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Downtown Minneapolis hotel sued in high-profile sex trafficking case
Attorney Jeff Anderson alleges Hotel Ivy “permitted” Lazzaro to engage in the sex trafficking of five teenage girls.
MINNEAPOLIS — A downtown Minneapolis hotel has been named in a lawsuit tied to the high-profile sex trafficking conviction of Anton Lazzaro.
Attorney Jeff Anderson filed suit on behalf of an unnamed plaintiff who claims to be one of Lazzaro’s victims. The suit alleges Hotel Ivy staff “permitted” Lazzaro to engage in the sex trafficking of five teenage girls when he lived in a condominium at the hotel property.
“The red flags of danger by this powerful predator were flying,” Anderson said in a statement. “Hotel Ivy ignored the flags and the signs. It chose to protect the predator.”
The suit claims front desk staff were trained to spot potential cases of sex trafficking, yet staff members testified in Lazzaro’s trial that he had a “type” that included underage girls who would frequently visit Lazzaro’s condo.
“There was a pattern of teenage girls arriving late at night to Hotel Ivy, visiting Lazzaro, and leaving a short time later intoxicated,” attorney Molly Burke said in a statement. “It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to know that something sinister and criminal was occurring.”
Owners and attorneys for Hotel Ivy have not yet commented publicly on the lawsuit.
Lazzaro was a donor to the Minnesota Republican Party who maintained high-level connections to state party leaders before his arrest in 2021. A federal jury convicted Lazzaro of sex trafficking minors in March 2023, and he was later sentenced to 21 years in prison. A second defendant, Gisela Castro Medina, was sentenced to three years in prison after she admitted to helping recruit underage girls for Lazzaro.
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Man’s windshield shattered by Orbeez beads thrown from I-205 overpass
A Southwest Washington man was driving on Interstate 205 when someone threw something what he described as small beads at his car.
VANCOUVER, Wash. — It was a close call for a Vancouver man who was driving on Interstate 205 when his windshield was shattered after somebody tossed what he describes as beads from an overpass.
Thankfully, the driver wasn’t hurt, but whoever was behind it caused over $1,000 in damages to his car.
A normal Monday quickly turned into a nightmare for a man who drove under the 63rd Street overpass in Vancouver.
“The next thing I know, once I go under it, this object that I thought was a rock came crashing into the windshield, and I was stunned,” said the driver of the car, who didn’t want to be identified.
It wasn’t a rock that shattered the windshield — it was Orbeez, which are plastic water-absorbent beads. The driver told KGW that he believes those beads were frozen.
Once the man got home, he found them all over the inside of his car.
“There was microscopic dust everywhere,” he said. “I mean, my eyes, it went in my nose, my mouth — it looked like it snowed in there.”
Minutes before the driver’s windshield was shattered, the driver said he saw two people along the overpass with flashlights.
According to Washington State Patrol, this isn’t the only incident they are looking into. There have been several reports of people throwing things, such as rocks and cinder blocks, from overpasses in the same area over the last couple of weeks. Nobody has been hurt so far, but two cars have been totaled.
As for the driver of from Monday night’s incident, they said they plan on being even more careful the next time they drive through this area of Vancouver.
A trooper with the Washington State Patrol said they’re looking into all of the cases, but at this point, aren’t saying if they are connected.
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Remains of Korean War solider from Minneapolis to buried
The U.S. Army says 19-year-old William E. Colby was reported missing in action on Dec. 2, 1950. His remains were identified just this year using DNA technology.
MINNEAPOLIS — Nearly 74 years to the day since he was officially deemed Missing in Action during the Korean war, a Minneapolis soldier finally reached his final resting place.
The burial at Fort Snelling National Cemetery, which came with full military honors, brought closure to the family of Army Corporal William Colby, but it couldn’t bring back the family – and memories – that have long since passed.
“I was little,” said Jinny Bouvette, Corporal Colby’s cousin, who is also among the few surviving family members who ever met him. “We were about nine years difference when he joined the service, I was ten.”
For years, Bouvette says her memories of her cousin Billy, were always clouded by sadness by what happened just months after he deployed to fight in the Korean War.
