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Elk River Police Department responding to ‘active incident’

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The police are asking the public near the area to stay in their homes.

ELK RIVER, Minn. — The Elk River Police Department is asking the public to avoid the area of 191st and Jackson Street as it responds to a contained “active incident.”

The area is considered an active scene and the police are asking nearby residents to stay inside their homes. 

This is a developing story and will be updated as more information becomes available.



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Busy deer hunting season for hunters and processors

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John Jaloszynski, owner and operator of Diamond J Big Game Processing, said it’s been a good season with more bucks this year than last year.

CAMBRIDGE, Minnesota — As the sun was setting, the trucks kept coming to Diamond J Big Game Processing in Cambridge on Sunday. 

“Yeah, we’re always staying busy,” said John Jaloszynski, owner and operator of Diamond J. “It’s been a good season. A lot more bucks this year than last year, I would say. Last year it was a lot more does.” 

Craig Larson of Ham Lake hunted north of Cambridge over the past two weekends. 

“Last weekend it was pretty slow and a lot of rain and the deer weren’t moving very well. A lot of people got them, but I didn’t. I saw a few, but it wasn’t very good last weekend. This weekend was better. The deer started to move today. They started moving more than they have,” Larson said. 

Larson brought a doe to get processed at Diamond J on Sunday afternoon. 

“There was an enormous amount of deer that could have been shot this year. So you could have taken your pick, essentially, where we hunt anyways,” said Ally Hansen of Cambridge. 

According to the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources’ 2024 preliminary deer harvest data, as of Nov. 14, 103,589 deer have been harvested in the state.

The DNR told KARE 11 news partner MPR that firearm deer harvest numbers for the season opener were up by about 4% from last year. However, statewide numbers were still down 12% relative to the five year mean. 

“I mean look back… in the old days when it was usually below 0° or 10° and you had a foot of snow on the ground come deer season. We don’t have that anymore. So I think it’s making it tougher for guys to see them and get them,” Jaloszynski said. 

Prior to the start of firearms deer season, the DNR reported deer populations fared well over the winter for much of the state. However, according to the DNR, deer populations in the northeast region are still low and “will take multiple years to recover from several severe winters in prior years.” 

This season, some hunters have also had to deal with windy conditions. 

“You don’t hear the deer coming in because you can usually hear them tapping along,” Larson said. “But when the wind is like that, you don’t know what it is because the leaves are blowing in the wind.”

But overall, both Larson and Hansen felt positive about their experiences this season. 

Hansen added, “Good season. I was glad that it was successful and now we’re good. It was nice to sleep in today.”

Minnesota’s 2024 seasons and hunts can be found, here

Wisconsin’s gun deer hunting season begins on Saturday. 



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Woman found dead after standoff

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The police negotiated with the man for hours before he eventually left the residence and was arrested.

RED WING, Minn. — The Red Wing Police Department is investigating after a woman was found dead and a man was arrested following an hours-long standoff. 

Officers from the department were initially called to the area of West Ave. and Putnam for a situation involving a suicidal man with a handgun, according to a department release. 

The police negotiated with the man for hours before he eventually left the residence and was arrested. 

According to the release, officers found the body of a woman inside the residence. 

The police are asking the public to avoid the area as the investigation continues. 

This is a developing story and will be updated as more information becomes available.



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Minnesota film festival highlights Indigenous stories

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Hosted by Twin Cities Film Fest, the free event took place in celebration of Native American Heritage Month.

MINNEAPOLIS — “You have to get comfortable with being uncomfortable.”

That’s one of the things filmmaker Rita Davern said she learned as she worked on her documentary Stories I Didn’t Know. The film delves into her family’s history of settling on land that belonged to the Dakota people.

Davern’s documentary was one of six productions featured in the MNmicro Film Festival in St. Louis Park on Sunday. Hosted by Twin Cities Film Fest, the free event took place in honor of Native American Heritage Month.

“Pike Island has a really amazing Indigenous history that I didn’t know,” Davern said ahead of her documentary’s screening. “And I knew I had no right to tell that story.”

That’s why Stories I Didn’t Know features Ramona Kitto Stately and her son Reuben, who share their family’s history in the film.

“We have 12,000 years of living human history of the Dakota right here in the Twin Cities area, and I do tours for people in places of power within the Twin Cities,” Stately explained. “Meeting Rita and being able to bring those two things together was really powerful because she comes from a place where people are connected to the land, and the Dakota come from a place where we’re connected to the land. So as different as our stories are, they’re very similar.”

Stately emphasized the importance of accurate historical representation: “We lack a true narrative of American history. When we think about the Indigenous history, the history of civilization, every other country knows that, but not in America. So I really hope that people will say, ‘You know what? That’s right. We’re missing some history that’s beforehand. Is that important, and why is that important for people to know?'”

Stately’s son Reuben, an artist who was also featured in the film, said it was an honor being a part of the film with his mother. “The generational learning and telling our story as a family is our tradition,” he added. “And then storytelling as Dakota people is tradition as well.”

The other featured films include The Jingle Dress, The Electric Indian, Without Arrows and The Coyote Way | We Come From The Stars.

The next MNmicro Film Festival is planned for February in honor of Black History Month.



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