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Sherburne Co. announces election recount date for MN House race

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Results from election night showed the Minnesota House potentially evenly split with 67 DFLers and 67 Republicans.

SHERBURNE COUNTY, Minn. — Sherburne County officials have announced when the recount for the crucial MN House seat in district 14B will be held. 

The winner of the recount could determine which party controls the Minnesota State House of Representatives. 

The recount for the House 14B race will be on Nov. 25 at 10 a.m. in the Maple Room of the Government Center in Elk River, according to a release from the county.

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.

After preliminary results from election night, the Minnesota House was split evenly with 67 DFLers and 67 Republicans. 

At one point on election night with 100% of precincts reporting, unofficial results showed Ek winning by just 4 votes. Then shortly after, Wolgamott led by 28. 

On Nov. 9, Sherburne County released a statement saying it plans to conduct hand recounts of votes in select races and will be covering the costs associated with it. 

According to Sherburne County, some ballots failed to upload to the Secretary of State’s website on election night. Those ballots were mail-in ballots received up to 8 p.m. on election night that, according to the county, had been properly processed, counted and included in the printed and electronic tabulations generated at Sherburne County. 

The county blamed the upload failure on an “improperly cleared or partially damaged memory card that did not fully collect and transmit results from some of the processed mail-in ballots.” That same memory card, according to the county, went on to send some generic test data designed to test the reporting system prior to the election, creating “inflated vote totals that later decreased once the error was discovered and corrected.” 

The District 54A race in Shakopee is also headed for a recount, where Democratic Representative Brad Rabke leads Republican challenger Aaron Paul by only 14 votes.



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Hennepin Co. Jail faces familiar problems

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Jails across the country are stretched thin due to staffing shortages, the opioid crisis, COVID and other factors.

MINNEAPOLIS — After receiving an extension from the state, the Hennepin County Sheriff’s Office now has roughly three weeks to fix an overcrowding crisis in its downtown jail facilities.

The Minnesota Department of Corrections placed the Hennepin County Adult Detention Center’s license on conditional status last month and demanded the jail to reduce its population to 600, setting an initial deadline of Nov. 14 before pushing that date back to Dec. 5. In a written order to the county, the state cited seven deaths since 2022 and blamed staffing shortages for the county’s inability “to adequately supervise inmates” and “respond to emergencies.”

Sharon Brooks, founder of a Twin Cities nonprofit “Peace of Hope” that assists families of the incarcerated, said many of her clients do not feel comfortable having relatives in the Hennepin County Jail right now.

“We don’t. We absolutely don’t,” Brooks said. “It’s a broken system.”

However, according to the latest published data, Hennepin County has made substantial progress toward the state’s target population of 600.

As of late Friday afternoon, the county had 667 people in custody at Sheriff’s Office facilities, down from 723 just one day earlier. So far, 186 people have also been annexed to alternate locations, which include the Hennepin County Adult Corrections Facility in Plymouth and neighboring county jails. The largest share of inmates have moved to Wright County.

Hennepin County currently has agreements with five counties to help relocate inmates. Sheriff Dawanna Witt has initiated discussions with 14 other counties as well. 

For the incarcerated people and their families, though, the relocation process can be difficult to navigate.

“The strain is tremendous. The not knowing,” Brooks said. “Families are thinking, how will I get to — let’s just say, Wright County or Anoka — how can I get there? And what’s going to happen when I get there?”

The situation in Hennepin County is hardly unprecedented. Last year, the state made similar demands to Ramsey County to reduce jail overcrowding, describing an “immediate risk” to people housed inside the facility. 

Across the country, jails have become particularly overwhelmed since the start of the pandemic four years ago. 

“They’re dealing with ratios of staff, to incarcerated people, that without a doubt make conditions unsafe,” said Wanda Bertram of the Prison Policy Initiative, which studies mass incarceration. “What we’ve seen since COVID is, understaffing has gotten worse, but it’s a problem — I want to be clear — that goes back decades and decades.”

Bertram specifically cited the case of Nevada, where the state started utilizing drones to make up for staffing shortages. In Hennepin County, Sheriff Dawanna Witt told KARE 11 earlier this year that her agency was down 20 percent in detention deputies. 

