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Minneapolis police investigating incident at St. Anne’s Place
Minneapolis Police Chief Brian O’Hara said they are investigating.
MINNEAPOLIS — People Serving People cleared out St. Anne’s Shelter after an alleged assault.
PSP CEO Hoang Murphy said they had to relocate 54 women and children, after the alleged assault happened last Thursday around 8 p.m.
St. Anne’s Place is a homeless shelter for women and non-gender binary led families in North Minneapolis.
Murphy said two residents and one staff member were hurt by people who live in the area.
“Last Thursday, there was an altercation that led to two guests being physically harmed: one was beat up, and another person was hit over the head with a pistol, and then another staff member was pretty severely kicked in the leg while holding an infant,” he said.
Murphy said the people who harmed residents and staff then attempted to break in. Surveillance video shows people damaging two doors with a baseball bat.
“There was a misunderstanding over a public street parking involving one of our homeless mother’s van’s. My staff tried to de-escalate with the family and with the folks that were involved. Then some reacted with extreme violence,” Murphy said.
He said the assailants also shot at a van that belonged to one of the guests.
Murphy is frustrated no arrests have been made.
“The challenge that I have with this is on Thursday night when everything should have been addressed on Thursday, someone broke in the front door with a baseball bat and used a pistol to harm my guests and then fire on a vehicle, those are all crimes,” he said.
Minneapolis Police Chief Brian O’Hara said these things take time.
“I know when people are experiencing a problem whatever is, whether it’s crime, or some other issue, some other disturbance, or a breach of the peace… they want the police to respond, and I think sometimes people may have an expectation that the police can immediately make an arrest but sometimes it may be unlawful for police to do that,” he said.
O’Hara said officers were getting conflicting information from both sides and none of the victims came forward that night.
“This is a normal thing when police come, and no one is coming forward as a victim, and no one is saying they were physically injured and we have this conflicting information back and forth it is normal thing for police to take a report and conduct an investigation after the fact,” O’Hara said. “On Monday we did have two victims come forward.”
He acknowledges it can be disappointing for people when they don’t see immediate results.
“I’m sorry for people who feel like they have not received adequate service but at times that’s the reality of what we’re facing. In order to conduct an arrest, we need a victim, we need to know for certain the information we have is correct and what we got to sort out conflicting information,” he said.
O’Hara said police have stepped up patrols in the area and placed a mobile camera near the shelter. Murphy said they hired private security to watch the property.
On Tuesday, PSP staff were bagging up the remaining belongings of the 16 families who lived there. Murphy said all of them have been relocated.
“They’re pretty shaken up. These are families that are homeless, they entered shelter because of lack of resources and support. This is supposed to be a quiet place for them to heal, to get services, to get back on their feet, and get housing,” he said. “We had two families flee out of fear. They left the shelter system. We’re hoping to make contact to at least get them their materials.”
He said St. Anne’s Place will be offline for awhile until the issue is resolved and people feel safe returning.
“The folks who did this literally live across the street and there’s not a sense of safety or calm,” Murphy said.
O’Hara said he anticipates arrests will be made.
Kare11
District 54A race officially headed for a recount
Democratic Representative Brad Rabke leads Republican challenger Aaron Paul by only 14 votes in Shakopee’s District 54A race.
SHAKOPEE, Minn. — A recount has officially been requested for the closest election in any Minnesota legislative district this cycle after the Scott County Canvassing Board certified the election results Wednesday afternoon. Democratic Representative Brad Rabke leads Republican challenger Aaron Paul by only 14 votes in Shakopee’s District 54A race.
This Scott County Canvassing Board meeting garnered a lot of attention not only because of how close the 54A race is, but because of 20 ballots in Shakopee precinct 10, that would directly impact the 54A race.
“We had 329 people check in to absentee vote, we received 309 ballots back,” said Scott County election official Julie Hanson.
Hanson says they will continue to audit and investigate the situation, but at the end of the day, the canvassing board’s job is to certify the ballots that they have received. Now that results have been certified by the county canvassing board, they will be sent to the Secretary of States Office to be certified there on Nov. 21.
“This is the system working the way it’s supposed to work,” said Minnesota Secretary of State Steve Simon. “The public and the political parties and the candidates can look and see and touch and feel and ask questions, and that’s exactly what we want.”
The state will cover the recount since the margin of victory is lower than .5%. That recount of 22,000 ballots will begin also on Nov. 21.
“There’s high degrees of transparency, and high degrees in terms of security in this process here,” said Hamline University Political Science Professor David Schultz.
Although Schultz feels recounts are important, he acknowledges they don’t have a history of actually changing the outcome.
