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Minneapolis man charged with arson in connection with mosque fire

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Hennepin County court documents allege Jackie Rahm Little intentionally set fire to south Minneapolis’ Masjid Al Rahma mosque Monday.

MINNEAPOLIS — Editor’s note: The video above first aired on KARE 11 on April 25, 2023.

A 36-year-old Minneapolis man is charged with arson in connection with one of two fires at local mosques this week.

Hennepin County court documents allege Jackie Rahm Little intentionally set fire to south Minneapolis’ Masjid Al Rahma mosque Monday. 

If convicted, Little faces up to 10 years in prison and a $20,000 fine.

Prosecutors say mosque surveillance footage obtained during their investigation showed a man, believed to be Little, enter the building carrying a bag. Investigators determined Little had been concealing a gas can, which was later found melted where the fire broke out.

First discovered by a building employee, Minneapolis Fire and Police responded and evacuated a number of adults and children inside the building while crews knocked down the flames on the third floor.

The criminal complaint says the building sustained approximately $1,000 worth of damage.

In more surveillance video from a nearby gas station, Little was seen purchasing a gas can and filling it with gas that day, according to the charges.

Little’s whereabouts are currently unknown, but police have issued a warrant for his arrest. Authorities say it isn’t clear if the fire set at Minneapolis’ Mall 24 mosque the day before is connected.

Additional court documents from Hennepin County show Little was arrested and charged with second-degree arson stemming from an incident in December 2021, in which he was accused of setting fire to a vehicle. Records show Little was subsequently bailed out by the Minnesota Freedom Fund.

According to CAIR-MN, the leadership at Masjid Al Rahma mosque will hold an event at 6 p.m. Saturday to raise money to help rebuild and restore the church. 

“We are not shaken by these acts, we are only more resolved,” said Jaylani Hussein, the executive director of CAIR, following news of the fire.

WATCH MORE ON KARE 11+

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Watch the latest local news from the Twin Cities and across Minnesota in our YouTube playlist:

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City of St. Paul condemns troubled Lowry Apartments

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The building, located at 345 Wabasha, has been a magnet for crime and drugs. An inspection on Dec. 9 found the Lowry Apartments unfit for human habitation.

ST PAUL, Minn. — A troubled St. Paul apartment building has been condemned, with city inspectors declaring it unfit for human habitation. 

The Lowry Apartments are one of the Capital City’s biggest headaches, a magnet for crime and drugs. An inspection on Dec. 9 documented a lack of fire protection systems, inoperable heating facilities, active plumbing leaks, electrical systems that had been damaged or tampered with, and overall unsanitary conditions, among other things. A condemnation notice was immediately issued. 

Being condemned means that all residents of the 134-unit affordable housing building must evacuate immediately. Included in the notice is a list of 25 action items/repairs that must be completed before the Lowry Apartments can reopen. Most are significant, making it unlikely residents will be able to return anytime soon. 

The troubled building is owned by Madison Equities, St. Paul’s largest downtown property owner, which is in the process of trying to sell off most of its portfolio after the death of long-time owner Jim Crockarell in January. Court documents say commercial real estate group Frauneshuh partnered with the Halverson and Blaiser Group to manage the property and act on behalf of the owner with tenants and other third parties after the building was placed into receivership in late August. 

“The building has been in decline, rapidly, since the owner died,” said resident Megan Thomas when KARE visited the Lowry apartments in August. “There’s a risk of violence, there’s a risk to health, I found a cockroach in an ice cube in my freezer last week because they are everywhere.” 

Thomas has since moved from the building because of living conditions. 

During that visit, the problems were obvious: The front door to the building was wide open, leaving the Lowry Apartments vulnerable to squatters, drug dealers, and others who were not residents. Windows were broken, plumbing leaked and the elevators were inoperable. 

Residents were blindsided when a foreclosure notice appeared on the building in mid-August, leaving them wondering where they would go. The city of St. Paul stepped in to broker a receivership for the property, but it appears now that action was not enough to stem the tide of problems that plague the Lowry Apartments.  

Hiding from the cold is what Jaelynn Hoggard is used to as a resident of the Lowry Apartments in Saint Paul. 

“My body can’t handle the cold, like my pacemaker feels the cold and everything,” said Hoggard. “I saw them posting it on the door, like the condemned notice. And my heart just shot into my stomach.”

Jaelynn is disabled and says there are times the elevators don’t work. Because of the living conditions, she had to give back her service animal.

“That was the hardest thing to do,” she said.



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Alleged Feeding Our Future mastermind claims reporter’s evidence could exonerate

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“Zara Frost” publishes a Substack newsletter that includes audio and video recordings that are not in the possession of any other news outlet — or Bock’s attorney.

MINNEAPOLIS — Editor’s note: The video above first aired on KARE 11 in September 2024.

