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With brash police chief gone, Metro Transit’s safety efforts push on

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“Now it’s [a] team approach, a whole community approach, to public safety,” Dotseth said.

That includes the addition of Transit Rider Investment Program (TRIP) agents aboard the Green and Blue light-rail lines checking fares and educating passengers on how to behave. Currently, there are 40 TRIP agents, but Metro Transit’s proposed 2025 budget calls for up to 100 agents by the end of next year.

Beginning in October, TRIP agents will work on the transit system from 5 a.m. to midnight every day. Officials say that TRIP agents have made more than a quarter-million contacts with riders since the program debuted in February.

Metro Transit will continue to employ private security guards at problem transit stations including Franklin Avenue, Lake Street/Midtown and Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport Blue Line light-rail stations, Central Station on the Green Line, the Orange Line’s Interstate 35W and Lake Street station, and the Brooklyn Center, Uptown and Chicago-Lake transit centers.

The agency also contracts with five community organizations to help transit passengers experiencing homelessness, hunger, mental health challenges and drug and alcohol addiction. Since its launch, the organizations have made contact with about 6,700 individuals, resulting in some 3,800 referrals for various services, according to Metro Transit.

There’s evidence the safety plan is starting to bear fruit.



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Homeless Memorial March participants brave cold in Minneapolis to honor those who died

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After returning to the church from the march, attendees took turns placing their signs with the names of people who died at the altar with hundreds of candles. They listened while speakers including Rev. DeWayne Davis, Lt. Gov. Peggy Flanagan, Simpson program manager Mary Gallini and others. Gov. Tim Walz did not attend, but Flanagan attended on his behalf to present an official proclamation of Dec. 12 being known as “Minnesota Homeless Memorial Day.”

Some speakers such as Cathy ten Broeke, assistant commissioner of the Minnesota Interagency Council on Homelessness, said they hope the memorial won’t be necessary in the future if there is work done to end homelessness.

“They are all of our relatives, and I hope that we recommit ourselves tonight to the work to ensure that we no longer have to have a memorial service remembering any one of our relatives experiencing homelessness when they die,” she said.



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Austin Navarro of Albert Lea sentenced to 25 years in prison for murder of 2-year-old child

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An Albert Lea man was sentenced Wednesday to 25 years in prison for murder of a 2-year-old boy.

Austin Michael Navarro, 26, also received a concurrent 32-month sentence for physically assaulting his 12-week-old son.

Navarro pleaded guilty to second-degree murder and third-degree assault charges in Freeborn County District Court on Sept.18.

He assaulted the two children while they were under his care on July 6, 2023, prosecutors said.

Navarro admitted in a plea hearing that he punched and kicked both children multiple times.

The 2-year-old was the child of his then-girlfriend. The toddler died after sustaining grievous wounds, including broken ribs, a lacerated liver and a traumatic brain injury.

The 12-week-old infant survived the assault but sustained several injuries to his head and body, including fractured ribs.

“My heart goes out Austin Navarro’s victims, as well as their families. While nothing can undo the pain Navarro caused, I hope that Navarro’s conviction is able to bring them some measure of solace,” Attorney General Keith Ellison said in a statement Thursday.



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Minneapolis council fails override Frey’s veto of U of M protesters

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Nine votes were needed to override Frey’s veto, but the vote was 7-6 in favor — not enough to overturn the resolution, which expressed solidarity with “nonviolent campus activism opposing war and supporting Palestinian human rights.”

The university has disputed that the protest at Morrill Hall was nonviolent, saying protesters spray-painted security cameras, broke interior windows and barricaded exits, trapping staffers for “an extended period of time.” University police and Hennepin County sheriff’s deputies arrested 11 protesters.

The university said the protesters caused over $67,000 in damage to doorways, walls and flooring; violated multiple university polices; and caused emotional harm to employees as they piled up furniture and copy machines to prevent workers from leaving.

The vote to override was supported by Council Members Robin Wonsley, Jason Chavez, Aurin Chowdhury, Jeremiah Ellison and Jamal Osman, as well as Council President Elliott Payne and Council Vice President Aisha Chughtai.

Those voting to sustain the veto were Council Members Michael Rainville, LaTrisha Vetaw, Katie Cashman, Emily Koski, Andrea Jenkins and Linea Palmisano.

That’s the same breakdown as the original 7-5 vote to approve the resolution, except that Jenkins was absent.



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