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Friends remember Liara Tsai fondly after her murder

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Authorities say Minneapolis transgender DJ was murdered by an acquaintance Saturday.

MINNEAPOLIS — News of Liara Tsai’s sudden, violent death sparked waves of shock and grief among those who knew the music producer and club DJ.

Tsai, a 35-year-old transgender woman, had already gained a following in the Twin Cities before moving here from Iowa City six weeks ago. She saw it as a chance to take her musical career to a higher level and live in a city with a larger trans community.

“I was so excited and so happy to see her move up to the Twin Cities. It was something she had been wanting to do for years, and her music was her life, her music was her soul,” Olivia Anderson, a longtime friend of Tsai’s in Iowa.

“If you met Liara, it’s an experience you will remember and hold with you for the rest of your life,” Anderson said. “She had a huge impact on my life and who I am.”

Anderson shared an array of photographs of the smiling, red-haired woman, who was also a combat veteran, spoken word artist, and crisis counselor.

A 32-year-old Iowa woman and former acquaintance of Tsai’s has been charged with murdering her in her apartment in the Elliot Park area of South Minneapolis. 

RELATED: Deputies respond to crash, find dead body wrapped in tarp

The homicide first came to light when the suspect, Margot Lewis, crashed Tsai’s car into a guardrail on I-90 Saturday morning. That led to the discovery of Tsai’s body in the back seat.

The victim’s friends Wednesday wanted to keep the focus on the woman they knew before her life abruptly ended.

“We had a beautiful relationship, and she’s someone I loved very deeply,” Mega Solga told KARE.

“She was the most fearless person I’ve ever met. She was the truest person I ever met. She knew exactly who she was, especially as a trans woman. She had no fear showing the world who she was.”

April Lee knew Tsai for years in Iowa, and happened to be in Minneapolis with friends Wednesday, sharing memories of their lost loved one.

“She had an incredibly powerful energy that can’t be communicated, that everyone who came into contact with her could feel,” Lee said.

“She was a very spiritual person with a lot of spiritual energy. No one’s ever seen anyone quite like her before. It may sound cliched, but it’s true.”

Dana Kazuko is also a Minneapolis DJ who was inspired by and helped by Liara Tsai.

“Liara was just this incredible artist who would come to my shows and listen to my mixes and give me feedback,” Kazuko said.

“There was no jealousy. No ‘This is yours and this is mine’ kind of thing. She was always very uplifting.”

She’d been scheduled to join Liara for a show Sunday night, but that never happened.

“Liara was also just profoundly curious about everybody else. She was herself. She had her beliefs, but she wanted to know what yours were. And then she’d engage and talk about it,” Kazuko said.

“Just the way she presented herself was just without a mask, without trying to be who you wanted her to be. She was always going to be herself.”

Liara had just been booked for a big show in Brooklyn, New York, which would’ve been her biggest gig ever.

“She was so excited about it. She was so excited about it,” Anderson said. “She’d been working so hard at her music for so long, and she was finally starting to get the traction she’d been searching for and the community she’d be search for, for so long.”

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Naz Reid’s new mission is to help save lives

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KARE11 followed the Timberwolves star to see how he’s partnering with NMDP to help those impacted by blood cancers in many ways.

MINNEAPOLIS — At a time of great political division, Minnesotans have united around one man, known by two simple words: Naz Reid.

The Timberwolves star has been popular among fans for years, but when he won the NBA’s Sixth Man of the Year this spring and helped propel the team to a deep palyoff run, fans went from clamoring for free ‘Naz Reid’ beach towel to paying $20 for ‘Naz Reid’ tattoos. 

Kai Glinsek is a diehard Timberwolves fan who helped kick off the ‘Naz Reid’ frenzy last season when he put up a ‘Honk if you love Naz Reid’ sign outside the Parkway Pizza location he manages in Northeast Minneapolis. He said he was inspired to put up the sign because of the hope Naz seems to give so many.

“He keeps being the unsung hero, and he’s also so constant,” said Kai, in between several honks as cars passed. “It’s hope.”

“It’s bigger than me.”

Reid sat down with KARE11 to talk about the support he has received and why he is now dedicated to paying it forward.