Aimee Bock, the former executive director of Feeding our Future and the top name associated with the $250 million pandemic child meal fraud case, is set to stand trial on Feb. 3.

But her lawyer, Kenneth Udoibok, does not have access to materials he believes could exonerate Bock — despite those materials being cited in a series of posts on Substack — according to a motion filed by Udoibok on Wednesday.

The Substack newsletter “Nourishing Truth – Unpacking the Feeding Our Future Scandal” is written by Zara Frost. It is unclear whether that name is a pseudonym, whether Frost is a journalist, and whether Frost has connections to any of the 70 defendants charged in the sprawling case.

The general tone of the postings points blame away from Feeding Our Future defendants and back toward the Minnesota Department of Education, which was tasked with oversight of the federal child meal program during the pandemic.

One passage states, “The implications are clear. Either 1. MDE was catastrophically incompetent at its oversight duties, or 2. The department’s current narrative about early fraud concerns is, to put it politely, revisionist history.”

What is clear is that Frost’s 10 articles sent out to 16 subscribers as of Dec. 11 include details no other news outlet has published concerning the case, including audio recordings of conversations involving Hadith Ahmed, the former Feeding Our Future employee who agreed to plead guilty and help the FBI and U.S. Attorney’s Office with the case.

Those recordings were not used at the first trial involving Feeding our Future defendants earlier in 2024 despite the government using Ahmed as a key witness.

Udoibok believes the government has the recordings along with evidence concerning the reimbursement claims process from phones and tablets seized during the investigation that prosecutors did use in the first trial — but have not disclosed to Udoibok for Bock’s case.

“The withheld materials are crucial to Defendant’s defense as they provide insight into how Feeding Our Future’s claims were processed, which could exonerate Defendant by demonstrating that she did not oversee a fraudulent scheme. The Government’s failure to disclose these materials creates a reasonable probability that Defendant would not be able to mount an effective defense,” Udoibok wrote in his motion, claiming the prosecution is violating the Brady rule that requires disclosing all exculpatory evidence.

Bock and her co-defendants are due back in court Thursday for a status conference.

Zara Frost told KARE 11 News that the audio and video files were leaked to them, but has not yet answered a series of other questions.



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Co-op looking at reopening St. Joseph’s Hospital in Chippewa Falls

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St. Joseph’s Hospital’s doors closed this past spring, but a new group is looking at opening it back up to serve what it described as an urgent health need.

CHIPPEWA FALLS, Wis. — Months after a hospital in western Wisconsin shut its doors, a cooperative is looking at opening it back up as a “bridge” as the group works to build a new hospital in the community. 

St. Joseph’s Hospital in Chippewa Falls closed along with Sacred Heart Hospital in Eau Claire and Prevea clinics in the region this past spring. Both hospitals were owned and operated by the Hospital Sisters Health System (HSHS). 

In light of these closures, the Chippewa Valley Health Cooperative formed, and is now planning to build a new hospital, which they say is slated to open in 2027. Before then, the group says they want to reopen St. Joseph’s so that patients can be taken “care of as fast as possible.”

RELATED: Two new hospitals may open in western Wisconsin

“Since we started the Cooperative, we’ve been singularly focused on making high-quality healthcare accessible and affordable for Chippewa Valley residents as fast as possible,” said Robert Krause, Chair of the Chippewa Valley Health Cooperative, in a press release. “The new facility we’ve planned in Lake Hallie is fundamental to the long-term sustainability of the hospital. At the same time, if we can, reopening the St. Joseph’s facility in 2025 will help us serve patients faster and doesn’t impede our plans or ability to open the new hospital.”

A press release from the co-op states a letter of intent has been signed with HSHS to purchase and reopen the Chippewa Falls facility “to provide urgently needed healthcare services.” The co-op has until April to find out if reopening the hospital would be financially responsible. According to the co-op, St. Joseph’s “has significant deferred maintenance that may need to be addressed before the hospital can be reopened.” 

“Once we understand whether reopening St. Joseph’s is possible, we will be in high gear to start caring for patients as fast as possible,” said Krause. “Then we will turn our attention to exploring other healthcare uses for the building once we’ve opened the new full-service hospital in Lake Hallie.”

RELATED: Laid off healthcare workers get community send-off ahead of hospital closures in western WI

When the hospitals and clinics closed in the region, more than 1,000 people lost their jobs, including 244 at St. Joseph’s. 

The new hospital being planned by the co-op is anticipated to be a new 144,000-square-foot space with 48 hospital beds, 12 ICU beds, and Emergency Department, Medical-Surgical services, Labor & Delivery, critical care units, a comprehensive Cancer Center, and comprehensive diagnostic services, including laboratory, radiology, and cardiology services. The plan is to open the hospital in Lake Hallie, between Chippewa Falls and Eau Claire. 



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