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Kim Potter was set to help lead use-of-force training in Washington state. Then it was canceled.

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Kimberly Potter, the former Brooklyn Center police officer who served 16 months in prison for manslaughter in the 2021 death of Daunte Wright, was initially set to help train enforcement officers for the Washington State Liquor and Cannabis Board next week.

The training would have been led by both Potter and Imran Ali, the former Washington County prosecutor who stepped down from prosecuting Potter’s case, Ali said Saturday.

But the board canceled its “Remorse to Redemption: Lessons Learned” training after the Seattle Times called to ask about it, the newspaper reported Saturday. The board reportedly took its action out of respect for the Wright family.

Wright’s mother, Katie Wright, could not be reached for comment Saturday, but told the Times she was upset with the idea of Potter “having that spotlight.” A spokesperson from the Liquor and Cannabis Board did not respond Saturday to a request for comment.

But Ali, now senior director of training, consulting and investigation services at the Twin Cities law firm Eckberg Lammers, confirmed that the board notified him via email the contract was canceled. Board leaders did not give a reason or address any concerns with him beforehand, he said.

“I knew it’d be controversial. I understand that aspect of it,” Ali said. But he said he saw Potter’s involvement as a way to have other officers learn from her mistakes.

“I think that if we continue to silence thoughtful discussion, if we continue to silence training, we’re going to continue to make the same mistakes,” he said. “It was apparent to me that what she wanted to do, was to do whatever she could do to effectuate change.”

Ali stepped down from Potter’s case and resigned his position with the Washington County Attorney’s Office after receiving “vitriol” infused with “partisan politics,” he said, from activists demanding justice for Wright.



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Twin Cities man guilty of murder for fatally stabbing fellow group home resident nearly 2 dozen times

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The staffer told a 911 dispatcher that she didn’t hear anything further from the room and said “something isn’t right.”

A police officer arrived and saw a shirtless Adams running from the Kingdom Hall of Jehovah’s Witnesses across the street and into the group home. In a Kingdom Hall trash can, police located a “badly bent” and bloody kitchen knife inside a garbage bag. Another bag held a pair of blood-soaked gloves.

Officers located Rahn in his room with stab wounds to his neck and back. Medics declared him dead at the scene.

Adams gave various accounts to police about how and why Rahn was stabbed.

The medical examiner found stab wounds to Rahn’s face, neck, upper body and elsewhere. He also suffered at least 20 stab wounds to one of his hands, which are “consistent with defensive wounds,” the complaint said.



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The Weeknd sings about romance that’s fast, reckless

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The title track from the coming album by FKA Twigs, “Eusexua,” isn’t exactly euphoric or sexy. Produced by FKA Twigs, Koreless and Earthearter, the track runs on nervous, hopping 16th-notes and distant chords under FKA Twigs’ whispery soprano before a beat fully kicks in. It’s anxious and tentative at first, wondering about a primal, possibly dangerous, possibly life-changing attraction: “Don’t call it love — eusexua.” Later, as the rhythm revs up, she promises, “You feel alone, you’re not alone.” But the propulsion falls away, leaving her “on the edge of something greater than before,” but dangling.

JON PARELES, New York Times

Suki Waterhouse, “Model, Actress, Whatever”

Stardom, by definition, is one of the rarest occupations. It’s also a wildly disproportionate topic for songwriters to take on. The immensely sly, self-conscious and droopy-voiced English model, actress and songwriter Waterhouse takes up the self-pity of a star in “Model, Actress, Whatever,” the title song of her new EP. It’s a slow-building waltz about what happens after making it big: “All of my dreams came true/The bigger the ocean, the deeper the blue,” she declares. She musters grandiose orchestral production to sum up a feeling of emptiness.

JON PARELES, New York Times



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How much will Twin Cities counties raise 2025 property taxes?

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Administrator David Hough told the County Board that much of the rest of the new spending is directed at employee salaries and benefits. The county workforce is expected to remain flat at nearly 10,000 employees.

The proposed capital budget includes $100 million for the Blue Line Light Rail extension. Another $45 million is slated for projects at HCMC, including a new parking ramp that will help make room for the eventual construction of an inpatient hospital tower.

Commissioners will meet with department leaders over the next two months to work on specifics of the 2025 budget before approving it in mid-December.

Ramsey County officials pitched a 4.75% maximum levy increase for 2025, as expected, late last month.

Ramsey County is on a rare biennial budget cycle, meaning it approved its 2025 budget last year, anticipating this year’s 4.75% increase. There’s a caveat, though: Then-County Manager Ryan O’Connor said at the time that cannabis sales tax could lower the 2025 levy. It didn’t, former Interim County Manager Johanna Berg said last month, because the county doesn’t have a sense of what that revenue will look like yet.

The 2025 supplemental budget is $848.5 million and represents a 5% increase from last year. That’s slightly larger than the 2025 budget approved last year, largely because of grants the county accepted to cover therapeutic youth treatment homes and violence prevention services. Property taxes fund about 46% of Ramsey County’s 2025 budget.



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