Connect with us

Kare11

1 dead, 2 critically injured after shooting in north Minneapolis

Avatar

Published

on



Chief Brian O’Hara said officers were making a traffic stop when they said they heard several rounds of gunfire.

MINNEAPOLIS — One man is dead and two other people are in critical condition following a shooting in a north Minneapolis parking lot, according to Minneapolis police.

Minneapolis Police Chief Brian O’Hara told reporters Wednesday night that officers are investigating the man’s death and as the city’s first homicide in 2023. Another man and a woman were also injured in the incident, the details of which, O’Hara said, are scarce.

O’Hara said officers were making a traffic stop around 8:20 p.m. in the area of Lowry and Emerson Avenues North when they said they heard several rounds of gunfire. O’Hara said a ShotSpotter in the area had also detected at least 23 rounds.

Officers in the area, as well as backup officers, responded to the scene, O’Hara said. Crews determined the scene was in the parking lot in front of Gold Star Foods at 818 North Lowry Avenue. 

According to O’Hara, the incident began when two men on foot approached a vehicle in the lot, occupied by a man and woman. O’Hara said the situation escalated when one of the men on foot walked up to the driver’s side door and opened it. That’s when, O’Hara said, the vehicle started pulling away, dragging the man outside with it. 

The second man on foot started firing at the vehicle as it drove away, according to Minneapolis police, and fled the scene after the vehicle stopped when it became stuck in a snowbank.

O’Hara said the man who had been caught in the vehicle’s driver’s side door also tried to flee before collapsing a short distance away. Police say despite life-saving efforts, he was pronounced dead at the scene. 

O’Hara claimed a handgun was found near his body.

The driver of the vehicle, a man, and his female passenger were critically injured in the shooting and subsequently brought to the hospital. Officials said the man was taken to North Memorial Hospital and is listed in critical condition. The woman was taken to Hennepin County Medical Center and is in critical but stable condition. 

Police say they believe at least three firearms were involved, and one is believed to have been semi-automatic.

“We’ve had a number of shooting incidents over the last few days and obviously that’s very concerning for me,” O’Hara said. “I think this just speaks volumes to the challenges we’re facing… it shows the crisis that we’re facing.”

O’Hara says the man who fled on foot is still at-large and the case remains open and active.

“We already live in a country with more guns than people, and there are 10 to 20 million more guns entered into circulation each year. It’s an incredible challenge for us to be able to partner with all of the law enforcement and community organizations to take as many guns out of the hands of people who should not have them before situations like this happen,” O’Hara told crews on Wednesday night. 

The identity and official cause and nature of the victim’s death will be released by the Hennepin County Medical Examiner.

O’Hara says there were about a dozen shootings between the weekend and Wednesday night. According to the city’s crime dashboard, 19 people in total were shot so far this year. That’s six more than last year at this time.

Thursday, Mayor Jacob Frey told KARE 11 that while “a single victim of gun violence is far too many,” it’s important to look at the bigger picture.

“Our police officers and Office of Community Safety, through a comprehensive effort, are working like crazy right now to make sure that those numbers are going down and I’ll tell you, they are,” the mayor said.

Data shows homicides dropped 20% last year, from 93 total in 2021 to 79 in 2022. Still, rates remain above pre-pandemic levels. In 2019, there were 46 on record.

On guns, Frey says he agrees with O’Hara, who he nominated to serve as chief last fall. At the time, the Minnesota Gun Owners Caucus opposed, calling O’Hara anti-gun.

“When you have this incredible proliferation of both legal and illegal guns that come into the city that is an underlying issue,” Frey said Thursday. “We can’t ignore it. Guns kill people. They do. Sometimes, guns come into the city by the trunk-load. It requires our officers to do all the more work to get guns off the street and by the way, last year they broke a citywide record. They broke a record in getting guns off the street and they deserve a lot of credit for that.”

KARE 11 reached out to the Minnesota Gun Owners Caucus for comment and received the following statement:

“We share a common goal with Chief O’Hara in keeping firearms out of the hands of those who should not have them, but we reject his implication that lawful gun ownership is part of the problem.

Mayor Frey’s revelation that truckloads of firearms are coming into the city is shocking. We are anxious to see more information about these truckloads, and hope there is strong prosecution of the individuals illegally trafficking those firearms, crimes that are rarely prosecuted in Minneapolis. 

Whether it’s trunk-load or truck-load the sentiment is the same, the criminals trafficking firearms are routinely under-sentenced or not prosecuted.”

