Star Tribune
As murderer sentenced, Brainerd horse trainer remembered for her ethereal spirit
Bethany Bernatsky embodied the same spiritual qualities as the horses she grew up riding since the age of 2 and training up until her murder at the age of 46. The beloved Brainerd woman was known nationally for her ethereal approach to the animal, and people who knew her say she is irreplaceable.
“To this day I haven’t met anybody like her,” said Venice LeRoy Liston, of Riverside, Calif. “In all the years I’ve been riding, 36 years, I’ve never met anybody like her that has her compassion and heart. The best trainer I’ve ever met. … It’s kind of discouraging because I don’t know that I will find anyone like her.”
Bernatsky was murdered in a case of mistaken identity Oct. 7, 2021. Cameron Moser, high on meth and armed with an automatic rifle, walked into cabin No. 5 at Cozy Bay Resort on Lake Edward in Nisswa and shot her. His ex-girlfriend’s parents previously owned the resort. Officials say the intended target resembled Bernatsky.
Moser, 32, entered a guilty plea last week and received a 34-year sentence. With credit for time served and under Minnesota sentencing guidelines, he will be eligible for release from the St. Cloud prison in 2044.
The legal conclusion comes more than two years after the murder due to the pandemic disrupting court proceedings and because Moser had several changes in attorneys, said Crow Wing County Attorney Don Ryan.
“I think it’s good for the community and for Bethany’s family to have this come to a final conclusion,” Ryan said.
Moser was to stand trial in July. Ryan said they reached a deal in recent weeks after Moser agreed to plead guilty to intentional second-degree murder. A grand jury indicted him on premeditated first-degree murder, but as part of the agreement that charge was dropped, avoiding a life sentence.
His attorney, Dan Hawley, declined to comment beyond the plea and what was said in court Wednesday.
“I haven’t always been at peace with the decisions that he made,” brother Ben Bernatsky said of Moser. “Hopefully he’ll be a changed person when he comes out.”
Their mother, Clare Bernatsky, died in October. She had dementia and didn’t know what happened to her daughter, he said. George Bernatsky died in 2001. He was a talented horse trainer in Brainerd, too, and instilled the equine passion in his daughter. Before most kids learn how to ride a bike, Bethany was on horseback.
Awards and accolades soon followed. The local newspaper headline in 1989 shared that she won the champion junior rider title for Central States Dressage and Combined Training Association, a seven-state competition. She was on the cover of Horseman’s News magazine in 2001. She later joined the Royal Lipizzaner Stallions to perform in Florida and participated in international exhibitions.
In Southern California, Bernatsky trained Ann Romney’s horse during Mitt’s bid for president. Bernatsky was the assistant head trainer at Medieval Times in Buena Park and worked at Liston Training Stables.
“We really do miss her a lot. She’s a pretty amazing person. They don’t make them like her anymore,” said owner Liston, who described Bernatsky as spiritual and kind.
A best friend of Bernatsky for more than 20 years, Melissa Korby, of Fergus Falls, said even when Bernatsky was alive she had a hard time describing her to others because she’s so ethereal.
“She could just talk to the horses like she was just in touch with another world that we’re not able to and just so peaceful and so spiritual,” Korby said.
Korby said Bernatsky trained a horse of hers in 2010 and before they knew it, they were buying a stable together and going into business. They became best friends, practically sisters. She said Bernatsky’s laugh was magnetic, “almost like a meditation tape.” She was humble, gentle, nonjudgmental, a hugger who always said “I love you,” the last words Korby heard from her at a horse training a week before her murder.
Bernatsky was known for training celebrity horses, but she took in a mule once. She also passed down her love of horses to her daughter, Arielle Rutledge, who graduated from City University of New York School of Law in May.
Bernatsky’s daughter and loved ones attended Moser’s plea hearing and sentencing Wednesday, where they shared unscripted victim impact statements. They said no amount of time will bring her back.
