Connect with us

Kare11

Hindsight vs Hope: Deadly crash highlights difficulty preventing repeat DWIs

Avatar

Published

on



After five previous DWI arrests, Steven Bailey completed everything required of him to get his license back. Four years later, he’s charged in a horrific crash.

ST. LOUIS PARK, Minn. — As we learn more about the man charged with the deadly crash at Park Tavern on Sunday night, many are asking how someone with a long history of DWI convictions was ever allowed to be behind the wheel in the first place.

“I think the opening, obvious question is why was he driving with that record?” said attorney Michael Bryant, managing partner of Bradshaw and Bryant. “With five DWI’s, how can you be on the road?”

According to Hennepin County Attorney Mary Moriarty, Steven Bailey, 56, had a blood-alcohol level of .325 when the crash occurred — more than four times the legal limit to drive in Minnesota.

He now faces two counts of criminal vehicular homicide and nine counts of criminal vehicular operation in the crash that killed two, including a tavern employee, and injured nine others.

How Bailey was able to regain his license is due, in part, to the timing of his previous DWIs. His first arrest and conviction took place in Wisconsin in 1985, when Bailey was 17 years old. His most recent DWI took place in Hennepin County in 2014.

In the decade since that 2014 arrest, and later conviction, Bailey appeared to complete everything the state, and courts, asked of him. 

“His license was revoked twice,” Bryant said. “And there was a long period from the last time that he had a DUI until the present – which doesn’t make this less of a horrible event –  but he went through the steps that he needed to go through in order to get that license restored.”

Bailey’s road back to driving began with an ignition interlock device installed on his car in Oct. 2014.

His driving record remained clean until Sept. 2019 when the ignition interlock – which is a device that requires a driver to blow alcohol-free before allowing the car to start – electronically registered a violation. With that violation, DVS again canceled Bailey’s driver’s license but he successfully appealed in court, claiming the interlock device in his vehicle was defective. 

According to sworn testimony, Bailey had been sober since June 2014, but when he blew into the device it at first registered a concentration of 0.181, then 0.038, then 0.0 just 15 minutes later. The judge agreed the device must have been faulty.

DPS confirms that Bailey’s ignition interlock program was in effect between 2014 and 2020. In 2023 he renewed his license and was listed as a valid driver in the state database at the time of Sunday’s crash. 

“Six years on Interlock is a long time and, you know, if you don’t have any violations and don’t have any, you know, issues during that, that time period, you’re not drinking while you’re driving,” Bryant said. “This is all based upon a system that’s set up with the hope that people can rehabilitate themselves and they can restore their rights to drive. With that (hope) comes the incentive to regain a license and insurance coverage so that society is protected in ways that you wouldn’t be if a person was driving without the license and definitely driving without insurance.”

It’s unclear what might have happened with Bailey after his interlock device was legally removed in 2020, but experts say the timing is familiar.

“In 2020, the end of 2019 and the beginning of 2020, we saw a sharp increase in injuries and deaths related to impaired driving,” said Lauren Johnson a community engagement manager for MADD of Minnesota, North Dakota and South Dakota. “It was a 33% increase.”

In response, Johnson said MADD advocated for a big shift in drunk driving prevention technology, which was later mandated in the bipartisan infrastructure bill in 2021.

According to the legislation, “advanced drunk and impaired driving prevention technology must be standard equipment in all new passenger motor vehicles.”

In December, the Department of Transportation began detailing rules for what that technology might entail.

“It’s a passive technology within the vehicle that will be monitoring things like eye movement,” Johnson said. “With Hyundai, it’s actually taking a little bit of a sample of the air quality and then detecting alcohol that way. Because it’s passive, it’s not something that needs to be done by the driver every time they get into the vehicle.”

While the technology has already raised some privacy and driver autonomy concerns, Johnson points to state data from 2017 that found one in seven Minnesotans have at least one DWI on their record and – of those – 42% have more than one.

“To me, that 40% just seems shocking,” she said. “But also, I think we can see from this story with Park Tavern that this is what can happen.” 

If you were impacted by the crash at Park Tavern, MADD has resources for victims and survivors. 



Read the original article

Leave your vote

Continue Reading

Kare11

Pumpkin display hopes to raise money for food shelf

Avatar

Published

on



Gary Peterson and his friends are collecting donations to help people in their community.

ST. LOUIS PARK, Minn. — A St. Louis Park pumpkin display is raising money for their local food shelf.

Gary Peterson started carving and painting three pumpkins over a decade ago. It’s now grown to over 100.

“I’ve heard people say they’ve come from Hutchinson,” he said.

Peterson along with two of his neighbors have spent the last 14 years growing their display, turning it into a neighborhood event.

“It’s been incredible, I just can’t believe how much this has expanded,” he said. “We did it just because we like to and then people were asking to give us money to cover the cost.”

The trio refused to take people’s money, but then one of them had an idea.

“My neighbor, Steve Leensvaart, just mentioned how about we just do it for the STEP program and the STEP program is our local food shelf in St. Louis Park,” he said.

So, they started to collect donations to help families in need. They’ve raised hundreds of dollars and donated hundreds of pounds of food over the last few years, carving for a cause.

“It is more gratifying every year,” Peterson said.

He estimated they have over 100 unique pumpkins in their yard. They’ve created the displays and come up with new family-friendly concepts for people to enjoy. Peterson said about 30 of their neighbors carved their own pumpkins to be put on display, and it’s been a big hit.

“It’s great. In the last couple of years, it’s turned into more of a neighborhood event,” said Sarah Durch.