With Democrats and Republicans tied at 67 seats a piece in the State House, if the recount were to flip the district 54A race in Republican Aaron Paul’s favor, it would change the entire balance of power in the State Legislature.
The House District 14B race is Sherburne County is also headed for a recount. Democratic incumbent Dan Wolgamott leads Republican Sue Ek by 191 votes. Due to an issue with results on election night, Sherburne County says they will cover the cost and hand recount the voters so there is complete transparency.
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Group overseeing MPLS consent decree to host community sessions
Two sessions will be held this week to allow residents to ask questions about a 4-year police and city reform plan released in September.
MINNEAPOLIS — In March last year, the City of Minneapolis and the Minnesota Department of Human Rights reached a court-enforceable agreement to reform city and police conduct after investigators found both entities engaged in practices violating the Minnesota Human Rights Act.
Effective Law Enforcement For All was selected to oversee the consent decree as an independent body in February this year, and in September released a nearly 90-page, 4-year plan on police cameras, trainings, how reports are taken and other policy changes.
ELEFA president David Douglass says the nonprofit organization will host two sessions this week to bring community up to speed on the plan. The first is set to begin at 6 p.m. Wednesday at Sabathani Community Center.
The second session will be held 6 p.m. Thursday at North Community High School.
“We also want to explain how we do what we do … and how to engage the Minneapolis community in this process because that was central to the agreement,” Douglass told KARE 11 ahead of the meeting. “Perhaps most important, our goal is to promote understanding so we want to hear back and have plenty of time for people to ask their questions.”
Douglass says ELEFA will issue a semiannual report in the coming weeks and will hold another community session in four months.
This all stems from George Floyd‘s murder, and a similar settlement is pending with the U.S. Department of Justice after its investigators found city and police conduct violated the constitution and federal law. Both parties agreed to resolve the findings through a court-enforceable consent decree with an independent monitor.
But former President Trump opposed federal consent decrees in his first term, calling them “a war on police,” and terminating one in Chicago. It’s unclear what will happen in his second term, but Minneapolis is still promising reform.
The Office of Community Safety sent the following statement in response to KARE 11 inquiry:
“While negotiations with the Department of Justice have continued without pause, tonight’s community engagement session hosted by ELEFA is their first opportunity to talk with the people of Minneapolis since their selection as the Independent Evaluator for the MDHR settlement agreement and the release of their Evaluation Plan. This engagement goes to highlight the work well underway to implement the Settlement Agreement with the State. City leadership has been and will remain committed to reforming policing in Minneapolis and building a more just, equitable approach to community safety – regardless of who sits in the White House.”
-Commissioner Todd Barnette, Office of Community Safety
The Minnesota Department of Human Rights shared a similar message:
“The state consent decree between the Minnesota Department of Human Rights and the City of Minneapolis and Minneapolis Police Department is here to stay regardless of what happens at the federal level.”
-Spokesperson, Minnesota Department of Human Rights
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Opponents, constituents react to tight House races
Community members say the tight results reflect changing opinions in their communities.
MINNESOTA, USA — Scott County certified the election results in a very close race in Shakopee, where incumbent democrat Brad Tabke beat Republican Aaron Paul by just 14 votes.
Paul has officially requested a recount in 54A, and now that process will begin.
That race is one of two Minnesota House races headed for recounts.
“It’s been up and down,” Paul said. “We’re preparing.”
The razor-thin margin falls within the threshold for an automatic recount under state law.
“I think people are just waiting to see what happens,” said Shakopee resident Collin Duff.
Duff says a lot of folks at Turtle’s Bar and Grill have been talking about it.
“I think everybody is tired of the way the world’s running, and we have to, we have to do it slowly,” said patron, Kathy Hoffman, who said these results show her community is looking for change
Meanwhile, in District 14B, DFL Rep. Dan Wolgamott now leads Republican Sue Ek by 191 votes after initial confusion on election night.
At one point, unofficial results showed Ek winning by four votes. Wolgamott later led by 28.
Sherburne County officials attributed the discrepancy to a memory card malfunction, but said no votes were lost or found. The county plans to conduct a hand recount at its own expense.
“There’s a huge effort to be sure that the votes counted were accurate, because it makes a big difference,” Ek said.
If current results hold, the Minnesota House would be evenly split between DFL and Republican members.
Buddy King, a District 14B resident, says the tight races reflect the state’s changing demographics,
“I’m not just talking racially, but just socially, economically, everything is growing,” King said. “And so I think what we’re seeing is the results of that.”
King’s wife, Keshia Anderson-King, hopes the DFL maintains its lead, citing concerns about education and support for LGBTQ and immigrant communities.
“Whether it be DFL or Republic, I just want it to be for the people,” she said.