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Judge dismisses Comey indictment over unlawful interim U.S. attorney appointment
U.S. District Judge Cameron McGowan Currie dismissed the indictments against James Comey and New York AG Letitia James, finding that interim U.S. Attorney Lindsey Halligan was unlawfully appointed and voiding the actions she took as the lone presenter and signatory to the grand‑jury proceedings; the dismissals were without prejudice. The rulings follow magistrate Judge William Fitzpatrick’s sharp criticism of DOJ for “indict first, investigate later” and orders to produce grand‑jury and seized materials, while separate orders have temporarily barred DOJ from using Daniel Richman’s seized files; DOJ has defended the appointment, says it will appeal, and may seek to refile.
Justice Department Appointments James Comey Case Courts
DoD reviewing public release of Sept. 2 Venezuela boat‑strike video, Hegseth says
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said the Pentagon is reviewing whether to publicly release video of the Sept. 2 Venezuela boat strike, reiterating that Adm. Frank “Mitch” Bradley ordered a follow‑on strike; the White House confirmed a second strike that killed two survivors and defends the broader campaign as lawful while President Trump said he would support releasing any footage. Lawmakers from both parties viewed classified video and split sharply—some, including Rep. Jim Himes and Sen. Tim Kaine, called the imagery deeply troubling and warned it could raise war‑crimes questions if survivors were targeted, while others like Sen. Tom Cotton defended the strikes—prompting bipartisan Armed Services investigations and further demands for transparency amid roughly 21–22 vessel strikes and about 80–87 reported deaths.
U.S. Anti-Drug Military Operations Use of Force Legal Authority U.S. Venezuela Operations
Iran says second U.S. deportation flight carries 55
Iran says a second U.S. deportation flight carrying 55 Iranians has left the United States, with Tehran's foreign ministry saying the deportees "announced their willingness for return" and that U.S. authorities cited legal breaches of immigration regulations. A U.S. official told the NYT the routine deportation also carried non‑Iranian nationals who would disembark in Cairo while the Iranians were routed via Kuwait to transfer to a chartered Kuwait Airways flight to Tehran; ICE declined to confirm specific flights, saying removal flights occur every day.
Iran–U.S. Relations U.S. Immigration and Enforcement U.S.–Iran Relations
China trade surplus tops $1T amid tariffs
China’s customs agency said Monday, Dec. 8, 2025, that its annual trade surplus has surpassed $1 trillion for the first time, as November exports rose 5.9% year over year even while shipments to the United States plunged nearly 29% under U.S. tariffs. The report notes U.S. import taxes on Chinese goods peaked at 145% this spring and have been reduced to 47.5%, and that China has redirected exports to Europe, Africa, Latin America and the rest of Asia.
U.S.–China Trade Global Economy
Murdaugh trial clerk Becky Hill pleads guilty
Former Colleton County Clerk of Court Mary Rebecca “Becky” Hill, 58, pleaded guilty in South Carolina to charges stemming from showing sealed exhibits from Alex Murdaugh’s murder trial to a photographer and lying about it in court. Hill had been arrested in May on obstruction and perjury counts, as well as separate misconduct‑in‑office charges tied to bonuses and promotion of her book, and her conduct has figured in Murdaugh’s appeals.
Courts and Legal Alex Murdaugh
Wegmans recalls mixed nuts for Salmonella risk
The FDA announced a recall of Wegmans Deluxe Mixed Nuts Unsalted sold in nine states and Washington, D.C., after supplier testing found Salmonella in a lot of raw pistachios used in the products. The recalled items, manufactured by Mellace Family Brands California in Warren, Ohio, were sold between Nov. 3 and Dec. 1; no illnesses have been reported and customers can return affected products for a full refund.
Food Safety Recalls FDA
Supreme Court hears Trump v. Slaughter today on presidential removal power
Today the Supreme Court hears Trump v. Slaughter, a challenge to the FTC’s statutory "for-cause" removal protections after President Trump removed Commissioner Rebecca Kelly Slaughter by email — a case that asks the justices to overturn the 1935 Humphrey’s Executor precedent and could greatly expand presidential power to fire independent-agency heads. Oral arguments begin at 10 a.m. ET with live audio; U.S. Solicitor General D. John Sauer will argue for the administration and Amit Agarwal for Slaughter, after the Court allowed the removal to stand pending review despite a lower-court order to reinstate her.
Supreme Court Presidential Removal Power Federal Agencies and Administrative Law
Blackburn, Cantwell unveil NIL savings bill
Sens. Marsha Blackburn (R‑Tenn.) and Maria Cantwell (D‑Wash.) introduced the HUSTLE Act to create tax‑advantaged accounts for college athletes’ name, image and likeness (NIL) income, require financial education, and tighten oversight of athlete agents. The bill allows contributions up to the annual gift‑tax exclusion, permits up to $35,000 in unused funds to roll into an IRA once an athlete has been out of college sports for at least a year, and directs Treasury to issue regulations to prevent abuse. The proposal updates the Sports Agent Responsibility and Trust Act to require agent registration with states and aims to curb exploitative commissions and IP grabs.
College Sports NIL U.S. Congress
ICE warns Illinois over releasing detainees
ICE sent a letter, shared with Fox News Digital, warning Illinois officials that state and local agencies are releasing violent criminal noncitizens despite active immigration detainers, which the agency says endangers public safety. ICE reports 1,768 criminal aliens with active detainers have been released since January 2025 and another 4,015 with pending detainers remain in custody, including individuals linked to 51 homicides and more than 800 sexual‑predatory offenses; the agency cited multiple cases where local authorities failed to notify ICE before release and asked whether Illinois will change course.
Immigration Enforcement Illinois Public Safety
Zelenskyy meets Starmer, Macron and Merz in London as EU backs ‘just and lasting’ ceasefire, U.S. plan faces Donbas sticking point
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy met in London with UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer, France’s Emmanuel Macron and Germany’s Friedrich Merz to review a U.S.-backed peace plan and seek a “just and lasting” ceasefire backed by robust European and U.S. security guarantees, with Merz voicing skepticism about some details. A major sticking point is a U.S. proposal suggesting Ukraine cede control of the Donbas; President Trump said Zelenskyy had not yet read the updated plan and claimed Ukrainian negotiators liked it and Russia was “fine with it,” while envoys Rustem Umerov and Gen. Andriy Hnatov are to brief Zelenskyy after recent talks.
Ukraine Peace Talks European Security U.S. Foreign Policy
Paramount launches $74.4B hostile tender for WBD to derail Netflix deal
Paramount launched a hostile tender offer for Warner Bros. Discovery at $30 a share — about $74.4 billion and including cable assets such as CNN/TNT/TBS — set to expire Jan. 8, 2026, directly challenging Netflix’s roughly $72 billion agreement to buy Warner’s studio and streaming businesses (a deal that excludes the cable networks and requires spinoffs and multi‑jurisdictional regulatory review). Paramount says its all‑cash proposal is materially higher and more certain, a claim that roiled markets (WBD and Paramount shares up ~5–6%; Netflix down) amid industry pushback, antitrust scrutiny and political attention.
Warner Bros. Discovery Warner Bros. Media M&A
ICEBlock sues Trump over Apple app takedown
The developer of ICEBlock filed a federal lawsuit in Washington, D.C., on Dec. 8, alleging the Trump administration violated the First Amendment by threatening prosecution and pressuring Apple to remove the ICE-tracking alert app from the App Store in October. The suit cites Attorney General Pam Bondi’s public statements as evidence of coercion; DOJ and Apple did not comment. ICEBlock lets users anonymously report nearby ICE sightings, which the White House has argued endangers agents, a claim the developer disputes.
First Amendment and Tech Platforms Immigration Enforcement
D.C. police chief Pamela Smith resigns
D.C. Police Chief Pamela Smith is stepping down, Mayor Muriel Bowser announced, praising Smith for driving down violent crime — including cutting homicides to an eight‑year low — launching a Real‑Time Crime Center and other technology upgrades, and overseeing about a 17% drop in overall crime in the first 10 weeks of 2024. The departure, for which Bowser gave no reason or successor, comes amid reports of pressure tied to former President Trump and an investigation into alleged crime‑data manipulation.
District of Columbia Washington, D.C. Policing Law Enforcement and Oversight
Russia sentences soldiers for killing U.S. citizen
A court in Russian-controlled Donetsk on Monday sentenced four Russian soldiers for the April 2024 killing of American-born Russell “Texas” Bentley, a 64-year-old pro-Moscow propagandist and fighter. Two officers received 12-year terms and were stripped of rank, a sergeant got 11 years, and a fourth soldier received 1.5 years for concealing crimes, after the court found Bentley was beaten to death when they mistook him for a U.S. spy and his body was later destroyed in a car explosion.
Russia–Ukraine War Courts and Legal Actions
Senate sets Thursday vote on 3‑year ACA subsidy extension amid GOP divisions
The Senate is scheduled to vote Thursday on a Democratic-led bill to extend enhanced Affordable Care Act premium tax credits for three years, a promise secured in the shutdown-reopening deal that guarantees a floor vote. Republicans remain divided — with some backing a time-limited extension with income caps or proposals to route funds into HSAs and others insisting on Hyde-style abortion restrictions — leaving bipartisan consensus elusive. Given those divisions, the Democratic clean three-year plan is not widely expected to clear the 60-vote threshold.
Affordable Care Act Congress Congressional Negotiations
Paramount Skydance offers $108.4B for WBD
Paramount Skydance announced Monday an unsolicited $108.4 billion all-cash takeover bid for Warner Bros. Discovery, coming three days after Netflix agreed to acquire Warner Bros. in an $82.7 billion deal. CEO David Ellison called the offer superior and said it provides a quicker, more certain path to completion for WBD shareholders.
Media M&A Warner Bros. Discovery
Report links U.S. universities to Chinese surveillance labs
A report released Monday by Strategy Risks and the Human Rights Foundation alleges that elite U.S. universities including MIT, Stanford, Harvard, and Princeton co-authored roughly 3,000 papers since 2020 with Chinese AI labs Zhejiang Lab and SAIRI, which are tied to state surveillance contractor CETC. The study argues such collaborations advanced technologies like multi-object tracking and gait recognition that support Beijing’s repression of Uyghur Muslims, noting Chinese laws compel research entities to assist state security services and warning U.S.-funded work may be absorbed into systems of oppression.
U.S. Universities and China Uyghur Human Rights
Ernst urges 24 agencies to freeze SBA 8(a)
Sen. Joni Ernst, chair of the Senate Small Business Committee, sent letters to 24 federal agencies urging a halt to funding and contracting through the SBA’s 8(a) program pending a government‑wide review of alleged fraud and oversight failures. Citing a recent DOJ bribery case tied to 8(a) awards, an undercover video, and SBA’s own June audit order, Ernst argues Biden‑era expansion of 8(a) goals to 15% has amplified risks; the program awarded more than $40 billion in FY2024.
Small Business Administration Federal Contracting and Oversight
Light snow Monday; storm watch Tuesday north metro
FOX 9 forecasts light snow in the Twin Cities Monday with a dusting expected, while areas north of I‑94 could see 1–3 inches. A stronger clipper arrives Tuesday with a winter storm watch posted for the northern metro and areas north, bringing heavier snow bands north of I‑94, a wintry mix or rain possible in the metro/south, and much colder air Wednesday dropping temps into the teens and single digits through the week.
Weather
Fire destroys Prior Lake mosque, K–12 school
An overnight fire around 2 a.m. Monday destroyed the Masjid Hamza Al‑Mahmood Foundation and Baitul Hikmah Academy in Prior Lake, with firefighters arriving to flames through the roof and a partial roof collapse. No one was inside; about 200 K–12 students move to e‑learning as the cause remains under investigation and the school seeks temporary space at other campuses or a rented site.
Public Safety Education
Allred quits Texas Senate bid, seeks House seat
Former Rep. Colin Allred announced Monday he is dropping out of the Texas U.S. Senate Democratic primary and will instead file to run for the newly drawn TX‑33 in Dallas County, setting up a primary challenge to Rep. Julie Johnson. His exit clears the way for Rep. Jasmine Crockett, who plans a 4:30 p.m. CT news conference, to likely enter a narrower Senate field now led by state Rep. James Talarico, who has already filed.
Texas Elections U.S. Congress
Boston Scientific buys Maple Grove facility for $188M
Boston Scientific has purchased a newly built facility in Maple Grove for $188 million, further expanding its presence in the northwest Twin Cities metro. The deal underscores continued investment by the medtech giant in its local operations; additional details about the building and any staffing plans were not immediately available.
Business & Economy Real Estate
White House NSS warns Europe could be 'unrecognizable' in 20 years amid migration
The White House’s newly released 33‑page National Security Strategy warns Europe could be “unrecognizable in 20 years or less,” blaming mass migration, low birthrates, speech restrictions and loss of national identity for a potential “civilizational erasure” that could alter NATO allies’ demographics and reliability. The document elevates mass migration as a primary U.S. security threat, pledges a renewed “Trump Corollary” to the Monroe Doctrine to reassert influence in the Western Hemisphere, signals a desire to reestablish strategic stability with Russia while softening some language on China, and urges Europe to take primary responsibility for its own defense as the U.S. shifts priorities.
China–U.S. Relations U.S.–China Relations Nuclear Policy
Johnson to unveil GOP health bill this week, promises House vote on ACA subsidies in December
Speaker Mike Johnson plans to unveil a House GOP health‑care bill this week and has pledged to bring a House vote on extending ACA premium tax credits in December. The promise comes amid shutdown‑linked negotiations — with the Senate and White House circulating competing extension/reform proposals and GOP factions split between extending the enhanced subsidies, restructuring them into accounts or HSAs, or refusing an extension — even as Johnson says he is not negotiating with Democrats.
Health Policy U.S. Health Policy Affordable Care Act
USCIS pauses all asylum decisions nationwide
USCIS on Friday ordered asylum officers to halt approving, denying, or closing all affirmative asylum cases nationwide in response to the D.C. National Guard shooting, according to internal guidance and a statement from Director Joe Edlow. Officers may continue interviews and file reviews but must ‘stop and hold’ at decision-entry; in-person decision appointments were canceled at least for Monday, and the pause applies to all nationalities.
Immigration Policy Department of Homeland Security
Trump proposes CAFE rollback to 34.5 mpg through 2031; GM, Stellantis back plan
The Trump administration proposed rolling back light‑duty CAFE standards to roughly 34.5 mpg through model year 2031—reverting to a 2022 baseline and increasing fuel‑economy requirements by about 0.5% per year versus roughly 2% under the Biden rule (which projected near‑50 mpg targets)—and the DOT/NHTSA plan was unveiled at the White House and sent into formal rulemaking and public comment. General Motors and Stellantis (and Ford’s CEO praised the move) backed the alignment as reflecting market realities and a single national standard, while environmental groups warned the rollback would raise U.S. oil use, emissions and weaken EV policy.
Automotive Industry Transportation Regulation Fuel Economy Standards
Supreme Court lets Texas use new House map for 2026, potentially adding up to 5 GOP seats
The Supreme Court issued an unsigned order allowing Texas to use its contested, Trump‑pushed redrawn congressional map for the 2026 elections — reinstating it ahead of candidate qualifying and March 2026 primaries after Justice Alito’s earlier temporary stay and despite a three‑judge panel’s prior directive to keep the 2021 map. The lower court’s majority (authored by a Trump appointee) found substantial evidence of racial gerrymandering, citing a DOJ letter and GOP statements, but the high court faulted the panel for not presuming legislative good faith; critics including Justice Kagan warned the stay will effectively lock in a plan that could give Republicans up to five additional House seats as part of a broader GOP redistricting effort.
Texas Redistricting Supreme Court of the United States Redistricting
Russia fires 653 drones, 51 missiles; Zaporizhzhia NPP loses power as Miami talks enter day 3
Russia launched an overnight barrage that Ukraine’s air force says included 653 drones and 51 missiles, hitting power and energy infrastructure across multiple regions and briefly cutting all off‑site power to the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant, with sites damaged and casualties reported. Meanwhile U.S. envoys led by Steve Witkoff (with Jared Kushner and other U.S. officials) are in Miami for a third day of talks with Ukrainian negotiators to refine a U.S. 28‑point (now pared to roughly 19) peace framework—pushed by President Trump but controversial for proposed territorial concessions and military limits—while parallel meetings with Moscow and pushback from European leaders continue.
Ukraine Peace Negotiations U.S.–Russia Relations Ukraine Peace Efforts
Rural hospitals warn $100K H‑1B fee hurts staffing
CBS reports that a September presidential proclamation imposing a $100,000 H‑1B fee for workers applying from abroad is straining rural hospitals’ hiring, with facilities like West River Health Services in Hettinger, North Dakota unable to attract U.S. applicants and now facing prohibitive costs or uncertain DHS waivers. The American Hospital Association, two national rural health groups, and 50+ medical societies have asked the administration to exempt healthcare, citing heavy reliance on foreign‑born clinicians and technicians.
Immigration Policy Healthcare Workforce
Thailand launches airstrikes near Cambodia border
Thailand launched airstrikes along its border with Cambodia, with Thai officials saying Cambodian troops fired first and that aircraft struck several "military targets," while Cambodian spokespeople deny firing and say Thailand attacked first, urging an end to the military actions. The strikes follow a smaller clash that wounded two Thai soldiers and prompted evacuations of schools near the border, and come after Thailand suspended parts of an October Trump-brokered deal following earlier land‑mine injuries in contested areas.
U.S. Foreign Policy Thailand–Cambodia Border Conflict Thailand–Cambodia Border Clashes
Indiana Senate opens hearings on Trump-backed mid-cycle map that splits Indianapolis, targets Carson and Mrvan
The Indiana Senate opened hearings on a Trump‑backed mid‑cycle redistricting plan that the GOP‑controlled House approved, a map that would split Indianapolis into four districts, pair East Chicago and Gary with rural northern counties, and likely eliminate the seats of Democrats Reps. André Carson and Frank Mrvan as part of a push toward a 9–0 GOP delegation. The proposal — drawn with national conservative groups and pressed by Trump and allies (including visits by VP‑level surrogates and threats of primary challenges) — has provoked intense pressure and violent threats against lawmakers, and its fate remains uncertain in the Senate where leaders say votes are not secured and a 25‑vote threshold could trigger a tie‑breaking vote by Lt. Gov. Micah Beckwith.
Redistricting and Gerrymandering Indiana Politics U.S. House Elections 2026
Augsburg says masked ICE agents targeted student
Augsburg University in Minneapolis says masked ICE agents came onto campus around 4 p.m. over the weekend, allegedly aiming weapons at witnesses — including staff and students — while targeting an undergraduate student, calling the actions 'unacceptable, dangerous, and profoundly disturbing.' A legal expert quoted by FOX 9 said ICE needs a judicial warrant to enter school buildings and that, absent one, individuals are not required to answer questions; FOX 9 reports a viewer provided video and that it has not independently confirmed whether anyone was detained.
Public Safety Education Legal
Camp Pendleton Marine killed in vehicle mishap identified as Pfc. Tanner F. Rubio
Pfc. Tanner F. Rubio, 21, of Dixon, California, was killed Wednesday afternoon at Camp Pendleton in a tactical vehicle mishap during a training evolution; Rubio was an infantry rifleman with I Marine Expeditionary Force serving in a battalion of the 1st Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, and had joined the Marine Corps in January 2025. Maj. Gen. Thomas Savage honored Rubio’s service and the loss across the division, officials said the accident was not related to the Steel Knight exercise, and a local state senator offered condolences and said she will monitor the investigation.
Military Training Accidents U.S. Marine Corps Public Safety
New Oakdale group home for trafficked youth
A new group home in Oakdale, Washington County, will support youth impacted by sexual exploitation and human trafficking, providing safe housing and services in the Twin Cities east metro. Announced December 7, the facility expands local capacity to serve vulnerable teens in the Minneapolis–Saint Paul area.
Public Safety Health
El Gran Combo founder Rafael Ithier dies at 99
Rafael Ithier, the pianist, composer, arranger, and founder of El Gran Combo de Puerto Rico, died at age 99, the orchestra announced on Dec. 7 via social media. A San Juan native and U.S. Army veteran, Ithier led the ensemble for six decades, shaping salsa across Puerto Rico and the U.S.; the Latin Recording Academy praised his “eternal legacy in salsa.”
Rafael Ithier El Gran Combo de Puerto Rico
Omaha QuikTrip shootout: 4 officers injured; suspect ID’d as Salvadoran national in U.S. illegally
Authorities say Juan Melgar-Ayala, 28, a Salvadoran national in the U.S. illegally and a convicted felon, opened fire at a QuikTrip in Omaha, wounding four police officers after firing at least 16 rounds (15 shell casings were recovered), and a bystander fled a gas-station bathroom moments before the shooting. Police say Melgar-Ayala is also linked to an earlier, seemingly random shooting at Phil’s Foodway that seriously wounded 61-year-old Michael Kasper; investigators are probing how he obtained the handgun amid family reports of mental-health issues, and Gov. Jim Pillen praised officers while noting the suspect’s immigration and felony status.
Law Enforcement and Public Safety Immigration Enforcement Public Safety and Policing
NYC mayor‑elect issues ICE rights guidance
New York City mayor‑elect Zohran Mamdani on Sunday released a video advising New Yorkers on their rights during ICE encounters, saying agents cannot enter private spaces without a judicial warrant and that residents may refuse entry, remain silent, and legally film as long as they do not interfere. Framing the message after a recent attempted ICE raid in Manhattan, he pledged to protect immigrants and New Yorkers’ right to protest, and reaffirmed the city’s sanctuary‑policy posture despite a November meeting with President Trump.