“We love this Halloween display, we come every year to see it. We love that the whole community gets involved to craft and carve the pumpkins,” said Jami Gordon-Smith.

“The shading and the details are unbelievable,” said Elizabeth Hanson.

Hanson hopes to take her 2-year-old son trick or treating for the first time but is worried the cold temperatures might keep them indoors.

“We’re going trick or treating hopefully,” she said. “He’s going to be a firefighter, but we’re probably going to have sweatshirts maybe like two pairs of sweatpants underneath. We’re going to be bundled up.”

Gordon-Smith said her family will be out Halloween night no matter the weather.

“Halloween only comes once a year, so you really have to take advantage and enjoy the evening no matter what the weather brings,” she said. “Guess it’s not totally unheard of in Minnesota to have a cold Halloween, but we are going to try and modify and do a lot of layers underneath our costumes and then we might add some hats and maybe some warmer socks.”

Durch also isn’t surprised they’re in for another chilly night.

“Well, what would Halloween be without Minnesota cold? I feel like every time you plan a costume you have to plan for how you can make this work if it’s snowing,” she said.

Peterson said they will have a bonfire and some hot chocolate and cider on Halloween to keep trick-or-treaters warm while they look at their pumpkins.

Click here to learn where you can see the pumpkins and how you can donate.



Read the original article

Leave your vote

Continue Reading

Kare11

Search continues for Bemidji missing person

Avatar

Published

on



Jeremy Jourdain was 17 when he was last seen on Halloween 2016.

BEMIDJI, Minn. — The search for Jeremy Jourdain, who was last seen on Halloween in 2016, continues now eight years later. 

Jourdain was last seen at a family member’s house in Bemidji, according to the U.S. Department of the Interior Indian Affairs. He left the residence near the 500 block of Wood Avenue after midnight and while people followed him, no one was able to find him. 

Jourdain was 17 at the time.

Officials said he was wearing a blue and grey sweatshirt, and blue jeans when last seen. He is Native American and is described as 6 foot 5 and 175 pounds. 

If you have any information on his whereabouts, you can contact the Bemidji Police Department at (218) 333-9111. Tips can also be sent to 1-833-560-2065, or you can email ojs_mmu@bia.gov.



Read the original article

Leave your vote

Continue Reading

Kare11

Asian-American voter turnout projected to rise despite barriers

Avatar

Published

on



The organizations say many Asian Americans are planning to vote despite lack of candidate outreach.

ST PAUL, Minn. — Most people have been contacted in some way shape or form by a campaign in the last few weeks. And if the polls are right and the race for president is a dead heat, every vote will matter. 

That’s why this is a head scratcher: 

According to a September 2024 voter survey by Asian American Pacific Islander Data, 27% of Asian-American voters said they hadn’t been contacted by either political party trying to get their vote. Last spring, earlier in the voting season, it was even more – 42%.

Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders are the fastest growing racial or ethnic group nationwide. 

Their voter participation levels are growing too, with 60% of eligible Asian-American voters turning out in 2020. And AAPI Data reports as many as 90% of Asian Americans they surveyed said they plan to vote this cycle.

“Candidates are not reaching out to Asian Americans, which is a huge mistake,” said ThaoMee Xiong, executive and networking director of the Coalition of Asian American Leaders.

She says even though there are more than 200,000 eligible Asian voters in Minnesota, the Asian vote is under-appreciated.

RELATED: How to watch KARE 11’s live coverage on Election Night 2024

“Neither the Democratic or Republican parties have been reaching out in huge numbers,” Xiong said. “They’re sending general mailers to everyone but … they need it in their native language.”

That’s why CAAL is partnering with two more organizations to keep voter turnout high and reach anyone candidates or advocates missed.

Xor Xiong is from Asian American Organizing Project, which focuses on engaging metro-area teens and young adults.

“Many of our communities are still facing barriers to go to vote,” he said. “There’s been more times than I like to admit in terms of when I was having a conversation over the phones of voters being surprised that they can take time off to go and vote, or they can bring the kids to the polling locations, or they can even bring someone to translate for them.”

“In Ramsey County, because of the large Hmong American population there, the polls in Ramsey County are federally required to provide interpreters and translated materials,” ThaoMee added.

Their nonpartisan campaign, Get Out the Vote for Asian Minnesotans, aims to get people registered and well-informed.

“Throughout Covid, there was a lot of anti-hate around the AAPI community and we are still feeling the impact of that to this day,” said Amanda Xiong, a community organizer with a group known as CAPI USA. “Even if folks are afraid to go to the polls, due to that, we try our best to then educate them around absentee ballots, voting early.”

“And so yes, there is a huge increase in terms of voter turnout, but then why is it still 70% feel as though they don’t belong?”

In 2021, the FBI reported a 168% increase in anti-Asian hate crimes. 

In Brooklyn Park and Brooklyn Center, the groups knocked on at least 700 doors in one session alone while keeping safety top of mind.

“We make sure that there’s a car following all the door knockers,” ThaoMee said. “We put everyone on text chain … and we are putting a lot of precautionary measures in place for the day of voting.”

After the election, the CAAL plans to conduct surveys and send the results to county election officials. They’ve done this before and say it led to policy changes this year at the legislature including measures to ensure people have easier access to interpreters.



Read the original article

Leave your vote

Continue Reading

Copyright © 2024 Breaking MN

Log In

Forgot password?

Forgot password?

Enter your account data and we will send you a link to reset your password.

Your password reset link appears to be invalid or expired.

Log in

Privacy Policy

Add to Collection

No Collections

Here you'll find all collections you've created before.