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Man charged after alleged road rage incident in St. Paul
The shooting occurred Monday around 7:30 p.m. on the 500 block of Front Avenue.
ST PAUL, Minn. — A 25-year-old Minneapolis man is accused of fatally shooting a man who he claimed assaulted him in an act of road rage Monday night in St. Paul.
Ian Loi Bursey is charged with two counts of second-degree murder after he shot a man Monday around 7:30 p.m. on the 500 block of Front Avenue. Bursey told officials that the shooting stemmed from an incident that began on Interstate 35E.
According to court documents, Bursey, who was driving a silver Hyundai, was merging onto the interstate and then allegedly “brake checked” a red Toyota Corolla that had let him in. Prosecutors say Bursey “brake checked” him and then later accused the driver of the Corolla of cutting him off after the two vehicles got off at Maryland Avenue. Court documents go onto say that Bursey followed the Corolla west on Maryland Avenue and south on Dale Street.
Prosecutors say Bursey then followed the Corolla into the parking lot of a strip mall and allegedly threw something at the vehicle. The driver of the Corolla then went into a store and then while leaving the lot, saw Bursey parked nearby. Court documents say the driver of the Corolla pulled up next to Bursey’s Hundai, and then the passenger of the Corolla got out and started punching Bursey. Bursey then fired his gun, according to court documents.
The driver of the Corolla then began driving toward Regions Hospital, but was involved in a crash near 12th Street and Cedar Street. When officers arrived on the scene, they found the passenger unconscious with a gunshot wound. The passenger, later identified as 26-year-old Tajai Evans of St. Paul, died at the scene.
Bursey told investigators that the Corolla cut him off about five times before the confrontation, however, was unable to provide much detail about what occurred. He told officials that his anxiety affects his memory. He did tell authorities that he followed the vehicle to the strip mall to get the license plate number, but officials say he didn’t have any record of the plate number. Bursey, who says he’s a rideshare driver, told investigators that he later parked and tried to get a rider when Evans started punching him.
Bursey said he tried to punch back but couldn’t. He told officials he racked a round into the chamber as a warning, and shot twice from inside the vehicle. Evans then ran off and Bursey called 911. He told officials he wasn’t trying to shoot and kill Evans, according to the charging documents, and when asked if he thought Evans had a weapon, Bursey told officials “it looked like the other man kind of did.” The driver of the Corolla, however, told police that Bursey shot so quickly after the first punch was thrown that “it seemed like Bursey had been planning something,” the criminal complaint says.
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Officials asking for information in 35-year-old cold case
8-month-old Michael Freeman died on Nov. 6, 1989 after going into seizures while in the care of his babysitter.
FRIDLEY, Minn. — It’s been 35 years since 8-month-old Michael Freeman died one day after having seizures while in the care of his babysitter in Fridley.
Officials say Michael was transported to a hospital on Nov. 5, 1989, and then died the following day. An autopsy showed that he had a skull fracture, a large subdural hemmorrhage and a cerebral edema, leading authorities to rule his death a homicide.
No arrest was ever made, but the Anoka County Sheriff’s Office is again looking to the public for any information that could help lead officials to a suspect.
Anyone with possible leads or tips is asked to email the department at ACSOColdCases@anokacountymn.gov. Officials say people can remain anonymous as they look for more answers.
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How a handful of votes could decide which party has control at the Minnesota State Capitol
Election results show Republicans and Democrats may each have 67 seats in the Minnesota House, but at least two races could head to a recount.
ST PAUL, Minn. — The Minnesota State Capitol is filled with big personalities and lengthy debates, but which party has control next year could be decided by a very small number of voters.
University of Minnesota political professor Larry Jacobs said as of Wednesday evening there is a dead-even tie in the Minnesota House with 67 Republicans and 67 Democrats.
“My breath is still being held. We are in the middle of a very close battle,” Jacobs said. “It’s really rare. You have to go into the history books.”
According to the Minnesota Legislature’s website, Minnesota hasn’t experienced a tie in the house since 1979. Records show the two parties argued over who would fill the role as Speaker of the House, since neither party could claim the position without a majority in the House.
The Secretary of State took over the role temporarily until the two parties worked out a deal. However, records show that deal between the parties eventually fell apart during the final days of the session.
According to the Minnesota Legislature’s records, the last 10 days of the 1979 legislative session included:
Fists slammed on desks, cries of order that were ignored, protests and dissents being logged in the Journal of the House, a walk out of DFL representatives that left the House without a quorum, and official business left unfinished, necessitating a special session.”
Jacobs said history could repeat itself if the tie in this current election is ultimately upheld.
“The first question will be well, who is going to be the speaker? Who are going to be on the committees? How are the committees going to operate? There will be a lot to sort out,” Jacobs said.
However, there is a decent chance the tie in the Minnesota House could be broken. Two of the races for seats in the Minnesota House are incredibly close. In District 14-B in Saint Cloud, the race was decided by just 28 votes. In District 54-A in Shakopee, the race was decided by a matter of just 13 votes.