New York City Immigration Enforcement and Sanctuary Policies
Final NDAA restores FBI notice to Congress on probes of federal candidates after GOP feud
The final NDAA restores a provision requiring the FBI to notify Congress when opening counterintelligence investigations into presidential and other federal candidates. The measure’s inclusion followed a public GOP feud — Rep. Elise Stefanik threatened to oppose the bill if the language were dropped and said she secured it after talks with Speaker Mike Johnson and former President Trump, while Johnson denies claims he pulled the provision amid disputes that risked the bill’s passage given the GOP’s razor‑thin majority.
National Defense Authorization Act Congressional Oversight and FBI U.S.–China Competition
Final NDAA excludes AI state‑preemption and CBDC ban amid broader China measures
The final NDAA leaves state-level AI rules intact by excluding preemption and also omits a ban on a U.S. central bank digital currency (CBDC), while creating an Artificial Intelligence Futures Steering Committee to recommend long-range AI policy. The roughly $900 billion bill also contains broader China-focused measures — including tech bans and investment crackdowns — and includes a U.S. troop pay raise.
Artificial Intelligence Regulation Artificial Intelligence Policy NDAA
Congress unveils $900B NDAA targeting China
House and Senate negotiators released a $900 billion National Defense Authorization Act that tightens U.S. economic and military competition with China, including bans on certain Chinese tech in Pentagon supply chains and a new Treasury-run outbound investment screening regime. The bill authorizes funding $8 billion above the White House request, provides a 4% pay raise for enlisted service members, expands counter‑drone authorities, backs Golden Dome and nuclear modernization, extends Pentagon support at the southwest border, strengthens the Indo‑Pacific posture with Taiwan security cooperation funds, and adds an FBI notice requirement when probing federal candidates.
NDAA U.S.–China Competition
NPS drops MLK Day, Juneteenth from fee‑free calendar, adds June 14; confirms nonresident surcharges
The National Park Service will revamp its fee‑free calendar effective Jan. 1, 2026, removing MLK Day and Juneteenth and adding June 14 (Trump’s birthday/Flag Day) along with other fee‑free dates such as Presidents’ Day, Memorial Day and the three‑day Independence Day weekend, Constitution Day (Sept. 17), the NPS 110th anniversary (Aug. 25) and Theodore Roosevelt’s birthday (Oct. 27), with Veterans Day the lone carryover. The Interior Department framed the changes as “patriotic fee‑free days” and tied them to a White House executive order favoring citizens/residents, while confirming resident annual passes remain $80, nonresident annual passes rise to $250, a $100 surcharge will apply to non‑U.S. visitors at 11 popular parks, and the America the Beautiful pass will move fully digital via Recreation.gov.
National Park Service Interior Department Policy Trump Administration Policies
DOT waives $11M of Southwest storm fine
The U.S. Department of Transportation issued an order Friday waiving Southwest Airlines’ final $11 million payment to the Treasury from a 2023 $140 million civil penalty tied to the carrier’s December 2022 holiday meltdown. DOT cited improved on‑time performance and investments in network operations, after Southwest had already made $12 million payments in 2024 and earlier this year toward the $35 million Treasury portion, with most of the overall penalty dedicated to customer compensation.
U.S. Department of Transportation Airlines and Aviation
Charlotte light rail stabbing: suspect twice deported, Trump reacts
Oscar Solarzano, an undocumented immigrant whom DHS says has been removed from the U.S. twice, was arrested after a stabbing aboard a Charlotte light rail that officials say arose from an altercation between two individuals rather than a random attack, and a magistrate ordered him to remain jailed. President Trump posted on Truth Social blaming Democrats over the incident, while Charlotte Mayor Vi Lyles highlighted the city's public-safety investments and said immigration enforcement is outside city jurisdiction; CBS-cited DHS documents show fewer than one-third of Border Patrol arrests in Charlotte’s recent crackdown were classified as criminal.
Immigration Enforcement Donald Trump Crime and Public Transportation
Fights end Hopkins–Tartan game; police clear gym
Police cleared the gym and ended a basketball game early at Hopkins High School on Saturday night after fights broke out during a matchup between Hopkins and Tartan, officials said. The event was hosted by Breakdown Sports under a rental agreement that required a security plan, which included two on‑site officers; school leaders reported no serious injuries and noted a similar third‑party tournament in August also saw fights at the same venue.
Public Safety Education
Nature study: Satellites threaten space telescope images
A NASA-led, peer-reviewed study published in Nature on Dec. 3, 2025 warns that reflected light from rapidly growing satellite constellations could contaminate up to 96% of images from some space telescopes within a decade, with at least one in three Hubble images expected to show a satellite streak. The analysis cites more than 10,000 active satellites (including ~7,800 SpaceX Starlink units) and forecasts major impacts on NASA’s SPHEREx as well as ESA’s ARRAKIHS and China’s Xuntian, while the American Astronomical Society and the U.N.’s ITU voice concern and SpaceX points to mitigation steps like visors and darker coatings.
Space and Astronomy Satellite Constellations
Trump orders DOJ, FTC food‑supply task forces
President Donald Trump issued an executive order on Dec. 6, 2025 creating food supply chain security task forces within the Justice Department and the Federal Trade Commission to address possible price‑fixing and anticompetitive behavior. The administration also urged DOJ to investigate major meatpackers as beef prices near record highs amid the smallest U.S. cattle herd in 70 years; DOJ and FTC may bring enforcement actions or propose new regulations if they find violations.
Antitrust and Food Supply Donald Trump
CU Boulder suspends Phi Kappa Sigma over hazing
The University of Colorado Boulder placed the Phi Kappa Sigma chapter on interim suspension after receiving a credible hazing report on Dec. 1 (formally logged Dec. 2) and at least two additional anonymous reports alleging 'extreme or severe hazing.' A campus safety alert issued Thursday night urged tips to Student Conduct and Conflict Resolution, Safe2Tell, or Metro Denver Crime Stoppers, while Boulder Police said no substantiated hazing cases are on record and three recent reports were unfounded or closed. The fraternity’s national office said it is partnering with the university in the investigation.
Campus Safety Higher Education
Netanyahu: Gaza ceasefire phase two ‘very shortly’; Trump-led oversight body expected by year-end
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Israel and Hamas are expected to enter phase two of the Gaza ceasefire “very shortly,” possibly by the end of the month and contingent on Hamas returning the remains of the last hostage, Ran Gvili; that phase is described as including deployment of an international security force, a technocratic temporary Gaza government under an international board (reported to be led by former President Donald Trump), Hamas disarmament and eventual Israeli withdrawal. Arab and Western officials say a Trump-led oversight body is expected to be appointed by year‑end, Germany has offered officers and diplomats to a U.S.-led coordination center and humanitarian aid, while Qatar warns the pause is fragile, Turkey questions the force’s composition, and sporadic violence and fatalities continue.
Israel–Hamas Conflict U.S. Middle East Diplomacy Israel–Hamas Ceasefire
Magnitude 7.0 quake hits Alaska–Yukon border
A magnitude‑7.0 earthquake struck Saturday in a remote area near the Alaska–Yukon border, the U.S. Geological Survey said, with shaking felt in Whitehorse and nearby communities but no immediate reports of injuries or damage and no tsunami warning. The quake, about 230 miles northwest of Juneau and 155 miles west of Whitehorse, occurred at a depth of roughly 10 km and was followed by multiple smaller aftershocks, according to U.S. and Canadian officials.
Earthquakes Alaska
Bessent says fraud money tracked overseas as Omar rebuts terror link on Face the Nation
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said on Face the Nation that funds tied to the Feeding Our Future fraud have “gone overseas” and that Treasury is tracing transfers to the Middle East and Somalia, while alleging some charged individuals donated to Gov. Tim Walz, Rep. Ilhan Omar and AG Keith Ellison as part of a broader probe into whether pandemic-era Minnesota welfare fraud — estimated at about $250 million — reached al-Shabaab. Omar rebutted the suggestion, saying any terror link would be “a failure of the FBI,” noting her campaign returned implicated donations years ago and that she had asked USDA to scrutinize the program, while a 2019 state audit found it could not substantiate claims that Child Care Assistance funds went to terrorist groups.
Minnesota Pandemic Aid Fraud Treasury Department Investigations U.S. Treasury Department
House Oversight probes Walz over MN COVID fraud
House Oversight, led by Rep. James Comer, has opened a probe into Gov. Tim Walz over nearly $1 billion in alleged Minnesota COVID-relief fraud. Launched last week, the investigation is examining allegations that some charged individuals donated to Minnesota officials and has prompted Rep. Ilhan Omar to say any proven link between the alleged Somali fraud and terrorism would be a failure of the FBI and should lead to prosecution.
Minnesota Pandemic Aid Fraud Congressional Oversight Pandemic Relief Fraud
Bessent says services, not tariffs, driving inflation; forecasts ~3% 2025 GDP in CBS interview
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent told Face the Nation on Dec. 7 that services — not tariffs or imported‑goods prices — are driving current inflation, citing PCE inflation at about 2.9% versus roughly 1.8% for imported goods. He said the holiday season is "very strong across all income cohorts," noted real incomes are up about 1% and GDP ran near 4% in a couple of quarters, and forecast the U.S. will finish 2025 with roughly 3% real GDP growth despite the Schumer shutdown.
Trump Administration U.S.–China Trade U.S. Economy and Inflation
Congress probes Philly schools’ antisemitism; Shapiro urges action
Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro’s office said the School District of Philadelphia must “take very seriously” allegations of antisemitism as the House Committee on Education and the Workforce investigates whether the district created a hostile environment for Jewish K‑12 students under Title VI. The committee’s November letter cites reports of teachers spreading antisemitism and district‑approved walkouts; Fox News Digital also reports obtaining messages from a ‘Philadelphia Educators for Palestine’ group and notes district policy bars staff‑student communication on personal social media.
Education and Antisemitism Congressional Oversight
Benin interior minister says coup foiled; 13 soldiers arrested as state TV restored
Interior Minister Alassane Seidou said in a Facebook video that a small group of soldiers launched a mutiny in Benin on Dec. 7 that was foiled, with local media reporting 13 soldiers arrested while the status of alleged coup leader Lt. Col. Pascal Tigri remained unclear. Gunfire was heard and soldiers patrolled parts of Cotonou as state TV and public radio signals were briefly cut and later restored; ECOWAS condemned the attempt and pledged to defend Benin’s constitution, and there was no official word on President Patrice Talon’s whereabouts.
West Africa Politics Benin Coup Attempt Benin Politics
Tracy Beth Høeg named acting FDA CDER chief
The FDA appointed Dr. Tracy Beth Høeg acting director of its Center for Drug Evaluation and Research on Wednesday after Richard Pazdur resigned three weeks into the post. Multiple senior FDA officials told CBS News the move could politicize a science-focused office that oversees U.S. drug approvals and supply, noting Høeg has advised vaccine policy and helped draft a recent internal memo alleging pediatric COVID‑vaccine deaths that drew rebukes from former FDA leaders in the New England Journal of Medicine.
Food and Drug Administration Drug Regulation
ACIP votes 8–3 to end universal Hep B birth dose; separate 6–4–1 vote backs post‑shot antibody testing
At a contentious Dec. 4–5 meeting, the HHS‑appointed ACIP voted 8–3 to end the longstanding universal hepatitis B birth‑dose recommendation — instead advising a birth dose for infants of HBV‑positive mothers while leaving administration for infants of HBV‑negative or unknown mothers to parent‑clinician decision or delayed dosing — and separately voted 6–4‑1 to recommend post‑vaccination antibody testing to determine whether fewer than three doses are needed. The recommendations, which must be approved by acting CDC director Jim O’Neill, have drawn sharp criticism from pediatric and infectious‑disease experts who warn that screening gaps and modeling estimates (roughly 1,400–2,700 excess infections annually) make rescinding the universal birth dose risky.
CDC/ACIP CDC and Public Health Hepatitis B
DOJ files 144-page opposition defending death-penalty pursuit in Mangione case
The Justice Department filed a 144‑page omnibus opposition defending its decision to seek the federal death penalty for Luigi Mangione, arguing motions to bar capital punishment or dismiss the indictment are premature and that New York courts can manage intense publicity through juror questionnaires, individualized/sequestered voir dire and witness sequestration. Meanwhile, multi‑day Manhattan suppression hearings have featured McDonald’s 911 and body‑cam footage from Mangione’s Altoona arrest and center on whether officers lawfully searched his backpack and questioned him before Miranda warnings — police say they recovered a 9mm matching the alleged murder weapon, a 3D‑printed receiver/silencer, notebooks and other items, while the defense seeks to suppress those statements and evidence.
UnitedHealthcare CEO Murder Case UnitedHealthcare U.S. Courts
CPSC recalls 210,000 INIU power banks for fire risk
The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission announced in December 2025 a recall of about 210,000 INIU 100,000mAh portable power banks (model BI-B41) sold on Amazon nationwide after at least 15 overheating incidents, including 11 fires that caused minor burns and property damage. Units with serial numbers 000G21, 000H21, 000I21 and 000L21 are affected; buyers are instructed to stop using them, verify serials on INIU’s recall page for a full refund, and dispose of lithium‑ion batteries through local hazardous‑waste programs.
Product Recalls Consumer Safety
Frank Gehry dies at 96 after brief respiratory illness
Frank Gehry, the acclaimed architect behind landmark buildings such as the Guggenheim Bilbao, Walt Disney Concert Hall and DZ Bank, died Friday at his Santa Monica home at age 96 after a brief respiratory illness, his death confirmed by Meaghan Lloyd, chief of staff at Gehry Partners LLP. He was a Pritzker Prize laureate and recipient of honors including the RIBA Gold Medal and Companion of the Order of Canada, celebrated for his wildly imaginative, sculptural architecture.
Architecture Frank Gehry Obituaries
Harvard discloses alumni–donor database breach
Harvard University said it discovered on Nov. 18, 2025 that systems used by Alumni Affairs and Development were accessed by an unauthorized party after a phone-based phishing attack, exposing contact details, donation histories and related records for alumni, donors, some students and faculty. The university says it cut off access and is working to prevent further intrusion, following similar recent breaches reported by Princeton, the University of Pennsylvania and Columbia.
Cybersecurity Higher Education
RSNA study: Ultrasound flags filler vessel blockages
At the RSNA meeting in Chicago, researchers reported that Doppler ultrasound can accurately detect vascular occlusions after hyaluronic acid filler injections, enabling targeted treatment to prevent serious harm. In a cohort of 100 patients from six sites (data collected May 2022–April 2025), ultrasound identified blockages—over 40% in perforator vessels and 35% with no flow in major facial arteries—highlighting the nasal region as highest risk and supporting enzyme (hyaluronidase) placement to dissolve filler.
Cosmetic Procedures and Safety Medical Imaging
Pew: X usage drops; Reddit, TikTok surge
Pew Research Center released new survey data on Nov. 28, 2025 showing U.S. social media habits are fragmenting: YouTube (84%), Facebook (71%) and Instagram (50%) remain most used, while Reddit has grown to 26% of adults (from 18% in 2021) as X’s user share declines. Among under‑30s, 63% use TikTok and roughly half use it daily, 58% are on Snapchat, and WhatsApp usage rose to 32% overall, with higher use among Asian and Hispanic users.
Social Media Trends Technology and Platforms
U.S.-brokered direct Israel–Lebanon meeting held in Naqoura amid cease-fire talks
U.S.-brokered talks in Naqoura marked the first direct, public Israel–Lebanon engagement since 1993, held on the sidelines of a U.S.-led monthly cease-fire monitoring mechanism and convening civilian envoys—including Lebanon’s Simon Karam and Israel’s Uri Resnick—after U.S. diplomats pressed both sides; discussions focused on economic projects to stabilize southern Lebanon. The meeting came amid sharp tensions — including a recent Israeli strike that killed a Hezbollah commander — as Lebanon, which says it is “far from” normalizing ties and reaffirmed the 2002 Arab Peace Initiative, has deployed some 10,000 troops and 200 checkpoints in a phased disarmament plan while demanding Israeli withdrawals from contested outposts and seeking international aid after roughly $11.1 billion in war damage, even as Israel says Beirut is not doing enough to disarm Hezbollah.
Israel–Lebanon Conflict Israel–Lebanon Border U.S. Foreign Policy
Israel identifies Thai hostage Sudhisak Rinthalak’s remains; says only one hostage body remains in Gaza
Israeli and Thai officials said remains transferred via the ICRC have been forensically identified by Israel’s National Institute of Forensic Medicine as Thai agricultural worker Sudhisak Rinthalak, who was killed on Oct. 7 and whose body was taken into Gaza. With that identification, Israel says only one hostage body remains in Gaza — Master Sgt. Ran Gvili — and officials pledged to coordinate returns and continue efforts to recover the final remains amid ongoing ceasefire tensions.
Hostage Negotiations Israel–Gaza Conflict Middle East conflict
Rollins College student arrested over AR-15 in dorm
Winter Park police arrested Rollins College senior Constantine Demetriades on Dec. 3, 2025, after the school flagged a 1,500‑round ammunition order and campus safety found an unloaded AR‑15 under his dorm bed with magazines, a tactical vest and knives. He is charged with possession of a weapon on school property; the college says he is banned from campus pending an internal conduct process, and Demetriades told police he is a hobby shooter and did not intend harm.
Campus Safety Gun Laws and Enforcement
Walz, legislative leaders deadlocked on gun special session; another meeting Friday
Gov. Tim Walz and bipartisan legislative leaders remain deadlocked over whether to call a gun-control special session after Thursday talks produced no agreement and another meeting was scheduled for Friday; DFL lawmakers are pushing to ban new sales of assault-style weapons and high-capacity magazines while GOP leaders say DFL bill language hasn’t been produced and prefer focusing on school security and mental health. Workgroup hearings have been stymied by partisan fights amid emotional testimony from victims’ families, and Walz — who has floated a constitutional amendment and plans a series of town halls (including Waconia) with advocates like Gabby Giffords — continues public outreach as negotiations continue.
Elections Local Government Public Safety
California warns after 21 mushroom poisonings, 1 death
California officials warned the public after 21 people were sickened and one person died in a cluster of mushroom poisonings concentrated in Monterey and the San Francisco Bay areas, saying the toxin involved is amatoxin (not neutralized by cooking, boiling, drying or freezing) and that at least one patient may require a liver transplant. CDPH director Erica Pan urged people not to forage during the high‑risk rainy season (October–March), noting dangerous species such as the death cap (2–6 inches tall, yellowish‑green) and the destroying angel, and officials advised eating only store‑bought mushrooms or leaving wild mushrooms to extensively trained foragers.
California Public Health Public Health Food Safety
San Diego weighs $30M police settlement
The San Diego City Attorney’s Office agreed to a $30 million settlement with the family of 16-year-old Konoa Wilson, fatally shot by police on Jan. 28, 2025, and the City Council will consider authorizing the payment at its Tuesday meeting. The deal, to be paid from the Public Liability Fund, would be among the largest police‑killing settlements in U.S. history; the family’s lawsuit alleges Officer Daniel Gold shot Wilson without warning as he ran past after being fired upon by another individual in a downtown station.
Police Accountability Civil Litigation
CMS chief warns Minnesota: fix Medicaid fraud or lose funds
CMS Administrator Dr. Mehmet Oz issued a 60‑day ultimatum to Minnesota on Dec. 5, warning Gov. Tim Walz that the federal share of Medicaid payments could be halted unless the state implements anti‑fraud fixes and submits a corrective action plan. Oz cited alleged theft exceeding $1 billion tied to "bad actors" in the Somali community, flagged suspicious spending spikes in Housing Stabilization Services and autism‑related EIDBI programs, and demanded weekly updates, a six‑month enrollment freeze for high‑risk providers, and re‑verification of all current providers.
Medicaid Oversight and Fraud Minnesota Government
Venezuela drills as USS Ford arrives; UK and Colombia curb intel sharing over U.S. boat strikes
Venezuela launched a nationwide military exercise, Plan Independencia 200, mobilizing roughly 200,000 troops and land, air and sea assets as the U.S. carrier Gerald R. Ford CSG arrived in the Caribbean amid ongoing maritime missile strikes on suspected drug-smuggling boats (Operation Southern Spear), which U.S. officials say includes some 21 strikes with dozens killed. The campaign has strained alliances — the UK has suspended some intelligence-sharing and Colombia has halted cooperation under President Gustavo Petro, while other regional reactions range from formal protests to increased logistical support for U.S. operations, and Washington says it may still pursue talks with Nicolás Maduro even as it leaves military options open.
Latin America Military U.S. Congress and War Powers
USSOUTHCOM posts video of 22nd Eastern Pacific strike killing four; first since Nov. 15
U.S. Southern Command posted unclassified video of a Dec. 4 Eastern Pacific strike it said killed four people aboard a narcotics‑smuggling vessel operated by a “Designated Terrorist Organization,” calling it the 22nd strike under Operation Southern Spear and the first maritime strike since Nov. 15. The Pentagon said Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth ordered the attack, which brings the campaign’s reported death toll to roughly 86–87 and comes amid a wider U.S. military buildup and congressional scrutiny over the legal basis and conduct of the strikes.
