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Black cultural center proposed at site of former MPD 3rd Precint

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Restaurant owner Frederick Brathwaite unveiled the idea to community members and councilors at a meeting Monday night.

MINNEAPOLIS — There’s a new vision for the old Minneapolis Police’s Third Precinct that burned during the riots nearly four years ago.

Frederick Brathwaite is behind the plan that he unveiled Monday night at a meeting with community members and some city councilors. Brathwaite is the co-owner of the popular restaurant called Mama Sheila’s House of Soul. 

Dozens of people filled the Hook and Ladder theater and lounge to see renderings of what Brathwaite calls the Minneapolis Black Cultural Center for the first time. The theater is right next to the Third Precinct. 

“We want to change the negative image of this sacred ground into something glowing and positive,” said Brathwaite. 

The building has been boarded up since rioters set it on fire after George Floyd was murdered in 2020. The future of the burned building is still unclear, despite many heated debates. 

“They want to see the building gone, that’s what many in the community has said,” said Brathwaite. 

The cultural center would include two buildings that emulate African head wraps, along with a restaurant, museum, memorials, sports courts, a theater and more. 

“It’s not just a historic center,” said Brathwaite. “It’s a cultural center, so when people come to visit, they will learn the history and culture of Black people.”

He says it could cost upwards of $80 million and that doesn’t include the property.

KARE 11 reporter Jennifer Hoff asked Brathwaite, “This proposal relies heavily on the city council agreeing to give you that property, what happens if they don’t?”

“First of all, I’m a very optimistic person, but if they do not give us the building, we will find out other avenues they can help us,” said Brathwaite. “The money is there, the money is out there in the community, in society, in the country.”

There were at least three council members at the meeting, including former president Andrea Jenkins who called the concept “beautiful,” saying she’d love to see something like this come to fruition if not here, somewhere in Minneapolis.

The council did vote late last year to move the Third Precinct from its original location to a new site just a few blocks north. 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=videoseries

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Charges: Men allegedly ‘jackpotted’ Lakeville ATM

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Five days after the incident, Minnesota State Patrol was able to locate and arrest the men at a Shakopee hotel.

LAKEVILLE, Minn. — The ATM at Lakeview Bank in Lakeville is currently out of service after police say it was ‘jackpotted’ on Oct 6. 

‘Jackpotting’ is a scheme where someone is able to hack the ATM through various techniques, and then dispense cash until the ATM is empty. In this case, police say the suspects stole $14,400.

According to Dakota County court documents, two Florida men, Robert R. Rosales Rivero and Geniver Antonio Pinuela Testa were charged last week in connection with the theft. They face up to 10 years in prison if convicted.



Five days after the incident, Minnesota State Patrol was able to locate and arrest the men at a Shakopee hotel. According to court documents, when officers arrested them, they found a small handheld device that had a screen and pushbutton features, matching the one caught on surveillance video during the incident. Officers also found clothing that allegedly matched what the suspects were wearing during the incident, and seven thousand dollars in cash in their hotel room.

According to court documents, surveillance video showed three male suspects at the ATM at various points during the day on Oct 6. All three rode up to the ATM on electric scooters. Police found an electric scooter in the suspects vehicle when they arrested them.  

In an alert sent out this summer, the Secret Service said they have seen an increase in these jackpotting attempts in several states this year. The suspects next court appearance is Oct 30. 



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MPD: Man dies after a party escalated to gunfire

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Officers provided medical aid but the man died at the scene.

MINNEAPOLIS — One man is dead after a party escalated to gunfire early Saturday morning, according to Minneapolis police. 

Minneapolis officers responded to a ShotSpotter activation on the 1700 block of 26 Ave N around 6 a.m. Upon arrival, they found a man with life-threatening injuries. 

Officers provided medical aid until EMS arrived, but the man died at the scene, according to a Minneapolis police press release. After investigating, officers believe that a fight broke out at a nearby party and spilled out into the street, escalating to gunfire. 

Minneapolis police said upon arrival, they arrested a man for disorderly conduct as he was still fighting and refusing to leave. It is unclear if this man was involved in the shooting. 

“Today, tragically, another family has been ripped apart by gun violence,” Chief O’Hara said. “Our investigators are committed to solving this crime and giving a voice to those who can no longer speak for themselves.”