Colby was just 19 years old and serving in the Korean War when he was declared missing in action on Dec. 2, 1950, after his unit was attacked by the Chinese People’s Army as they attempted to withdraw from the Chosin Reservoir.
“They figure that’s where Billy was,” Bouvette said, pointing to a green circle on a printed map of the Chosin Reservoir. “That’s where he was the last time that he was reported (alive).”
The young soldier could not be recovered following the battle, and the U.S. Army issued a presumptive finding of death on Dec. 31, 1953.
“We never thought of him as being killed in action, we always thought of him as just missing,” Bouvette said. “My aunt, she always thought he was alive somewhere.”
His fate was finally confirmed for family members by the Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency on May 2, 2024, after Colby’s remains were identified from 55 boxes of remains returned to the U.S. by the North Korean government in 2018.
The process required a DNA analysis of his remains and a sample from a living relative before it could be matched and verified.
Bouvette says representatives initially tried to reach her, but it wasn’t until learning that her aunt and cousin had submitted those DNA samples that she realized what was happening.
“At first I thought they were just people trying to scam old people, and I wouldn’t answer them,” she said, with a laugh. “But eventually, that’s how I found out that he was really, really gone.”
Just a few months later, the Army’s Past Conflict Repatriations Branch helped return his remains, along with a jacket adorned with a full accounting of his honors.
“He didn’t get them when he was alive,” Bouvette said. “So I told them to put them in the casket with him, so he’s got them now.”
She did decide to hold on to one of his awards for herself, Colby’s Purple Heart.
“I just can’t tell you what it feels like,” she said, looking at the military medal in her hand. “It fills your heart right up. It just fills your heart right up.”
Yet it can’t quite compare to seeing his procession finally reach its end.
“My heart is so full… it is overflowing,” she said. “I just can’t… I have no words. I’m just glad that he’s here, and to know he’s home now. He’s home.”
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Minnesota Supreme Court hears arguments in transgender athlete case
JayCee Cooper filed a lawsuit against USA Powerlifting after the organization banned her from participating in women’s competitions.
SAINT PAUL, Minn. — The conversation inside the Minnesota State Capitol on Tuesday was focused on sports, but a different type of competition was taking place inside the court chambers. Two opposing sides are vying for the Minnesota Supreme Court to rule in their favor in the case of Cooper v. USA Powerlifting.
Transgender woman and athlete JayCee Cooper filed discrimination charges with the Minnesota Department of Human Rights in 2019 after USA Powerlifting banned her from participating in women’s competitions. In 2021, Cooper filed a lawsuit against USA Powerlifting.
The lawsuit claims USA Powerlifting’s ban on transgender women is “an outlier among international, national and local sports organizations,” pointing to the International Olympic Committee’s framework regarding inclusion of athletes and their gender identities.
The case made its way through the state’s courts over several years before landing in the hands of the Minnesota Supreme Court. Oral arguments took place Tuesday morning, in which Cooper was represented by Gender Justice attorney Christy Hall and USA Powerlifting was represented by attorney Ansis Viksnins.
Gender Justice is a legal nonprofit organization based in St. Paul. In a press conference Tuesday morning, the organization’s legal director Jess Braverman said USA Powerlifting is violating Cooper’s rights under the Minnesota Human Rights Act.
“Every Minnesotan deserves the freedom to pursue their dreams without fear of exclusion or discrimination,” Braverman said. “Ms. Cooper was denied that right, solely because she is transgender.”
Viksnins, the attorney representing USA Powerlifting, said Cooper was excluded from women’s competitions due to her biological sex, not gender identity. “It’s not discrimination based on gender identity. That’s the problem for Ms. Cooper’s case: that the differentiation here was because of her biological sex, not for gender identity.”
In 2021, USA Powerlifting launched its MX category, providing a separate division for athletes of all gender identities. “It doesn’t solve the problem of transgender women being barred from women’s competitions, which is the issue here,” Braverman said.
There is no clear timeline as to when the Supreme Court will makes its decision on the case.