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Maplewood woman given 1½-year prison term for stealing $1.25M in government COVID-19 relief money

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A Maplewood woman has been sentenced to 1½ years in prison for stealing for herself and others $1.25 million in COVID-19 relief money from government agencies.

The sentencing Wednesday of Takara Hughes, 36, in U.S. District Court in Minneapolis came after she pleaded guilty to wire fraud for submitting phony claims for unemployment benefits to state agencies in Minnesota and elsewhere.

Along with her prison time, Hughes’ sentence includes three years of supervision after her release and an order to pay back everything she stole from agencies that included the Minnesota Department of Employment and Economic Development and California Employment Development Department.

Ahead of sentencing, Hughes’ defense argued for her to receive a prison term of a year and a day, pointing out that both of her parents’ lives of crime made her childhood especially difficult.

But prosecutors pushed for 2¾ years in prison, noting in a filing with the court that she “lied and defrauded repeatedly and audaciously” as part of her scheme.

In January 2022, federal agents searched her home and found “substantial evidence of her scheme, including on her devices and her cell phone,” the filing continued.

One text on her phone included in the prosecution filing referenced submitting false claim applications and included the message, “It’s so easy. I can walk him thru.”

The attorney for a co-defendant, 39-year-old Tequisha Solomon, of Las Vegas, has pleaded guilty to wire fraud.

Federal sentencing guidelines call for Solomon, whose thefts were nearly four times what Hughes stole, to serve anywhere from seven to 8¾ years in prison. However, federal judges have full discretion when sentencing defendants and are not bound by the guidelines calculation. Her sentencing has yet to be scheduled.

For example, according to prosecutors:

While Solomon and Hughes lived in Nevada or Minnesota, they falsely claimed they resided in Southern California, where they worked as hairstylists, and received at least $37,000 and $46,000, respectively, in state unemployment benefits.

Hughes and Solomon, who has lived in South St. Paul and Woodbury, also fraudulently applied for economic injury disaster and federal Paycheck Protection Program small-business loans by falsely claiming they owned cleaning service businesses. They also submitted fraudulent claims on behalf of other people and charged them a fee to do so.

Solomon reportedly cost the federal government and several state agencies at least $4.7 million for alleged false claims. Hughes reportedly was paid $1.25 million for herself and others.



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Como Zoo names new Amur tigers

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Twin Amur tigers born at Como Zoo in August now have names — Marisa and Maks.

Two long-time volunteers who have worked with zookeepers to care for and teach the public about the zoo’s big cats came up with the names, the first to be born at the St. Paul zoo in more than 40 years.

Marisa, a name that the volunteers found to mean “spirited and tenacious,” call that a perfect reflection of her personality. The name also carries special significance for the Como Zoo community, as it honors a retired zookeeper of the same name who was instrumental in the care of large cats during her 43 years at the zoo, Como Zoo and Conservatory Director Michelle Furrer said.

The male cub has been named Maks, which is associated with meanings like “the greatest” or “strength and leadership.” The volunteers felt this was an apt description of the male cub’s confident demeanor and growing sense of leadership, Furrer said.

“Marisa and Maks aren’t just names; they’re a fun reminder of the passion and care that keep us committed to protecting wildlife every day,” Furrer said.

The newborns and their first-time mother, 7-year-old Bernadette, remain off view to allow for more bonding time, zoo officials said. The cubs’ father, 11-year-old Tsar, has been a Como resident since February 2019 and remains on view.

Fewer than 500 Amur tigers — also known as Siberian tigers — remain in the wild as they face critical threats from habitat loss, poaching and human-wildlife conflict, the zoo said.



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Ash tree removals cause wood waste crisis in Minneapolis, St. Paul and across MN

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Much of the wood waste in the metro area is sent to a processing site near Pig’s Eye Lake in St. Paul, where it is stored before being burned to produce energy at the St. Paul Cogeneration plant downtown.

Cogeneration provides power to about half of downtown and was originally built to manage elm-tree waste in response to Dutch elm disease. The plant burns approximately 240,000 tons of wood each year, according to Michael Auger, senior vice president of District Energy in St. Paul.

Jim Calkins, a certified landscape horticulturalist who has been involved in discussions about the problem, said he thinks using wood for energy is the most logical solution.

“The issue is, we don’t have enough facilities to be able to handle that, at least in the Twin Cities,” Calkins said. “So there has to be dollars to support transportation to get the wood to those places, or in some cases, to upgrade some of those facilities such that they are able to burn wood.”

Plans are in place to convert Koda Energy in Shakopee to burn ash wood, which could potentially handle around 40,000 tons of wood waste, but that would take around two years to establish, according to Klapperich.

In some areas of the state, cities have resorted to burning excess wood waste because they felt they had no other option. Open burning wood releases a lot of carbon into the air, Klapperich said.



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Former Nebraska attorney opens bookstore in St. Paul’s Union Depot

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Weary from the rat race nature of practicing commercial law, Danielle Miller had long dreamed of starting a new professional life as a bookstore owner. When the Lincoln, Neb., resident saw a space at St. Paul’s Union Depot, she moved to make her dream a reality. She and her husband now call the Macalester-Groveland neighborhood home.

Eye On St. Paul recently visited with Miller in her sun-drenched store, Story Line Books, to talk about what spurred her to leave the law behind and lose herself in shelves of books. This interview was edited for length.

Q: So, you’ve opened a bookstore, in Lowertown. Are you a little crazy?

A: That’s been the reaction. There’s been a lot of “Really? Lowertown?” There’s been a lot of that. It’s a little unnerving.

Q: Why decide to just up and move to St. Paul?

A: We travel a lot; we travel all over the world. And we go to bookstores. We were here visiting [my husband’s] parents in Woodbury, and we drove down Randolph because we like to eat at Due Focacceria. And we saw this building that had “For Sale” on it. It was a 900-square-foot retail spot on the bottom and an apartment above. And I was like, that is the European bookstore dream, right? I looked it up online, but it got scooped up. A week later, I was looking again and this [Union Depot space] was the first post.

I was immediately in love. The next time we were up here, we made arrangements to come and see it. And I told my husband, “You should probably get a job in St Paul.”

Q: Back up a few steps. Why this compulsion to open a bookstore when you were a working attorney?



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