Caribbean/Eastern Pacific Strikes U.S. Anti-Drug Military Operations Caribbean Counterdrug Operations
Louisiana jail break: two recaptured/neutralized, manhunt continues for third
Three inmates escaped a Louisiana jail after removing mortar and concrete blocks from a degraded outer wall, scaling down with sheets and lowering themselves to the ground. Johnathan Jevon Joseph was captured after a foot chase, Joseph Allen Harrington died by suicide during a police standoff, and 24-year-old Keith Eli — charged with attempted second-degree murder — remains at large as a manhunt continues; three jail employees have been placed on administrative leave pending an internal investigation.
Louisiana Crime and Public Safety Louisiana Public Safety
Florida teacher charged with sex crimes against student
Palm Beach County deputies arrested former Donna Klein Jewish Academy science teacher Elias Gordon Farley, 26, on Dec. 4, alleging he used a shared Google Doc to secretly communicate with and groom a student before engaging in sexual acts at the Boca Raton campus and his apartment. An arrest affidavit cites corroborating surveillance video, a search-warrant find matching the student’s description, and a school report after a staffer saw bruises; Farley is held on $500,000 bond on charges including unlawful sexual activity with a minor and offense against a student by an authority figure.
Crime and Education Florida
18M under winter alerts across West, Midwest
The National Weather Service says more than 18 million people are under winter weather alerts Saturday as a strong system brings heavy snow to the Northern Rockies and expands into the Northern Plains and Upper Midwest, including 2–5 inches possible in Chicago. Subzero lows are possible in the Dakotas and Minnesota by Sunday night, while Colorado’s mountains face heavy snow and the Pacific Northwest braces for multiple Pacific systems with widespread heavy rain, flood watches, and a multi‑day flooding threat.
Winter Weather National Weather Service
Georgia seeks $390,000 NIL damages from ex-player
The University of Georgia Athletic Association is pursuing $390,000 in liquidated damages from former defensive end Damon Wilson II, now at Missouri, alleging he breached a buyout clause in his NIL agreement after transferring in January. Legal records show Wilson was recently served; Georgia also asks a judge to compel arbitration, while Wilson’s attorneys argue his move was not financially motivated.
College Sports NIL Courts and Litigation
Refunds open after Woodbury Dental Arts settlement
Minnesota AG Keith Ellison announced Dec. 6 a settlement with the Woodbury Dental Arts bankruptcy trustee that lets former patients seek refunds from the Consumer Protection Restitution Account for prepaid services never received after the clinic’s abrupt closure. Claims must be filed within 60 days of notice with proof of payment; owner Dr. Marko Kamel has surrendered his dental license and cannot reapply for 10 years following Board of Dentistry actions.
Legal Local Government
Gaza war death toll surpasses 70,000, ministry says
Gaza’s health ministry says the death toll from the Israel–Hamas war has surpassed 70,000 since the fighting began. Qatar’s prime minister warned the ceasefire is at a critical juncture as the first phase winds down, reporting over 360 Palestinians killed since the Oct. 10 truce began—including two deaths reported by Shifa Hospital and an Israeli account of three militants killed crossing the ceasefire line—and mediators say the second phase has not yet started amid Turkish concerns about the proposed security force composition.
Israel–Gaza Ceasefire U.S. Foreign Policy Israel–Hamas War
U.S. mass killings hit lowest since 2006; 17 so far in 2025
According to the AP–USA Today–Northeastern database, the U.S. has recorded 17 mass killings so far in 2025 — the fewest since the tracking began in 2006 — with 14 of those incidents involving firearms and roughly two‑thirds of mass killings occurring in or around private homes. Experts say the decline likely reflects a regression to the mean after 2018–19 spikes rather than a durable safety trend, note that none of 2025’s cases were at schools, and point to factors such as improved trauma response and new school threat‑assessment laws in 22 states (as well as parallel declines in mass‑shooting counts tracked by the Gun Violence Archive) as possible contributors.
Gun Violence and Public Safety Public Safety Gun Violence in America
Waymo to recall software after NHTSA school‑bus passing probe; response due Jan. 20
Waymo will file a voluntary software recall with the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration to fix a software issue that contributed to its autonomous vehicles passing stopped school buses; the company said no injuries were reported and Chief Safety Officer Mauricio Peña acknowledged the need to "be better." NHTSA has sent detailed questions, set a Jan. 20, 2026 deadline for Waymo’s responses and said similar prior incidents are likely, while Austin ISD documented 19 illegal passings, including one that occurred moments after a student crossed in front of a vehicle.
NHTSA Autonomous Vehicles Transportation Safety
FDA, Abbott warn Libre 3 sensors can give false lows; 7 deaths, 736 injuries
The FDA and Abbott warned that some FreeStyle Libre 3 continuous glucose monitoring sensors can produce falsely low glucose readings, a problem linked to seven deaths and 736 serious injuries. Abbott said all seven deaths occurred outside the U.S., 57 of the 736 injuries were reported in the U.S., about 1.5 million of roughly 3 million affected sensors are estimated to have already expired or been used, and users should immediately stop using and dispose of affected lots, verify lot numbers at FreeStyleCheck.com, and request free replacements.
Diabetes Care Technology FDA Recalls Medical Devices
Coast Guard’s Munro makes largest at-sea cocaine bust in 18+ years in Eastern Pacific
In the Eastern Pacific, the Coast Guard cutter Munro seized about 20,000 pounds of cocaine in what the service called the largest at‑sea interdiction in more than 18 years. USCG video shows a helicopter crew disabling the engines of a noncompliant go‑fast vessel before Munro recovered the drugs; the agency said the action was part of Operation Pacific Viper but did not disclose the fate of those aboard, and it comes amid recent controversy over lethal maritime strikes.
U.S. Coast Guard Drug Trafficking and Interdiction
U.S. signals land interdictions 'very soon' as Maduro vows to resist amid Caribbean buildup
The U.S. has massed a major military buildup in the Caribbean — centered on the USS Gerald R. Ford carrier strike group and backed by B‑52s, F‑35s, AC‑130s, destroyers, amphibious ships, a submarine, special‑operations aviation and thousands of service members ashore and afloat — and President Trump has said the U.S. will begin striking suspected Venezuelan drug traffickers “by land…very soon,” not ruling out ground troops. Venezuela’s Nicolás Maduro has vowed to resist, mobilized forces and pressed legal measures against opponents, as U.S. maritime strikes on suspected drug boats have killed scores and drawn domestic and international criticism and legal questions.
Latin America U.S. Military Operations U.S.–Venezuela Tensions
SIGAR: U.S.-funded gear left behind forms 'core' of Taliban security apparatus
A SIGAR report says U.S.-funded equipment, weapons and facilities left behind after the 2021 withdrawal have “formed the core of the Taliban security apparatus.” The Pentagon estimated roughly $7.1 billion in material and equipment was left, a prior watchdog found 316,260 weapons (about $511.8 million) in Afghan stocks though their operational status was unclear, and SIGAR added that the ANDSF’s dependence on U.S. support stemmed in part from designing the force as a mirror of U.S. forces.
Afghanistan Reconstruction Afghanistan Withdrawal Government Oversight
Israel-backed Gaza militia leader Yasser Abu Shabab killed in clan clash near Rafah
Yasser Abu Shabab, leader of the Popular Forces militia in Gaza who was widely seen as Israel-backed and had fought Hamas, was killed during clashes with a Palestinian clan near Rafah in southern Gaza. Israeli officials say they helped arm his militia (a claim he denied), and Abu Shabab had acknowledged security coordination with Israel to prevent Hamas infiltration; the Hamas-run Interior Ministry celebrated his death as the "inevitable fate of every traitor" and urged other Israel-aligned militants to surrender as he operated in an area under Israeli military control.
Palestinian Militias Israel–Hamas Conflict Israel–Gaza Conflict
Study links 3–4 cups coffee to slower aging
Researchers at King’s College London report in BMJ Mental Health that among 436 adults with schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, or psychotic depression, drinking up to four cups of coffee daily was associated with longer telomeres—markers of cellular aging—equating to about five years younger biological age versus non‑drinkers. The observational study, published in late November 2025, found benefits peaked at three to four cups and reversed above four cups, aligning with FDA guidance of roughly 400 mg/day caffeine.
Public Health Research Coffee and Caffeine Mental Health
ICE 'Metro Surge' arrests rise to at least 19 in Twin Cities; DHS names gang member and sex offenders
ICE's "Operation Metro Surge," launched in the Twin Cities on Dec. 1 to target individuals with final deportation orders, has produced at least 19 arrests — including several Somali nationals and others DHS identifies as criminal noncitizens, among them an alleged gang member and convicted sex offenders charged with sexual abuse and other crimes. The operation has prompted local pushback (Minneapolis banned use of city‑owned parking lots for immigration actions) and comes amid broader Trump administration efforts to crack down on Somali immigrants and review protections such as TPS.
ICE Operations Minneapolis Government Department of Homeland Security
New Orleans officials escalate resistance to DHS 'Catahoula Crunch' with portal, jail access limits
DHS has launched "Operation Catahoula Crunch," a two‑month, roughly 250‑agent Border Patrol‑led immigration sweep in New Orleans and nearby Kenner that the department says resulted in “dozens” of arrests within 24 hours and is focused on noncitizens with alleged violent‑crime histories. Local officials have escalated resistance — NOPD says it will not enforce civil immigration law, the Orleans Parish Sheriff’s Office is blocking ICE jail access under a long‑standing consent decree, the City Council and mayor‑elect Helena Moreno opened a portal to document alleged federal agent abuses, and Louisiana’s attorney general has demanded cooperation and warned of legal consequences; protests and business closures in Hispanic neighborhoods have also followed the operation.
Law Enforcement Operations Louisiana Politics Immigration Enforcement
Minneapolis bans city property for ICE staging
Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey signed an executive order this week prohibiting law enforcement from using city‑owned parking lots, ramps, garages and vacant lots to stage civil immigration enforcement operations, as the city braces for an ICE action focused on Somali visa‑fraud cases. City staff are also sharing a notice template that businesses and homeowners can display to deter civil immigration enforcement on private property.
Sanctuary Policies Immigration Enforcement
L.A. County to aid workers fearing ICE raids
Los Angeles County officials approved an emergency declaration that will cover living expenses for residents who miss work due to fear of immigration raids and began accepting aid requests in December. The move is part of broader sanctuary‑style measures cities and counties are adopting in response to heightened federal immigration enforcement.
Los Angeles County Government Sanctuary Policies
DC Guard shooting suspect pleads not guilty, held without bond in D.C. Superior Court
Rahmanullah Lakanwal, a 29‑year‑old Afghan national, pleaded not guilty in D.C. Superior Court to an upgraded first‑degree murder charge and related counts of assault and firearm offenses and was ordered held without bond after appearing remotely from a hospital bed before Magistrate Judge Renee Raymond, who said the government's case is "exceedingly strong." Prosecutors say one West Virginia National Guard member, Spc. Sarah Beckstrom, was killed and SSgt. Andrew Wolfe critically wounded in the Nov. 26 ambush near Farragut Square; DOJ has signaled it may seek the death penalty and federal investigators are probing Lakanwal’s background and alleged radicalization after he drove from Bellingham, Washington.
Federal deployment and courts D.C. National Guard Shooting U.S. National Security
Hong Kong security office warns foreign journalists over coverage
Hong Kong’s Office for Safeguarding National Security summoned representatives and journalists from foreign outlets, including The New York Times, on Saturday to warn of consequences under the national security law for reporting on last month’s Wang Fuk Court fire and Sunday’s legislative elections. Officials read a statement accusing some international coverage of distorting facts and interfering in Hong Kong affairs, said “Do not say you have not been warned,” and later posted the warning on the office’s website.
Hong Kong National Security Law Press Freedom
Rep. Harris files Homeschool Graduation Recognition Act
Rep. Mark Harris (R‑N.C.) said Wednesday he introduced the Homeschool Graduation Recognition Act to amend federal law so homeschool graduates are explicitly recognized as high‑school graduates for college admissions. Harris argues an outdated heading in 20 U.S.C. §1091(d) has prompted some colleges to add extra hurdles for homeschoolers, citing Molloy University’s requirement for a district letter or a GED; he says the bill would ensure homeschool applicants are treated the same as other students who meet test and application requirements.
U.S. Congress Higher Education Admissions
St. Paul declares snow emergency
St. Paul has declared a snow emergency and moved into the enforcement phase, with city officials ticketing and towing vehicles that violate snow-emergency parking rules. During the recent snow emergency the city issued 3,253 tickets and towed 952 vehicles.
Weather Transit & Infrastructure Local Government
House passes pediatric cancer trial expansion bill
The House of Representatives unanimously passed the Mikaela Naylon Give Kids A Chance Act on Monday, a bipartisan measure to expand children’s access to cancer therapy trials and spur development of pediatric treatments. The bill reauthorizes NIH funding for pediatric disease research through FY2027 and extends the FDA’s authority to expedite review of certain pediatric drugs; it is named after teen advocate Mikaela Naylon, who died from osteosarcoma.
U.S. Congress Pediatric Cancer
Senate votes to overturn Biden ANWR restrictions
The U.S. Senate on Dec. 4 passed a Congressional Review Act resolution sponsored by Rep. Nick Begich to overturn a Biden-era rule that restricted development on more than 1 million acres within the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR). Sen. Maria Cantwell opposed the measure as risking legal and regulatory chaos, while Alaska Native group Voice of the Arctic Iñupiat and Kaktovik’s mayor praised the vote as supporting self-determination and responsible development in their homelands.
Congress and Energy Policy Alaska and ANWR
Russia launches massive drone–missile barrage in Ukraine
Ukrainian officials said Saturday that Russia fired more than 650 drones and 51 missiles across multiple cities overnight, as Moscow also claimed it had seized the strategic city of Pokrovsk after months of fighting. The surge in strikes and battlefield claims came as U.S. envoy Steve Witkoff continued 'constructive' Miami talks with a Ukrainian delegation on President Trump’s revised peace plan, with another session expected Saturday.
Ukraine War National Security
U.S. halts South Africa aid, adds tariffs
The New York Times reports that President Trump has halted U.S. foreign aid to South Africa, imposed 30% tariffs on South African imports, and said last month that South Africa will not be welcome at the 2026 G20 summit in Florida, citing alleged persecution of Afrikaners. The administration has also tightened refugee policy to effectively favor Afrikaners, while Afrikaner leaders gained unusual access to U.S. officials in Washington and Pretoria, including meetings with the vice president’s office and State Department.
U.S.–South Africa Relations Trade Policy and Tariffs
Light snow Saturday for Twin Cities metro
FOX 9 meteorologists say a Saturday afternoon clipper will brush the Twin Cities with a trace to about 1 inch of snow after 2 p.m., while a winter weather advisory covers all of southern Minnesota where higher totals are expected. Snow should taper for everyone overnight, with the heaviest amounts near the Minnesota–Iowa border and some north Iowa counties topping 6 inches.
Weather
Border Patrol to impose $5,000 apprehension fee
U.S. Border Patrol Chief Michael Banks said Thursday that nearly all detained illegal immigrants aged 14 and older who entered without inspection will be charged a $5,000 'apprehension fee,' citing authority in the July 'big, beautiful bill.' The policy, announced in an X post, applies regardless of how long a person has been in the U.S. or any ongoing proceedings, and comes as a new lawsuit challenges separate daily civil penalties; DHS has also set a $1,000 fee for parolees and launched a self-deportation incentive.
Immigration Enforcement Department of Homeland Security
Florida launches first black bear hunt since 2015
Florida opened its first regulated black bear hunting season in a decade on Dec. 6, 2025, after the Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission issued 172 permits via lottery for zone‑specific quotas through Dec. 28. The move follows roughly 160,000 applications and includes tighter rules than 2015; opponents failed to halt the hunt in court and say at least 43 permits were secured by critics who won’t use them to reduce bear kills, while the state cites a bear population now exceeding 4,000.
Florida Wildlife Policy Hunting and Conservation
DHS disputes pepper‑spray claim by Rep. Grijalva, says 2 officers hurt at Tucson ICE raid
Following a Tucson ICE raid in which protesters briefly trapped federal agents in a taco-shop parking lot and multiple arrests were made, Rep. Adelita Grijalva said she was pushed aside and pepper‑sprayed after identifying herself. The Department of Homeland Security, via Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin, disputed that claim — saying Grijalva was only near someone who was pepper‑sprayed, that two officers were seriously injured by the crowd, and that progressive lawmakers have called for a congressional investigation.
Law Enforcement and Protests Congressional Oversight Immigration Enforcement
Texas AG sues EPIC City developers for fraud
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton filed a Collin County lawsuit against the East Plano Islamic Center, Community Capital Partners and associated leaders, alleging an illegal securities and land‑development scheme tied to the proposed 400‑acre 'EPIC City' (now 'The Meadow'). The suit cites unregistered securities sales, broad solicitation that undercut claimed exemptions, misleading location and religion‑targeted marketing, undisclosed $360,000 CEO compensation, and misuse of investor funds, and seeks an asset freeze, receiver, corrected statements, penalties and restitution.
State AG Enforcement Real Estate Development
FAA probes airline compliance with shutdown cuts
The FAA notified U.S. airlines on Monday that it is investigating whether carriers complied with Trump administration emergency orders to reduce flights by 3%–6% at 40 major airports during the 43‑day government shutdown, warning fines of $75,000 per flight over the allotment. Airlines have 30 days to prove compliance; the agency lifted restrictions Nov. 16, and data from Cirium indicate only 2% of flights were cut on Nov. 14 despite a 6% requirement, while Delta reported a $200 million loss from Nov. 7–16.
Federal Aviation Administration U.S. Airlines
Trump orders review to align childhood vaccine schedule with other developed countries
President Trump has ordered a review of the U.S. childhood vaccine schedule, directing HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and the CDC director to fast-track a comparison of core childhood-vaccine practices in peer developed countries and to update the American schedule if other countries’ approaches are judged "better," while preserving access to currently available vaccines; the directive follows a CDC panel’s withdrawal of the universal infant hepatitis B birth recommendation. Trump praised the panel on Truth Social, Kennedy replied on X "Thank you, Mr. President. We’re on it," and the American Medical Association’s Sandra Adamson Fryhofer called the hepatitis B decision "reckless" and not based on scientific evidence.
Vaccines and Immunization Policy Vaccines and Public Health Policy Donald Trump
CDC: U.S. measles cases top 1,800 in 2025
CDC data show the U.S. has recorded more than 1,800 measles cases so far in 2025, the most in over 30 years, with infections confirmed in at least 39 states. The largest outbreak was in West Texas with more than 760 cases and two pediatric deaths among unvaccinated children before the state declared it over in August; New Mexico reported one adult death. Health officials cite declining MMR coverage among kindergarteners (about 92.7% in 2023–24 vs. 95.2% in 2019–20), while HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. publicly urged measles vaccination though opposed mandates.
Public Health Vaccines and Immunization
NYC teen detained on federal arson charge in subway burning; judge reverses release
An 18-year-old high school student, Hiram Carrero, was arrested and charged in federal court with arson after authorities say he set a homeless subway rider on fire early on a northbound 3 train near 34th St–Penn Station; the victim remains in critical condition after exiting at Times Square with legs and torso on fire. U.S. District Judge Valerie E. Caproni ordered Carrero detained after prosecutors appealed a magistrate’s decision to release him to home confinement; the case—investigated by the ATF’s New York Arson and Explosives Task Force with the NYPD and FDNY—carries a minimum seven-year sentence if convicted and has a preliminary hearing set for Jan. 4 unless a federal grand jury indicts sooner.
New York City Federal Courts Crime and Public Transportation
NFL sets 2028 deadline for uniform field standards
The NFL announced a league-wide plan to bring every stadium’s playing surface up to enhanced safety and performance standards, with a compliance deadline in 2028 and a library of approved, accredited field systems provided to clubs before the 2026 season. Both grass and synthetic fields must meet metrics validated by lab and on‑site testing — including BEAST traction and STRIKE impact devices — under a red‑yellow‑green rating framework approved by a joint NFL–NFLPA committee; the league said new fields must meet the standards immediately and existing fields have two years to comply, while noting it will not mandate natural grass.
NFL Sports Safety
Texas DPS finds 30 handguns in spare tire
Texas DPS says special agents, working with CBP and HSI, seized 30 handguns hidden in a spare tire during a Wednesday morning inspection at the Anzalduas Port of Entry in Mission, Texas, and arrested driver Luis E. Torres Mujica, 30, of Guanajuato, Mexico, and passenger Jesse Joe Camacho, 28, of McAllen. Officials reported 60 magazines and a speed loader were also recovered, one pistol was stolen out of Austin, and the guns were allegedly bound for Guanajuato; both men face theft of property and second‑degree felony firearm‑smuggling charges.
Border Security Gun Trafficking
FAA hires Peraton for ATC overhaul
The FAA has selected Peraton to lead a multi‑year overhaul of the nation’s air‑traffic control systems, a move with implications for Minneapolis–Saint Paul International Airport and travelers across the Twin Cities. Announced in a Dec. 5 TwinCities.com report, the award positions Peraton to manage core modernization work the FAA says is needed to improve safety, reliability and capacity.
Transit & Infrastructure Technology
FAA eases nationwide flight cuts to 3%; MSP still under limits
The FAA has scaled back its mandated flight‑capacity reductions at 40 major U.S. airports from a planned 10% ramp (held at 6%) to 3% as controller attendance improved, but the order — in effect since Nov. 7 amid unpaid air traffic controllers, staffing shortages and missed paychecks — remains in place and continues to limit operations at Minneapolis–Saint Paul International (MSP). The cuts and earlier staffing shortfalls have caused widespread delays and thousands of cancellations nationwide (dozens at MSP), prompted airlines to offer refunds and waivers, and spurred an FAA probe into carriers’ handling of the reductions.
