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Bank teller machine scam netted more than $400,000

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Four people stole more than a quarter of a million dollars through a scheme that involved depositing phony checks and making cash withdrawals at teller machines in the Twin Cities, according to a newly unsealed indictment.

A federal judge on Monday unsealed an indictment that included allegations of conspiracy, bank fraud and aggravated identity theft after one of the defendants — Cornelius Anthony McDade— was arrested in Wisconsin. Three others have yet to be apprehended and their names were redacted from the charging document made public this week.

Prosecutors allege that McDade, 32, of Minneapolis, and the others focused on interactive teller machines at the Edina, St. Paul and Maple Grove branches of Wings Financial Credit Union during a scheme that spanned from Nov. 2021 through March 2022 in Minnesota “and elsewhere.” They deposited more than 150 fraudulent or forged checks at Wings and used the deposits to illegally take out about $272,545 in cash, according to charges, and deployed similar tactics to take out another $150,000 from other financial institutions, including Affinity Plus Credit Union and Huntington Bank.

McDade and the others are accused of fraudulently gaining access to bank accounts, debit cards and checkbooks of numerous people at Wings and other financial institutions. The charges say they recruited people on social media to open new bank accounts at the institutions to carry out the scheme and also stole debit cards and checkbooks from other people in the Twin Cities area.

The alleged plot relied on opening bank accounts to deposit forged or fraudulent checks at the teller machines — also referred to as XTMs — at Wings, immediately withdrawing and stealing cash from the accounts. This led to negative account balances after the checks did not clear.

McDade did not have an attorney listed for him as of Tuesday afternoon. A spokesperson for Wings Financial Credit Union declined to comment, citing a company policy not to comment on pending litigation.

McDade and three others were indicted by a federal grand jury on Sept. 19. Following McDade’s arrest, Assistant U.S. Attorney Rachel Kline asked a judge Monday to unseal a redacted indictment because “the government no longer has flight and destruction of evidence concerns.”

Similar to ATM machines, XTM machines let customers deposit checks and withdraw cash immediately without waiting for the check to clear. Customers can also use the machines to withdraw larger amounts of cash than would normally be allowed at an ATM. According to the indictment, Wings customers can use XTM machines after their accounts have been open for 30 days and Wings caps transactions at $5,000 in deposits per day and $2,000 cash back per transaction. The credit union placed a hold on accounts that reached the $5,000 limit.



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St. Paul police release body camera footage of shooting of Lowertown homicide suspect

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Murdock continues to ask the officers, “Why did you shoot me?”

The officers turn Murdock onto his stomach and place him in handcuffs. As the officers begin asking him, “Where were you hit, buddy?” Murdock does not respond as the officers pull the sweatshirt up on his torso. The officers then yell for medics to be brought in. Murdock was airlifted to HCMC in Minneapolis, where he died from his injuries.

Along with the footage, St. Paul police sent out a news release, in which St. Paul Police Chief Axel Henry said it’s a “very sad time for our city and the families of those impacted by the loss of a loved one.”

“We stand committed to being transparent and accountable for our actions and we hope the release of these videos will help answer some of the questions people have,” Henry said. “The families, our community, and our officers will continue to be our priority as this independent investigation moves forward.”

The Bureau of Criminal Apprehension is conducting an investigation into the shooting of Murdock. Asked about why officers decided to fire, spokesperson Jill Oliveira said “any information about motive is part of the BCA’s active investigation.”



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Chinese and Russian coast guard ships sail through the Bering Sea together, US says

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WASHINGTON — The U.S. Coast Guard said Tuesday that it spotted two Russian ships and two Chinese vessels passing through the Bering Sea in formation on Saturday, in a sign of the growing cooperation between Beijing and Moscow in the Arctic.

The Chinese and Russian coast guard ships were spotted about five miles inside the Russian exclusive economic zone in the northernmost location where Chinese vessels have been seen by the U.S. Coast Guard, it said. The Bering Sea separates Russia from Alaska.

”This recent activity demonstrates the increased interest in the Arctic by our strategic competitors,” Rear Adm. Megan Dean, commander of the 17th Coast Guard District, said in a statement.

In July, Russian and Chinese bombers flew together for the first time in international airspace off the coast of Alaska. The flights were not seen as a threat, but it was the first time that Chinese bombers had flown within the Alaskan air defense identification zone and the first time Chinese and Russian aircraft had taken off from the same base in northern Russia.

The Chinese coast guard said in a statement that the joint patrol with Russia, which followed a joint drill, was to check fishing boats to maintain order in the North Pacific Ocean, in accordance with a U.N. and international convention. It said the vessels carried out exercises on search and rescue of illegal boats that showed ”high efficiency in coordination and cooperation.”

The close relationship between the Chinese and Russian militaries has been a concern in Washington, which has criticized Beijing for supporting Moscow’s war in Ukraine.



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Minneapolis police projectile injured protester in 2020 unrest

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A new federal lawsuit alleges that a Woodbury man sustained a traumatic brain injury after being shot with a rubber bullet by Minneapolis police while peacefully protesting the killing of George Floyd outside the Third Precinct in 2020.

The ordeal left Mason Hermann, of Woodbury, with short-term memory loss, headaches and fatigue, the lawsuit contends.

Attorney Jeff Storms filed the 29-page lawsuit in court last week. It seeks unspecified damages from the city of Minneapolis for violating Hermann’s First Amendment rights.

Minneapolis has paid nearly $50 million to settle claims of police brutality or officer misconduct since Floyd’s murder. Many hefty payouts went to journalists and bystanders injured by law enforcement officials during the unrest, actions that have since been described as a pattern of unconstitutional behavior by the U.S. Department of Justice.

City spokesman Allen Henry acknowledged that the city has been served with the lawsuit, but declined to comment on the pending litigation.

Hermann, then 20, joined a growing crowd of protesters on Lake Street on May 27, 2020, to criticize MPD’s actions. No curfew restrictions were in place at that time.

Officers in tactical gear were perched on the Third Precinct’s roof and outside its barricaded entrance for hours, where some armed with 40-mm “less lethal” rounds fired upon the crowd. At approximately 6:50 p.m., according to the lawsuit, a rubber bullet struck the left side of Hermann’s head, without warning or provocation. No commands were given prior to that use of force.

The unidentified officer “shot Hermann with the projectile in retaliation for and to chill Hermann’s further speech,” the lawsuit says, adding that Hermann “never displayed any aggression” toward police.



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