Watch the latest local news from the Twin Cities in our YouTube playlist:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=videoseries





Read the original article

Leave your vote

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

GIPHY App Key not set. Please check settings

Kare11

St. Paul Police solving more non-fatal shootings

Avatar

Published

on



The department is the only one in the state to start a non-fatal shooting unit that launched in January.

ST PAUL, Minn. — The City of St. Paul has seen a number of deadly shootings recently, but often it’s the ones that aren’t fatal that don’t get as much attention. And for police, they can also be harder to solve.

The department, though, is trying something new to try and reverse that trend.

“The amount of guns that are on the street right now,” St. Paul Police Commander Nikkole Peterson said about the biggest change she’s seen in the 22 years she’s been a cop. “It’s jaw-dropping.”

Commander Peterson is now in charge of the department’s non-fatal shooting unit that launched in January focusing only on those crimes. 

It’s the only department in the state implementing something like that, after it saw success with the police department in Denver, Colorado doing something similar. 

“If there’s a shooting, it doesn’t matter what time of night that happens or time of day, that sergeant will get called in to begin the investigation immediately,” said Commander Peterson.

The crime used to fall on the homicide unit that’s already burdened by heavy case loads. There’s also usually little victim cooperation which can stall solving non-fatal shootings.

“A lot of times we wouldn’t investigate it any further or the prosecutor wouldn’t charge those crimes and we knew that something different had to be done,” said Commander Peterson.

The unit is now treating non-fatal shootings like homicides and making them a priority. The investigators also rely more heavily on evidence and devote just as many resources, from forensics to video management and even SWAT teams.

“We are utilizing all these different resources to help solve these crimes,” said Commander Peterson. “We’re chasing down every lead that we can.”

In a press conference on Tuesday, St. Paul Police Chief Axel Henry said there have been 86 non-fatal shootings compared to 99 this same time last year. But two years ago, there were 170, putting the city’s solve rate around 60%.

“Anything above 50% is just incredible and so we’re really happy with where we’re at right now,” said Commander Peterson.

Commander Peterson also credits the city’s ASPIRE program that focuses on intervention, particularly with youth. She also points to the Office of Neighborhood Safety that partners with local organizations working on prevention, saying this cooperation is ultimately what will reduce crime. 



Read the original article

Leave your vote

Continue Reading

Kare11

St. Paul mayor won’t implement childcare tax hike

Avatar

Published

on



Mayor Melvin Carter says the ballot question facing St. Paul voters amounts to a $110 million promise the city can’t keep to low-income families.

ST PAUL, Minn. — A ballot question up for consideration in St. Paul right now would authorize the city to raise property taxes by $110 million over the next ten years in order to help pay for childcare for some low-income families.

But regardless of how that vote goes, Mayor Melvin Carter said he has no plans to follow through.

“I am telling our community that, based on my judgment, it can’t be done, so we’ll continue to do the work that we’ve been doing,” Carter said. “If our voters say yes to this, they’ll say yes to authorizing us, not directing it to be done. Those two things are actually opposites.”

St. Paul city council member, Rebecca Noecker, who supports and helped craft the 2024 Early Care and Learning Proposal, said the Mayor’s stance is concerning. 

“I find it very alarming to hear an elected leader in a democracy say that he would not accept the results of an election,” she said. “That’s just, that’s really concerning from a democracy standpoint to me.”

The mayor’s argument for ignoring a voter-authorized tax hike centers on the language of the ballot question itself, which reads:

“In order to create a dedicated fund for children’s early care and education to be administered by a City department or office that provides subsidies to families and providers so that early care and education is no cost to low-income families and available on a sliding scale to other families, and so as to increase the number of child care slots and support the child care workforce, shall the City of Saint Paul be authorized to levy property taxes in the amount of $2,000,000 in the first year, to increase by the same amount each year following for the next nine years ($4,000,000 of property taxes levied in year two, $6,000,000 in year three, $8,000,000 in year four and so on until $20,000,000 of property taxes are levied in year ten).” 

“If I’m a voter, I think, if we vote yes on this, then childcare will be available in the city at no cost to low-income families,” Carter said. “This proposal would serve an average of only 404 children per year, at a total cost of $110 million in property tax increases.”

“We can’t ask (St. Paul voters) to pass the largest single property tax increase that I can ever remember on the basis of making a promise that explicitly says all children, and then turn around and say, ‘Oh, of the 20,000 children in our city under age five, we only meant 404 of them.”

