and Minnesota, were legally enforceable tools of racial segregation for the first half of the 20th century. They barred homes’ sale to, and sometimes even occupancy by, anyone who wasn’t white until 1948, when they became unenforceable. Mapping Prejudice, a University of Minnesota research project uncovering these covenants, has found more than 33,000 of them in Minnesota, including more than 500 in Mounds View.

Many local cities have partnered with Just Deeds, a coalition that helps cities and their residents learn about and discharge covenants. In 2019, the Legislature passed a law allowing homeowners to add language to their deeds that discharges racist covenants but doesn’t erase them from the record. Earlier this year, Mounds View was the first to pass an ordinance requiring it. The city is also helping residents navigate the process.

Just because these covenants are no longer enforceable doesn’t mean they haven’t had long-lasting consequences, Kirsten Delegard, Mapping Prejudice project director, said at a Mounds View City Council meeting this summer: Minneapolis homes with racial covenants are worth 15% more than those without, she said. And neighborhoods with covenants remain the whitest parts of the Twin Cities.

Mounds View residents Rene and Steven Johnson were troubled to learn from Mapping Prejudice that their house, and many homes in their neighborhood, had racially restrictive covenants on them. It took some effort, including a trip to the Ramsey County Recorder’s Office, to find the document, which not only contained race restrictions but barred unmarried couples from owning the home.

The couple got their covenant discharged, and educated the city about the process, Rene Johnson said. That helped lead to the ordinance requiring covenants to be discharged before sale.



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