Star Tribune
Cobb family’s supporters offer legal, spiritual praise for murder charges against trooper
Bookended with prayers that echoed in the atrium of the Hennepin County Government Center, Ricky Cobb Jr.’s family members voiced gratitude that the state trooper who shot their loved during a traffic stop last summer in Minneapolis now stands charged with murder.
“The bells of justice have now started ringing,” said Atlanta attorney Harry Daniels, speaking on behalf of Cobb’s family in the atrium of the Hennepin County Government Center in downtown Minneapolis.
Hennepin County Attorney Mary Moriarty announced the decision Wednesday to charge trooper Ryan Londregan with second-degree unintentional murder, first-degree assault, and second-degree manslaughter in the July 31 shooting of Cobb, 33, of Plymouth. Cobb was pulled over about 2 a.m. on Interstate 94 in north Minneapolis for driving without taillights.
“I want to think the District Attorney’s Office for the bravery and courage, despite the naysayers’ polarizing comments,” Daniels said. “It shouldn’t matter if you wear a badge, a shield or a star. It’s not a Black and white thing, not matter who wants to make it a Black and white thing. It’s a law enforcement vs. citizen thing. … It’s about right and wrong.”
During the stop, troopers attempted to remove Cobb from the vehicle after learning he had been accused of violating a standing domestic order for protection out of Ramsey County. As the car started moving, dragging along another trooper, Londregan shot Cobb.
Surrounded by Cobb’s family members and other there to hold them up, Daniels brushed aside comments he’s hearing that Londregan was a hero who was only trying to protect his partner.
“‘Why are we prosecuting a hero?’ ” Daniels quoted those who defended Londregan. “Well, there was a hero on that day. Because as the defendant was firing his [gun], Ricky was shielding … the partner from bullets. Think about that. As the other officer reached around, his partner was shooting. But for Ricky’s body, the other officer would have been shot.”
Ricky Cobb Sr., with his pastor standing nearby, confessed as strangers passed by and news media chronicled, “I was probably not the best father, but I was there, like I’m here now.”
He said his hope is not so much for justice, but “I’d rather have the truth. Justice is on my back burner, but that’s just me personally.”
He also asked himself rhetorically whether collecting money in connection with his son’s death matters to him.
“Is it about money?,” Cobb Sr. said. “No. I’d take all of it back. Give me my son for one minute, one minute.”
The final words were left to Pastor Madalyn Fields, who counts the Cobb family among her congregation at Immanuel Baptist Tabernacle in Robbinsdale.
Fields offered up prayers for the Cobb family and Moriarty’s staff “that You would bless that they have the strength and the courage to right the wrong.”
Fields made sure to include prayers for the trooper who shot Cobb.
“We pray, oh God, that you would stir in his heart and that he would stand and decide that right is right and wrong is wrong. We ask that you would bless him and bless his family, for God we too know that only love will cause this world to change in the direction that it is going.”
Star Tribune
Long Prairie, MN school board dismisses its superintendent, the latest controversy in this small town
LONG PRAIRIE, MINN. — The school district superintendent dressed up as the school mascot, Thor, on football nights. He read the graduation address in both English and Spanish. He even set up office hours in the cafeteria, granting easier approachability to students.
But now, two months into the school year, Daniel Ludvigson is gone. Or, rather, “on special assignment,” according to the terminology of the Long Prairie-Grey Eagle School Board, which voted 4-3 earlier this month to remove him as superintendent. The move came weeks after voting to not renew his contract, which expires at the end of the school year in June.
Four board members — two of whom voted to oust Ludvigson, including Board Chair Kelly Lemke — are up for re-election next week.
The dismissal is the latest blow in this central Minnesota community on the edge of the prairie. Over the last nine months, the town of 3,400 residents and seat of Todd County has lost its mayor, a city manager, two school board members, and now its superintendent.
Students walked out earlier this month in support of Ludvigson. Signs in support of Ludvigson can be seen across town on the lawns of apparent Democrats and Republicans alike. And last week, hundreds packed the American Legion off Hwy. 71 to eat beef sandwiches and sign support letters for Ludvigson, who only swung by to pick up his child for hockey practice.
In a time of great divide in America, this fight has nothing to do with politics.
“You’ve got Harris buttons and Trump hats side-by-side, arm-in-arm,” said Amanda Hinson, a former local newspaper reporter who is concerned the board is not being upfront about why they placed Ludvigson on special assignment. “We want transparency in our government.”
Lawn signs around Long Prairie, Minn., now include people weighing in on the dismissal of Superintendent Daniel Ludvigson by the school board. (Christopher Vondracek)
School board members say Ludvigson has repeatedly shown he is not ready for the prime time of a school district bigger than the one in central North Dakota he arrived from two years ago. They have twice disciplined Ludvigson, but did not state the reason for placing him on “special assignment,” beyond insinuating that staff are fearful to raise official complaints.
Star Tribune
Snow and rain on Halloween
Rain and potentially heavy snow are on tap Thursday around the Twin Cities, just before families set out for Halloween trick-or-treating.
Temperatures were expected to drop throughout the day, creating conditions for flurries. A winter weather advisory is in effect from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. covering the Twin Cities metro area and parts of south-central Minnesota. Steady rain drenched the Twin Cities on Thursday, making for a soggy morning commute.
“As colder air begins to move in this morning, the rain will transition to heavy snow from west to east with snowfall rates of an inch per hour at times into early afternoon,” the National Weather Service in Chanhassen said in a weather advisory.
The Twin Cities and surrounding areas could get between 2 and 4 inches of snow, according to the weather service. The winter weather advisory is expected to affect Anoka, Chisago, Hennepin, Ramsey, Scott, Washington and Le Sueur counties.
It’s unclear how much of the snow will actually stick, with warm surface temperatures likely leading to melting on contact in many areas.
“Exact totals will depend on snowfall rate, surface temperatures, and melting — which increases uncertainty with the snow forecast,” the weather service said in an early Thursday briefing.
“Thundersnow possible!” the weather service emphasized.
The good news for Halloween revelers is that the snow and rain are expected to wrap up in time for trick-or-treating, though temperatures will remain in the 30s with a sharp windchill.
Star Tribune
Alcohol use suspected by off-duty deputy in injury crash in Afton, patrol says
An off-duty Washington County sheriff’s deputy caused a head-on crash while under the influence of alcohol and injured a couple in the other vehicle, officials said.
The crash occurred about 10:40 a.m. Sunday in Afton on Hwy. 95 at Scenic Lane, the Minnesota State Patrol said.
Campbell Johnston Blair, 58, of Hastings, was heading north in his Subaru Crosstrek, crossed into the opposite lane and collided with a southbound Ford Expedition, the patrol said.
Blair and the other vehicle’s occupants, 38-year-old Erik Robert Sward and 36-year-old Heather Lynn Sward, both of Lake Elmo, were taken to Regions Hospital with non-critical injuries, according to the patrol.
The patrol noted the alcohol use by Blair was involved in the crash.
Blair, who was driving a private vehicle at the time of the crash while off-duty, has been a deputy with the Sheriff’s Office since 2020 and is currently assigned to our Court Security Unit.
The Sheriff’s Office has been asked for reaction to the crash involving one of its deputies.