Star Tribune
Minnesota man faces a $15,000 bill after his blown tire started a wildfire
Scott Rodgers was almost home — a mile or less away — last May when a tire on his truck blew out. He later learned that the wheel bearing most likely locked on the front passenger side, causing an enormous amount of friction that turned to heat, which burned through the rubber of the tire until it exploded off the rim.
His two kids were in the back seat. He was able to pull the truck into the front of his driveway, get his kids out and use a garden hose to smother a fire that was smoldering from where the tire had been up into the engine and through the truck’s hood, dashboard and windshield.
But it was too late. With the landscape dry from drought, sparks from the blown tire ignited a wildfire that grew from the side of the road to about 32 acres near Sebeka, Minn., in Wadena County. Now, the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources is demanding that Rodgers pay $15,000, saying he is responsible for the cost incurred by state firefighters to put out the fire.
“This was a complete accident,” Rodgers said when reached by phone. “This wasn’t an intentional fire or anything like that.”
Firefighters talked to Rodgers in his driveway that day, after they had started to get the fire under control. He was a mailed a $190 fine a few weeks later, saying he had been careless and negligent for driving 1 mile after the tire blew.
Rodgers didn’t fight the ticket, thinking that was the end of it. He said he didn’t learn the DNR also wanted $15,000 until last week, when the bill was sent to collections and he heard from a bankruptcy lawyer.
While equipment failures and car troubles do periodically cause fires on roadsides during dry years, it is rare for the state to seek damages. Under state law, anyone responsible for starting a wildfire through carelessness or negligence is on the hook for paying the cost of putting it out.
The fact that Rodgers kept driving after the tire blew out is likely what tipped the scale into negligence, said Jon Handrick, forestry enforcement officer for the DNR.
“These kinds of fires are generally caused by things like bad bearings on a trailer,” he said. “It’s somewhat unique to have a tire on the vehicle, itself, blow out and a driver dragging his own rim. At that point it’s not an unknown issue. If you know your tire is out and there is an issue and it’s sparking and you continue on, that’s when it jumps to negligence.”
The DNR officer who wrote the ticket back in May said that Rodgers drove for “one mile” with sparks flying from the rim of his blown-out tire.
Rodgers said that’s not true. He was less than a half-mile from home and had no idea that there were sparks coming from his car, he said.
“Maybe if it was a back tire I would have seen something in the mirror,” he said. “But I never saw sparks or anything like that. It would have been impossible for me to see sparks coming from the front passenger side. I was right by my driveway and had my kids in the truck.”
The wildfire was extinguished by the following day, Handrick said.
While it never grew to more than 32 acres, the cost was so high because the area was extremely dry at the time and firefighters needed to use aircraft to keep the flames from spreading, he said.
“At that time of year there was such a strong spread potential that we needed to keep it in check before it got any bigger,” Handrick said.
Rodgers said he isn’t sure what his next step will be. He said he hopes he will be able to fight the bill in court or plead his case in some other way.
Star Tribune
Release of hazardous materials forces closing of highway in southeast Minnesota
The Minnesota Department of Transportation closed part of a state highway Wednesday evening near Austin because of a “major hazardous materials release” in the area.
Hwy. 56 from Hayfield to Waltham, a stretch covering about five miles, was closed in both directions and drivers were directed to follow a detour to Blooming Prairie on U.S. Hwy. 218.
No information on the hazardous materials released was immediately available.
Star Tribune
Civil suit against MN state trooper who shot Ricky Cobb II is dismissed
A federal judge dismissed a civil lawsuit against Minnesota state trooper Ryan Londregan in the shooting death of Ricky Cobb II during a 2023 traffic stop.
The decision is the latest development in a case that has drawn heated debate over excessive use of force by law enforcement. Criminal charges against Londregan were dismissed by Hennepin County Attorney Mary Moriarty in June, saying the prosecution didn’t have the evidence to proceed with a case.
On Wednesday, U.S. District Judge Nancy E. Brasel granted Londregan’s motion to dismiss the civil suit, arguing he acted reasonably when he opened fire as Cobb’s vehicle lurched forward with another state trooper partly inside.
Londregan’s attorney Chris Madelsaid Wednesday that it’s been a “long, grueling journey to justice. Ryan Londregan has finally arrived.”
On July 31, 2023, the two troopers pulled over Cobb, 33, on Interstate 94 in north Minneapolis for driving without taillights and later learned he was wanted for violating a felony domestic no-contact order. Cobb refused commands to exit the car.
With Seide partly inside the car while trying to unbuckle Cobb’s seatbelt, the car moved forward. Londregan then opened fire, hitting Cobb twice.
In her decision, Brasel said the troopers were mandated by state law to make an arrest given Cobb’s domestic no-contact order violation. She said it was objectively reasonable for Londregan to believe Seide was in immediate danger as the car moved forward on a busy highway, which would make his use of force reasonable.
Star Tribune
Donald Trump boards a garbage truck to draw attention to Biden remark
GREEN BAY, Wis. — Donald Trump walked down the steps of the Boeing 757 that bears his name, walked across a rain-soaked tarmac and, after twice missing the handle, climbed into the passenger seat of a white garbage truck that also carried his name.
The former president, once a reality TV star known for his showmanship, wanted to draw attention to a remark made a day earlier by his successor, Democratic President Joe Biden, that suggested Trump’s supporters were garbage. Trump has used the remark as a cudgel against his Democratic rival, Vice President Kamala Harris.
”How do you like my garbage truck?” Trump said, wearing an orange and yellow safety vest over his white dress shirt and red tie. ”This is in honor of Kamala and Joe Biden.”
Trump and other Republicans were facing pushback of their own for comments by a comedian at a weekend Trump rally who disparaged Puerto Rico as a ”floating island of garbage.” Trump then seized on a comment Biden made on a late Wednesday call that “The only garbage I see floating out there is his supporters.”
The president tried to clarify the comment afterward, saying he had intended to say Trump’s demonization of Latinos was unconscionable. But it was too late.
On Thursday, after arriving in Green Bay, Wisconsin, for an evening rally, Trump climbed into the garbage truck, carrying on a brief discussion with reporters while looking out the window — similar to what he did earlier this month during a photo opportunity he staged at a Pennsylvania McDonalds.
He again tried to distance himself from comedian Tony Hinchcliffe, whose joke had set off the firestorm, but Trump did not denounce it. He also said he did not need to apologize to Puerto Ricans.
”I don’t know anything about the comedian,” Trump said. ”I don’t know who he is. I’ve never seen him. I heard he made a statement, but it was a statement that he made. He’s a comedian, what can I tell you. I know nothing about him.”