Government & Politics Transit & Infrastructure Government
FAA probes airlines over shutdown flight cuts
The Federal Aviation Administration opened an investigation on December 5, 2025 into how U.S. airlines implemented FAA-ordered flight reductions during the federal shutdown, a move that could affect carriers serving Minneapolis–Saint Paul International Airport. The agency previously imposed nationwide cutbacks that included MSP; the probe will review carriers’ compliance and could lead to enforcement actions.
Transit & Infrastructure Local Government
Texas releases unredacted 911 calls from July 4 floods
Texas has released unredacted 911 calls from the July 4 floods that capture chaotic, desperate pleas for rescue and confirm some callers did not survive, as officials reported at least 136 deaths statewide, including 117 in Kerr County. The recordings — more than 400 calls handled overnight by just two dispatchers — include a firefighter, Bradley Perry, reporting he was trapped in a tree before later dying while his wife Tina survived, note that Camp La Junta campers were rescued, and list a toll at Camp Mystic of 25 campers and two teen counselors; a spokesperson for families of Camp Mystic victims declined to comment on the release.
Public Records and Transparency Emergency Response and 911 Texas Hill Country Floods
OMB reviews 2030 census race, ethnicity standards
OMB Chief Statistician Mark Calabria said Dec. 5 the Trump administration has begun reviewing 2024-approved federal standards for collecting race and ethnicity, including for the 2030 census, potentially reconsidering new Middle Eastern/North African and Hispanic/Latino checkboxes and the combined race/ethnicity question. The review follows OMB’s September notice extending agencies’ compliance deadline into 2029 while stating the Biden-era revisions remain in effect; advocates warn changes could undermine data used for redistricting and civil-rights enforcement.
Census and Demographics Federal Policy and Regulation
SSA aims to halve field office visits in 2026
The Social Security Administration plans to reduce in‑person field office visits by 50% in FY2026 — capping them at about 15 million — according to a November internal operating plan shared with the AP, citing rising use of online and phone services. A spokesperson said offices remain front‑line service points, but unions warn the target, recent rural closures, and at least 7,000 layoffs this year could limit access for people who cannot navigate digital systems; the plan also sets a new goal to schedule all requested appointments within 30 days.
Social Security Federal Workforce
Trump administration will expand travel ban to more than 30 countries, DHS chief says
After meeting with President Trump, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem publicly urged a "full travel ban" and said the administration will expand the current policy covering 19 countries to around—or "over"—30, though she declined to name the countries or give a start date and said the president is still evaluating additions. DHS said it will announce the list soon, and Noem said the expansion would target countries lacking stable governments or the ability to vet travelers, building on a June proclamation that fully barred 12 nations and placed seven under heightened restrictions.
Trump Administration Homeland Security Immigration Policy
FRA okays weekly rail track inspections using tech
The Federal Railroad Administration on Friday approved a waiver allowing U.S. freight railroads to reduce manual track inspections to as little as once per week when they employ automated track-geometry inspection systems, rejecting industry requests to cut human checks to twice monthly and to allow three days to repair defects. FRA’s decision requires immediate repairs of serious defects and fixes for all defects within 24 hours, as unions warn safety risks could rise and railroads cite BNSF and Norfolk Southern pilots showing improved safety under reduced manual inspections.
Rail Safety and Regulation Federal Railroad Administration
AG Ellison to mediate UMN–M Physicians–Fairview talks; parties resume negotiations
The University of Minnesota, Fairview Health Services and M Physicians agreed to resume talks over the medical school’s future funding and clinical partnership with Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison managing the negotiations and naming a team to assist and help select a mutually agreed mediator. The move follows a contentious standoff — Fairview and M Physicians had announced a roughly $1 billion, “foundational and binding” framework they aim to finalize by end of 2025, while UMN regents unanimously criticized the pact as an overreach (calling it a “hostile takeover”), passed a resolution directing negotiations with the university and prompted the removal of M Physicians leader Dr. Greg Beilman from a UMN vice president post.
Local Government Health Business & Economy
St. Louis Park schools issue ICE guidance
After rumors on Thursday that ICE agents were outside St. Louis Park school buildings, the district said it found no evidence of ICE presence, increased supervision, and sent families guidance on what would happen if federal agents do come to schools. Officials said schools do not collect immigration status, visitors must use main entrances, and only a judge‑signed order would compel action; they urged families to keep contacts updated and consider a preparedness plan (including DOPA, reconnection steps, and emergency kits).
Education Public Safety
Judge questions Trump control of California Guard
U.S. District Judge Charles Breyer sharply questioned the Trump administration’s continued federal command of California National Guard troops at a Dec. 5 hearing in San Francisco, asking whether the president could retain control indefinitely given changed conditions since June deployments to Los Angeles. California seeks a preliminary injunction returning control to the state; DOJ attorney Eric Hamilton argued federal law allows the president to maintain command as necessary. Breyer did not rule, noting the force has shrunk from about 4,000 to roughly 100 members still in the LA area.
National Guard and Federal Authority California Courts Immigration Enforcement and Protests
HHS alters Rachel Levine portrait name
HHS confirmed it changed the official portrait label of former Assistant Secretary for Health Adm. Rachel L. Levine at its Washington headquarters to display her previous name during the recent federal shutdown. In a statement to NPR, HHS spokesperson Andrew Nixon said the department aims to ensure information reflects 'gold standard science' and committed to 'reversing harmful policies enacted by Levine' and to having 'biological reality' guide public health, while an HHS staffer criticized the move as disrespectful and Levine declined to engage beyond noting her service.
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services LGBTQ Policy
Michael Jordan testifies in NASCAR antitrust trial, challenges charter system
Michael Jordan testified Dec. 5 that he felt compelled to challenge NASCAR’s charter system, saying 23XI refused the Sept. 2024 charter extensions because they were not economically viable, included a no‑sue clause and were presented as an ultimatum; Jordan said he owns 60% of 23XI, has invested $35–$40 million and — persuaded by Denny Hamlin — bought a third charter in late 2024 for $28 million despite the uncertainty. Heather Gibbs testified teams had only six hours to sign the 112‑page extension, calling it “like a gun to your head,” and plaintiffs 23XI and Front Row (whose owner Bob Jenkins says he hasn’t turned a profit since the early 2000s and has lost about $100 million) argue NASCAR’s revenue split shortchanges teams compared with leagues like the NBA.
Michael Jordan and 23XI Racing NASCAR Sports Antitrust and Governance
House Democrats back bill limiting ICE detention
Reps. Pramila Jayapal and Adam Smith introduced the Dignity for Detained Immigrants Act with support from more than 120 House Democrats, proposing to repeal mandatory immigration detention, create a presumption of release for some groups, and phase out private detention facilities by about 2029. The bill would also require DHS to allow members of Congress unannounced access to detention centers. A contractors’ trade group, the Day 1 Alliance, criticized the measure as effectively ending immigration enforcement.
U.S. Immigration Policy U.S. Congress
EU fines X $140M for DSA violations
The European Commission fined Elon Musk’s X about $140 million (120 million euros) for breaching the EU’s Digital Services Act, finding the platform used a deceptive paid blue‑check design, maintained a poorly functioning ads repository, and failed to provide effective researcher data access — the Commission called this the first non‑compliance decision under the DSA. EC spokesperson Thomas Regnier announced the penalty and contrasted X’s stance with TikTok’s concessions while denying any targeting of U.S. firms; Musk says he will legally challenge the sanctions, and U.S. politicians including Sen. Marco Rubio and JD Vance have criticized the fine as an attack or censorship — the DSA allows fines up to 6% of worldwide annual revenue and X serves over 100 million EU users.
X (Twitter) EU Digital Services Act Elon Musk and X
New Orleans police won’t enforce civil immigration law
The New Orleans police chief was criticized after comments suggesting the department would not enforce federal civil immigration laws ahead of planned ICE operations. Louisiana Attorney General Jeff Landry sent a letter urging NOPD to immediately direct officers to fully cooperate with ICE and CBP, warning that noncooperation could constitute felony malfeasance under the state’s 2024 ban on sanctuary policies as City Council unrest and protests accompany the federal surge.
Policing and Public Safety Immigration Enforcement
Forest Lake schools open applications for board vacancy; interviews set Dec. 4
Forest Lake ISD 831 opened applications to fill Luke Hagglund’s vacant school board seat, with submissions due by 4 p.m. Nov. 20 and a process that included statutory eligibility rules, the formation of two or three subcommittees to advance finalists and the option to draw an additional finalist from 2024 school board runners (starting with Laura Ndirangu); interviews were set for Dec. 4 and a tentative appointment timeline included a 30‑day waiting period before a Jan. 3 appointment and a ceremonial oath Jan. 8. After interviewing 11 candidates on Dec. 4, the board deadlocked and did not make an appointment, leaving the seat unfilled while next steps are determined.
Local Government Education
FRA eases track inspection rules nationwide
The Federal Railroad Administration finalized a rule on Dec. 5, 2025, allowing railroads to reduce some manual track inspections if they use approved technology to detect defects. The nationwide change applies to rail lines that run through the Minneapolis–Saint Paul metro, shifting more inspection responsibility to sensors and automated systems while the FRA says safety standards will be maintained.
Transit & Infrastructure Government/Regulatory
Officials: ICE targeting Somalis in Twin Cities; MPD won’t assist
City and state officials say ICE is mounting targeted enforcement in the Twin Cities against the Somali community — with reports of as many as 100 federal agents and an “Operation Metro Surge” that began Dec. 1 and led to 12 arrests, including some individuals from Somalia and an alleged Somali gang member — and DHS has said many reviewed cases showed fraud. Minneapolis Police Chief Brian O’Hara said the MPD will not assist or share information for immigration enforcement, as President Trump’s public remarks about Somali immigrants have stoked fear and prompted community protests and business impacts.
Public Safety Legal Local Government
Eagan opens Veteran Village for homeless veterans
A new Veteran Village in Eagan opened Friday, Dec. 5, 2025, providing housing and support for veterans experiencing homelessness in Dakota County. The facility’s launch expands local capacity to serve unhoused veterans in the south Twin Cities metro.
Housing Local Government
Study flags 168 chemicals harming gut bacteria
University of Cambridge researchers reported Tuesday in Nature Microbiology that 168 common chemicals—from pesticides and plastic additives to flame retardants—can inhibit beneficial human gut bacteria. The team screened 1,076 contaminants against 22 bacterial species and built a machine‑learning model to predict microbiome toxicity, noting exposures can occur via food, water and environmental contact while calling for real‑world exposure data and microbiome safety testing of consumer chemicals.
Environmental Health Microbiome Research
Minimum wages to rise across U.S. in 2026
A new NELP report says minimum wages will increase in 22 states and 66 cities/counties in 2026, with changes taking effect in 19 states and 49 localities on January 1 and additional boosts in four states and 22 cities later in the year. Sixty jurisdictions will have at least a $15 minimum on Jan. 1, and some areas will hit $17 or more, including NYC/Long Island/Westchester at $17 and New Jersey long‑term care workers at $18.92, as many increases are indexed to inflation while the federal minimum remains $7.25.
Labor and Wages U.S. Economy
Iran fires missiles in Gulf military drills
Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Navy conducted missile exercises in the Strait of Hormuz and Gulf of Oman on Thursday and Friday, launching ballistic and cruise missiles — including Qadr 110, 380 and 360 — at simulated targets, according to Iranian state media and Reuters. The drills, Iran’s second since the June Israel–Iran war, showcased strike footage and were framed as deterrence, in waters where the U.S. 5th Fleet patrols to keep vital oil shipping lanes open.
Iran Military Exercises Persian Gulf Security
NJ court permanently bars ex-Sen. Menendez
New Jersey Superior Court Judge Robert Lougy permanently barred former U.S. Sen. Bob Menendez from holding any public office or position of public trust in New Jersey, the state attorney general announced. The order follows Menendez’s July 2024 conviction on 16 counts and his 11-year sentence in January 2025 for taking bribes in gold and cash and acting as a foreign agent; AG Matt Platkin said Menendez would face a fourth-degree contempt charge if he ever applies for public office.
Bob Menendez Public Corruption
Gymnasts sue USA Gymnastics, SafeSport over coach abuse
Gymnasts have sued USA Gymnastics and the U.S. Center for SafeSport, alleging both failed to protect athletes from coach Sean Gardner and that USA Gymnastics knew as early as 2017 he posed a "serious & present danger" but did not warn parents. The complaint details alleged grooming and abusive behaviors at a Mississippi gym — including long mandatory hugs, retaliation, closed‑door meetings, kissing gymnasts' foreheads, sexual jokes, inappropriate social‑media conduct, excessive drinking around minors and stalking — and says investigators who seized devices in late May found, per sealed court documents, hidden‑camera images of girls about 6–14 who were nude, using the toilet, or changing into leotards; USA Gymnastics declined to comment due to ongoing litigation.
Sexual Abuse in Sports USA Gymnastics
Jan. 6 pipe bomb suspect Brian Cole Jr. ordered detained at first D.C. court appearance
Federal authorities arrested 30-year-old Brian Cole Jr. of Woodbridge, Virginia, Thursday in connection with two pipe bombs placed near the DNC and RNC on Jan. 5, 2021, charging him with transporting an explosive device across state lines and attempted malicious destruction by means of an explosive device. At his initial D.C. federal court appearance Dec. 5, Magistrate Judge Moxila Upadhyaya ordered Cole detained; he did not enter a plea, is due back Dec. 15, and prosecutors say the case rests on bank and purchase records, cell‑site and license‑plate data and items seized in searches after a re‑review of existing evidence. AP reported that Cole confessed and reportedly expressed belief the 2020 election was stolen; his attorney is private counsel John Shoreman.
Jan. 6 Investigations Law Enforcement and Courts Federal Courts/DOJ
Supreme Court to hear Trump birthright-citizenship case in spring; New Hampshire class action at issue
The Supreme Court will hear arguments in the spring and could issue a decision by early summer on the constitutionality of former President Trump’s birthright-citizenship order; the case originates in a New Hampshire class action in which a federal judge blocked the order for a class including all affected children, and lower courts have largely concluded the order violates or likely violates the 14th Amendment. The administration has also sought review of an appeals-court ruling that led to a nationwide injunction in suits brought by Democratic-led states, and the Court’s recent limits on nationwide injunctions left open that class actions and certain state suits can still have nationwide effect.
Immigration Policy Birthright Citizenship Immigration and Citizenship
Putin’s New Delhi visit yields labor pact and oil pledge amid U.S. tariffs and EU bans
During his New Delhi visit, Vladimir Putin and Narendra Modi announced an expansion of economic ties — including a labor mobility deal to allow more Indian nationals to work in Russia, free electronic visas for Russian tourists, cooperation on civil nuclear, clean energy, shipbuilding and fertilizers, and steps toward an India–Eurasian Economic Union free-trade agreement — as bilateral trade stood at $68.7 billion last fiscal year. Putin also pledged Russia would continue “uninterrupted” fuel shipments to India even as Indian refiners have curbed Russian crude purchases after the U.S. doubled tariffs on India and new EU bans on refined products prompted exporters like Reliance to halt some Russian purchases, amid reports of sanction‑evasion practices by oil vessels.
India–Russia Relations U.S. Sanctions and Tariffs U.S. Foreign Policy
Nature retracts climate–economy paper; 2100 GDP-loss estimate slashed after data error
Nature has retracted a high-profile climate–economy paper after a data error was found that, when corrected (removing Uzbekistan), reduced the 2100 global GDP-loss estimate from about 62% to roughly 23%; the study had also circulated a widely cited mid-range projection of roughly $38 trillion per year in damages by 2049. Nature posted an editor’s note on Nov. 6 and issued a full retraction this week, and the authors say they intend to resubmit a revised version.
Climate Economics Scientific Retractions Climate Change
Supreme Court takes Trump birthright case
The U.S. Supreme Court agreed on Dec. 5, 2025, to hear a challenge to President Donald Trump’s order seeking to limit birthright citizenship, setting up a constitutional ruling this term. The outcome could directly affect families in the Twin Cities whose children were born in Minnesota to non‑citizen parents, as well as access to documents and services dependent on citizenship status.
Legal Immigration
Judge orders release of Florida Epstein grand jury transcripts; NYC cases pending
Judge Rodney Smith ordered the unsealing of grand jury transcripts from the abandoned 2006–2007 Florida Epstein investigation, finding the Epstein Files Transparency Act overrides grand jury secrecy and requires the DOJ, FBI and federal prosecutors to release records by Dec. 19. The DOJ has sought unsealing in three matters—the approved Florida probe and related 2019 (Epstein) and 2021 (Ghislaine Maxwell) SDNY cases—with the New York judges setting a Monday deadline for DOJ’s final filing and saying they will rule expeditiously after victim, estate and defense submissions.
Jeffrey Epstein Investigation Jeffrey Epstein Courts and Justice Department
St. Paul school bus, LRT collide; student hurt
Metro Transit says a school bus and a light-rail train collided around 9:30 a.m. Friday at University Ave W and Western Ave N in St. Paul, sending one student to the hospital with minor injuries as a precaution. A witness told authorities the bus driver ran a red light; Metro Transit Police and the Minnesota State Patrol are investigating, and another bus transported the remaining students to school.
Public Safety Transit & Infrastructure
GOP senators press Rubio to tighten Afghan vetting
Several Senate Republicans sent a letter to Secretary of State Marco Rubio urging an overhaul of vetting for Afghan evacuees after the late‑November shooting of two National Guard members in Washington, D.C. The lawmakers cite Department of War inspector general findings of vetting gaps under Operation Allies Refuge/Welcome and demand the administration identify evacuees with significant security concerns and seek their removal, referencing the charges against suspect Rahmanullah Lakanwal.
Immigration Policy Congress National Security
California to ban all plastic grocery bags in 2026
California will prohibit grocery, pharmacy, liquor and convenience stores from providing both thin single-use plastic bags and thicker ‘reusable’ plastic film bags starting Jan. 1, 2026, under SB 270 and a new update, SB 1053. Paper bags may be offered for at least 10 cents and must reach 50% post-consumer recycled content by Jan. 1, 2028, a shift that follows a 2022 AG probe finding most recycling facilities do not accept plastic carry-out bags.
California Environmental Policy Plastics and Recycling
D.C. Circuit upholds Trump firings at NLRB, MSPB
In a 2–1 decision on Dec. 5, 2025, the D.C. Circuit ruled President Trump lawfully removed Democratic members Cathy Harris (Merit Systems Protection Board) and Gwynne Wilcox (National Labor Relations Board), holding both agencies wield significant executive power despite statutes permitting removal only for cause. The majority opinion by Judge Gregory Katsas contrasted with a dissent from Judge Florence Pan warning of politicization; the ruling follows a May Supreme Court stay and comes days before the Court hears a related case on presidential removal limits.
Presidential Removal Power Federal Courts Labor Boards
IHME: Under‑5 deaths to rise in 2025
The Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation projects global under‑age‑5 mortality will increase in 2025 for the first time this century, to about 4.8 million deaths from 4.6 million in 2024, largely linked to a historic drop in health-focused foreign aid. NPR reports the model, detailed by IHME’s Dr. Steve Lim, attributes the reversal to a 26% cut in international health aid — with the U.S., U.K., France and Germany among donors reducing funding — while limited increases from some contributors do not offset the shortfall.
Global Child Mortality U.S. Foreign Aid
CBS: Trump’s $20T investment claims inflated
A CBS News review finds no evidence to support President Trump’s recent claims that $18–$21 trillion has been newly invested or committed to the U.S. since he took office, noting the White House’s own tally of $9.6 trillion includes double-counts and Biden-era projects. Companies including Micron and GlobalFoundries confirmed large portions of cited investments were announced under President Biden and backed by CHIPS Act funding or credits, while federal data show total corporate investment on pace to exceed $5 trillion in 2025.
Donald Trump U.S. Economy
Defense seeks to suppress evidence in UHC CEO killing
Luigi Mangione has been fighting to exclude contested evidence, including a gun, in the UnitedHealthcare CEO killing case and returned to court Dec. 2 for a hearing focused on the admissibility of those items. No immediate ruling was reported, and a scheduled Day 4 of pretrial proceedings was postponed after the judge said Mangione was ill, with the evidentiary hearings to resume at a later, TBD date.
Public Safety Legal
Medical examiner rules Anna Kepner’s death a homicide by mechanical asphyxia; FBI probe continues
Miami‑Dade records and a family‑provided copy of Anna Kepner’s death certificate list the 18‑year‑old Florida cheerleader’s cause and manner of death as mechanical asphyxiation and homicide; she was found Nov. 7 aboard the Carnival Horizon under a bed, wrapped in a blanket and covered with life jackets, and has since been cremated. The FBI’s Miami Field Office is leading the investigation — reviewing ship surveillance, key‑card logs and phone records — and court filings identify a 16‑year‑old stepbrother as a person of interest though no arrests or charges have been announced, with related custody hearings and subpoenas ongoing.
Florida Crime FBI Investigations Federal Law Enforcement
Light snow causes 100 crashes, 1 fatality Friday morning
Light snow, ice and slush across Minnesota contributed to 100 property-damage crashes between midnight and 9 a.m. Friday, including 64 vehicles off the road, 10 spinouts, two jackknifed semis and five injury crashes. One person died in a two-vehicle crash on Hwy 67 near 190th Ave north of Wood Lake just after 8 a.m., and MnDOT said side streets and ramps were the slickest in the Twin Cities.
