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Top Hennepin County prosecutor presents strategy to curb youth auto theft

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With Minneapolis already reporting 4,125 car thefts ahead of the typical summer uptick in crime, Hennepin County’s top prosecutor announced new efforts to address the crisis of youth stealing cars.

In back-to-back news conferences Wednesday at the Hennepin County Government Center, Hennepin County Attorney Mary Moriarty unveiled a collaboration with law enforcement and social workers. Meanwhile, activist and attorney Nekima Levy-Armstrong hosted a separate event after to say kids are crying out for help and more funding for community-based programming is needed to give youth something to do besides joyride in stolen cars.

Moriarty is hoping to intervene with at-risk youth and prevent crime before it occurs.

“We cannot ignore the early warning signs that a youth is headed toward behaviors that might escalate,” she said.

As part of her office launching a new focused collaboration with law enforcement, there is a hotline that Hennepin County families can call for support. Moriarty said a social worker will arrive at their home within an hour to help with mental, behavioral or emotional issues with the aim of de-escalating the situation.

Services are free and available every day between 10 a.m. and 10 p.m. by calling 612-979-9511. Staff will offer ongoing stabilization after the first 72 hours by providing optional eight-week culturally specific services.

Flanked by parents, educators and activists, Levy-Armstrong said kids as young as 12 who don’t know how to drive are being chased by police — including in a pursuit that ended with a crash on the north side last week.

“This has been going on for far too long,” Levy-Armstrong said. “We do not condone what has been happening with our young folks … We need all hands on deck to address what we feel is a crisis that is happening in our community.”

Levy-Armstrong applauded Moriarty’s new initiative, but she doesn’t want a call for help to turn into child protective services (CPS) potentially being called and causing further problems for a family by taking a child away.

The collaboration includes regular intervention meetings between the attorney’s office and law enforcement agencies — five have been held so far — to identify youth in need of services. CPS and truancy teams are also there to learn about high-risk youth they believe are engaging in auto theft-related behaviors.

Moriarty said other changes to address youth auto theft involve the courts adding to their judicial review detention decisions on whether to hold youth charged with fleeing police. This charge wasn’t previously part of judicial review.

There’s also a faster turnaround for charging decisions — within one day and a first court appearance within three days if a child was admitted to the juvenile detention center but ultimately released. If the youth is not booked at the detention center, a charging decision will be made within five business days when historically, she said this took weeks or even months.

Moriarty said it’s difficult to charge youth for auto theft for a number of reasons. Sometimes officers don’t see who is actually driving, or the driver will say they didn’t know the vehicle was stolen. And if they rely on DNA evidence to determine that, it is time-consuming to get such evidence. She also said kids wear face masks, making it harder to identify the driver.

Even if youth are charged, she said, they are frequently found incompetent by psychologists to go through court proceedings.

Minneapolis clocked 2,100 car thefts at this time last year. The city has doubled that.

But at the same time, the attorney’s office has charged a fraction of those thefts, with 465 related cases. Nearly 70% of those are within the juvenile prosecution division.

Moriarty said despite this widespread problem, youth committing these crimes account for less than 3% of the population. And it’s often the same youth engaging in repeat behaviors.

Youth auto theft has been a nationwide problem ever since a TikTok video went viral in 2021 showing kids how to hotwire Kias and Hyundais in as little as 90 seconds.

Levy-Armstrong said Black and brown youth not only experienced the COVID-19 pandemic upending school and their social lives, but they were also at the epicenter of global unrest from George Floyd’s murder.

All this has impacted mental health, finances and emotional health “for too many families that were already struggling.”

“We need to get at the root of why these things are happening,” she said. “We want to see a change happen in the summer of 2023.”



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Star Tribune

Amtrak’s Borealis train from St. Paul to Chicago hits 100K riders in five months

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“Reaching 100,000 passengers in less than six months is a testament to the good things that can happen when we provide a service that is needed,” said MnDOT Commissioner Nancy Daubenberger. “We are very excited to reach this milestone and look forward to strengthening our partnerships with communities, as well as federal, state and local governments, and Amtrak to continue providing a safe, reliable, and sustainable transportation option.”



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“Harry Potter” play from Broadway lands in Plymouth school

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“Both are discovering who they are,” said stage manager and Armstrong senior Katie Spickelmier. The play reflects the “struggle of growing up in a society you don’t really fit into.”

Cast members are challenged with embodying beloved iconic characters while creating their own personal versions of them — while speaking their lines in British accents.

“Trying to put yourself in a whole different dialect is definitely a fun challenge for all of us — and trying to keep it appropriate and not silly,” Smallacombe said.

And then, of course, as with everything Harry Potter-related, there’s all the magic the production’s tech team has had to figure out how to depict without the benefit of Hollywood’s computer-generated special effects. They include the machinations of the time machine, a character shooting out of a fireplace, characters flying above the stage.

Lovitt and other staffers traveled to New York to see how Broadway pulled it off. It debuted there in 2018 as a five-hour play performed in two parts (and remains that length in the London production). It was later edited to a one-part version at three and a half hours, and in November will be presented on Broadway in under three hours (which is the version playing in Chicago). The high school version is even shorter, closer to two hours.

Actors from “Harry Potter and the Cursed Child” rehearse a scene at Armstrong High School in Plymouth. The 40-scene play has a cast of more than 30 students. (Renée Jones Schneider)

Of course, Broadway, like Hogwarts, has access to magical elements not generally available to Midwestern high schools. For example, she said, there was a whole swimming pool directly under the stage, which cast members reached via a tunnel, wearing scuba gear and emerging soaking wet.



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St. Paul woman accused of stealing sheep from Bloomington farm

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A St. Paul woman faces a felony charge for allegedly stealing a sheep from a local farm in Bloomington, according to court documents.

Mandy Kay Bower, 42, was arrested at Old Shakopee Road E. in Bloomington Saturday evening after officers saw her and a male walking with a dog and a sheep on a leash.

According to police, Bower told officers that she purchased the sheep for $200. However, one of the officers noticed burs, a prickly plant found in fields, all over Bower and the sheep.

The male with Bower told officers she stepped over the fence of a farm, put a leash on one of the sheep and pulled it through the fence, according to the charging document. Bower pulled so hard that the sheep was choking, the male told officers, according to the document.

The officers eventually spoke to an employee and owner of the nearby farm and confirmed that the sheep, a breeding hair ram worth approximately $500, had not been sold to Bower, according to court documents.

Bower is charged with rustling and livestock theft. In a booking photo, Bower appears to have a tattoo of a sheep covering her left cheek.



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