Election officials in the respective counties, Scott County and Stearns County, both say that a recount is possible.
Officials say the losing candidates must request a recount, but their campaigns won’t have to pay for the recount because the margin of victory is lower than 0.5%, which is the requirement for a publicly funded recount.
Election officials in Scott County say the recount in the race for 54-A could happen sometime between Nov. 20 and Dec. 2.
Election officials in Stearns County say a recount in the race for 14-B would likely happen sometime during the week of Thanksgiving.
Election officials in both counties are currently working with the Minnesota Secretary of State’s Office to facilitate their potential recount should the candidates formally request one.
“These are very close races. It’s a few dozen votes. If you think of your extended family that might show up for a reunion, it’s that kind of difference,” Professor Jacobs says.
There is more at stake than just control over the Minnesota House. Jacobs said recounts in these two races could potentially determine whether one party has control over the entire Minnesota State Capitol.
“The Democrats have been able to hold the one seat that was up in the Senate, so they are going to have their one-seat majority in the Senate. The governor of course, Tim Walz, is back, so the Democrats have two of the three.”
The Democrats would have had a clean sweep of all three bodies if it weren’t for just a handful of votes in these two close races that have narrow victories by Republicans.
“Overall, it’s good news for the Republicans, because if it’s a tie, or it’s a majority, they are going to be able to block the Democrats,” Jacobs said/
So, if everything stands, could history repeat itself here in Minnesota? Jacobs said Minnesotans could be facing another chaotic session at the State Capitol, like they did back in 1979.
“I would hope there would be some effort on some issues to find agreement, but the reality is that the game plan for Republicans is to stop the Democrats. They don’t want to see spending. They don’t want to see taxes being increased. I don’t think it’s malice. I think it’s just very different political agendas,” Jacobs said.
Besides the races in 54-A and 14-B, nearly a half dozen other Minnesota house races were determined by a few hundred votes.
Candidates in those other close races could also request a recount, but election officials say since the margin of victory in those other races is higher than the margin of 0.5% the candidates would have to pay for the recount themselves.
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Economic concerns pushed voters to Trump, so what comes next?
President Trump is promising sweeping changes to tariffs, immigration and taxes. While Wall Street surges in the short term, experts say the months ahead are murky.
MINNEAPOLIS — Exit polls found a consistent theme among the voters who helped send President Donald Trump back to the White House on Tuesday: Inflation and the economy were top of mind.
According to national exit polls conducted by NBC News, 45% of all voters said they were worse off financially than they were four years ago, with 2 in 3 rating the economy poorly.
But at a time when many economic indicators show the U.S. is outperforming many other countries, the views of voters still vary widely.
“One thing that’s interesting about the economy this year is that the economy has sent some mixed signals,” said Chris Chapp, Political Science Professor at St. Olaf College. “And voters really reacted through a very partisan lens.”
Professor Chapp and his students conducted exit polling across 14 precincts within Minnesota Congressional District Two.
Of the 665 voters surveyed, 55% of Trump voters listed “Inflation/Economy” as the most important issue, compared to just 18% of Harris voters.
While Harris did win Minnesota, and narrowly carry CD2, Chapp says economic concerns help explain why she underperformed democrats Angie Craig and Amy Klobuchar.
“In our survey, close to 10% of Klobuchar voters also voted for Trump,” Chapp said.
Of those split-ticket voters, Chapp says 45% listed “Inflation/Economy” as the top issue.
“It doesn’t matter where you go, high prices are hitting people in the face,” said Chris Farrell, senior economics contributor for American Public Media’s Marketplace.
While economic frustrations helped swing the election in Trump’s favor, Farrell says the post election surge on Wall Street on Wednesday also shows how strong the underlying economy continues to be.
“President-elect Trump is inheriting a good economy,” Farrell said. “You have a low unemployment rate. The economy grew at a 2.7% annual rate in the third quarter, the inflation rate is coming down.
And then the expectation is there is going to be less regulation and lower taxes, so you’re looking at pretty good cash flow. That’s what I think we’re going to be seeing in the stock market.”
But he says the real test will be what comes next.
“I do believe that we will have tariff increases,” Farrell said. “I don’t know what exactly the percentage is going to be but Trump has been consistent throughout the campaign and actually back when he was President, very consistent that he likes tariffs.”
Once that plan emerges he anticipates a different kind of inflation fight with the federal reserve over interest rate cuts.
Then there are all the other cuts that Trump has promised on the campaign trail, alongside his so-called “secretary of cost-cutting,” Elon Musk.
“My expectation, and this is what I’m going to watch, is that Musk is going to be involved,” Farrell said. “What does this really mean if he gets involved in cutting the budget, how will that emerge, how deep will the cuts be who is going to get impacted by those cuts? Follow that closely because once we start making cuts, it can have a real impact on people’s ordinary lives.”