Star Tribune
Missing 54A absentee ballots likely thrown out, Scott County attorney says
Multiple sleeves encase absentee ballots in Minnesota. An inner envelope, known as a secrecy sleeve, contains the ballot but no identifying information about the voter to protect their privacy. That goes inside another envelope, known as a signature sleeve, that the voter signs. And that all gets placed inside the envelope use for mailing.
In the 54A race, an absentee ballot board followed the standard procedure for accepting or rejecting absentee ballots, the summary states. Members first examined the signature sleeves and recorded them into a statewide registration system. They then divided those envelopes by precinct before opening the signature and secrecy sleeves, removing the ballots and preparing them for tabulation.
As part of the investigation, county staff asked the city for the secrecy envelopes tied to the 20 missing ballots. That’s when staff learned those liners had been thrown out, prompting the county to track trash and recycling. The trash sat at a Burnsville landfill, according to the summary. The recycling, located at a Dem-Con facility, had already been sent for shredding.
That led to the conclusion outlined in the preliminary summary: the ballots were likely thrown out while they remained in the secrecy envelopes before being tabulated.
“This unfortunate situation resulted in a level of confusion that should not have occurred,” Hocevar said in a statement, adding that the investigation remains ongoing. He said in the summary that the ballots will most likely not be recovered, adding that even if they’re found, “it is unlikely that their chain of custody can be proven to assure they have not been tampered with.”
Demuth, the Republican representative, previously called on called on Scott County to “prove chain of custody if the ballots are located and guarantee that there was not malicious activity” that led to the ballots “being removed or destroyed.”
Star Tribune
Off-duty MN police officer is one of two killed in traffic collision
“He was ready to enter into public safety at a young age,” Charnoski wrote. “He dedicated his life to Red Lake Nation.
The same Police Department lost another officer in July 2021, when Ryan Bialke was shot to death by David Brian Donnell Jr.
Donnell, now 31, was sentenced two years later to a 37-year term.
Bialke was one of five officers to respond to a welfare check at Donnell’s home on the Red Lake Indian Reservation on July 27, 2021. Donnell, who was reportedly using drugs and suicidal, went inside the house when officers arrived. Bialke, who knew there was a tribal warrant out for Donnell, kicked down the front door. He was met with gunfire and died immediately.
Star Tribune
Federal guilty plea outlines a rash of violent carjackings across Twin Cities since 2021
A 21-year-old St. Paul man linked to a vast spree of violent robberies and carjackings in the Twin Cities has now pleaded guilty to federal charges that also include possessing a stolen handgun.
Ricardo Rydell Walker, Jr. entered a guilty plea Tuesday in U.S. District Court that included admitting to stealing a sport-utility vehicle after striking the owner in the head with a handgun June 28, 2022. According to the U.S. Attorney’s Office, Walker also admitted to aiding and abetting three other carjackings that took place between 2021 and June of this year — the latter taking place while Walker was in jail on his federal charges.
His convictions carry a maximum 15-year federal prison sentence, but prosecutors have agreed not to request a sentence above 6 1/2 years. U.S. District Judge Katherine Menendez has not yet scheduled a sentencing date.
A message seeking comment has been left with the federal defender representing Walker.
According to court records, Walker was arrested in Maplewood after police and Ramsey County deputies found him and his accomplices sleeping inside a different stolen car than the vehicle he carjacked six days earlier. Walker rammed a nearby squad car after being stirred awake and fled onto public roads before colliding with another vehicle. Police arrested Walker and others following a brief foot chase.
Police also found Walker in possession of a Springfield Armory Hellcat 9mm handgun. After tracing the firearm’s serial number, officers discovered that the gun had been reported stolen out of Minneapolis. Walker later told a detective that he bought the handgun from an unknown man in Minneapolis a day before his arrest.
Walker’s crime spree netted criminal charges in multiple counties before his case went federal. The June 2022 carjacking followed three violent robberies on June 28 that took place on the Augsburg and University of Minnesota campuses and at a West St. Paul apartment complex. According to charges, Walker and his accomplices pulled off another robbery in West St. Paul earlier on the morning of his eventual arrest.
Walker’s penchant for armed robbery began in February 2021, less than two months after he turned 18. Within a year, one criminal complaint read, officers said they were “well-acquainted” with Walker and at least one of his accomplices for “having been involved in numerous robberies/carjackings. [They] were known to display firearms and known to target expensive vehicles.”
Star Tribune
Northern lights may be faintly visible across parts of the US this Thanksgiving
NEW YORK — This Thanksgiving, solar storms may produce faint auroras across the northern rim of the United States.
Pale auroras may be seen across many northern states Thursday and Friday, but they may be brief and and seeing them will depend on how intense the solar storms get, NOAA meteorologist Mike Bettwy said in an email.
Much of the following states are best positioned for potential auroras: Washington, Montana, the Dakotas, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan and Maine. Northern parts of Idaho, Wyoming, New York, Vermont and New Hampshire may also see auroras.
Space weather experts say auroras could be visible from 10 p.m. EST Thursday to 1 a.m. Friday EST, though it’s difficult to pin down an exact window. Updated forecasts may be available as the event draws closer on NOAA’s Space Weather Prediction Center website or an aurora forecasting app.
To spy the spectacle, wait for clear skies to get dark and then go outside, ideally away from bright city lights. Taking a picture with a smartphone camera may also reveal hints of the aurora that aren’t visible to the naked eye.
The sun is currently at the maximum phase of its 11-year cycle, making solar surges and northern lights more frequent. Earlier this week, the sun shot a pulse of high-energy plasma towards Earth.
The active period is expected to last for at least another year, though scientists won’t know when solar activity peaked until months after the fact, according to NASA and the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
Experts don’t expect major communication disruptions from this week’s solar storm.