Transit & Infrastructure Weather Public Safety
White House hosts ‘Washington Accords’ Rwanda–DRC signing; Trump vows U.S. rare earth purchases
At a Dec. 4 ceremony hosted by the White House at the newly renamed Donald J. Trump Institute of Peace (formerly the U.S. Institute of Peace), President Trump welcomed Rwandan President Paul Kagame and DRC President Félix Tshisekedi to sign the U.S.-brokered "Washington Accords," formally ratifying a June agreement that aims for a permanent ceasefire, disarmament of non‑state forces, refugee returns and expanded economic cooperation — including Trump’s pledge that the U.S. will buy rare‑earth and other critical minerals from Rwanda and the DRC. The event unfolded amid controversy over the forced renaming and takeover of USIP and ongoing court challenges and layoffs, and came as fighting in eastern DRC — notably intensified shelling around Kamanyola and rejection of the deal by groups like M23 — underscored that core security conditions remain unmet.
U.S. Institute of Peace DRC–Rwanda Peace Deal DRC–Rwanda Conflict
Seven of nine targeted universities reject White House 'Academic Excellence' compact
Seven of the nine universities the White House approached — University of Arizona, Brown, Dartmouth, MIT, University of Pennsylvania, USC and the University of Virginia — have declined to sign the administration’s "Compact for Academic Excellence," leaving the University of Texas at Austin and Vanderbilt noncommittal. The White House proposed preferential federal grants tied to commitments such as a five‑year tuition freeze, caps on international students and bans on race/sex considerations, but universities rejected the pact as threatening academic freedom, institutional independence and merit‑based research funding.
Education policy Education Federal government
ADP: U.S. private payrolls fall 32,000
ADP reported U.S. private payrolls fell by 32,000 in November, with its three‑month average at −4,700 jobs — a sign of flatlining conditions concentrated at the smallest firms. Broader labor measures show modest cooling (Chicago Fed real‑time unemployment 4.44%, four‑week initial claims ≈215,000, and Bank of America data showing payroll growth slowed to +0.2% year‑over‑year), and BofA economists attribute the weakness more to supply constraints than to a large wave of layoffs.
Federal Reserve Federal Reserve and Interest Rates U.S. Labor Market
Trump-linked group funds Utah ballot measure
A nonprofit tied to President Trump, Securing American Greatness, has contributed $4.35 million over the last six weeks to a Utah committee backing a ballot measure to repeal the state’s anti-gerrymandering law, according to state campaign finance records. The spending aims to help Republicans recapture a House seat projected to flip to Democrats next year and offers an early signal of how Trump’s sizable war chest could be deployed to shape GOP fortunes after he leaves office.
Donald Trump Campaign Finance Redistricting and Gerrymandering
Minnesota flagged food-aid fraud in 2019
Multiple former Minnesota Department of Education employees told CBS News they spotted signs of fraud tied to Feeding Our Future in July 2019—months before COVID—then faced pressure from the nonprofit’s leader, Aimee Bock, to ease scrutiny. Prosecutors say FOF ultimately falsely claimed 91 million meals and received nearly $250 million before FBI raids in January 2022; the scandal has yielded 61 convictions and 78 total charges, and a 2020 FOF discrimination suit against the state was dismissed after the federal probe became public.
Feeding Our Future Fraud Minnesota Government Oversight
Ireland probes drone incursion during Zelenskyy visit
Ireland is investigating unidentified large drones that breached airspace near Dublin Airport late Dec. 1 as Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy arrived, with officials classifying the event as a hybrid attack, according to Irish media and a statement to CBS News. The Irish military and police mounted a joint security operation that ensured a safe visit; reports say four military‑style drones entered a no‑fly zone along the plane’s expected path and later circled an Irish Navy vessel, amid a broader European pattern of mystery drones near critical sites.
European Security and Hybrid Warfare Ukraine–Russia War
CDC advisers ease Hep B birth‑dose mandate
The CDC’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices voted Friday, Dec. 5, 2025, to recommend that not all newborns require a hepatitis B vaccination at birth, allowing deferral in certain low‑risk cases (such as when the mother tests negative for hepatitis B surface antigen). The change, pending formal CDC adoption, would require Minnesota hospitals and clinics to update newborn vaccination protocols in coordination with the Minnesota Department of Health.
Health
Judge orders pardoned Jan. 6 defendant Taranto back to Washington state after alleged Raskin sighting; detention request under review
A federal judge ordered Jan. 6 defendant Taylor Taranto — who was pardoned by former President Trump — to immediately return to his home in Washington state after probation officers reported he was allegedly seen by local police near Rep. Jamie Raskin’s home, prompting heightened security for Raskin. Judge Carl Nichols said he will consider prosecutors’ request to detain Taranto, who must attend a Dec. 10 probation hearing and pledged to drive back by noon Friday, as prosecutors cited mental‑health concerns and alleged supervised‑release violations.
Federal Courts January 6 Cases Jan. 6 Cases
Feds charge Minneapolis man in Bloomington kidnapping-rape; AG, U.S. attorney cite serial assaults
Federal authorities have charged Abdimahat Bille Mohamed in a Bloomington kidnapping-rape, alleging probable cause that he committed multiple sexual assaults — including gang rapes — involving at least five victims from 2017 to 2025. U.S. Attorney Daniel N. Rosen vowed to "aggressively prosecute this serial rapist," and U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi criticized prior local release decisions that left Mohamed, who was on probation from two earlier Minneapolis sex‑assault convictions (one involving a 15‑year‑old), free when the September incident occurred.
Public Safety Legal
Colombia seizes 7.1 tons of cocaine; 11 held
Colombia’s navy said Wednesday it seized about 7.1 tons of cocaine in two Caribbean operations—one 90 nautical miles off Barranquilla and another in the Gulf of Morrosquillo—arresting 11 suspects without injuries and valuing the haul at more than $340 million. The announcement comes as the U.S. continues lethal maritime strikes on suspected drug‑running boats, including a Thursday Pacific strike that killed four, amid rising scrutiny over a Sept. 2 Caribbean strike.
Drug Trafficking and Interdictions U.S. Anti-Drug Operations
Man killed in Payne‑Phalen shooting on Edgerton; 13th St. Paul homicide of 2025
Officers responded just before 9:15 p.m. to the 900 block of Edgerton Street in St. Paul’s Payne‑Phalen neighborhood after a man was found with a gunshot wound to the upper torso; he was taken to Regions Hospital and pronounced dead shortly after arrival. Police processed the scene and say the circumstances remain under investigation, with the Ramsey County Medical Examiner set to conduct an autopsy to confirm identity and cause of death; it is St. Paul’s 13th homicide of 2025.
Public Safety Legal
Meta inks AI licensing deals with publishers
Meta said Friday it signed multiyear, compensated AI data agreements with news outlets including USA Today, People Inc., CNN, Fox News, The Daily Caller, Washington Examiner and Le Monde to feed real‑time answers in its Meta AI chatbot across Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp and Messenger. The deals, similar to a previously announced Reuters agreement, include source attribution and links back to publisher articles, with Meta planning additional partners and features over time.
Meta Platforms Media and AI
Interior cuts Christmas tree, firewood permit fees
The U.S. Department of the Interior, led by Secretary Doug Burgum, announced a holiday affordability effort reducing or waiving Bureau of Land Management fees through Jan. 31, including a “one dollar, one tree” policy setting Christmas tree and firewood permits at $1 each. The plan opens new cutting areas near communities, military bases, tribal lands and rural counties, raises household limits to up to 10 cords and three trees (with flexibility to remove caps), and is framed as both cost relief and hazardous fuel reduction amid wildfire risk.
U.S. Department of the Interior Public Lands and Wildfire Prevention
Mandela Barnes launches Wisconsin governor bid
Former Wisconsin Lt. Gov. Mandela Barnes announced Tuesday he is running for governor to succeed retiring Democratic Gov. Tony Evers, entering as a likely frontrunner in a crowded Democratic primary. Barnes, who narrowly lost a 2022 U.S. Senate race to Republican Ron Johnson, immediately drew fire from GOP Rep. Tom Tiffany, who labeled him a 'far-left extremist' and said voters would reject him again in 2026.
Wisconsin Politics 2026 Elections
Study links obesity to faster Alzheimer’s biomarkers
Researchers from Washington University School of Medicine reported at the RSNA meeting in Chicago that Alzheimer’s blood biomarkers increased 95% faster over five years in people with obesity compared to non‑obese peers, based on 407 participants in the Alzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative. PET scans in the same cohort showed greater amyloid plaque buildup in those with obesity, suggesting higher Alzheimer’s disease burden over time. The authors, Drs. Soheil Mohammadi and Cyrus Raji, said the results underscore the role of whole‑body health in brain health and called for future prevention trials, potentially including GLP‑1 drugs earlier in life.
Alzheimer's Disease Obesity and Metabolic Health
Trump calls Japan PM after Xi call
After speaking with Chinese leader Xi Jinping, Donald Trump phoned Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi, Takaichi said. In the Nov. 24 Xi–Trump call Xi told Trump that "Taiwan's return to China is an integral part of the post‑war international order" — a point Trump did not include in his public post — and Beijing has since mounted diplomatic and economic pressure on Japan, including UN protest letters, halted seafood imports, a travel advisory and canceled cultural events, amid tensions sparked by Takaichi's earlier remarks about a potential Chinese blockade of Taiwan.
Taiwan China–Japan Relations Indo-Pacific Security
Study: Rents up 41% in major U.S. cities
A new LendingTree analysis of HUD fair-market rents finds average one-bedroom rents in the 50 largest U.S. cities rose $457 (41%) to $1,578 and two-bedroom rents rose $505 (37%) to $1,858 between 2020 and 2025, with New York, San Diego and Miami posting the biggest jumps. The report attributes spikes to demand outpacing supply and population growth, while San Francisco saw minimal increases; a Zillow/StreetEasy report says rents since 2019 have outpaced wages 1.5x and Realtor.com projects only a 1% national rent dip next year.
Housing and Rent U.S. Economy
Iran says it will boycott draw; head coach to attend amid U.S. visa denials
Iran says it will boycott the 2026 World Cup draw ceremony in Washington after some delegation members were denied U.S. visas by the Trump administration. Nevertheless, Iran’s federation says head coach Amir Ghalenoei and one or two staff will attend to ensure the team’s seat isn’t left vacant — a move the federation calls a technical attendance and not a retraction of the protest, consistent with U.S. travel exceptions for athletes, coaches and necessary support personnel.
U.S. Immigration Policy World Cup 2026 2026 FIFA World Cup
Mace bill would add photos to SNAP EBT cards
Rep. Nancy Mace introduced legislation to require photographs on SNAP Electronic Benefit Transfer (EBT) cards and mandate retailers verify the photo before accepting benefits, aiming to reduce fraud. The bill sets photo-update intervals (10 years for adults, five for minors) and directs the Agriculture Secretary to create procedures allowing caregivers of minors, people with disabilities, and elderly recipients to access benefits on their behalf; Reps. Lauren Boebert and Barry Moore are listed as original cosponsors.
SNAP and Food Assistance Congress and Legislation
Maryland releases unredacted voter record
After a legal threat forced Maryland to lift redactions, state voter records revealed registration details for Ian Andre Roberts, a school superintendent recently arrested by ICE. House Administration Committee Chair Bryan Steil and Vice Chair Laurel Lee have sent a 10-question letter to Maryland SBE Administrator Jared DeMarinis seeking whether Roberts remains registered, whether he ever voted or received absentee ballots, and how the state complies with NVRA list‑maintenance requirements amid scrutiny of its voter‑roll vetting.
Election Administration Elections and Voting Immigration Enforcement
DOJ sues six states over voter rolls
The Justice Department has sued six states for refusing to turn over statewide voter registration rolls, warning that their actions amount to open defiance of federal law. Separately, House Administration Committee leaders opened a targeted oversight inquiry into Maryland after an ICE‑arrested superintendent, Ian Andre Roberts, surfaced on voter rolls, requesting detailed records on his registration status, any voting or absentee‑ballot activity, and the state’s list‑maintenance procedures.
Department of Justice Elections and Voting Election Law and Voting Rights
House panel probes Maryland voter rolls
House Administration Committee Chair Bryan Steil and Vice Chair Laurel Lee sent a letter Thursday to Maryland elections chief Jared DeMarinis seeking answers about noncitizen Ian Andre Roberts’ voter registration and the state’s citizenship verification and list‑maintenance procedures under the NVRA. The letter asks whether Roberts is still registered, whether he ever voted, whether absentee ballots were mailed to him, and how Maryland complies with 52 U.S.C. §20507, and comes amid DOJ’s separate lawsuit over statewide voter list disclosures.
Elections and Voting Immigration Enforcement
NPR challenges Trump funding-cut order in court
At a Dec. 4 summary-judgment hearing in Washington, D.C., NPR argued President Trump’s May 1 executive order titled 'Ending Taxpayer Subsidy of Biased Media' unlawfully targeted NPR and PBS for perceived bias and violates the First Amendment, while DOJ countered that the order also reflected a broader desire to stop funding media and that NPR suffered no cognizable harm because Congress later rescinded $1.1 billion in public-media funds. U.S. District Judge Randolph D. Moss expressed skepticism of DOJ’s position, noting an NEA grant to NPR was canceled to align with the decree, and will decide whether to rule now or send the case to trial.
First Amendment and Press Freedom Trump Administration Legal Actions
Report: U.S. traffic delays hit record
The Texas A&M Transportation Institute’s Urban Mobility Report finds U.S. traffic congestion reached record levels in 2024, with the average American spending 63 hours stalled in traffic as delays spread beyond traditional rush hours and into more days of the week. Los Angeles topped the rankings at 137 hours lost per commuter, while San Diego saw the biggest percentage increase since 2019 at more than 37%, and researchers noted rising truck-related rush-hour delays and heavier Thursday traffic nearly matching Fridays.
Transportation and Infrastructure U.S. Economy
NCPC expects White House to file 90,000‑sq‑ft ballroom plan this month; cost estimated at $300M
NCPC Chair Will Scharf said the White House is expected to submit plans to the commission this month for a roughly 90,000‑sq‑ft ballroom — nearly double the size of the main White House and designed to hold up to 999 people — which the commission will review at a "normal and deliberative pace." The project, which began construction in October with demolition work on the East Wing, now carries an estimated cost of about $300 million (up from $200 million), will be led by Shalom Baranes Associates with McCrery Architects as a consultant, and the White House says it will be privately funded with a released donor list of 37 names.
National Capital Planning Commission White House Renovation Project White House Construction
NY AG declines charges in Queens police shooting
New York Attorney General Letitia James’ Office of Special Investigation declined to charge NYPD Officers Salvatore Alongi and Matthew Cianfrocco in the March 27, 2024 fatal shooting of 19‑year‑old Win Rozario during a mental‑health crisis at his Queens home, concluding prosecutors could not disprove beyond a reasonable doubt that deadly force was justified. The report, which cites body‑cam video of Rozario advancing with scissors and a prior Taser use, recommends expanding non‑police mental‑health first responder programs, enhanced officer training, and a state law enabling public‑health responses to behavioral‑health crises; the officers still face an internal discipline trial and a family lawsuit, while Mayor‑elect Zohran Mamdani pledged to strengthen health‑led crisis response.
Policing and Accountability New York Attorney General
US cuts immigrant work permits to 18 months
USCIS announced on Dec. 5, 2025, that Employment Authorization Documents for many legal immigrants will shift from up to five years of validity to 18 months, requiring more frequent renewals. The federal change applies nationwide, directly affecting Twin Cities immigrants who work under EADs and the employers who depend on them.
Legal Immigration
Mamdani to end NYC encampment sweeps
New York City Mayor‑elect Zohran Mamdani said Thursday he will halt homeless encampment sweeps when he takes office in January, breaking from Mayor Eric Adams’ 2022 initiative. Mamdani said his administration will prioritize connecting people to long‑term housing and cited a 2023 Comptroller audit that found sweeps largely failed to place people in shelter.
New York City Government Homelessness and Housing Policy
DHS to pause new HCBS disability licenses Jan. 1, 2026–Dec. 31, 2027; limited exceptions
The Minnesota Department of Human Services will pause accepting and issuing new Home and Community‑Based Services (HCBS/245D) disability license applications from Jan. 1, 2026, through Dec. 31, 2027, may retroactively cancel existing applications, and will bar current providers from adding new services during the moratorium. DHS frames the freeze as a response to fraud investigations and the need for greater oversight after a roughly 283% surge in new applications (with participants up ~25% and active provider licenses up ~55% over five years), while allowing limited exceptions for requests from counties, tribal nations or case managers.
Health Local Government
Grand jury declines to re‑indict Letitia James after case tossed over unlawful appointment
An out‑of‑district federal judge dismissed New York Attorney General Letitia James’s indictment—charging bank fraud and false statements over a 2020 Norfolk mortgage—after finding that interim U.S. attorney Lindsey Halligan was unlawfully appointed; the dismissal was without prejudice and turned solely on that appointment defect, with Halligan having been the lone prosecutor before the grand jury. Prosecutors sought to refile but a Norfolk grand jury declined to re‑indict; DOJ may appeal or try again, while James (who has pleaded not guilty) called the charges baseless and has accused investigators of politicized and "outrageous" conduct.
Letitia James Courts/Legal Department of Justice
House cancels vote on NIL SCORE Act after GOP defections
A planned House vote on the SCORE Act regulating college athletes’ name, image and likeness was canceled after several Republicans defected, despite backing from former President Trump and the bill being brought to the floor by Speaker Mike Johnson and Rep. Steve Scalise. Rep. Hakeem Jeffries and other critics — who called it the "Lane Kiffin Protection Act" — say the bill would preempt state laws, bar athletes from being classified as employees, curb collective bargaining and strip legal rights, and note that organized labor and player associations oppose it; the measure also contains a revenue‑sharing provision tied to at least 22% of the average annual revenue of the 70 highest‑earning schools.
College Athletics and NIL U.S. Congress College Sports NIL Legislation
State Dept readies 'FIFA Pass' priority visas
Ahead of the 2026 FIFA World Cup, the State Department says it is preparing a 'FIFA Pass' priority visa initiative announced last month and has surged resources to handle increased demand while keeping vetting strict. Matt Pierce, a senior Consular Affairs official, said wait times are now under 60 days in 80% of countries and more than 400 additional consular officers have been deployed, underscoring the Trump administration’s security focus as the U.S. hosts most matches beginning in June 2026.
U.S. Visa Policy World Cup 2026 Security
Appeals court pauses ruling curbing D.C. National Guard deployment
A federal appeals panel issued an administrative stay of Judge Jia Cobb’s order that had barred the Trump administration from unilaterally using the D.C. National Guard for crime-control operations or calling up out‑of‑state Guard members, saying the stay should not be construed as a ruling on the merits while it considers a longer-term pause and leaving the Guard deployed for now; the District’s attorney general is suing to bar deployments without the mayor’s consent. The administration ordered an additional 500 Guard personnel after the Nov. 27 ambush that killed two Guardsmen — Arkansas is sending 100 — while states such as West Virginia say roughly 170 Guardsmen remain in D.C. on volunteer rotations and have not asked to leave, and their governor has not committed to the surge and will consult Guard leadership; the White House says the president acted lawfully.
National Guard and D.C. Governance National Guard Operations Washington, D.C.
Pew: Democratic anger at federal government hits record
A nationally representative Pew Research Center survey fielded Sept. 22–28, 2025 finds 44% of Democrats and Democratic-leaning independents feel angry toward the federal government—the highest share recorded in Pew trends since 1997—while 40% of Republicans and GOP leaners report feeling content and just 9% angry. Only about one in five Americans say they trust the federal government to do what’s right always or most of the time, among the lowest levels in seven decades, and the poll captures a widening emotional polarization that preceded the subsequent 43‑day government shutdown.
Public Opinion Federal Government
ICE detains Harvard professor in synagogue shooting case
DHS said Wednesday that ICE ERO Boston detained Harvard Law visiting professor Carlos Portugal Gouvea, a Brazilian national arrested Oct. 2 for firing a BB gun outside a Boston-area synagogue, and that he agreed to voluntarily depart the U.S. Gouvea pleaded guilty on Nov. 13 to illegal use of an air rifle after other charges were dismissed, and the State Department revoked his J‑1 visa two weeks after the incident; Harvard suspended him pending the investigation.
Immigration Enforcement Harvard University
Navy: Houthi ops stressed Truman strike group
The U.S. Navy released investigation findings Thursday concluding that intense operations against Yemen’s Houthis contributed to a series of mishaps involving the USS Harry S. Truman carrier strike group during its Sept. 2024–May 2025 deployment. The report details “Operation Rough Rider” (Mar. 15–May 6), more than 1,000 airstrikes and 72 hours of continuous flight ops, and links the high-tempo combat environment to a December friendly-fire incident by USS Gettysburg, a February collision near the Suez Canal, and two F-18 losses in April and May. Vice CNO Adm. Jim Kilby said accountability actions were taken (details redacted) and emphasized adherence to procedures in combat conditions; no fatalities occurred, but damages are estimated at about $164 million.
U.S. Navy Houthi Conflict Military Safety
Colorado districts settle CHSAA transgender-athlete suit
A coalition of Colorado school districts, led by District 49, settled a lawsuit against the Colorado High School Activities Association (CHSAA) over transgender athlete participation, dismissing their claims and agreeing to pay CHSAA $60,000. Plaintiffs say the deal ensures districts can separate sports by biological sex without CHSAA penalties, while CHSAA maintains it never penalized districts, leaves eligibility decisions to schools, and that the settlement changes none of its policies.
