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Fifth-generation cranberry farmers harvest in Wisconsin

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This Dempze family planted their first cranberries more than 100 years ago.

WISCONSIN RAPIDS, Wis. — A traditional Thanksgiving table isn’t just a treat for the stomach. There are the smells of cooked food and flowers on the table. The sound of clinking dishes and cooking food drifts in from the kitchen.

And don’t forget the color of the meal: golden-roasted turkey, snappy green and orange vegetables, and for most people, vibrant red cranberries.

Despite the jellied-can shape that so many cranberries adopt on their way to the table, these round fruits start their lives in a dense, brushy nest surrounded by hundreds of their siblings.

Originally, cranberries grew wild in the sandy soil and collected by Indigenous peoples.

Eventually, white farmers started growing the bright berries, leading to an industry that produces around 65% of the nation’s cranberries.

Many areas of Wisconsin have that perfect mix of sandy soil and water needed for cranberry marshes. More than 100 years ago, the Dempze family put down both their roots and the roots of their cranberry plants.

“I am a fifth-generation cranberry farmer. My great-great grandfather, Charles Dempze, started growing cranberries in 1900 when he was just 10 years old,” said Rochelle Hoffman, from her farm in Wisconsin Rapids, Wisconsin.

Since then, The Dempze Cranberry Company and their family farm has grown into an 87-acre farm, plus an even bigger farm in Tomah and a third family farm in Augusta since then.


The family chose a bright day in mid-October to roll out the crews and equipment needed for the fall harvest.

After flooding the cranberry marsh, a tractor pulls a harrow through the flooded cranberries, knocking them off the vines. Cranberries then float to the top of the water, thanks to the four air-pockets that make them buoyant.

Crew, wrapped in hooded sweatshirts and dark rubber waders, then corral the floating berries with a bright yellow boom. Once the cranberries are squeezed into a small area in a corner of the marsh, tubes start sucking them into a machine that shakes off the last green leaves and vines.


When they’re first picked, the cranberries are all shades of red and pink, with white and speckled berries mixed in. But after a quick wash and a trip in a truck, the berries are frozen for juice and craisins, turning the vibrant red we see on our holiday tables.

Once the berries are picked, the water will drain back into the channels and waterways that ring the farm. The empty vines will then sink back to soil, stripped of the berries that pull them up.

“Cranberries are an evergreen perennial so they don’t need to be planted every year,” Hoffman said. “In fact, they can live in perpetuity for well over 100 years — some are still cultivated after a hundred years.”

So, both the farmers and their crops can continue to live on the land, growing bright cranberries, for the next hundred years.

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Charge filed after 3-year-old falls from Brooklyn Center window

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BROOKLYN CENTER, Minn. — A man is facing a felony charge following the death of his 3-year-old son, who fell out the window of an 8th-floor apartment. 

It happened the morning of May 18 at the Lux Apartments on Summit Drive in Brooklyn Center. According to the criminal complaint, the child was declared dead at the scene by paramedics. 

The child’s father, Saleban Abdullahi Duale, is charged with second-degree manslaughter. He was staying at his brother’s apartment with his kids, and one of the children told investigators their dad was on the phone all morning. The complaint states the couch in the living room was pushed up against the window, and a 9-year-old witness told investigators the 3-year-old was pushing on the window screen before they fell. 



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New murder charges added for Derrick Thompson

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The son of a former Minnesota State Representative is now charged with five counts of third-degree murder, on top of the original 10 charges.

MINNEAPOLIS — Editor’s note: The above video originally aired on August 28, 2024.

The Hennepin County Attorney Mary Moriarty announced Monday that a man charged with killing five women in a 2023 Minneapolis car crash will now face additional charges.

In a news release, Moriarty said Derrick Thompson is now charged with five counts of third-degree murder, on top of the original 10 counts of criminal vehicular homicide. 

Prosecutors say Thompson, the son of former Minnesota State Representative John Thompson, rented a Cadillac SUV on June 16, 2023. Shortly afterward, Thompson was clocked by a state trooper driving 95 mph on I-35W — weaving in and out of traffic. He exited on Lake Street, sped through a red light, and struck a black Honda with five people inside. 

The crash killed five young women ages 17 to 20: Salma Mohamed Abdikadir, Sahra Liban Gesaade, Sagal Burhaan Hersi, Siham Adan Odhowa, and Sabiriin Mohamoud Ali.

“The senseless deaths of these five young women at the hands of Mr. Thompson has devastated their families and communities,” said Moriarty in a news release. “The sad fact is that he has done this before. Just six months before this crash, Mr. Thompson was released from a California prison for fleeing police, speeding off the highway and onto city streets where he struck and severely injured a woman. His lengthy record of dangerous driving, the trail of devastation he’s left in his wake, and his conduct in this case make these more serious charges appropriate. We will continue to seek a lengthy period of incarceration to keep the community safe.”

Additionally, Thompson faces federal charges related to the crash. Thompson was allegedly found with fentanyl and a loaded gun inside the Escalade. As a convicted felon, he is not legally allowed to possess a firearm. 



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Alleged sex trafficking victim files lawsuit against hotel chain

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The plaintiff – now 26, but 15 at the time she was reportedly sold for sex – says staff at the Brooklyn Center Super 8 Hotel turned a blind eye to her traffickers.

MINNEAPOLIS — A Minnesota woman who says she was a victim of sex trafficking as a teen has filed suit against the operators of a Twin Cities hotel for allegedly not only turning a blind eye to the illegal activity but giving her captors extra accommodations to do their business. 

The lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court in Minneapolis, seeks unnamed actual, compensatory, and punitive damages from what it calls “The Wyndham Brand Defendants” – a group of corporate entities that operated the Super 8 Hotel at 6445 James Circle N. in Brooklyn Center back in 2013 when the plaintiff was 15 years old. 

Now 26 years old, the plaintiff alleges that she was ensnared by sex traffickers who tricked her into believing they planned to take care of her but instead kidnapped her, posted advertisements online, and forced her to have commercial sex for their financial benefit. Under the constant threat of violence, she found herself forced to do “increasingly depraved things, in increasingly depraved locations, such as the Brooklyn Center Super 8,” the lawsuit alleges. 

In court documents, the unnamed plaintiff – named in court documents only as T.S. – says between August and December of 2013 she was unlawfully and repeatedly trafficked at the Brooklyn Center Super 8. The lawsuit maintains that staffers knew T.S. was a minor under the age of 18 and was being prostituted inside a room that The Wyndham Defendants were profiting from, but did nothing to stop it. 

“Upon arrival and throughout her trafficking at the subject Super 8 Hotel, the “red flags” of the sex trafficking venture were apparent to the point where Defendants’ managers admitted that they suspected commercial sex with a child under 18 was occurring and had occurred in Room 262, the room in which the Plaintiff was located,” the lawsuit alleges. 

The lawsuit adds that based on Wyndham policy or protocol, Super 8 managers and staff were required to report the obvious signs T.S. was being sex trafficked to corporate officials and law enforcement but failed to do so. In fact, the plaintiff alleges, staff at the hotel actually helped the traffickers by continuing to rent them rooms without requiring legal ID, accepting cash payments instead of traceable credit cards,  and even providing extra towels to clean up evidence of illicit sexual activities. 

A federal law known as the Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act allows victims to sue entities that financially benefit from participating in a venture they know or should know engages in criminal sex trafficking.

In a submitted response the Wyndham Defendants deny the allegations, and say they lack knowledge or information “to form a belief as to the truth of the allegation that Plaintiff was a victim of sex trafficking.” 



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