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Former St. Paul worker sentenced to more than 10 years for shooting teen

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A former city of St. Paul staffer charged with shooting a teen outside a recreation center where he worked last year has been sentenced to a decade in prison.

Exavir Binford, 27, was convicted of fist-degree assault on Friday for shooting the teen in the head. Ramsey County District Court Judge Joy Bartscher sentenced Binford to 10 years and five months in prison, ordering that Binford pay $34,000 in restitution to the teen’s family.

Andrew Marshall, a lawyer representing the teen’s mother, Margarita Davison, said Binford’s actions left permanent scars on the teen and his family.

The boy, who was 16 at the time, “has not been able to return to school. He is taking online classes, but he can only handle it part time. He really can’t go anywhere without his mother because she has to be able to administer emergency medication if he has a seizure,” Marshall told the court, relaying a victim impact statement from the teen’s family, “As a parent, Ms. Davison thought that [her son] going to the Jimmy Lee rec center after school was a good thing. She thought it was a safe environment … The idea that the person running the rec center would try to harm her son was unimaginable.”

Binford could spend the last third of his sentence on supervised release if he remains on good behavior.

Police arrested Binford last January after a confrontation escalated outside of the Jimmy Lee Rec Center on Lexington Pkwy. N, leading to a fight in the center’s parking lot. According to charging documents, Binford told investigators that he shot at the teens after they jumped him, adding that he didn’t realize his bullet struck JT until a moment later. Binford pleaded guilty to first-degree assault in December. Prosecutors dismissed a second-degree attempted murder charge against him and agreed to a sentence above state guidelines.

City leaders were quick to decry the incident, ending Binford’s employment and launching an audit of recreation center policies across the city. That probe is ongoing.

Davison has since sued the city for medical expenses and other damages related to the teen’s traumatic brain injury. Davison’s lawsuit in federal court alleges that officials knew of Binford’s troubled history with youth but did little about it. According to allegations outlined in the suit, Binford threatened to shoot a 17-year-old girl while working at the Jimmy Lee Rec Center in 2022 and he punched a visitor multiple times while working at the Arlington Rec Center in 2019.

“Mr. Binford should never have been in a position where he was around kids. He should never be allowed to be in a position where he’s around kids in the future. The fact that [the teen] is alive is just luck. Mr. Binford tried to kill him,” Marshall said in court Friday, relaying the family’s statement. “He shot Ms. Davison’s 16-year-old son in the head. It was not a mistake. He acted out of anger.”

City spokesperson Kamal Baker confirmed that officials received the lawsuit and said they are reviewing it. Baker said the city’s response will be provided to the court.



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Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey rebuffs calls for police chief’s firing

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Anti-police brutality activists interrupted a Minneapolis City Council meeting Thursday to call for Police Chief Brian O’Hara’s firing, saying his department failed a Black man who begged police for help for months, to no avail, before he was finally shot in the neck by his white neighbor.

John Sawchak, 54, is charged with shooting Davis Moturi, 34, even though three warrants had been issued for his arrest in connection with threats to Moturi and other neighbors.

Activists showed up at the council meeting and asked for time to talk about the case. Instead, the council recessed and activists took the podium and castigated the city for failing Black people, even as state and federal officials are forcing the police department into court-sanctioned monitoring because of past civil rights violations.

Nekima Levy Armstrong, founder of the Racial Justice Network, said O’Hara needs to be held accountable.

“This is not the first time instance where the community has raised concerns about his poor judgment, poor leadership, blaming the community and excuses. It’s completely unacceptable for him to get away with it,” she said. “How many Black people’s doors have they kicked in for less?”

On Thursday the council voted to request the city auditor review the city’s involvement in and response to the matters between Moturi and Sawchak.

Mayor Jacob Frey released a statement in response saying he supports the council’s call for an independent review of the case, but O’Hara “will continue to be the Minneapolis police chief.”

Protesters also questioned why the public hadn’t heard from Community Safety Commissioner Toddrick Barnette, who called a news conference within hours to say he’s not going to fire O’Hara and the city leadership supports him.



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Backyard chickens approved for more areas in Woodbury, but not typical city lot

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A Girl Scout from Troop 58068 told the Woodbury City Council recently that they should allow backyard chickens in the city: They cheer people up, she said.

It turned out that chickens were on an upcoming agenda and, perhaps pushed a bit by the scout’s lobbying, the Woodbury City Council at their next meeting passed a new ordinance allowing for backyard hens.

The new ordinance went into effect on Oct. 23, the night of the council meeting, and will allow people who live on property zoned R-2, a “rural estate” district, to have backyard chickens. A typical city lot is zoned R-4 and those areas still cannot have chickens, the council said.

The city has received requests “here and there” for the last several years about backyard chickens, City Council Member Andrea Date said.

Backyard chickens come have home to roost — and never leave — in a host of other Minnesota cities that allow them, from Hopkins to Thief River Falls. It’s long been allowed in both St. Paul and Minneapolis, and new cities started approving backyard coops during the pandemic, when interest spiked.

In Woodbury, it wasn’t until the question was included on the city’s biannual survey that city staff knew how people felt. The survey found less support for chickens on a typical city lot — just 13% of respondents said they strongly approve of the idea while 43% percent strongly disapproved — but a majority approved of backyard chickens on lots of 1 acre or more.

The city’s rules until recently only allowed chickens on “rural estate” properties of five or more acres.

The new ordinance allows up to six hens, but no roosters, on property less than four acres that meets the zoning requirements. Larger properties can have an additional two chickens per acre above four acres. The ordinance also sets a height limit for chicken coops of 7 feet. No license or permit is required in Woodbury for backyard chickens.



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Anonymous donor pays overdue bill for Fergus Falls home where town’s first Black resident lived

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A $10,000 overdue special assessment bill threatening tax forfeiture of a historic Fergus Falls home was paid off this week thanks to an anonymous donor.

Prince Albert Honeycutt lived at 612 Summit Avenue East, renamed Honeycutt Memorial Drive in 2021. Not only was Honeycutt the town’s first Black resident — settling there in 1872 from Tennessee — he was the state’s first Black professional baseball player, first Black firefighter and first Black mayoral candidate.

He was an early pioneer and prominent businessman who owned a barbershop in town. Missy Hermes, with the Otter Tail County Historical Society, said Honeycutt and his wife were likely the first Black people in Minnesota to testify in a capital murder trial of a man who was convicted and hanged in Fergus Falls.

“In other places, you would never have a Black person testifying against a white person, especially a woman, too, before women could vote even,” Hermes said. “Obviously he was respected enough.”

Nancy Ann and Prince Albert Honeycutt with their children inside the now-historic Honeycutt house in 1914. Photo from the collections of the Otter Tail County Historical Society.

When dozens of people from Kentucky moved to Fergus Falls in April 1898, known as “the first 85,” Honeycutt helped integrate them into the community.

He died in 1924 at age 71 and is buried in Oak Grove Cemetery in Fergus Falls.

Up until 2016, several owners lived in the Honeycutt home. But the city bought and sold the house to nonprofit Flowingbrook Ministry for $1 to take over the tax-exempt property and operate the ministry.

Ministry founder Lynette Higgins-Orr, who previously lived in Fergus Falls, moved to Florida several years ago and little activity has been going on in the historic home since. But she said there are plans to make it into a museum.



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