“To me it’s more about keeping a dangerous person off the street,” Korby said. “She was truly the kindest person, just the last person you would think anything like this would ever happen to.”
Star Tribune
Minnesota’s Anthony Edwards fined $35,000 for making obscene gesture during Wolves-Kings game
NEW YORK — Minnesota All-Star guard Anthony Edwards has been fined $35,000 by the NBA for making an obscene gesture on the court during the Timberwolves’ NBA Cup win in Sacramento on Friday night.
The league announced the fine Sunday.
The NBA did not specify exactly what Edwards did, other than saying it happened with 3:15 left in the first period. That was how much time remained when Edwards was called for an offensive foul, and not long afterward television cameras captured him directing the gesture toward the stands as he walked to the Minnesota bench.
Edwards finished with 36 points in the game, one in which Sacramento’s De’Aaron Fox scored an NBA season-high 60 points in defeat.
AP NBA: https://apnews.com/hub/NBA
Star Tribune
Trial set to begin in Minnesota in case of Indian family who died trying to cross border
Steve Shand worried as he waited for the first group of smuggled Indian migrants to cross the border from Canada into Minnesota one frigid winter night.
“It’s 16 degrees cold as hell,” Shand texted an alleged smuggler from his van in December 2021. “They going to be alive when they get here?”
The migrants arrived safely, and Shand drove them to Chicago without trouble.
But the next month, a family of four migrants — including two children — froze to death on the border after failing to reach Shand’s van amid a subzero blizzard. Authorities say that Shand and the man he was texting, Harshkumar Patel,frequently spoke of the risk of smuggling Indian nationals through the deep cold of the northern border but persisted anyway. They allegedly coordinated four more illegal border crossings before the deaths on January 19, 2022 led to criminal investigations stretching all the way to India.
In Fergus Falls, Minnesota, federal prosecutors plan to argue at a trial scheduled to start on Nov. 18 that Shand and Patel participated in a “large, systemic human smuggling operation” that brought Indian nationals to Canada on student visas, then smuggled them into the U.S.
The court proceedings are expected to offer a rare inside look into the workings of migrant smuggling on the northern border, where international media coverage of the deaths of Jagdish Patel, 39; his wife Vaishaliben, 37; their daughter Vihangi, 11; and son Dharmik, 3,has failed to slow illegal crossings.
The U.S. Border Patrol had a record 198,929 encounters with migrants across the Canadian border in the 2024 fiscal year — an 81% increase since the year the Patel family died. Most encounters happen in the sector covering New York, Vermont and New Hampshire but some law enforcement leaders from border communities in the Grand Forks sector that includes Minnesota also describe a crisis.
In Congressional testimony this May, Renville County, N.D. Sheriff Roger Hutchinson lamented a lack of border agents to adequately patrol the Grand Forks Sector, with some temporarily deployed to the southern border. He said that law enforcement along the northern border has dealt with dead bodies, high speed pursuits, fence-cutting and damaged crops, humanitarian rescues in extreme conditions, illegal substances, counterfeit goods and subjects with warrants.
Star Tribune
Is K-pop star Jin wearing a University of Minnesota shirt in his new music video?
Minnesota K-pop fans are delighting over a detail in singer/songwriter Jin’s new music video.
In the music video for “Running Wild,” which debuted Nov. 14, the South Korean star and member of boy group sensation BTS appears to be wearing a University of Minnesota sweatshirt. The fashion choice was first noticed by fans in a promotional video last month.
The maroon shirt is emblazoned with a gold M, which looks very much in the style of the University of Minnesota’s logo. It’s visible around the video’s 1:30-minute mark.
“International army, you might not know that, but that is a Minnesota collegiate sweater,” TikTok user moonchild_of_bangtan posted in a video.
The Minnesota Star Tribune contacted the University of Minnesota to find out if the shirt is official merch. We’ll update this story if we hear back.