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Red Bull Showrun brings motorsports fans to Minneapolis

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“America understands show,” former Formula One driver David Coulthard said.

MINNEAPOLIS — You’d expect Minneapolis to be busy this weekend. After all, the Vikings are at home for the first time this season.

While thousands will make their way to U.S. Bank Stadium on Sunday, thousands also showed up outside the stadium for a different kind of roar.

“Just from feeling the intensity, the noise, and I honestly called my father right away and told him I want to go check out a race,” Branden Fourre said.

Fourre is one of the thousands at the Red Bull Showrun, a display of multiple types of motorsports, including Formula 1.

“It is really loud,” Mei Huynh said. “I see it on TV all the time, but I didn’t think that it was going to be like that, like, ears splitting loud.”

Many fans we spoke with Saturday were at the Showrun to see a Formula One car in person, driven by former F1 driver David Coulthard. Coulthard now works as a presenter and commentator and drives the V10 engine RB7 F1 car.

With so much hype growing around Formula One, especially here in the United States, we had to ask – does Coulthard think another race could be added, and could it be in Minnesota?

“America understands show,” Coulthard said, laughing.

“I don’t see why not, the reaction has been very positive,” he added. “In Europe, we race pretty close to each other in terms of distance between the racetracks. So all of this goes to show that you put on the event, there’s enthusiasm for people to turn up and give up their weekend.”

Saturday’s display was fun for fans who’ve loved the sport for years – and those just getting started.

“America is well served in amazing sports,” Coulthard said. “There is room for Formula One, we’re growing in this country and we really, really appreciate it.”



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1 dead, 1 injured in crash near Tofte

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As of Wednesday afternoon, officials have not released any details about the woman’s condition.

TOFTE, Minn. — One person died and another was hospitalized Tuesday after a crash near the North Shore of Lake Superior.

The Cook County Sheriff’s Office released a statement saying deputies responded to a reported traffic incident around 8:30 p.m. in the Tofte area. When deputies arrived, they located two people in the vehicle apparently needing medical attention.

Officials said one individual, Douglas Junker, of Edina, was pronounced dead at the scene. The other victim in the vehicle, a woman also from Edina, was transferred to a local hospital for treatment.

The sheriff did not release any details about her condition as of Wednesday afternoon.



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Man sentenced to 20 years in 1984 cold case Minneapolis murder

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Matthew Brown admitted to following a woman from the bar to her apartment the morning of July 19, 1984, and then stabbing Robert Miller when he tried to step in.

MINNEAPOLIS — A former Minnesota state prison security counselor will himself serve a 20-year sentence behind bars after admitting his guilt in a murder that went unsolved for decades. 

Matthew Brown was in a Hennepin County Courtroom Monday, just over 40 years after the fatal stabbing of Robert Miller inside his south Minneapolis apartment. The prosecution and defense agreed to a 20-year sentence after Brown agreed to plead guilty, in part to spare his victim’s family the pain of having to sit through a trial. 

Brown’s attorney read an allocation for the defendant, admitting that early the morning of July 19, 1984 he followed a woman home from the bar and then broke into the apartment she went into. The woman ran into the bathroom, and when the 32-year-old Miller jumped in to intervene, Brown brutally stabbed him to death. 

Prosecutors said after the sentencing that 20 years “isn’t enough time,” but that the cold case had significant challenges – among them, many of the witnesses and investigators who contributed to the investigation are now dead. 

KARE 11’s Lou Raguse spoke with the victim’s brother, Jim Miller, following the sentencing. Miller recalled sharing a bedroom with “Bobby” when the two were younger, and expressed gratitude that Robert got a chance to hold his youngest child on the Fourth of July that year, just weeks before the murder. 

Jim Miller says while his brother’s violent death has haunted him for decades, he is doing his best to honor Robert by not holding on to hate, as “Bobby” would not have wanted that. Miller also noted that Brown – who eventually relocated to Moose Lake, where he worked at a prison for sexual offenders as a security counselor – rebuilt his life with a wife and children while living less than 30 minutes from Miller and his family. Miller added that he knows people who knew Brown and had no idea his brother’s killer was so close. 

Miller added that the family is happy the case ended with a guilty plea so they didn’t have to sit through a trial, and told Raguse that they are not upset with prosecutors for the deal that was struck. He also thanked the police for refusing to give up on the case. 

After growing cold over more than three decades, investigators got a breakthrough in the case in 2018 when advances in technology allowed the Minnesota BCA to develop a DNA profile built on blood recovered from the scene at 3209 Girard Ave. S. There were no hits in the nationwide system, but investigators soon consulted with a genealogist and determined that a Minnesota man named Matthew Russell Brown of Barnum was a potential suspect. They were able to collect a DNA sample from a plastic disposable cup Brown used in March of 2023, and the profile matched the blood collected at the murder scene. 

Brown, who had relocated to Illinois, was extradited to Minnesota and charged with murder, burglary and assault in Robert Miller’s death. 



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Snohomish couple dies while on vacation in Maui

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The husband and wife, who was also pregnant, were snorkeling in Maui when they were found unresponsive on Sept. 14.

SEATTLE — A couple from Washington died in Maui over the weekend after first responders found the husband and wife unresponsive in the water where they were snorkeling, according to the Maui County Fire Department. 

Family members identified the couple as 25-year-old Ilya Tsaruk and 26-year-old Sophia Tsaruk, according to a GoFundMe page. Sophia was pregnant and the couple also had an 18-month-old son, who was with other family members and not with them at the time of their deaths. 

The Tsaruks are from Snohomish, according to public records.

On Saturday, Maui County Fire said firefighters responded to reports of snorkelers in distress near the north side of Āhihi-Kīnaʻu Natural Area Reserve on Maui. They found Sophia unresponsive in the water and took her to shore to begin CPR. First responders then went back out on the water and found Ilya underwater approximately 150 yards offshore, the department said. 

Resuscitation efforts were not successful and both people died at the scene. 

The couple was on vacation together and were expecting a daughter. 

“Yesterday, we lost a dear sister and brother, daughter and son, and beautiful niece, but we know that heaven received and gained the three of them with open arms,” the fundraiser states. “Ilya and Sophia both loved the Lord and were always serving in the church and serving people around them. Sophia had the voice of an angel, and together with Ilya, they sang in a worship group in their church.”

“We are blessed to have had both of them in our lives and are left now with the sweet memories and moments that we shared together with them,” the page states.

So far, the GoFundMe has raised over $111,000 toward funeral expenses and for their son. 



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