Star Tribune
St. Paul mayor and city council meeting to reach budget compromise
The middle ground: a 7.2% increase.
In an interview Wednesday afternoon, Deputy Mayor Jamie Tincher said Carter, too, would like the levy to be lower. But proposing a 5% increase would mean an additional cut of $6 million from 2025 city services — a reduction that could increase fire response times, slow the processing of license applications and reduce parks and rec and library services.
“He doesn’t have a path to do that without reducing services that will be felt by the people who are currently getting them,” Tincher said.
If the two sides cannot agree on a tax levy for 2025, state law would require the city to institute this year’s levy. That, Tincher said, would lead to drastic cuts in city personnel and services, as costs go up every year because of things like health care, insurance and previously negotiated salary increases.
The gap between revenue and costs then, she said, would be $16 million.
Tincher was asked if this year’s negotiations felt “different.”
Star Tribune
New details about life, background of Luigi Mangione, UnitedHealthcare shooting suspect
Luigi Mangione’s face is now familiar worldwide, following his arrest for allegedly murdering UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson last week in Manhattan. But new details on the life and background of the Ivy League-educated 26-year-old are still emerging by the hour.
Mangione, in custody in Pennsylvania following a five-day manhunt and facing a second-degree murder charge in New York, struggled with police and yelled out as he entered an extradition hearing on Tuesday.
Those who knew Mangione are now trying to reconcile the friendly computer science major with the suspect who allegedly shot and killed Thompson last week, and was arrested carrying a short manifesto criticizing health insurance companies for putting profits above care and specifically singling out UnitedHealthcare, according to the New York Times and CNN.
Luigi Mangione was born in 1998 to Louis and Kathleen Mangione, and was part of a well-known family in Maryland that owned a wide range of businesses. Luigi’s grandfather, Nick Mangione Sr., and his wife purchased a golf course and country club in Howard County in the 1970s. It included a 220-room hotel, a 10,000-square-foot ballroom, and an 85-seat amphitheater, according to the Washington Post. They had five daughters and five sons, including Luigi’s father Louis.
They later bought another country club and a radio station in the 1980s. Mangione Sr. died in 2008, but his children have continued to run the family businesses.
Thomas J. Maronick Jr., a lawyer and radio host who knew Mangione Sr., praised the family, describing them as “incredibly generous.” He said they were generous with charities.
Maronick Jr. said he was shocked that Luigi Mangione has been named as the shooter. “Given the family, and how generous and supportive of charity they are, and the esteem their name carries in Maryland, it’s the last person you’d expect,” he said.
Former classmates at the Gilman School, an all-boys, $37,000 a year private school in Baltimore, told the New York Times that Luigi Mangione was intelligent. They said he made mobile apps before college, and participated in clubs including model UN and robotics.
Star Tribune
Alleged drunk driver in St. Louis Park Tavern crash that killed two pleads not guilty, will go to trial
Steven Frane Bailey formally entered a not guilty plea on charges that he killed two people and injured nine more by driving drunk and crashing his car into the patio of the Park Tavern in St. Louis Park over Labor Day weekend.
Bailey posted $500,000 bond in October and is out on conditional release while attending treatment for alcohol addiction. On Tuesday afternoon, he sat outside the sixth-floor courtroom of the Hennepin County Government Center with members of his family waiting for court to be called in-session. Family members of the victims of the crash congregated at the other end of the hall.
Steven Frane Bailey (Hennepin County Jail)
Judge Juan Hoyos entered the not guilty plea for Bailey and agreed to a trial start date of May 12, 2025 with an evidentiary hearing set to take place on Feb. 6, 2025.
Assistant Hennepin County Attorney Krista White noted that when Bailey completes his treatment there will need to be a discussion about what happens to his conditional release.
Hoyos had granted Bailey what is commonly referred to as a bed-to-bed transfer as part of his release from jail. Bailey is currently allowed to stay at his residential treatment facility and is only allowed to leave to attend meetings of Alcoholics Anonymous or Narcotics Anonymous and court hearings. He remains on electronic home monitoring.
Bailey was dressed in a white collared shirt with a tie and brown slacks for his appearance alongside attorney Thomas Sieben. He is facing 13 criminal charges related to the crash that killed Park Tavern employee Kristina Folkerts, 30, of St. Louis Park, and customer Gabriel Quinn Harvey, 30, of Rosemount and injured nine others, three seriously.
Kristina Folkerts and Gabriel Harvey (With permission from GoFundMe)
Folkerts, a mother of three, was a server at the restaurant where her mother had also worked. Harvey, a health unit coordinator at nearby Methodist Hospital and a nursing school student, was there with others celebrating a colleague’s departure.
The hearing on Tuesday lasted just a few minutes. Folkerts’ mother-in-law, Mary Smith, said she had driven 90 minutes with her sister, Patty Blakenship, to be there in honor of Folkerts. Smith said it was a bizarre scenario, seeing Bailey looking more or less like a free man. She said Folkerts’ youngest daughter, Halle, just turned 2-years-old.
Star Tribune
Minneapolis man charged with fatal chase that killed St. Paul man
An unlicensed driver fleeing Minnesota State troopers after a traffic stop in St. Paul hit speeds of more than 100 miles per hour before he crashed into a vehicle in a church parking lot, ejecting and killing its passenger before he ran from the scene last weekend, according to felony charges filed Tuesday.
The Ramsey County Attorney’s Office charged Lorenzo Leontay Washington, 28, of Minneapolis with criminal vehicular homicide and fleeing a police officer following the chaotic scene Sunday that resulted in the death of Day Por Tho, 36, of St. Paul.
Washington was booked into the Ramsey County Jail, and his first court appearance is scheduled for Wednesday morning.
According to charging documents, a trooper spotted Washington driving a Camry 30 mph over the speed limit at around 11:18 p.m. on Dec. 8. The trooper pulled over Washington’s Camry along I-94 East, but Washington fled before the trooper could reach him.
A chase began and the trooper told law enforcement that Washington was the only person in the vehicle. Washington sped over 100mph while fleeing police, ignoring troopers’ sirens and traffic controls before police stopped ground-level pursuit. A patrol helicopter sighted and followed Washington until he lost control near the intersection of Parkway Drive. He drove over a curb and into the parking lot of Gustavus Adolphus Lutheran Church where Tho sat in his Mazda car. The Camry struck the driver’s side of the Mazda, causing it to spin in counter clockwise, throwing Tho 30 feet before his body landed in the southbound lanes of Arcade Street. He was pronounced dead at the scene.
Washington ran from his car where officers found and arrested him. Investigators asked Washington what happened after the crash, but he responded “Uh, commotion … lights.”
When told he was being investigated for criminal vehicular homicide, Washington “showed emotion” and made comments suggesting he was the Camry’s driver. Washington said he did not see the vehicle he struck, but did see the troopers emergency lights.
“You’re going to force me to say it,” Washington said after police asked again if he drove the Camry. “I already told you wasn’t nobody else in the vehicle. I believe I told him that already.”