“I remember my first game, my rookie year, when we played the Nets and everybody was just rooting for me,” Reid said. “This past year it’s only gotten crazier and bigger and more exciting. Getting the love and support from the city is huge and being able to give back is more important. It’s bigger than me.”

The interview came just before the 2024-25 season tipped off, as Reid joined forces with NMDP, formerly known as Be The Match, on World Marrow Donor Day, to bring hope to Blood Cancer Patients in need of a stem cell transplant.

“Obviously everyone knows me, the basketball player, but they don’t know this side of me,” Reid said. “I want people to understand that I’m here to help. I know what it feels like to have someone who is in need.”

For Naz, that someone is Rudy Roundtree, his long-time mentor who died of leukemia in 2022 after being unable to find a match for a stem cell transplant of his own.

Reid: “I know what it feels like to be in a situation where you can give, but you can only give so much, so you kind of need a helping hand.”

Erdahl: “Tell me about Rudy.”

Reid: “He’s like a father figure. He’s been with me since I can remember. Tough times, fun times, happy times, happy moments, he was just a joy and exciting to be around. You just had to be there to understand.” 

Rudy’s widow, Sheila Roundtree certainly understands. 

“It’s emotional for me because I saw the beginning to now,” Sheila said.

Though she is proud every time Naz takes the floor, watching him take the stage at the NMDP event brought her pride to another level.

“To see him in this spotlight means so much to me,” she said. “I also am a (cancer) survivor, so we wanted to pick a cause that was true to our heart and this is it.” 

And it isn’t the half of it. Just like his role on the court, Naz is happy to share the spotlight. He has spent time highlighting top NMDP donors, taking photos during fundraising drives and meeting families impacted by blood cancer.

Help for Cayden

Earlier this year, Reid connected with Cayden Addison who, at 8 years old, has spent more time in the hospital battling a rare form of leukemia, than many Americans will spend in their lifetime.

“We’ve gone through chemotherapy already, we’ve tried different forms of treatment and unfortunately they weren’t successful,” said Courtney Addison, Cayden’s mom. “It’s very difficult because that’s my baby, and it’s really important that we find a match for him.”

That’s where Naz comes in, his visit with Cayden wasn’t just about lifting his spirits. He is also sharing his story in hopes of finding him a match, and this fall he also hosted an NMDP event at the University of Minnesota, with the hope of encouraging a key-demographic of potential stem cell donors to join the NMDP registry.

Bringing Hope Full Circle

After hearing of the U of M event, Kai Glinsek was inspired to sweeten the pie for those prospective donors, by providing Parkway Pizza to all who attended.

“I wanted to jump all over this because I lost my mom about five months ago to pancreatic cancer, and then during that time while she was battling I also had testicular cancer,” Kai said. “So when I found out that Naz was doing something that could help a lot of people that struggle with cancer, I had to jump at it.” 

“Everybody at the frat just loves Naz Reid,” said Axel Arnold, who donated stem cells last year, and helped host a special donor registry event at Sigma Alpha Epsilon a few days after Reid’s visit.

Erdahl: “What does it mean to you to now be that person for so many others, to raise awareness and bring people along on this journey?”

Reid: “It’s huge, it means a lot to me. I want people to be supported the way I’m supported. I want people to be known the way I’m known, so whatever I can do in any way, shape or form I’m here to do it.”

How to Help

If you’d like to join the NMDP donor registry or donate to help with research, click here.



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Minneapolis Parks Board considers rink closures

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The park could change the number or rinks and which ones close before their final budget approval in December

MINNEAPOLIS — The Minneapolis Park and Recreation Board is considering closing multiple ice rinks because of climate impacts and finances.

In a statement, the board said they need to address a $1.5 million funding gap. To fix it they plan on reducing the number of ice rinks from 22 to 17 locations over two years, reducing recreation center hours during non-peak times by one hour per weekday, four additional federal holidays, and Sundays at five locations.

The board recommended shutting down rinks at Webber, Powderhorn, and Windom Parks at the end of the 2024/2025 season and Lyndale Farmstead in 2025/2026, with a possible fifth location.