Minneapolis police and investigators are looking into the shooting to determine more. If you have any information, call CrimeStoppers at 1-800-222-TIPS (8477) or contact them online at this link

This story is developing and updates will be published as more information is available. 



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Absentee ballots well guarded in Minnesota

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Minnesotan are using absentee ballots far more they did in 2016, the most recent non-COVID presidential election year.

MINNEAPOLIS — Hundreds of thousands of voters have already decided to vote absentee this year, but those ballots won’t be opened until Election Day. That’s one of the reasons elections officials are working to assure us those ballots will be protected until then.

“We always have, but we’ve increased those security measures throughout,” Blaine City Clerk Cathy Sorensen told KARE.

“Here at City Hall the ballots are stored in a room that only election officials have the key to. We have re-keyed that lock to make sure it’s not a master key that anyone can get in there.”

During the pandemic, people got used to the idea of throwing their ballot in the mail or handing it to somebody at a curbside drop-off site. This new way of doing things caught on with a large segment of voters.

As of Oct. 17, more than 337,000 absentee ballots have already been accepted statewide. That many more have been sent to voters but haven’t been returned and accepted yet.

“During the COVID election in 2020 people got used to it, they got a taste for it and they trust it,” Minnesota Secretary of State Steve Simon told KARE.

“So, that accounts for the surge and the increase.” 

And yet, not everyone is convinced the mail-in system is foolproof. In the KARE 11 MPR News Star Tribune Minnesota Poll taken in late September, only half of respondents said they think those absentee ballots are protected from fraud. 

About 38% said they believe mail-in ballots are vulnerable to fraud and 12 % said they weren’t sure about it.

That’s why we’re seeing efforts to by elections managers to show how the system works ahead of Nov. 5.

“With absentee ballots, there’s a couple of steps that are involved,” Simon said. “You have to see if the person did it right. Did they sign it? Did they have a witness sign it? Did they do it right? Then, and only then, can you count them.”

The job of reviewing incoming absentee ballots is done across the state by bipartisan absentee ballot boards. We saw one such board – Mark Olson and Terry Wold – on Thursday afternoon going through ballot envelopes and paperwork at Blaine City Hall.

They were checking to see if the outer ballot envelopes matched with the voter’s application for the absentee ballot.

“The judges are looking at the signature envelope, which is just like signing the roster on Election Day, because when they’re voting early it is Election Day to them,” Sorensen said. 

The ID information used by the voter on the signature envelope – the driver’s license number or last four digits of the Social Security number – must match the information on the application form. Same goes for the voter’s signature. The one on the envelope must match the one on the application.

The bipartisan ballot board is dealing with paperwork and ballots that are still inside an envelope that’s inside yet another envelope, so they can’t see how the person voted as they’re deciding whether to accept it.

The absentee ballot will be rejected if those key factors don’t match. They can also be rejected if there’s no witness signature, or if the witness isn’t a registered Minnesota voter. In those situations, the elections offices contact the absentee voter to offer them a chance at a do-over. 

If the ballot is accepted, the unique bar code on the signature envelope is scanned into the State Voter Registration System to create a record that the person voted absentee. It enables absentee voters to track the status of their ballots on the Secretary of State’s online ballot tracking site.  

It also ensures that someone can’t vote again in person on Election Day and that a person can’t cast multiple absentee ballots. Voters may receive multiple absentee ballot applications from multiple sources, but ultimately, they’re only allowed to cast one ballot tied to their unique voter information.

As the election nears the ballots are removed from their signature envelopes but won’t be counted until Election Day.

“After our ballots are sent to Anoka County, they’re opened up, and the signature envelope is put aside.  Inside is a ballot envelope – their actual ballot is inside an orange-colored envelope – and that’s put aside. So, now we know this particular voter voted, but we don’t know how they voted.”

In the past, the influx of those absentee totals has created speculation that “new” ballots were being added after the counting had ended. That’s not the case. 

“If there are late arriving batches of absentee ballots those are going to take longer. That’s just sort of common sense,” Simon said. “And that means they might be added later.”

In the meantime, those ballots will be secured. In Blaine you need a badge key card just to get to the floor where the election equipment is kept.

“Even getting into the actual election cage there’s an old school padlock that only election officials have,” Sorensen said. 

“Again, it’s just one more layer to make sure we have that chain of custody and that confidence no one was able to access without one of us.”



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