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Man charged after his 5 dogs maul girl getting off school bus in St. Paul

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A St. Paul man has been charged with misdemeanor counts after several of his dogs attacked and wounded a 7-year-old girl as she got off her school bus early last month.

Marco Antonio Mendoza Landaverde, 37, was charged in Ramsey County District Court last week with two counts of failure to restrain the dogs from inflicting injury and two counts of failing to have two of the dogs vaccinated for rabies in connection with the incident on Feb. 8 in the 600 block of Van Buren Avenue.

Landaverde was charged by summons and is due in court on April 18. Court records do not list an attorney for Landaverde, and contact information for him was not immediately available.

The owner surrendered the dogs to city Animal Control the day after the attack, and “they were humanely euthanized,” the charges read.

A posting on the day of the attack on the NextDoor social media app warned parents in the Frogtown neighborhood to keep their kids inside “and keep an eye out for these dogs,” which were said to be pit bulls.

An online fundraiser organized by the girl’s brother soon after the attack identified her as Sumaya Farah Ali. According to a note written by her brother, the family arrived in the United States four months earlier to find medical care for a family member’s congenital heart defect.

“Sumaya was injured and had pieces of nose, ear, and thigh bitten off. The doctors were able to stitch together the best they could,” the brother wrote.

According to the charges:

At about 4:40 p.m. on Feb. 8, a 911 caller said several dogs bit her daughter. The girl’s parents said Sumaya was leaving the bus stop with her father when five large dogs pulled her to the ground and attacked her.

Emergency medical responders took the girl and her parents to a nearby hospital for treatment of her wounds.

A resident provided police with a video recording from his doorbell camera of the attack. It showed that the dogs kept mauling the girl until an SUV driver, later identified as Landaverde, honked and sent the dogs running.

Landaverde said the dogs got loose from his yard a block away through an open gate. He provided proof of rabies vaccination for two of the five dogs. He did not have a permit allowing him to have more than three dogs.

Star Tribune staff writer Kyeland Jackson contributed to this report.



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HCMC leader is first Somali American to lead Minnesota hospital board

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Mohamed Omar is the new board chair of Hennepin Healthcare System, the organization that runs HCMC, making him Minnesota’s first Somali American hospital board leader.

The health care system board permanently appointed Omar to the position Wednesday at their regular meeting. He had served as interim chair since Babette Apland stepped down in September.

Omar has been on the volunteer board for three years, working on the finance, investment, audit and compliance committees. He is the chief administrative officer at the Washburn Center for Children and previously was chief financial officer at the Greater Minnesota Housing Fund.

In a statement, Omar said he was excited to lead a hospital board in the state with the largest Somali American population in the U.S. He said he shared the health system’s dedication to providing “equitable, high-quality care.”

“My commitment is to deepen our community engagement, build more authentic connections between patients and team members, and build a confident future together,” Omar’s statement said.

CEO Jennifer DeCubellis and Nneka Sederstrom, chief health equity officer, praised Omar’s selection to lead the board. They said more inclusive leadership with a commitment to ending health disparities are key to HCMC’s success.

Hennepin County Board Chair Irene Fernando, who is also on health system board, said she was excited to work with Omar. She said county leaders are dedicated to good stewardship of the “state’s last public safety-net hospital.”

“As the first Hennepin County Board Chair of color, I know how impactful it is for our communities to see themselves represented in public leadership,” Fernando said.



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Campfire ban lifted at Superior National Forest, including BWCAW

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DULUTH – The Superior National Forest has lifted its forestwide campfire ban, including the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness, effective Friday.

Recent rain and humidity have improved conditions across the national forest’s 3 million acres, forest officials said in a news release.

The Minnesota Department of Natural Resources has also lifted fire restrictions in Cook, Koochiching, Lake and northern St. Louis counties.

Fire danger is still a concern this time of year, said Karen Harrison, DNR wildfire prevention specialist.

“As leaves fall and vegetation continues to dry out, it’s important for people to be cautious with anything that can cause a spark,” she said.

The national forest imposed its broad campfire ban nearly two weeks ago, after a third wildfire, named for Bogus Lake, was discovered on forest land. No significant fire activity has been reported in recent days for any of those three fires. A fourth fire inside the forest, the 8.5-acre Pfeiffer Lake Fire, started Oct. 17. It was contained within 24 hours, the Forest Service said.

Much of northeast Minnesota is still classified in the “severe drought” stage by the U.S. Drought Monitor.



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What is fascism? And why does Harris say Trump is a fascist?

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WASHINGTON — Vice President Kamala Harris was asked this week if she thought Donald Trump was a fascist, and she replied ‘’Yes, I do.’’ She subsequently called him the same thing herself, saying voters don’t want ‘’a president of the United States who admires dictators and is a fascist.’’

But what exactly is a fascist? And does the meaning of the word shift when viewed through a historical or political prism — especially so close to the end of a fraught presidential race?

An authoritarian, ultranationalist political ideology and movement. It is often associated with the far right and characterized by a dictatorial leader who uses military forces to help suppress political and civil opposition.

History’s two most famous fascists were Nazi chief Adolf Hitler in Germany and Italian dictator Benito Mussolini. Known as Il Duce, or ”the duke,” Mussolini headed the National Fascist Party, which was symbolized by an eagle clutching a fasces — a bundle of rods with an axe among them.

At Mussolini’s urging, in October 1922, thousands of ”Blackshirts,” or ”squadristi,” made up an armed fascist militia that marched on Rome, vowing to seize power. Hitler’s Nazis similarly relied on a militia, known as the ”Brownshirts.” Both men eventually imposed single-party rule and encouraged violence in the streets. They used soldiers, but also fomented civilian unrest that pit loyalists against political opponents and larger swaths of everyday society.

Hitler and Mussolini censored the press and issued sophisticated propaganda. They played up racist fears and manipulated not just their active supporters but everyday citizens.



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