The board’s Communications and Marketing Manager Robin Smothers said Powderhorn and Webber were chosen because they are built on water bodies, which makes it more challenging to open and maintain than rinks built on land. She said the land rinks were selected based on proximity to other rinks and construction challenges.

For people who go to Windom Park, the news was hard to hear.

“My kids learned to skate here,” said Molly Phillips. “The parks department says they’re keeping Logan Park, but my kids can’t walk to Logan Park. So, I think it will lead to a lot more kids sitting at home instead of engaging with their community.”

Phillips said the ice rink is more than just a sheet of ice, it’s a place where the community can come together.

“My family has a tradition we call Sunday soup and skate where we make a big pot of soup, we bring it to the rink, and we ladle it out and we meet our neighbors,” Phillips said.

She said her family goes to the rink almost every day in the winter, except for last year, when Minnesota experienced an unusually warm winter.

The Windom ice rink is also a favorite spot of Johnny Sundahl and his son Odin. Odin skated at the rink last year, while his mom and dad just tried to keep up.

“I think it’s a bummer if it’s going to go away just because when I said people get together here in the wintertime that’s one of the biggest activities that people do. You’ll see families skating around, you’ll see the hockey players, figure skaters practicing and afterwards everyone will gather around the fire and make s’mores,” Johnny said.

Odin said skating outdoors is a feeling like no other.

“It just gives you a sense of free. It doesn’t matter what you’re doing, you just feel happy, like you’re defying gravity. It’s awesome,” Odin said.

They’re both hopefully the city decides to keep their rink open.

“It would keep a lot of memories; it would mean more people keeping a bond with each other,” Odin said.

Johnny said the warming house is a place where the community can get together.

Phillips agreed it’s a special place.

“What’s really cool about this rink to is the warming house has skates for anybody to use,” she said.
“So, even if you don’t have the budget to outfit your family in ice skates you can access this rink.”

University of Minnesota Tourism Director Xinyi Cin said more abnormal winters can change people’s behaviors.

“It could lead to actually crowding in the other sites that do still remain open. It might also discourage people so much that they just decide to do a completely different activity. To some extent we are in a wait and see that kind of observing pattern,” she said.

She said climate change isn’t going anywhere and said fewer outdoor rinks could potentially lead to other issues.

Cin said a 2024 spring survey showed that 91% of businesses that responded said the abnormal winter negatively impacted their business. Cin said it will be crucial for everyone to help these businesses adapt and stay resilient.

“I would also be curious to hear for example what do businesses in our neighboring states… that also have a lot of snow. How are they adapting? Can we learn from each other?”

The final list of rink closures isn’t final yet. The final budget won’t be approved until December 10, so the number of rinks and which locations can change.



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84-year-old arrested 50 years after Minneapolis woman murdered

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Criminal charges have been filed in a cold-case murder dating back to 1974.

DUNN COUNTY, Wis. — More than 50 years after a Minneapolis woman was stabbed to death, an arrest has been made in the cold case, authorities in western Wisconsin confirmed, adding he was identified as a suspect with the help of genetic genealogy. 

A first-degree murder charge was filed Thursday against Jon Keith Miller of Owatonna, court records filed in Dunn County show. He is 84 today, but was 33 on Feb. 15, 1974. 

That’s the day 25-year-old Mary Schlais was discovered dead in the town of Spring Brook in Dunn County, Wisconsin. Authorities say she left her Minneapolis home and was hitchhiking to an art show in Chicago. Just a few hours later, someone called authorities to report seeing a man throw her body out of a car before driving away.


According to the Dunn County Sheriff’s Office, her autopsy showed she had “more than a dozen stab wounds and defensive cuts to hands, indicating she had put up a big struggle with her killer.” 

Dunn County Sheriff Kevin Bygd confirmed to KARE 11 Miller has been arrested in this case. 

In a statement released Thursday night, he said many tips, leads, and interviews were conducted over the past five decades, with several pieces of evidence being examined and reexamined. 

In recent years, Bygd said his department worked with Ramapo College in New Jersey and its team of genetic genealogists. He said through investigative genealogy a viable suspect was identified. 



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