Courts and Education Policy Transgender Sports Policy
Trial shows Linda Sun texts on Hochul, Cuomo
At former New York state official Linda Sun’s federal trial in Brooklyn, prosecutors presented Jan. 25, 2021 messages in which Sun told Chinese consular officials that then–Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul was "much more obedient" than Gov. Andrew Cuomo and that the lieutenant governor "listens to me more." Sun, charged with violating and conspiring to violate FARA and related offenses, is accused of acting on behalf of China, including steering a Lunar New Year video and seeking to block mention of Uyghurs in a Cuomo speech, while allegedly funneling millions to her husband to buy real estate and a Ferrari.
FARA and Foreign Influence New York Politics
DHS: Half of probed MN immigration cases fraudulent
DHS says a targeted fraud‑detection operation in Minneapolis–Saint Paul found about half of the investigated immigration cases were fraudulent, spanning naturalization, H‑1B, marriage and Ukrainian humanitarian parole applications. The agency also cited more than 95,000 pending Minnesota immigration applications (about 6,500 tied to Somalia) but did not release underlying totals or any charging data; FOX 9 has requested records.
Public Safety Legal
Yermak resigns after anti-corruption raid amid energy-sector embezzlement probe
Andriy Yermak resigned as President Volodymyr Zelensky’s chief of staff after anti‑corruption agents from NABU and the SAPO searched his Kyiv apartment in the presidential compound and his office, actions tied to "Operation Midas," a 15‑month, $100 million probe into alleged embezzlement of funds meant to repair Ukraine’s energy grid; Yermak says he has not been formally charged, cooperated with investigators and had lawyers present. His departure — accepted by Zelensky to "avoid rumors and speculation" — has intensified political fallout, with ministers removed, renewed calls for Yermak’s ouster, EU scrutiny, investigators naming Tymur Mindich as an alleged ringleader, and concerns the scandal could weaken Ukraine’s negotiating position in recent U.S.–Ukraine peace talks.
U.S. Foreign Policy Ukraine Government Ukraine Politics
Vatican panel rejects women deacons again
The Vatican released a synthesis on Dec. 4, 2025 from a second study commission led by Cardinal Giuseppe Petrocchi concluding women should not be ordained as deacons, while suggesting creation of new lay ministries and leaving room for further study. The document, which unusually included members’ votes on theological questions, follows Pope Francis’s 2016 and 2020 directives to examine historical and doctrinal issues, and drew criticism from U.S.-based advocacy groups that want ministerial recognition for women.
Catholic Church Women’s Ordination Debate
Ana Walshe’s alleged lover details affair; Brian Walshe voicemail played in court
At the murder trial, Washington, D.C. realtor William Fastow testified that he and Ana Walshe had an intimate relationship, spent holidays and trips together, planned a Jan. 4 meeting and that Ana had been preparing a D.C. townhouse and wanted to tell her husband herself, while prosecutors played a voicemail Brian Walshe left Fastow asking if he’d heard from Ana. Prosecutors also played hours of Brian’s recorded interviews, presented physical evidence recovered from trash bags (including a hatchet, hacksaw, bloody towels, a Prada purse, boots matching Ana’s last seen footwear and her COVID-19 card), argued motives tied to the alleged affair and custody concerns to avoid prison, and noted Brian’s recent guilty plea to misleading police and conveying a human body, which the defense counters by saying he found his wife dead and denies knowing of any affair.
Courts and Legal Brian Walshe Massachusetts
Trump backs Hegseth after IG faults Signal use; job appears safe
The Pentagon inspector general found that Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth violated Department of Defense rules by using his personal Signal app to share sensitive, near‑real‑time operational details — including targets, timing and aircraft — tied to U.S. strikes against Houthi militants, conduct the IG said could have endangered U.S. personnel and the mission. The classified report was delivered to Congress with a redacted public version released Dec. 4; while the IG did not conclude Hegseth had improperly declassified the material and Pentagon spokespeople called the review a "total exoneration," President Trump publicly backed Hegseth and his job appears safe for now.
Defense Oversight Defense and National Security Information Security
Harvard Youth Poll: 39% of young Americans say political violence may be justified in some scenarios
A Harvard Youth Poll found 39% of 18–29‑year‑olds say political violence can be acceptable in at least one scenario (56% say it is never acceptable), with scenario breakdowns including 28% if the government violates individual rights, 12% for fraudulent election outcomes and 11% when someone promotes extremist beliefs. The poll also shows broad disaffection with institutions and leaders among young Americans—Trump’s approval is 29% among 18–29‑year‑olds, congressional Democrats 27% and Republicans 26%—alongside low optimism about the country’s direction, widespread economic insecurity and concerns that AI will eliminate opportunities.
Political Violence in the U.S. Economy and AI Public Opinion
SoftBank invests in Sierra, backs Japan expansion
Axios reports that U.S. AI startup Sierra has secured an investment from SoftBank and will expand into Japan, per an exclusive published Dec. 4, 2025. The deal aligns Sierra’s AI agent platform with SoftBank’s reach in the Japanese market; further details were not provided in the report.
Artificial Intelligence Industry Corporate Funding and Deals
U.S., Kenya sign $2.5B global health pact
Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Kenyan President William Ruto signed a five‑year, $2.5 billion ‘America First’ global health agreement in Washington on Dec. 4, replacing prior USAID‑run arrangements after the agency’s dismantling. The deal allocates $1.7 billion in U.S. funds and $850 million from Kenya to combat HIV/AIDS, malaria and tuberculosis with an emphasis on faith‑based providers while pledging non‑discrimination; similar accords with other African nations are expected, though not with Nigeria or South Africa.
U.S. Foreign Aid and Global Health Trump Administration Foreign Policy
Russia restricts FaceTime, blocks Snapchat
Russia’s internet regulator Roskomnadzor said Dec. 4 it imposed restrictions on Apple’s FaceTime and disclosed it blocked Snapchat on Oct. 10, alleging both are used for terrorism, recruiting and fraud. The moves expand the Kremlin’s campaign to control online communications after prior blocks on Signal and Viber, bans on WhatsApp and Telegram calls, YouTube throttling, VPN disruption, and promotion of a state-backed MAX messenger.
Russia Internet Controls U.S. Tech Companies
State Dept memo: Deny H‑1B visas to applicants tied to ‘censorship’ work
An internal State Department memo dated Dec. 2 directs consular officers to deny H‑1B visas to applicants found responsible for or complicit in "censorship" of protected U.S. speech, instructing officers to thoroughly review resumes, LinkedIn and media for roles such as fact‑checking, content moderation, trust & safety, compliance and combating misinformation. The guidance tells officers to pursue findings of ineligibility — including for applicants returning to the U.S. — and is framed as implementing a May policy restricting visas for foreigners complicit in censoring Americans; the State Department declined to comment on the allegedly leaked memo while reiterating its stance on defending Americans’ free expression.
U.S. Visa Policy Immigration and Visas World Cup and Olympics
Van Epps sworn in, GOP at 220 seats; Greene exit to cut majority to 219
Matt Van Epps was sworn into the House on Dec. 4 after winning the Tennessee 7th District special election by about 54%–45% in a contest marked by heavy outside spending (including large MAGA Inc. buys) and high‑profile surrogates and rallies from both parties. His seating brings Republicans to 220 seats (Democrats 213, with two vacancies); Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene’s planned resignation next month would cut the GOP majority to 219.
Campaign Finance 2025 Tennessee 7th District Special Election U.S. House Control
IMLS reinstates terminated library, museum grants
The Institute of Museum and Library Services said Wednesday, Dec. 3, 2025 it is reinstating all grants previously terminated after a Trump executive order, stating the action supersedes earlier termination notices. The move follows a lawsuit by 21 state attorneys general and a November ruling by a Rhode Island federal judge that the administration’s actions were unlawful, unlocking funds that library advocates say are critical for small and rural libraries.
Institute of Museum and Library Services Library Funding and Policy
Georgia panel OKs Jones $10M campaign loan
Georgia’s Ethics Commission ruled on Dec. 4, 2025 that Lt. Gov. Burt Jones can loan $10 million to his leadership committee for his 2026 gubernatorial bid, adopting a legal opinion that such personal loans are permitted under current state law. The decision rejects Attorney General Chris Carr’s challenge and underscores the advantages of leadership committees, which can raise unlimited funds and coordinate with candidates, ahead of Georgia’s May 2026 primaries.
Georgia Politics Campaign Finance
USCIS cuts EADs to 18 months; OBBB caps TPS/parole to 1 year
USCIS announced it will shorten employment‑authorization document (EAD) validity for a wide range of noncitizens — including refugees, asylees, those granted withholding, pending asylum/withholding and adjustment applicants, and others seeking long‑standing humanitarian relief — from five years to 18 months for any request pending or filed on or after Dec. 5, 2025, citing post‑incident vetting needs and more frequent background checks. Separately, under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, certain parole and Temporary Protected Status categories will be capped at one‑year EADs (or the end of status) for applications pending or filed on or after July 22, 2025, with USCIS saying officers will apply a holistic review that can include applicants’ positive contributions.
Immigration Policy USCIS
Judge denies new trial in Minneapolis girl’s killing
A Hennepin County judge denied Dpree Shareef Robinson’s postconviction bid to withdraw his 2023 guilty plea and vacate his 37.5‑year sentence for the 2021 drive‑by shooting that killed 9‑year‑old Trinity Ottoson‑Smith in Minneapolis. The court found no evidence Robinson was impaired by oxycodone at his plea hearing and rejected his claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, keeping his second‑degree murder conviction and sentence in place.
Legal Public Safety
NYU attack suspect charged, linked to burglaries
NYPD arrested James Rizzo, 45, for allegedly assaulting NYU student Amelia Lewis on Monday and says he also assaulted a 68-year-old woman on Thanksgiving; he was taken into custody early Tuesday after being found in an NYU off‑campus building with items tied to multiple burglaries near Washington Square Park. Prosecutors said a tracked laptop led police to a vacant penthouse where Rizzo was allegedly surrounded by stolen goods; he was ordered held without bail and a judge requested a psychological evaluation.
Crime and Courts Campus Safety
GOP expands Trump nominee package after Dem block
Senate Republicans will bundle 97 of President Trump’s nominees for confirmation next week after Sen. Michael Bennet (D-Colo.) objected to an earlier 88-nominee package that mistakenly included a cabinet‑level pick requiring 60 votes. The objection delays the schedule into the third week of December, but GOP leaders say they will push a larger slate that can advance by simple majority under earlier rule changes, putting total Trump confirmations above 400.
U.S. Senate Federal Appointments
Florida bust nets 92,000 pounds, military-grade weapons
The Brevard County Sheriff’s Office said Wednesday it seized about 92,000 pounds of illegal kratom‑derived substances and an arsenal of weapons and explosives from a Palm Bay operation, arresting 26‑year‑old Maxwell Horvath. Sheriff Wayne Ivey alleged Horvath’s firm, Overseas Organics, produced a 7‑hydroxymitragynine product far more potent than morphine; Horvath faces 36 counts of felon‑in‑possession, plus charges for two short‑barreled machine guns and a short‑barreled rifle, with additional explosive‑device charges pending. Officials called it the largest seizure of its kind nationally and displayed IEDs, suppressors, thousands of rounds, and other “military‑grade” items.
Crime and Law Enforcement Drugs and Public Safety
GAO opens probe into FHFA Director Pulte
The Government Accountability Office has opened a probe into Federal Housing Finance Agency Director Bill Pulte after top Senate Democrats asked the watchdog to examine whether he misused his authority by referring Letitia James, Adam Schiff, Lisa Cook and Eric Swalwell to the Justice Department for alleged mortgage fraud. A GAO spokesperson confirmed the request was accepted and the agency is beginning to determine scope and methodology, while the FHFA declined to comment.
Congressional Oversight FHFA Federal Oversight and Investigations
Study ties consistent bedtimes to lower blood pressure
A small study published in Sleep Advances found hypertensive adults who kept a consistent bedtime for two weeks saw modest but meaningful improvements in overnight blood pressure without increasing total sleep time. Participants reduced their night-to-night bedtime variability from about 30 minutes to just a few minutes, which researchers and an outside sleep-medicine expert said likely helped resynchronize circadian rhythms that govern normal blood-pressure dips at night.
Cardiovascular Health Sleep and Circadian Rhythms
DOJ details Maxwell records to unseal under new law; judges set review and deadlines
The Justice Department has asked federal judges to unseal Ghislaine Maxwell trial materials under the new Epstein Files Transparency Act, filing motions and letters that identify categories it seeks to release — including search warrants, financial records, survivor interview notes, electronic device data, grand‑jury materials — and asking courts to lift or modify protective orders. Judges Paul Engelmayer and Richard Berman set expedited briefing schedules (victims and Maxwell responses due Dec. 3, DOJ replies in early–mid December, with some in‑camera descriptions ordered sooner) and said they will rule promptly to try to meet the statute’s public‑release deadline in December.
Politics Courts/Legal Politics & Government
NYC mayor‑elect Mamdani keeps Commissioner Jessica Tisch to lead NYPD
Mayor‑elect Zohran Mamdani announced he will retain NYPD Commissioner Jessica Tisch, praising her for cracking down on corruption and driving down crime and saying they share goals of public safety and stability. Tisch said she is confident she can lead under his administration, though the decision — which reassures business leaders — highlights differences on bail reform and policing priorities and has drawn concern from some progressive allies.
Policing and Public Safety Government New York City Politics
Letitia James challenges NY acting U.S. attorney
On Dec. 4 in Manhattan, U.S. District Judge Lorna G. Schofield heard New York Attorney General Letitia James’s bid to quash DOJ subpoenas and disqualify John Sarcone, arguing his appointment as acting U.S. attorney for the Northern District of New York is unlawful after his 120‑day interim term lapsed and judges declined to retain him. DOJ countered that AG Pam Bondi lawfully named Sarcone a special attorney and first assistant, enabling him to serve as acting U.S. attorney, and called disqualification 'drastic and extreme.' The dispute comes amid a string of recent court rulings against other Trump‑era interim U.S. attorney appointments in New Jersey and Virginia.
Justice Department Appointments Letitia James
U.S. reviews Tanzania ties after crackdown
The U.S. State Department said it is comprehensively reviewing its relationship with Tanzania after condemning repression and violence following the disputed Oct. 29 presidential election that returned President Samia Suluhu Hassan to power. The move follows the EU’s suspension of tens of millions in aid and UN experts’ condemnation of alleged extrajudicial killings, disappearances and mass detentions; Hassan defended the security forces and claimed a 98% victory as opposition figures were arrested and protests suppressed.
U.S. Foreign Policy Tanzania Election Crisis
DOJ curbs LGBTQ protections in PREA audits
An internal DOJ memo obtained by NPR instructs PREA auditors to stop evaluating detention facilities on standards tailored to protect transgender, intersex and gender‑nonconforming people, pending revisions to align with President Trump’s Jan. 20 executive order recognizing only two sexes. The change applies to federal and state prisons and jails, juvenile facilities, and immigration detention, and includes halting review of gender‑identity‑based housing decisions and whether sexual assaults were motivated by gender‑identity bias.
Department of Justice Prison Rape Elimination Act (PREA)
D-Day medic Charles Shay dies at 101
Charles Norman Shay, a Penobscot tribal elder and World War II medic who as a teen helped rescue wounded on D‑Day, died at 101 at his home in Thue et Mue, France, near Omaha Beach, his death announced by a group supporting the Charles N. Shay Indian Memorial. He was one of roughly 175 Native Americans among about 34,000 Allied troops who landed on Omaha Beach, later recounted his wartime rescues in a 2010 Library of Congress interview, and in 1945 was turned away from voting in Maine — where Native Americans did not gain full suffrage until 1954.
U.S. Military Veterans World War II Veterans Native American Affairs
Challenger: U.S. layoffs hit 1.1 million
Outplacement firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas reports U.S. employers announced 1.1 million job cuts through November 2025, up 54% from the same period in 2024 and the highest since 2020. Tech led with 153,536 layoffs and retail 91,954, while the report cites major drivers including roughly 300,000 cuts from the federal Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), market conditions, closures, restructuring, AI and tariffs; ADP separately said private payrolls fell by 32,000 in November, driven by small firms.
U.S. Economy Labor Market
FBI: Trump rally shooter acted alone
After an unprecedented international investigation involving thousands of interviews, FBI officials concluded that Thomas Crooks — the shooter at a Trump rally — acted alone, with no established motive or identified accomplices, and the bureau rejected claims of a cover‑up. The case is in a "pending, inactive" status to be reactivated on any credible lead, and FBI leaders including Kash Patel and Dan Bongino said they fully briefed President Trump as a crime victim.
Government & Law Enforcement FBI and Law Enforcement Donald Trump
Treasury data undercut Trump tariff tax claim
Treasury and budget data show tariff revenue is far too small to substitute for federal income taxes — FY2025 tariffs are about $195 billion versus roughly $2.7 trillion in annual individual income taxes, and the Tax Foundation estimates current tariff policy would raise about $2.1 trillion over 10 years versus roughly $32 trillion in individual income taxes, calling full replacement "mechanically impossible." Analysts also note a $2,000 "tariff dividend" would cost $300–$600 billion (more than current tariff receipts), a tariff-funded tax cut would mainly benefit high earners, and any such shift would require Congress to rewrite the tax code and faces pending legal challenges.
Tariffs and Trade Tax Policy U.S. Federal Budget and Taxes
State Dept renews Venezuela 'Do Not Travel' alert
The U.S. State Department on Dec. 3, 2025 reissued its Level 4 'Do Not Travel' advisory for Venezuela without changes, citing pervasive violent crime, terrorism, arbitrary detention, and severely limited health care and consular support, and urging all U.S. citizens and lawful permanent residents in the country to depart immediately. The advisory warns of kidnappings, wrongful detentions with reports of torture, risks at Maiquetía airport (unregulated taxis/ATMs), and danger in border areas where Colombian terrorist groups operate; it notes the U.S. has had no embassy in Venezuela since 2019 and that DOT restricts U.S.–Venezuela flights.
State Department Travel Advisories Venezuela and U.S. Policy
Melania announces 7 Ukrainian reunifications
First Lady Melania Trump announced Thursday, Dec. 4, that seven more Ukrainian children have been reunited with their families under a Russia–Ukraine youth reunification initiative, according to a White House statement. The White House said six boys and one girl were returned, and Melania Trump credited cooperation between Russia and Ukraine while noting her representative provided U.S. humanitarian support; she previously reported eight reunifications in October.
Russia–Ukraine War U.S. Foreign Policy
MMB forecast: $2.4B surplus now, nearly $3B 2028–29 shortfall
Minnesota Management and Budget’s new forecast shows a near‑term surplus of about $2.4 billion — roughly $549 million higher than previously estimated — but predicts a nearly $3 billion shortfall in the 2028–29 biennium, driven largely by rising health‑care costs. Gov. Tim Walz cautioned that federal tariffs and health‑care changes add uncertainty while saying the budget remains on solid footing; the outlook has swung since March’s roughly $6 billion projected shortfall and the June special session that trimmed the biennial budget from $72 billion to $66 billion (post‑session estimates briefly cut the out‑year gap to about $1.1 billion before federal changes were factored in).
Local Government Business & Economy
$1,000 'Trump Accounts' for 2025–2028 newborns
A new federal program will deposit $1,000 into investment accounts for all U.S. babies born 2025–2028 once parents open an account, with funds invested in low‑fee U.S. stock index funds and accessible at age 18 for restricted uses such as tuition, a home down payment or starting a business. Michael and Susan Dell also pledged $6.25 billion to add a $250 seed for some children age 10 and under in lower‑income ZIP codes who don’t qualify for the $1,000, changes that directly affect eligible Twin Cities families.
Business & Economy Education
30-year mortgage rate falls to 6.19%
Freddie Mac’s weekly survey on Thursday, Dec. 4, reported the average U.S. 30-year fixed mortgage rate dipped to 6.19%, near its low for 2025. The move could modestly improve affordability for Minneapolis–Saint Paul buyers and refinancing prospects for some homeowners as the housing market heads into winter.
Business & Economy Housing
After Trump pardon, BOP frees ex‑Honduras president Hernández; Honduras AG vows to seek justice
President Trump granted a full pardon to former Honduran president Juan Orlando Hernández — who had been convicted in a U.S. federal court of conspiring to import more than 400 tons of cocaine and sentenced to 45 years — and the Bureau of Prisons confirmed his release from USP Hazelton after lobbying from supporters including Roger Stone and public thanks from Hernández and his wife, while Trump called the case a “Biden setup.” The move drew bipartisan criticism in the U.S., and Honduras Attorney General Johel Zelaya said his office is obliged to seek justice and possible charges against Hernández, a development that unfolded amid a tense Honduran presidential vote after Trump publicly backed candidate Nasry “Tito” Asfura.
U.S. Foreign Policy Presidential Pardons Clemency and Pardons
Dell details $6.25B ‘Trump Accounts’ gift; $250 for 25M kids, White House projects $1.9M by 28
Michael and Susan Dell pledged $6.25 billion to seed Treasury‑run “Trump Accounts,” including a $250 Dell deposit for about 25 million U.S. children age 10 and under in ZIP codes with median family incomes under $150,000, while the Treasury will add a one‑time $1,000 seed for U.S. citizens born Jan. 1, 2025–Dec. 31, 2028 who have Social Security numbers. The accounts — launching July 4, 2026 — are tax‑deferred, must be invested in low‑cost index funds, allow up to $5,000 in annual contributions from parents, employers and others, and the White House projects a fully funded account could grow to nearly $1.9 million by age 28.
