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A decade after his death, St. Cloud exchange student still fostering connections

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ST. CLOUD – As the sound of music from a festival at Lake George filtered in through the open windows of City Hall, a group of about two dozen people gathered Sunday afternoon for a more somber reason.

It was the 10-year anniversary of the day that upended all of their lives — when German exchange student Alexander Voigt died in a fiery plane crash five days before he was to return home. The untimely death of an adventurous 16-year-old devastated those who knew him. But it has also created lasting connections that span generations and continents.

“We’ve had an enlarged family ever since, and there are those we consider friends even though we don’t see each other very much,” Voigt’s father, Yorck Jetter, said Sunday, a day after arriving from Munich with wife Jutta Voigt and daughter Kira Voigt.

Alex “Sascha” Voigt was visiting St. Cloud during the 2013-2014 school year as an international exchange student with Youth For Understanding. He was staying with St. Cloud Mayor Dave Kleis, an avid traveler who has visited more than 130 countries and had previously played host to five other exchange students.

On June 20, 2014, Voigt was savoring his final days in Minnesota. He had just returned to St. Cloud from a trip to Duluth, where he conquered the quintessential North Shore to-do list (Grandma’s Saloon & Grill in Canal Park, Gooseberry Falls, Betty’s Pies) and then said goodbye to friends at a going-away party.

That evening, he went up in the air in a small plane with commercial pilot Scott Olson to get some aerial photos. But about 25 minutes after takeoff, the plane crashed into a house in neighboring Sauk Rapids, taking Olson’s life, too. It was later determined the plane likely lost pitch control when its canopy opened during flight.

“It’s unbelievable that it’s already been 10 years,” Jetter said Sunday. It’s the fourth time in the past decade the family has come to central Minnesota, and this time they wanted to reconnect with those who knew Voigt during his final year.

“It’s very symbolic. Ten years just feels different,” Jetter said.

Also in the room Sunday were Ken and Sharron Ring of Houston, Minn., who hosted Jetter as a foreign exchange student in 1979 and have kept in touch ever since.

“He is family,” said Ken Ring, now 75.

Alex Voigt’s family visited the Rings’ farm when he was about 8 or 9, where he drove a tractor, went boating and begged to search for hidden Easter eggs even though it wasn’t Eastertime, Sharron Ring said with a laugh.

Most of those gathered Sunday knew Voigt only as a high school student. He attended Technical High School, where he was known as a “positive goofball” who was adventurous and kind, said Joe Froelich, who met Voigt through sports at Tech.

“He was someone everyone gravitated towards,” said Jess Ambrosch, another former classmate who is now engaged to Froelich.

The couple, who knew of each other in high school but weren’t friends, started dating after Voigt introduced them.

“He’s kind of responsible for us happening,” said Ambrosch, noting Voigt’s memory will carry into a new generation with their 10-month-old daughter Hazel, whose middle name, Alexandra, pays homage to Voigt.

“He may be gone physically but he’s always with us, his influence,” Froelich said. “We only knew him for a year. It’s crazy how you can build those connections with people so fast. He was one of those people. You don’t meet a lot of those people in your life.”

Others shared similar sentiments.

“Alex brought us together as friends,” Jake Oehrlein said about the group of former classmates who gathered Sunday. “I think, otherwise, we might not all have been in the same friend group. But we have a lifelong connection because of him.”

Rachel Evavold, who went to prom with Voigt, said whenever she pictures Voigt, he is laughing and smiling. “He was always joking and so fun to be around — but also somebody you could count on for anything,” she said.

Voigt’s family hadn’t seen him for a year when he died. After the crash, they came to St. Cloud to collect his remains and, on the same day he was supposed to return home, held a small memorial at St. Cloud’s convention center.

The following year, the family returned to dedicate a bench along the Mississippi River. And on the fifth anniversary of his death, Voigt’s family came to “retrace his steps” during the last month of his life by exploring the North Shore — and even sitting in the same booth at Grandma’s. At the time, Jutta Voigt said they were learning a lot about the “Alex they never got to meet.”

Former classmates, including Froelich and Ambrosch, have also visited Voigt’s family in Munich. And Kleis visits them in Germany at least twice a year.

Seeing Voigt’s former classmates — now as young adults with careers, and some with marriages and children — was bittersweet.

“It’s a turning point in the life of his friends,” Jetter said.

But even though Voigt didn’t get the chance to blossom into a 20-something, he left an enduring mark on those who knew him.

“His short time on this earth made more impact on me than many individuals I’ve known my entire life,” Kleis said. “His joy for life and new experiences was contagious.”



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St. Cloud council moves forward with $17 million in MAC upgrades focused on hockey

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Bissett, who played youth and high school hockey at the MAC, oversaw the addition of Torrey Arena in 1997 and was part of the city planning team that first began looking at further MAC expansion 13 years ago.

“I’ve seen all of the things we’ve done and I’ve got a lot of plans, some still stuck to my office wall, of things we didn’t do,” said Bissett, who plans to retire at the end of next year. “I’d like for this one to be done when I leave. At least that would keep the MAC maintainable for the size of our community.”



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Two men die in recent motorcycle accidents

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Two local men died last week as a result of crashes while riding their motorcycles, the State Patrol said.

Ross Anthony Stensrud, 61, of Rochester was killed Thursday evening when his motorcycle went off the highway south of St. Charles, Minn. According to the State Patrol, Stensrud was northbound on Hwy. 74 near Park Road when the accident happened shortly after 6 p.m.

The road was dry but alcohol was said to have been involved. Stensrud was not wearing a helmet.

Kaeden Devon Price, 19, of Minneapolis, died Tuesday of multiple blunt force injuries after crashing into a pickup truck on Interstate 35W on the afternoon of Sept. 24. The State Patrol said Price, who was wearing a helmet, was speeding on his motorcycle when he sideswiped one vehicle and rear-ended the pickup.

The accident happened near E. 36th Street in Minneapolis. No one else was hurt in the crash.



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Minneapolis boosting synagogue patrols through Jewish Holy Days amid hateful rhetoric

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Minneapolis police are boosting patrols around synagogues and Jewish community centers during the ongoing High Holy Days, amid a global rise in anti-Semitic threats and violence.

“I am concerned with all the hateful rhetoric that is online,” Police Chief Brian O’Hara said Saturday at a City Hall news conference. “I am concerned that there could be a lone actor out there that could see something online and be inspired to commit an act of violence in our community.”

Already police have arrested a man on suspicion of making terroristic threats for reportedly carrying a gun outside Temple Israel in Minneapolis last week — and authorities say the 21-year-old had previously called in threats to shoot up the synagogue using a voice-masking app.

The man has not yet been charged for the incident which occurred during Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year that began at sundown Thursday. The holiest day of the Jewish calendar, Yom Kippur, starts Friday and ends Saturday.

O’Hara said that a gun has not been recovered and that police didn’t have evidence “to suggest that this incident was anti-Semitic in nature or motivated by hateful bias.” He said there were no ongoing direct threats to which the increased patrols are responding.

However, he said, “the police department has been seeing an enhanced level of threats towards our Jewish community over the last year,” and is especially mindful of the impending anniversary Monday of the Oct. 7, 2023 attack on Israel by Hamas terrorists that killed nearly 1,200 people.

Mayor Jacob Frey, who is Jewish, said he was at Temple Israel with his wife during Rosh Hashanah.

“We all have an obligation here not just to act with peace, but to encourage peace from our neighbors, regardless of what happens around the world,” he said.



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