Republished July 31, 2021 - 7:20 PM
Original Publication Date July 30, 2021 - 11:26 PM
SHOOTING DEATH-CHARGE
Murder charge filed in shooting outside Elks Club
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — A Minneapolis man has been charged in a fatal shooting outside the Elks Club in June. Deandre D. Turner was charged Thursday in Hennepin County District Court with one count of second-degree murder with intent in the June 30 killing of Andrew T. McGinley. The Star Tribune reports Turner was charged via arrest warrant and was not in custody as of Friday afternoon. McGinley died of multiple gunshot wounds. The charges against Turner did not cite a motive, but they noted that McGinley and several others had gathered for a vigil for someone who had recently died.
AIR QUALITY-MINNESOTA
Minnesota extends statewide air quality alert until Tuesday
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — The Minnesota Pollution Control Agency has extended an air quality alert until noon on Tuesday for the entire state due to what authorities are calling an “unprecedented significant air quality event." Minnesota has been dealing with smoke from Canadian wildfires that has created some of the highest particulate readings on record. An air quality alert was set to expire Friday afternoon, but it was extended. The MPCA says fine particle levels are expected to reach a level that's considered very unhealthy for everyone, across north central and south central Minnesota. That area includes Hibbing, Brainerd, St. Cloud, and the Twin Cities.
IMPERFECT PURSUIT
Perfectly Impossible; Gymnasts wrestle with the imperfect
TOKYO (AP) — Even as they soar to the top of their sport, the best gymnasts in the world grapple with the idea of imperfection. No gymnast has been given a “perfect” score under the sport's Code of Points since it was overhauled in 2006. Newly minted Olympic champion Sunisa Lee says she understands she'll never do the “perfect” routine at the international level. It's one of the reasons she's looking forward to her NCAA career at Auburn University. The NCAA still uses the “perfect 10” scoring system.
AP-US-WOMAN-BEHEADED-MINNESOTA
Man charged with beheading woman in Minneapolis suburb
SHAKOPEE, Minn. (AP) — A man is charged with beheading a woman while they were in a car in traffic in a Minneapolis suburb. Alexis Saborit was charged Friday with second-degree intentional murder in the knife attack on America Thayer, which happened Wednesday afternoon in Shakopee. Several people witnessed the attack. When police arrived, they found Thayer's body and head. A machete-style knife was in an alley a few blocks away. Authorities have not said what motivated the attack, but Soborit has a criminal history that includes a domestic assault conviction for an attack against Thayer in 2017. At that time, she said they had been dating seven years.
MINNESOTA LAWMAKER-ETHICS
Embattled Minnesota lawmaker will apologize to colleague
ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) — Rep. John Thompson has agreed to publicly apologize for calling a colleague a racist during a debate on the Minnesota House floor last month. The embattled St. Paul Democrat agreed to apologize to Republican Rep. Eric Lucero, of Dayton, he next time the House convenes. The St. Paul Pioneer Press reports the deal was approved by a House ethics panel Friday. In return, an ethics complaint Lucero filed against Thompson will be dismissed. The complaint was unrelated other controversies dogging Thompson. Top Democrats called for his resignation this month after police reports resurfaced alleging he committed domestic violence, which he has denied.
PONZI SCHEME-PETTERS
Receivership closes; $722M recovered for Petters' victims
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — The job of recovering money for the victims of Minnesota businessman Tom Petters’ Ponzi scheme has come to an end, as a federal judge has closed the receivership, which recovered $722 million. Petters, of Wayzata, is serving a 50-year prison sentence for defrauding investors out of $1.9 billion. Receiver Doug Kelley and his team have spent more than a decade searching for and liquidating Petters’ assets to compensate as many victims and creditors as possible.
AP-CAR-IOWA-SPEEDWAY-ANNOUNCER'S-RANT
Racetrack promoter sorry for backing announcer's racist rant
FAIRMONT, Minn. (AP) — An auto racing announcer in southern Minnesota will sit out for the rest of the season following a racist rant in Iowa last month. And a track promoter who supported him is now apologizing. Fairmont Raceway promoter Jon McCorkell says he's sorry for comments he made in support of longtime announcer Lon Oelke. Oelke was fired from an Iowa racetrack after he complained about people who don't stand for the national anthem. McCorkell initially said he agreed with Oelke. But now he says he's learned a lot about the issues behind the protest that takes a stand against racial inequity. The raceway says Oelke will take a leave of absence.
POWER PLANT SALE
Minnesota co-ops approve North Dakota power plant sale
BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) — A Minnesota electric company says its member cooperatives have endorsed a deal to sell a financially troubled coal-fueled power plant in North Dakota to a Bismarck firm. Great River Energy says its 28 member cooperatives approved the sale Friday of the Coal Creek Station and an associated transmission line that runs from the plant’s location in central North Dakota to Minnesota. Terms of the deal have not been publicly disclosed. The company says the cooperatives also approved an agreement to purchase electricity over the next decade from the plant’s new owner, Rainbow Energy Center, a marketer that sells wholesale electric power.
News from © The Associated Press, 2021