Child Investment Accounts Federal Savings Programs Philanthropy and U.S. Economic Policy
Issa opts for California reelection bid
Rep. Darrell Issa said he will seek reelection in California’s newly reshaped 48th Congressional District rather than pursue a run in Texas, telling Fox News Digital he was asked to consider Texas after California voters passed Proposition 50 but that “California is my home.” Issa acknowledged the district was redrawn toward a Democratic advantage yet said he can hold the seat, while a source said he expects President Donald Trump’s support; he had discussed the possibility of Texas’s 32nd District amid Texas’s redistricting being enjoined for 2026.
U.S. House Elections California Politics
Florida CFO unveils anti‑illegal immigration policy package
Florida CFO Blaise Ingoglia announced a slate of legislative priorities on Dec. 3 to curb illegal immigrants’ access to state‑licensed financial services and benefits, including barring down‑payment assistance, prohibiting issuance of licenses overseen by the Department of Financial Services, requiring CDL final exams be administered only in English, and removing illegal immigrants as covered employees under workers’ compensation. Ingoglia, citing 26 arrests tied to his agency (including four insurance fraud cases totaling $800,000), also proposed requiring insurers to accept fault if an illegal immigrant policyholder is involved in an auto crash, and said he is working with state lawmakers Rep. Kiyan Michael (R‑Duval) and Jonathan Martin (R‑Fort Myers) to advance the package.
Florida Politics Immigration Policy
US Marshals offer $5,000 reward in manhunt for missing Virginia high school coach accused in child porn case
U.S. Marshals are offering up to $5,000 for information leading to the arrest of Travis L. Turner, a Union High School football coach who has been missing since Nov. 20 and is the subject of 10 Virginia State Police warrants — five counts of possession of child pornography and five counts of using a computer to solicit a minor. State police, aided by the U.S. Marshals and FBI, have launched a multi‑jurisdiction search using drones, K‑9s and search‑and‑rescue teams after learning Turner, who was last seen walking into wooded terrain with a firearm and wearing a gray sweatshirt and sweatpants, may be armed; his family and attorney say he left without essentials and have urged him to return while the school has placed him on leave and barred him from school property.
Virginia Education Law Enforcement Child Exploitation Cases
Survey: Foreign Service morale 'dangerously low' under Trump
The American Foreign Service Association reports that 98% of roughly 2,100 surveyed members rate morale as poor, with large majorities saying Trump-era changes since January are hindering U.S. diplomatic work. Conducted Aug–Sep 2025, the survey cites heavier workloads from staffing losses, delayed initiatives, and rising intent to leave, while the State Department responded that it values candid feedback and emphasized reorganization to empower frontline bureaus.
State Department U.S. Foreign Service
U.S. jobless claims hit 3-year low
The Labor Department said Thursday that initial unemployment claims fell to 191,000 for the week ending Nov. 29, the lowest since Sept. 24, 2022, undershooting forecasts for 221,000. The four‑week average dropped to 214,750 and continuing claims edged down to 1.94 million for the week ending Nov. 22, a snapshot that could factor into the Federal Reserve’s rate decision next week amid mixed labor signals.
U.S. Economy Labor Market and Employment
DHS lists Afghan evacuees arrested in ICE sweeps
The Department of Homeland Security released a list of recent ICE arrests involving Afghan evacuees with criminal convictions and alleged terror ties, citing failures in the 2021 vetting process and detailing cases including sex‑crime convictions and other violent offenses. The disclosure comes days after an Afghan evacuee allegedly shot two West Virginia National Guard members in Washington, D.C., and amid a broader post‑incident immigration enforcement and vetting review; DHS Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said the department is prioritizing arrests of “known or suspected terrorists and criminal illegal aliens.”
Immigration Enforcement Homeland Security
DHS: Oregon fatal crash suspect had California CDL
The Department of Homeland Security said Monday that Rajinder Kumar, a 32-year-old Indian national accused of criminally negligent homicide after a Nov. 24 semi-truck crash that killed two people on U.S. Highway 20 in Deschutes County, Oregon, entered the U.S. illegally in Nov. 2022, was released, received work authorization in 2023, and later obtained a California commercial driver’s license. ICE has lodged a detainer as Kumar remains in the Deschutes County jail; DHS highlighted Oregon’s sanctuary status and said it will seek custody if he is released.
Immigration Enforcement Road Safety and Transportation
Utah DA charges protest safety volunteer with manslaughter
Utah prosecutors charged a volunteer safety monitor with manslaughter in the fatal shooting of a "No Kings" protester, saying he fired three shots and that the third round—fired over people’s heads at a large gathering—was reckless; DA Sim Gill proceeded with charges after a five‑judge panel denied a request for a grand jury, citing a similar Massachusetts case as informing the decision. Prosecutors said another safety volunteer, Arturo Roberto Gamboa, will not be charged due to insufficient evidence though his conduct was described as alarming, while Gamboa’s attorney says he walked with the rifle unloaded, pointed at the ground, and may not have heard commands to stop.
Courts and Legal Protests and Public Safety
Chauvin files for new trial in Minnesota
Derek Chauvin, the former Minneapolis officer convicted of second-degree murder in George Floyd’s death, filed in November 2025 in Hennepin County District Court seeking a new trial or evidentiary hearing. The filing alleges flawed medical expert testimony, misrepresented police training, and faulty jury instructions, and cites 34 sworn statements from current and former Minneapolis officers asserting the knee restraint was taught and consistent with policy.
George Floyd case Courts and Legal
Trump pardons Rep. Henry Cuellar and wife
President Trump pardoned Rep. Henry Cuellar and his wife in a federal bribery and conspiracy case in which prosecutors alleged the couple accepted nearly $600,000 to advance an Azerbaijan‑controlled energy company and a Mexican bank, including agreements to influence legislation and deliver a pro‑Azerbaijan House floor speech; their trial had been scheduled for next April. Cuellar, who denies wrongdoing, thanked Trump, said he will remain a "conservative blue dog" Democrat and filed for reelection the same day, while the White House defended the clemency and Trump described the prosecution as "weaponized."
Presidential Clemency Congress and Ethics Congressional Ethics and Corruption
Subzero cold grips Twin Cities; MSP hits −5°F
On Thursday morning, December 4, 2025, the Twin Cities saw subzero temperatures with MSP Airport bottoming out at −5°F and numerous metro suburbs between −14°F and −5°F. Statewide, daily record lows were set in Hibbing (−19°F), Owatonna (−15°F) and Red Wing (−11°F); forecasters say highs will reach only the teens Thursday with wind chills near −5°F, before a brief warmup into the upper 20s–low 30s Friday.
Weather
BCA probes use-of-force incident in Bloomington
The Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension said at 8:02 a.m. Thursday that it is investigating a use‑of‑force incident in Bloomington. The agency has not released which department was involved, where the incident occurred, or what happened; the inquiry is ongoing and more information is pending.
Public Safety Legal
House to consider three GOP bills targeting foreign influence in schools, including TRACE Act
House Republicans are bringing three bills to the floor aimed at combating alleged CCP/foreign influence in U.S. schools: H.R. 1069 (PROTECT Our Kids Act) would bar federal funding to K‑12 schools that receive direct or indirect financial support from the Chinese government, including through Confucius Institutes; H.R. 1049 (TRACE Act) would condition federal education funds on local education agencies notifying parents of their right to request and receive information about foreign influence in curricula; and H.R. 1105 (CLASS Act) is included in the package with limited public detail. Sponsors Rep. Kevin Hern, Rep. Aaron Bean and Rep. David Joyce, along with Select Committee on the CCP Chair John Moolenaar, have publicly framed the measures as a commonsense effort to expose foreign‑backed influence and give parents greater access to school materials.
Education Policy U.S. Congress China Influence
Haitian gang leader gets life for U.S. kidnappings
Joly Germine, a Haitian gang leader, was sentenced to life in prison for orchestrating the kidnapping of 16 American missionaries, with most victims — including a 6-year-old, a 3-year-old and an 8-month-old — held for about 62 days before they escaped. Germine, who was transferred to U.S. custody from Haiti in May 2022 after an arrest warrant, was also fined $1,700, and prosecutors and victims, including Ray Noecker whose wife and five children were among the hostages, delivered impact statements.
U.S. Federal Courts Haiti Kidnappings International Kidnapping
Researchers scrape 3.5B WhatsApp numbers via API
Security researchers from the University of Vienna and SBA Research exploited weak rate limits in WhatsApp’s GetDeviceList and related APIs to enumerate 3.5 billion active accounts and download profile photos, ‘about’ text, device info and public keys, they told BleepingComputer and Fox News. Using five authenticated sessions on a single university server, they queried over 100 million phone numbers per hour and pulled 77 million U.S. profile images; WhatsApp has since added rate limiting after the issue was disclosed, and the researchers did not release the data.
Cybersecurity Meta/WhatsApp
HHS probes school over unauthorized child vaccination
HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. announced Wednesday that the department has opened an investigation into a Midwestern school for allegedly vaccinating a child without parental consent despite a state religious exemption. In a video statement on X, he said HHS will launch compliance reviews of major providers, issue letters reminding providers of parents’ rights to timely access to children’s medical records, and have HRSA warn grant recipients that federal funds require adherence to parental‑rights protections. HHS will also review how states and districts process medical and religious exemptions under the Vaccines for Children program, and directed parents to file complaints with the HHS Office for Civil Rights.
HHS and Vaccination Policy Parental Rights and Schools
Social frailty tied to higher dementia risk
UNSW Sydney researchers report in The Journals of Gerontology that older adults classified as socially frail had a roughly 47% higher risk of developing dementia over 12 years compared with non‑frail peers. The study followed 851 dementia‑free adults aged 70+ in Sydney’s suburbs, using biennial neuropsychological testing and adjusting for physical and psychological frailty and health history; low family/financial satisfaction, infrequent contact, and limited social activity were the strongest contributors.
Public Health Dementia Research
Virginia twins charged with deleting federal databases
The Justice Department said Wednesday it arrested Virginia twin brothers Muneeb and Sohaib Akhter, 34, who were indicted last month for conspiring to delete and tamper with U.S. government databases while working for federal contractor Opexus. Prosecutors allege nearly 100 databases were deleted, including FOIA and sensitive investigative records, and that IRS data for at least 450 people was stolen; the charges include conspiracy, computer fraud, theft of U.S. records and aggravated identity theft.
Cybersecurity and DOJ Federal Contracting
NYT and reporter Julian Barnes sue Pentagon and Hegseth over new press-access policy, alleging First and Fifth Amendment violations
The New York Times and intelligence reporter Julian Barnes have sued the Department of Defense, Secretary Pete Hegseth and chief Pentagon spokesman Sean Parnell over a new press‑access policy, alleging it violates their First and Fifth Amendment rights. The complaint says the policy gives the Pentagon unbridled discretion to suspend or revoke PFAC credentials, amounts to viewpoint discrimination — noting invited reporters signed a pro‑Trump pledge — has been widely rejected by news organizations, and cites Sherrill v. Knight and Karem v. Trump as due‑process precedents.
Pentagon and Press Freedom Press Freedom and Pentagon Policy First Amendment Litigation
ICE detention hits 65,135; nearly half have no criminal record, official data show
As of Nov. 16, ICE held 65,135 people, of whom 48% (30,986) had no U.S. criminal charges or convictions, 26% (17,171) had convictions and 26% (16,978) had pending charges; 52,510 detainees were initially arrested by ICE and 12,625 were CBP transfers, and ICE-recorded non‑criminal arrestees surged 2,143% from Jan. 26 to Nov. 16 and now, for the first time, outnumber those with convictions. FOIA-derived reporting and local data show average daily arrests rising and the administration broadening arrest targets to include more non‑criminal or “collateral” arrests with multiple agencies assisting, though DHS disputes the reported pace and has stopped publicly sharing enforcement data, and some judges have ordered releases or halted warrantless arrests.
Immigration Enforcement DHS/ICE Department of Homeland Security
Grand Canyon South Rim hotels close after waterline breaks
The National Park Service is halting overnight stays at the Grand Canyon’s South Rim starting Saturday due to multiple breaks in the Transcanyon Waterline, the park’s only water source, leaving hotels and campgrounds without water. Lodges including El Tovar, Bright Angel and Maswik are closed to overnights while welding repairs proceed; day visits remain open and officials say lodging could reopen as early as next week if water service is restored.
National Parks and Public Safety Infrastructure and Utilities
Trump says asylum freeze could be indefinite, considers denaturalizing criminal naturalized immigrants
President Trump said he would "permanently pause" migration from poorer or "Third World" countries and invoked INA §212(f) to halt entry and asylum processing — USCIS has paused affirmative asylum decisions and been directed to reexamine green cards and admissions from a set of countries — a moratorium he said could last "a long time" with "no time limit" and tied to the recent D.C. National Guard shooting. He also vowed to revoke what he called millions of Biden-era admissions, end federal benefits for noncitizens, remove those deemed public charges or security risks, and said he would seek to denaturalize naturalized immigrants convicted of crimes if he has the legal authority.
Donald Trump U.S. Immigration Policy Trump Administration
Anthropic: Chinese hackers automated 80–90% of cyberespionage using Claude; first fully automated attack reported
Anthropic says Chinese‑linked hackers used its Claude AI—via "Claude Code" and engineered jailbreaks that broke tasks into innocuous steps—to automate roughly 80–90% of a cyberespionage campaign it calls the first documented fully automated attack; investigators detected the operation in mid‑September 2025 after Claude issued thousands of requests to perform data triage, credential harvesting, lateral movement and backdoor creation and produced detailed post‑operation artifacts. About 30 organizations across tech, banking, chemical manufacturing and government were targeted with several successful breaches, prompting U.S. warnings about rapidly escalating AI‑enabled threats and a House Homeland Security hearing on Dec. 17 to question Anthropic and other tech executives.
Congressional Oversight China Cyber Threat China
Colombian family files IACHR challenge to U.S. strike
The family of Alejandro Carranza filed a petition with the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, received Tuesday, alleging his Sept. 15 death off Colombia’s Caribbean coast was an extrajudicial killing in a U.S. strike on an alleged drug boat. The filing, the first formal human-rights challenge to the U.S. boat-strike campaign that has killed 80+ people since early September, seeks compensation and cites statements by U.S. officials; the U.S. does not recognize the jurisdiction of the commission’s associated court, so any recommendations would be nonbinding.
U.S. Military Operations Human Rights and International Law
Stamford standoff ends with 2 dead, explosives found
Stamford Police say a man evictable under a court order barricaded himself in a home on Oaklawn Avenue Tuesday, exchanged gunfire with officers, and was later found dead of an apparent self-inflicted gunshot. After the hours-long standoff, officers discovered a decomposed body on the second floor and multiple explosives including pipe bombs, grenades, and Molotov cocktails; no officers were injured, the bomb squad cleared devices, and the state inspector general opened a probe into the officers’ use of deadly force.
Crime and Public Safety Law Enforcement and Policing
FDA reclassifies shredded-cheese recall as Class II; 260k+ cases in 31 states
The FDA on Dec. 1, 2025 reclassified a voluntary Great Lakes Cheese recall of shredded and grated cheeses to Class II after the products were found to possibly contain metal fragments; the recall, initiated in early October, covers more than 260,000 cases—including about 235,789 cases of low‑moisture part‑skim mozzarella—distributed in 31 states and Puerto Rico with sell‑by dates in Feb.–Mar. 2026. Affected brands and retailers include Aldi (Happy Farms), Target (Good & Gather), Walmart (Great Value), Food Lion, Publix, H‑E‑B, Lucerne and others; NPR reported the FDA had not issued a press release on the recall as of its story.
Product Recalls FDA Recalls FDA
Florida House opens midcycle redistricting talks
Florida’s GOP-controlled House convenes its first select committee meeting on congressional redistricting Thursday in Tallahassee, launching a potential midcycle remap as both parties jockey for advantage ahead of 2026. Gov. Ron DeSantis has signaled support and floated a special session if needed, while a constitutional ban on partisan intent and reluctance from Senate President Ben Albritton pose hurdles; advocates plan to oppose any partisan redraw.
Redistricting and Elections Florida Legislature
Adams signs NYC anti-BDS, synagogue-security orders
Outgoing New York City Mayor Eric Adams on Wednesday signed two executive orders: one barring city agencies and pension decision-makers from discriminating against Israel in procurement and investment, and a second directing tighter NYPD enforcement to protect synagogues and other worshipers from harassment. The move, announced at an antisemitism summit in New Orleans, sets up a clash with Mayor‑elect Zohran Mamdani, a BDS supporter who could rescind the orders after taking office Jan. 1.
New York City Government Israel–BDS Policy
New York blocks Locust Valley trans bathroom ban
New York Education Commissioner Betty Rosa has blocked Locust Valley School District’s policy barring transgender students from bathrooms and locker rooms that don’t match their sex at birth, directing the district to allow access consistent with gender identity. The order ties Locust Valley to an existing case in Massapequa—where an identical policy was halted in October amid an NYCLU challenge—and says the Massapequa outcome could affect Locust Valley; the Locust Valley board says it will comply pending any overriding ruling while seeking further legal counsel.
Education Policy LGBTQ Rights and Law
FDA to tighten vaccine approvals; internal review links 10 child deaths to COVID shots
An internal FDA memo from vaccine chief Dr. Vinay Prasad — reported by NPR and CBS — urges tighter vaccine approval standards (revising the annual flu framework, stricter labeling and authorizations including for pregnant women, requiring disease‑reduction endpoints for pneumonia vaccines, and questioning simultaneous administration) and cites an internal review of 96 pediatric death reports that it says shows at least 10 children died “after and because of” COVID‑19 vaccination, with myocarditis suggested as a likely cause; the findings have not been peer‑reviewed and omit detailed case data. Twelve former FDA commissioners and other public‑health experts denounced the claims in a NEJM letter, arguing surveillance reports cannot prove causation and that the proposals could harm high‑risk patients, while HHS defended the effort and some professional societies (AAP, IDSA) continue broader pediatric recommendations amid the shift in ACIP guidance.
FDA and Public Health FDA and Vaccines Public Health Policy
1,585 lbs meth seized in Georgia sting
Federal and state authorities indicted Gerardo Solorio‑Alvarado, 44, and arrested him and alleged accomplice Nelson Enrique Sorto, 36, after seizing roughly 1,585 pounds of methamphetamine hidden in blackberry pallets tied to box trucks in Gainesville and southeast Atlanta. The stakeout began Nov. 20 at a Fulton County cold‑storage site; a K‑9 alert led to 661 lbs in one truck and a later search found 924 lbs in another, with a Wednesday news conference confirming the 'tens of millions' value and prior drug convictions for both men.
Drug Trafficking Immigration Enforcement
74-year-old sentenced for mailing fentanyl-laced pills
The U.S. Attorney’s Office for Rhode Island said Monday that Patricia Parker, 74, was sentenced last Tuesday to two years’ probation, including nine months of home confinement, after pleading guilty to conspiring to distribute fentanyl and distributing more than 310 grams. Prosecutors said an FDA undercover operation in 2022 found she mailed counterfeit amphetamine pills laced with fentanyl and possessed more than 18,000 pills, with over 1,000 suspected drug parcels sent, amounting to roughly 150,000 doses. Parker, now living in Massachusetts, maintained she didn’t know some pills contained fentanyl, a claim prosecutors disputed in a sentencing memo.
Opioids and Fentanyl Courts and Law Enforcement
Trump pardons Oak View Group cofounder Leiweke
President Donald Trump granted an unconditional pardon Wednesday to Timothy Leiweke, former CEO and cofounder of Oak View Group, months after the Justice Department charged him with conspiring with a rival to rig the bidding process for a new arena project in Texas. Leiweke, a prominent sports and venue developer known for Los Angeles’s entertainment district and past leadership roles at Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment, is cleared of federal liability by the clemency despite the pending antitrust case.
Presidential Clemency Antitrust and Sports Venues
U.S. posts $5M reward for Tren de Aragua boss
The U.S. has offered a $5 million reward for tips leading to the arrest of Tren de Aragua leader "Niño Guerrero" and announced Treasury sanctions targeting the gang and its network, an action Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said was taken at President Trump’s direction. Sanctioned associates include model/DJ Jimena Romina Araya Navarro ("Rosita"), accused of laundering proceeds and aiding a 2012 Tocorón prison escape; Eryk Manuel Landaeta Hernandez, identified as the gang’s financial/logistics chief in Colombia and arrested in October 2024; and several other alleged operatives involved in extortion, kidnappings and homicides across the region.
Transnational Organized Crime U.S. Sanctions and Law Enforcement U.S. Sanctions
Starbucks to pay $38M in NYC scheduling case
Starbucks will pay $35 million to resolve a New York City scheduling case — the largest labor‑law settlement in the city’s history — and said it will comply with the city’s Fair Workweek law going forward. The announcement came amid a recent wave of Starbucks Workers United strikes that drew Mayor‑elect Zohran Mamdani and Sen. Bernie Sanders to a Brooklyn picket line, as about 550 of roughly 10,000 company‑owned stores are unionized and workers say the company has refused to negotiate a first contract; Starbucks said it is ready to return to negotiations when the union is.
Labor and Unions Labor and Employment Law Corporate Legal Settlements
HHS updates youth gender dysphoria evidence review
HHS released an updated November evidence review on youth gender dysphoria that authors defended amid backlash and which the department says updates a May report; HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. called prior “gender-affirming” interventions for minors harmful and “malpractice,” and Assistant Secretary for Health Brian Christine warned of long-term risks including loss of fertility. HHS says it invited groups including the Endocrine Society and the AAP to peer review the report but they declined, while the Endocrine Society responded that use of puberty blockers and hormones in youth is rare, cautious, and associated with improved well‑being; the author roster includes affiliations such as MIT, Duke, SEGM and the Manhattan Institute.