At the same time, the Prison Policy Initiative has long argued that there are simply too many people in jails that don’t need to be there. Bertram referenced data showing that nearly a quarter of inmates in Hennepin County since March 2020 have been booked on “public order” charges.

Although county data shows more than half of the people currently in Hennepin County custody face serious charges such as assault, homicide and weapons crimes, there is a notable portion — more than 13 percent — facing drug charges, which are sometimes intertwined with mental health struggles.

“There’s a large proportion of people in local jails across the country, that have a serious mental health issue,” Bertram said. “There have been a lot of jails that have attempted to alleviate the problems of jails not being equipped to handle these situations, by adding new facilities, adding new services. Unfortunately, because of the larger issue of staffing shortages — especially in the medical department — they’re not really able to follow through on those initiatives.”

James Stuart, the executive director of the Minnesota Sheriff’s Association, also acknowledges the same problem.

“Certainly the opioid crisis is one of them. The mental health challenges are very significant across the state,” Stuart said, “as we try to find adequate beds.”

In Hennepin County, the clock is ticking toward Dec. 5 for Sheriff Witt to find other beds for Hennepin County inmates, although her agency is only one part of the broader criminal justice system.

Sharon Brooks said she has confidence that Witt can find the right solution to manage jail overcrowding, as long as she’s able to work closely with prosecutors, judges, partner law enforcement agencies and other stakeholders.

“We can do better,” Brooks said. “But we have to face the reality that this is a team effort.”



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St. Paul nonprofit stunned after freshly planted trees destroyed

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The city estimates $40,000 of damage to dozens of trees destroyed and thrown into the Mississippi River by vandals this week.

SAINT PAUL, Minn — Along Lower Landing Park in Saint Paul, some evidence of the crime remains in the Mississippi River.

“There’s one right here. you can see the root ball is still sticking out,” says Henry Frankson of Tree Trust, the Saint Paul nonprofit that contracts with the City of Saint Paul to plant trees.

Henry and his coworker Malick Jenke were among the first to discover that much of their recent hard work was literally uprooted and discarded.

“I could see just a trail of dirt leading up to the edge [of the river]. We were looking over, and we could see several trees,” Henry said.  “A number of these trees we planted with our own hands. It’s incredibly disappointing and incredibly frustrating. And it just breaks my heart.”

Vandals uprooted or destroyed 59 of the 245 trees planted along Shepard Road in Saint Paul over MEA weekend. Those trees were planted by Tree Trust and its young student workers. 

Tree Trust’s Director of Community Forestry Karen Dumach says its work revolves around urban forestry and youth employment training — giving young people their first job in a field they believe makes a big difference in the community.

“There was a lot of hope around the work they were doing, having that impact on the community into the future,” Dumach said.

These particular trees were planted to replace the diseased Ash trees that Saint Paul had to remove. 

Of the 59 damaged, 14 were able to be salvaged and replanted, but the city will have to address the rest in the spring. They estimate the damage caused tops $40,000. 

Henry and Malick are trying to make sense of it.

“I was confused, honestly. I wanted to know what the thought process behind it was,” Malick said.

But they are learning it’s difficult to make sense of a senseless crime.

Saint Paul Police are looking for any tip that can help them solve this case.



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The Voice contestants with Minnesota ties stop by KARE 11

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Adam Bohanan and Cameron Wright joined KARE 11 News at 4 to talk about season 26.

GOLDEN VALLEY, Minn. — Season 26 of The Voice is seeing some amazing talent from across the country — and Minnesota!

Adam Bohanan, a native New Yorker, is currently living in Minneapolis.

Cameron Wright is from north Minneapolis and is currently living in St. Louis.

Adam is Team Reba and Cameron is Team Bublé and they both won their Knockout rounds and will be moving onto the Playoffs for a chance to move into the Live Shows of The Voice. Both artists spoke about their experiences on The Voice, from the Blind Auditions to the Knockout Rounds.

The Voice airs Monday and Tuesday at 7 p.m. on KARE 11.



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