The mayor isn’t the only one who has been clear about their stance for more than a year.

Advocates for the ballot question say they have been clear about who is – and isn’t – covered by the proposal since the council voted to override his veto.

“There’s never been a claim that this would cover every single child on day one,” Noecker told KARE11 back in the summer of 2023. “This is to provide low-income families with free child care, and to make it more affordable for families above that.”

Even though the proposal doesn’t come close to covering all low-income families, she stands by the language on the ballot and the information that supports it.

“Even if this does move forward, there’s just no scenario in which the city can administer this program as it’s currently framed,” Mayor Carter said during a news conference in the summer of 2023.

“I think that the ballot question is really clear as to who is going to be eligible for the program. But I think that in any ballot question, you only have so many words and so much space, and that’s why it’s so important to have accompanying information that goes along with that ballot question,” Noecker said. “This program will not meet the entire need. And that’s, that’s the case with every single public program that we have in our country.”

Despite her concern with the Mayor’s latest comments, Noecker said she remains hopeful that voters will be given the ultimate say.

“I haven’t really contemplated what happens after Nov. 5 if the mayor is not ready to respect the results of the election,” she said. “That’s something that my council colleagues and I will need to talk about and we’ll need to discuss what our options are in that situation.”

If it does pass, Mayor Carter said he’s not the only one who will have questions to answer.

“The folks who put this plan together by ignoring every concern, by ignoring everything my team and I have brought forward, those are the folks who should tell us what they plan to do if this passes,” Carter said. “The council member seems to have, essentially at this point, a two-part plan number one is ignoring all of my input and number two is counting on me to do all the work and they’re going to need a better plan than that.”



Read the original article

Leave your vote

Continue Reading

Kare11

Campaign mailers miss the mark on Minnesota water issues

Avatar

Published

on



Virginia-based political action committee launches misleading mailers blaming Democrats for PFAS, dirty water.

MINNEAPOLIS — Democratic candidates are being targeted with hit pieces that distort their record on clean water and PFAS “forever chemicals” in Minnesota. 

The Virginia-based Make Liberty Win political action committee has flooded mailboxes and doorknobs with mailers and lit pieces, accusing Minnesota Democrats at the State Capitol of being so busy passing a “radical agenda” that they’ve abandoned clean water efforts.

The mailers come complete with photos of trash in a lake, a mysterious green substance in a sink, and a poison warning skull symbol with the letters “PFAS” inside it.

The pieces are landing in the Lake Minnetonka area, where Democrat Tracy Breazeale is running in House District 45-A and Democrat Ann Johnson Stewart is running in a special election in Senate District 45.

“I’m a strong proponent of making sure we continue to keep our lakes clean, free of aquatic invasive species, that we’ve got clean drinking water alongside of that,” Breazeale told KARE.

She was shocked to see the mailers linking her to dirty water and PFAS, part of an onslaught of campaign literature arriving in the district in one form or another.

“Some have been hung on doors, some have been coming out through the mail. Some have been e-mail. Some have been other forms of electronic distribution,” Breazeale explained.

To start with, Breazeale has not been in the legislature. She’s serving her second term on the Minnetonka Beach City Council, which voted to build a new water tower that captured the iconic look of the old one. The council also supported a new water treatment plant that will filter PFAS beyond what’s required by the EPA.

“I’ve learned more about water infrastructure, PFAS, what it takes to build a new water tower, what it takes to build new water plant and all that goes into that,” she said. 

The facts don’t support the claim that Democratic lawmakers have abandoned clean water efforts. 

Since 2009 your tax dollars have gone to the Clean Water Fund, to protect and restore water quality in lakes, rivers, streams, and groundwater. Part of your lottery money has gone to the outdoors, which includes water quality initiatives.

In the 2023-2024 session, the DFL-controlled legislature voted to spent $318 million from the Clean Water Fund to clean water projects for 2024 and 2025. Those include environmental mitigation as well as assistance with water treatment plants.

In the same budget cycle, lawmakers devoted $25 million in lottery proceeds to water quality projects. In the current two-year budget cycle, Democrats also devoted $45 million to PFAS mitigation and filtering projects across the state. 

Lawmakers passed some of the toughest laws in the nation regulating PFAS in products.

“This is a beautiful community. Water is really important. Lake Minnetonka is literally the centerpiece of our district,” Ann Johnson Stewart told KARE.

