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Suicide attempt ended standoff that closed I-35 in Faribault; 44 pounds of meth found

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The standoff that shuttered Interstate 35 and prompted shelter-in-place orders for hours in Faribault on Sunday ended when an armed man tucked his pistol under his chin and pulled the trigger.

But, according to new federal charges filed this week, Donald Ray Sanderson’s head slipped back as he squeezed the trigger and the round fired into the air directly in front of his face. A SWAT team deployed gas and a police K9 brought the 41-year-old Rochester man to the ground as he ran toward a residential neighborhood.

The dramatic conclusion to a monthlong drug investigation that included a cross-country trip in a rental car and a high-speed, drug-fueled police chase yielded federal drug and gun charges against Sanderson this week. Charges were also filed against his 29-year-old passenger, Lindsay Wade Stolpa — who bailed out of the vehicle shortly after a spike strip caused a tire to fly off.

The Rice County Sheriff’s Office said Wednesday that law enforcement, searching the rental car Sanderson drove, found the vehicle “littered with hypodermic needles” and recovered 44 pounds of methamphetamine, nearly 300 pills — most containing fentanyl — and equipment for packaging drugs. Both Sanderson and Stolpa, who told police Sanderson promised to pay her to accompany him on a drive to California and back, made their first court appearances in Minneapolis on federal drug distribution charges on Wednesday.

Sanderson is also being charged with one count of being a felon in possession of a firearm and has a lengthy criminal history that includes driving while intoxicated, domestic battery, felony threats of violence and introducing contraband into jail, among other convictions.

According to a federal criminal complaint:

Agents began investigating Sanderson in late June after fielding a tip from an informant claiming that Sanderson was possessing a large quantity of powder fentanyl. They learned that a woman called police in February that Sanderson, her boyfriend, was robbed at gunpoint and had a bag of cash stolen. He was also allegedly assaulted and robbed of $5,000, methamphetamine and fentanyl pills in Mankato in January.

Law enforcement started surveilling Sanderson’s cellphone earlier this month and also discovered that he rented a Nissan Altima from an Enterprise Rent-A-Car in Rochester and due to return it on July 21. Surveillance video from a Kwik Trip gas station showed Sanderson and Stolpa arrive and leave together, and agents watched Sanderson’s location as he drove to Utah, Los Angeles, Las Vegas and back toward Minnesota.

Agents tailed the two in Des Moines on July 21 and into Minnesota, and a Minnesota State Trooper activated its lights to stop the car near Clarks Grove. The car first pulled over to the side of the roadway but the vehicle fled as the trooper approached on foot.

The vehicle struck a spike strip deployed by law enforcement in Hope, Minn., yet continued driving even as the rubber of one tire flew off and left behind only a rim. Stolpa bailed at that point, and was arrested. She told agents that Sanderson promised to pay her to go on the trip west and noted that he had a firearm in the vehicle. She also said that she loaded up a hypodermic needle with methamphetamine that Sanderson injected himself with as they began fleeing from law enforcement.

Sanderson finally stopped and left the vehicle south of Faribault after trying to drive on the roadway’s shoulder to get around backed up vehicles in a construction zone. He waved his firearm and yelled at agents to shoot him, before engaging in a standoff on Interstate 35 for “several hours.” He also fired one round at the pavement of the interstate and later shot at a drone flying overhead.

Agents arrested Sanderson around 7 p.m., after he lost his pistol as it flew out of his hand during the failed attempt to shoot himself. He was later treated at a hospital for the methamphetamine use and K9 bite.

On Wednesday, U.S. Magistrate Judge David Schultz ordered Sanderson temporarily detained pending a July 29 detention and preliminary hearing. Schultz ordered Stolpa to be released into an inpatient treatment facility, but she will remain in federal custody until a facility accepts her.



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Minneapolis police sergeant accused of stalking and harassing co-worker

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Sgt. Gordon Blackey, once a security guard to Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey, allegedly admitted to tracking the woman’s movements in her vehicle, according to a criminal complaint.



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Inmate’s death at Moose Lake prison under investigation

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Minnesota corrections officials are investigating after an inmate was found dead at the state prison in Moose Lake.

The 37-year-old’s cellmate found the man unresponsive in their room about 10:40 a.m. Tuesday, according to a news release Wednesday from the Corrections Department. Staffers immediately started life-saving efforts, but those efforts failed.

The department’s Office of Special Investigations is looking into the death, with help from the Midwest Medical Examiner’s Office. The inmate’s identity was being withheld until notification of family.



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Minnesotans join Smith, AOC in unveiling affordable housing bill

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Joined by Minnesota affordable housing groups, Democrats Sen. Tina Smith and New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez unveiled a bill Wednesday that they say would create more affordable housing across the country.

The “Homes Act” would establish a housing development authority within the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development that would build and maintain a stock of permanent affordable housing. Smith said housing supply is far behind demand.

“Our proposal would serve renters, and homebuyers alike, providing millions of Americans in rural and urban communities with more options for a quality, affordable place to call home—with the sense of stability, security, comfort and pride that should come with it,” Smith said in a statement.

Her bill would authorize $30 billion in federal spending a year, with 5% of that set aside for tribal communities and at least 10% for rural communities, along with a revolving loan fund. Noah Hobbs, the strategy and policy director of One Roof Community Housing in Duluth, said that rural requirement will especially help in greater Minnesota.

“Oftentimes when bills get made either in St. Paul or D.C., they leave out greater Minnesota or greater America,” he said. “This rural set aside is really huge in helping us do more work than what we’re already doing. So we’re doing about, on average, 20 homes a year, either acquisition rehab or new construction. And so we’re hoping that this will help accelerate that.”

He said he thinks the bill will help not only in Duluth but also in places like Floodwood, Grand Marais, Grand Rapids and smaller municipalities between Duluth and larger cities.

Research from New York University, University of California at Berkley and the Climate and Community Institute estimates that the bill could build and preserve 1.25 million housing units, which would include 876,000 units for low income households, according to a joint memo from Smith and Ocasio-Cortez’ offices on the bill.

The bill would also help local communities address housing needs by helping to finance real estate acquisition or conveying property to public housing authorities, nonprofits, local governments, community land trusts and tenant or resident owned cooperatives, the memo continues.



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