She’s a civil engineer who specializes in environmental engineering and infrastructure, who served two years in the Senate in 2021 and 2022, when Republicans controlled that chamber.

“I’ve already met with all the engineers, and the public works directors and the mayors, because when you have small communities like this, they have to share water, or they share sewer interceptors, or they share maintenance kinds of activities.”

She was surprised by the messaging in the mailers, looking to pin dirty water and PFAS on her and her fellow Democrats. It’s especially significant because the battle for control of the legislature is largely fought in mailboxes and doorknobs.

“I mean, water is the whole reason that I’m really motivated in my job to make sure everybody has clean water, and that we don’t have PFAS. So, it was pretty ridiculous and just one of many pieces we’ve seen.”

Make Liberty Win has not responded to KARE’s inquiry, as of the deadline for this story.

Here’s a summary of the PFAS-related provisions from HF 2310, the 2023 Environment and Climate Budget bill, as prepared by the nonpartisan Minnesota House Research staff:

  • $2,070,000 each year from the environmental fund for the Pollution Control Agency (PCA) to develop and implement a program related to emerging issues, including Minnesota’s PFAS Blueprint.
  • $500,000 for a report on firefighter turnout gear and firefighter biomonitoring (see below for more information).
  • $50,000 from the remediation fund for a work group to develop recommendations for PFAS manufacturer fees (see below for more information).
  • $63,000 in fiscal year 2024 and $92,000 in fiscal year 2025 for the commissioner of health to amend the health risk limit for PFOS.
  • $25,000,000 for grants to support planning, designing, and preparing for solutions for public water treatment systems contaminated with PFAS and for the PCA to conduct source investigations of PFAS contamination and to sample, address, and treat private drinking water wells.
  • $4,210,000 in fiscal year 2024 and $210,000 in fiscal year 2025 for PFAS reduction grants, which includes $4,000,000 for grants to industry and public entities to identify sources of PFAS entering facilities and to develop pollution prevention and reduction initiatives.
  • $1,163,000 in fiscal year 2024 and $1,115,000 in fiscal year 2025 from the environmental fund for rulemaking and implementation of the new PFAS information requirements and product bans (more information on the policy below).
  • $478,000 from the environment and natural resources trust fund (ENRTF) for the University of Minnesota to develop novel methods for the detection, sequestration, and degradation of PFAS in Minnesota’s lakes and rivers.

That legislation also contained the following policy provisions, according to the memo from nonpartisan House Research staff:

  • Article 3, Section 1, requires manufacturers of a product containing intentionally added PFAS to submit certain information to the PCA by Jan. 1, 2026. The section also bans certain categories of products (carpets or rugs, cleaning products, cookware, cosmetics, dental floss, fabric treatments, juvenile products, menstruation products, textile furnishings, ski wax, and upholstered furniture) containing intentionally added PFAS beginning January 1, 2025. The PCA is given authority to ban additional products through rulemaking and a total ban on products containing intentionally added PFAS becomes effecting January 1, 2032, with exceptions for products where the use of PFAS is currently unavoidable as determined by the commissioner.
  • Article 3, Sections 18 & 19 modify PCA reporting requirements related to the 3M settlement and east metro private well testing for PFAS.
  • Article 3, Sections 25-27 & 31 prohibit the use of firefighting foam containing PFAS effective January 1, 2024. Certain exceptions would apply, including exceptions for airports and oil refineries and terminals.
  • Article 3, Section 30 requires the PCA to establish a work group to review options for collecting a fee from manufacturers of PFAS in the state and submit a report to the legislature by February 15, 2024.
  • Article 3, Section 32 requires the PCA to submit a report to the legislature regarding PFAS in turnout gear by January 15, 2024, including recommendations and protocols for PFAS biomonitoring in firefighters.
  • Article 3, Section 33, requires the PCA to adopt water quality standards for six PFAS by July 1, 2026.
  • Article 3, Section 34, requires the commissioner of health to amend the health risk limit for PFOS by July 1, 2026.
  • Article 9, Section 9, allows St. Louis County to use a portion of its environmental trust fund for projects to protect Lake Superior and other waters in the Great Lakes watershed from PFAS contamination from landfills.



Read the original article

Leave your vote

Continue Reading

Copyright © 2024 Breaking MN

Log In

Forgot password?

Forgot password?

Enter your account data and we will send you a link to reset your password.

Your password reset link appears to be invalid or expired.

Log in

Privacy Policy

Add to Collection

No Collections

Here you'll find all collections you've created before.