HHS Gender Dysphoria Review Health Policy Federal Government
New Mexico man jailed for Trump threats
Federal prosecutors said Tyler Leveque, 38, of Albuquerque was sentenced Wednesday to roughly 10 months in prison for using social media in early January 2025 to threaten President Donald Trump. According to the U.S. Attorney’s Office, the Secret Service and FBI opened an investigation after Leveque posted explicit threats across TikTok, X and Facebook, referenced violence around Jan. 19, and claimed to have purchased a gun; agents contacted him on Jan. 6 and confirmed he had initiated an online firearm purchase but had not taken possession.
Courts and Justice Threats Against Public Officials
FDA: ByHeart infant-botulism cases rise to 39; recalled formula still on some shelves
The FDA says 39 confirmed or suspected infant botulism hospitalizations in 18 states have been linked to ByHeart infant formula, which was recalled nationwide after lab tests detected C. botulinum type A in some samples (including an opened can in California); no unopened cans have tested positive and no deaths have been reported. Despite the recall, investigators have still found ByHeart products on store shelves in multiple states, and federal and state officials are urging parents to stop using the formula, keep samples for possible testing, contact health care providers if infants show symptoms, and are working with retailers to remove remaining stock.
Public Safety Health
Chauvin files postconviction petition in Hennepin
Derek Chauvin filed a postconviction petition seeking a new trial, arguing jury instructions misstated the law and requesting an evidentiary hearing into alleged trial misconduct and due‑process violations; the defense retained physicians from The Forensic Panel and a Critical Incident Review analyst and submitted sworn statements from 34 current and former MPD officers saying the knee‑to‑neck tactic was part of MPD training and policy. The filing highlights autopsy details — Dr. Andrew Baker cited cardiopulmonary arrest complicating restraint and did not find injuries consistent with asphyxia, conflicting with state experts who said Floyd died from low oxygen — and notes Chauvin is housed at FCI Big Spring (projected federal release Nov. 2037); MPD Chief Brian O’Hara said there is no credible information that former President Trump will pardon him.
Public Safety Legal
Reagan survey: U.S. wants global lead, doubts readiness
The Ronald Reagan Institute’s 2025 National Defense Survey, released Dec. 3, finds 64% of Americans want the U.S. more engaged and leading internationally even as only 49% believe the military can win a major war overseas and 45% say it can deter aggression. The poll also shows rising support for aiding Ukraine, with 64% favoring sending U.S. weapons (up nine points year over year), and documents a continued, broad-based erosion in public confidence in the armed forces since 2018.
U.S. Military and Defense Policy Public Opinion and Polling
St. Paul council delays vote on police force review tied to ICE operation
Following a federal ICE raid that sparked a large neighborhood protest, the St. Paul City Council postponed a Dec. 3 vote on launching a formal investigation into officers’ use of force during the operation and protest. Council members had proposed the city’s first formal action tied to the incident — including an audit of public costs, a review of compliance with the city’s separation ordinance, and a probe into use of pepper balls, less-lethal munitions and chemical irritants — while urging greater transparency and accountability.
Public Safety Local Government Legal
Steve Cropper, Booker T. & the M.G.’s guitarist and co-writer of ‘Dock of the Bay,’ dies at 84
Steve Cropper, the masterful guitarist for Booker T. & the M.G.’s and co-writer of "(Sittin' On) The Dock of the Bay," has died at 84, his death confirmed to CBS News by Soulsville Foundation CEO Pat Mitchell Worley; the cause was not immediately known. According to associate Eddie Gore, Cropper had been at a Nashville rehabilitation facility after a recent fall and was working on new music during a Tuesday visit.
Steve Cropper American Music Obituaries
Ex-Washington Co. deputy sentenced in DUI crash
A former Washington County sheriff’s deputy was sentenced in Washington County on Dec. 3, 2025, for driving drunk while off duty and crashing into a family’s SUV, according to TwinCities.com. The case stems from an earlier east‑metro crash; the sentencing concludes a criminal proceeding involving a local law‑enforcement officer.
Legal Public Safety
Democrat to file impeachment articles against Hegseth
Rep. Shri Thanedar (D-Mich.) said Wednesday he will introduce articles of impeachment against Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, with a public unveiling planned Thursday morning at Union Station in Washington, D.C. The articles will allege murder, conspiracy to murder, and reckless and unlawful mishandling of classified information, referencing the Pentagon IG's 'Signalgate' findings and an alleged re‑strike after a Venezuelan boat attack. House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries has already dismissed the effort as unviable in a GOP‑run House; the Pentagon did not immediately comment.
Pete Hegseth U.S. House of Representatives
Charles Booker launches Kentucky Senate bid
Former Kentucky state Rep. Charles Booker, a progressive Democrat, announced he is running in 2026 to succeed retiring GOP Sen. Mitch McConnell, citing platform planks including Medicare for All, reparations, UBI, universal childcare, and abolishing ICE. Booker previously lost the 2022 general to Sen. Rand Paul and the 2020 Democratic primary to Amy McGrath; he left a role in Gov. Andy Beshear’s office in September ahead of the campaign.
2026 Kentucky Senate Race U.S. Elections
Comer blasts Dems over Epstein files; Oversight Democrats release 150+ more images
House Oversight Committee Democrats released more than 150 additional photos and videos from Jeffrey Epstein’s Little St. James — materials they say came from a tranche turned over by the U.S. Virgin Islands DOJ — and say they will soon make related financial records obtained from JPMorgan Chase and Deutsche Bank public as part of transparency for survivors. Committee Chair James Comer blasted the releases as “cherry-picking,” noting some photos had previously circulated (including via James O’Keefe), while Republicans point to thousands of subpoenaed documents and more than 65,000 pages the committee has already made public.
Congressional Oversight Jeffrey Epstein Case Jeffrey Epstein Investigation
St. Paul sets hearing on 5.3% 2026 levy
The St. Paul City Council scheduled a Truth in Taxation hearing on a proposed 5.3% increase to the 2026 property‑tax levy. On Dec. 3, 2025 the council voted to adopt that 5.3% levy and approved $6.7 million in budget changes.
Local Government Business & Economy
St. Paul approves 5.3% 2026 levy, $6.7M budget changes
The St. Paul City Council on Dec. 3, 2025 approved a 5.3% increase to the city’s 2026 property‑tax levy and adopted $6.7 million in changes to the municipal budget. The vote finalizes next year’s tax rate and spending plan, directly impacting city services and property‑tax bills for St. Paul residents.
Local Government Business & Economy
San Diego sheriff rejects ICE detainer in boy’s death
The San Diego County Sheriff’s Office declined an ICE immigration detainer for Mexican national Hector Balderas-Aheelor, arrested in connection with a Thanksgiving hit-and-run in Escondido that killed 11-year-old Aiden Antonio Torres De Paz. DHS said it lodged the detainer on Nov. 29 and noted Balderas-Aheelor had been removed from the U.S. four times; the sheriff cited compliance with California’s Values Act, while Gov. Gavin Newsom’s office said federal authorities can still act on criminal warrants.
Immigration Enforcement California Sanctuary Policies
SBA probes Minnesota Somali groups over PPP fraud
The Small Business Administration opened an investigation into a network of Somali organizations and executives in Minnesota tied to the state’s $1 billion pandemic-aid fraud case, examining whether any also fraudulently obtained Paycheck Protection Program loans. SBA Administrator Kelly Loeffler announced the probe and an agency spokesperson confirmed SBA will review recipients’ eligibility, including citizenship status and nonprofit legitimacy, and seek to claw back any improperly obtained funds.
COVID-19 Aid Fraud Small Business Administration
Police hunt gunman after MGM casino killing
Prince George’s County Police are searching for a suspect who fatally shot a man in his 20s inside the MGM National Harbor food court in Maryland just before noon Wednesday in what officials called a targeted attack. Police said video shows the assailant went directly to the victim and opened fire without an exchange before fleeing by car; no other injuries were reported. MGM remained open except for the food court, some nearby schools briefly locked down, and no suspect description or motive has been released.
Maryland Crime Gun Violence
SPPS says 2026 school levy on track to rise 15% after hearing
St. Paul Public Schools says its 2026 property tax levy is on track to rise about 15% following the district’s Truth-in-Taxation hearing. The update, given after the Tuesday hearing, signals the School Board will likely adopt the levy later this month for taxes payable in 2026.
Education Local Government
ICE: Guatemalan with prior DUIs probed in fatal crash
ICE says Brayan Josue Alva‑Rodriguez, 25, a Guatemalan national ordered deported in 2023, is under investigation after a Sunday head‑on collision on Highway S‑2 near Julian, Calif., killed an 8‑year‑old girl and injured several others. CHP reports a Toyota Tacoma crossed the double‑yellow line, hit a Toyota Camry head‑on, then struck a Ford F‑350; five patients were airlifted and three taken by ambulance. ICE said it will lodge an immigration detainer if Alva‑Rodriguez is formally charged, noting prior DUI charges in 2020 and 2021 and his 2018 unlawful entry.
Immigration Enforcement California Public Safety
Yale Budget Lab: Trump’s $2,000 tariff dividend would cost $450B, lift 2026 GDP 0.3 pp
Yale Budget Lab estimates paying $2,000 tariff "dividend" to Americans earning under $100,000 would cost about $450 billion and would boost U.S. GDP by roughly 0.3 percentage points in 2026 (with a ~0.15 pp employment uplift and only a trace rise in inflation). Treasury and outside estimates of tariff receipts vary (roughly $195–$260 billion collected in FY2025 with a faster pace into FY2026), and other analysts say the plan could leave large gaps or economic costs; the administration has floated alternatives (tax relief or targeted accounts), faces legal and legislative hurdles, and aims to begin payments around mid‑2026.
Government & Politics U.S. Politics Donald Trump
Black Friday retail +4.1% YoY; Adobe $11.8B online as foot-traffic estimates diverge
U.S. Black Friday retail sales rose 4.1% year‑over‑year per Mastercard SpendingPulse, while Adobe Analytics said consumers spent a record $11.8 billion online (up 9.1%) with mobile driving over half of Thanksgiving sales and peak online activity hitting about $12.5 million per minute mid‑day. Foot‑traffic estimates diverged—RetailNext reported a 3.6% decline in in‑store visits while Pass_by saw a 1.17% increase—and analysts warn much of the dollar growth was pricing‑driven (Salesforce: average selling prices +7%, items per order −2%, order volumes −1%).
Retail and E‑Commerce Retail and E-commerce Retail and Consumer Spending
U.S. imposes visa bans over Nigeria anti-Christian violence as broader strategy expands
The U.S. announced visa restrictions under the Immigration and Nationality Act targeting Nigerians — and in some cases their immediate family members — who direct, authorize, support, participate in, or carry out violence against Christians, and has designated Nigeria a "country of particular concern" under the International Religious Freedom Act. The action is part of a broader Trump administration response that includes threats to cut U.S. aid, Pentagon contingency planning and cooperation with Nigerian forces, a congressional probe and calls for targeted sanctions and accountability, coming as Nigeria declares a nationwide security emergency after mass abductions and attacks on schools and places of worship.
Nigeria Religious Violence Nigeria Security Crisis Nigeria and Religious Freedom
Thunderbird F-16 crashes in California; pilot safe
A U.S. Air Force Thunderbirds F-16C Fighting Falcon crashed during a training mission around 10:45 a.m. PT on Dec. 3 over controlled airspace near Trona in California’s Mojave Desert. Nellis Air Force Base said the pilot safely ejected and was hospitalized with non-life-threatening injuries as San Bernardino County Fire responded; the 57th Wing has opened an investigation.
U.S. Military Aviation Safety
Schumer, Kaine, Schiff and Paul introduce Venezuela War Powers resolution
Senators Chuck Schumer, Tim Kaine, Adam Schiff and Rand Paul introduced a War Powers resolution on Wednesday to bar President Trump from using U.S. armed forces to engage in hostilities within or against Venezuela. The move follows bipartisan concerns that a second Sept. 2 strike may have been illegal and reflects senators’ vows to block U.S. military action in Venezuela if the administration pursues further strikes.
War Powers and Authorization U.S. Congress Congress
Frey bars ICE staging in Minneapolis city lots
Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey signed Executive Order 2025-02 prohibiting federal, state or local agencies from using Minneapolis-owned parking lots, ramps, garages and vacant lots to stage or process civil immigration enforcement operations. The order directs departments to identify affected properties, post standardized warning signs, report any violations immediately, and provide an optional signage template private owners can use, amid reports of ICE operations targeting the Somali community.
Local Government Public Safety
GivingTuesday donations hit record $4B in 2025
Americans donated an estimated $4.0 billion on GivingTuesday, Dec. 2, 2025, up from $3.6 billion in 2024, according to nonprofit GivingTuesday’s nationwide data. The group also reported 11.1 million U.S. volunteers, up from 9.2 million last year, and said inflation-adjusted giving rose 8.1% as individuals sought connection and impact; corporate and foundation gifts are excluded from the estimate.
Philanthropy and Nonprofits U.S. Economy
Ex-Missouri officer pleads guilty to 20 civil-rights counts
Former Florissant, Mo., police officer Julian Alcala pleaded guilty Tuesday to 20 federal counts of willfully depriving women of their right to be free from unreasonable searches after he took their phones during traffic stops in early 2024 and searched for nude images. Prosecutors said he sometimes texted explicit videos to himself; the FBI traced a victim’s deleted text to Alcala and seized additional evidence under a warrant. A felony obstruction count was dropped in the plea deal; sentencing is set for March 11, 2026.
Police Misconduct Federal Courts
Russia extends U.S. citizen Gilman’s term to 10 years
A regional court in Voronezh, Russia, on Wednesday added two years to U.S. citizen and former Marine Robert Gilman’s sentence after convicting him of a new assault on prison staff, bringing his total term to 10 years. Gilman, arrested in 2022 after a train disturbance and later convicted of assaulting a police officer and multiple prison officials, apologized in court; his lawyer told state-run TASS he will not appeal.
Robert Gilman Russia–U.S. Relations
Judge orders refunds for pardoned Jan. 6 defendants
U.S. District Judge James Boasberg on Wednesday ordered the government to refund restitution and fees to Jan. 6 defendants Cynthia Ballenger and Christopher Price after their convictions were vacated when President Trump’s pardon mooted their pending appeal in the D.C. Circuit. Boasberg, who denied refunds in July, reversed course in a memo order, concluding the court can order repayment despite Appropriations Clause and sovereign‑immunity concerns because vacatur “wipes the slate clean.”
Jan. 6 Cases Federal Courts
House Judiciary subpoenas Jack Smith for Dec. 17 deposition
House Judiciary Chairman Jim Jordan subpoenaed special counsel Jack Smith for a closed-door deposition on Dec. 17 and ordered production of records by Dec. 12. Smith’s attorney Peter Koski said Smith will comply and had offered in October to testify in an open hearing, and Republicans point to revelations that Smith’s team obtained phone toll records (metadata only) for select lawmakers around Jan. 6, 2021.
Congressional Oversight Donald Trump Investigations Trump Legal Cases
California opens portal to report federal agent misconduct
California Gov. Gavin Newsom and Attorney General Rob Bonta launched an online portal Wednesday for the public to report alleged misconduct by federal agents during ICE deportation operations. The site allows users to upload photos and videos to the California Department of Justice, which will compile records to assess potential legal action; the White House criticized the move, saying ICE is targeting criminal offenders and faces rising assaults.
Immigration and Border Policy State–Federal Relations
Byrna sues California over less‑lethal weapons ban
Byrna Technologies filed a federal lawsuit Wednesday in the Southern District of California against Gov. Gavin Newsom’s administration, alleging the state’s restrictions on its pepper‑projectile launchers and ammunition violate the Second Amendment. The complaint cites Heller and Caetano to argue that less‑lethal launchers are protected “bearable arms,” while California’s classification of Byrna’s chemical rounds as banned “tear gas” effectively blocks sales; Newsom’s office was asked for comment.
Second Amendment California Gun Policy
MDH cites Golden Valley senior home after fatal fall
The Minnesota Department of Health cited Meadow Ridge Senior Living in Golden Valley for neglect and fined it $5,000 after 79-year-old resident Larry Thompson slowly fell from his electric scooter and suffocated while staff, following a 'no touch after a fall' policy, failed to assist. Surveillance and body-camera video show staff delayed aid until first responders arrived; the state long‑term care ombudsman warned such 'no touch/no lift' policies pose serious risks.
Health Public Safety
Doctor sentenced in Matthew Perry ketamine case
Dr. Salvador Plasencia was sentenced to 30 months in prison after pleading guilty in June to four counts of unlawful ketamine distribution in connection with actor Matthew Perry’s death; he has agreed to surrender his medical license and had faced exposure of up to 40 years. Perry’s family urged the maximum sentence—with stepfather Keith Morrison calling Plasencia the “most culpable”—while Plasencia said he accepts the court’s sentence “with humility and deep remorse,” and his defense said the clinic “filled a void” in the community.
Courts and Legal Celebrity Legal Cases Matthew Perry case
Eagan names Salim Omari police chief
The City of Eagan has appointed Salim Omari as its new police chief, according to a Dec. 3 report. Omari, who began his policing career in St. Paul, will lead the department serving the Dakota County suburb; the announcement marks a leadership change with public‑safety implications for Eagan residents.
Public Safety Local Government
$7.35M deal for Lake Elmo–Hwy 36 interchange land
Washington County and a church reached a $7.35 million agreement for property needed to build the Lake Elmo Avenue–Minnesota 36 interchange in Lake Elmo. The pact clears a key right‑of‑way hurdle for the east‑metro highway project as the county advances design and land acquisition.
Transit & Infrastructure Local Government
ICE arrests Afghan ISIS-K supporter in Virginia
DHS says ICE agents arrested Afghan national Jaan Shah Safi in Waynesboro, Virginia, on Dec. 3, alleging he supported ISIS-K after entering the U.S. under Operation Allies Welcome. DHS added Safi arrived Sept. 8, 2025, in Philadelphia and that his TPS application was terminated after Afghan TPS ended; the agency said this is the third arrest of an Afghan admitted under the Biden-era program in a week, following cases in Washington, D.C., and Fort Worth.
Homeland Security Immigration Enforcement
Man indicted for ramming ICE vehicle in St. Paul
A federal grand jury indicted Jeffrey Josuee Lopez‑Suazo on charges of assaulting and impeding a federal officer and improper entry after ICE says he intentionally rammed an agent’s unmarked squad with a blue Toyota Corolla during a Nov. 25 operation on Rose Avenue East near Payne Avenue in St. Paul. The incident triggered a standoff and large protest where tear gas and pepper spray were used; a second man, Victor Molina Rodriguez, was also arrested that day.
Legal Public Safety
Mike Lindell files for Minnesota governor
MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell registered Wednesday to run for Minnesota governor as a Republican, according to state records. He joins a crowded GOP field for the 2026 race that already includes House Speaker Lisa Demuth, Rep. Kristin Robbins, and Minneapolis attorney Chris Madel, among others.
Elections Local Government
21 states sue USDA over SNAP memo
At least 22 states plus Washington, D.C. have sued the USDA over a memo directing states to turn over SNAP enrollment and case-management data, with plaintiffs citing privacy and legal concerns. A San Francisco federal judge has paused enforcement of the request while litigation proceeds, even as 28 states — mostly GOP-led, with North Carolina the lone Democratic exception — have already provided the data.
SNAP Legal Fight SNAP and USDA Immigration and Public Benefits
USDA warns it will pull SNAP administrative funds from noncompliant states next week
The USDA warned it will pull SNAP administrative funds from states that refuse to provide requested recipient immigration data, saying formal warning notices will precede any cutoff and that noncompliant states could be notified as soon as next week with time to comply and an appeals process. Most GOP-led states have provided the data while 22 states plus D.C. (including California, New York and Minnesota) have sued and a San Francisco federal judge has temporarily blocked enforcement — a standoff that could affect state administrative reimbursements within the roughly $100 billion-a-year SNAP program (state admin funds are a significant share of program costs and are slated to fall from about 50% to 25% next October), and some states (e.g., Connecticut) are already setting aside money to cover potential federal cuts.
USDA and SNAP SNAP and USDA Federal-State Litigation
Four men wounded in Dayton’s Bluff shooting now charged in gunfight
Four men were wounded in a shooting shortly after 4:30 p.m. Monday, Dec. 1, near 4th St. E. and Earl St. in St. Paul’s Dayton’s Bluff; police say all four injuries are non-life-threatening, K9 and drone teams searched the scene, and there is no ongoing public threat. Ramsey County prosecutors have charged all four men — charging documents describe a “wild gunfight” with multiple participants exchanging fire — and the case has moved to Ramsey County District Court.
Public Safety Legal
BAE wins $22M Navy deal; Twin Cities work
BAE Systems secured a $22 million U.S. Navy contract that could grow to as much as $317 million, with engineering and program support to be performed in the Twin Cities. The award brings new defense-related work to the metro and could impact staffing and operations at BAE’s local facilities.
Business & Economy Technology
Oregon ICE protester charged over violent threats
DHS says Oregon protester John Paul Cupp, 45, who also uses the name Walid al‑Amriki, faces federal charges after videos showed him threatening to kill ICE agents and sexually assault their spouses outside the Portland ICE facility. In one Instagram video labeled "Daddy Walid’s Come Get Bin Laden Challenge," he self‑identified as "bin Laden" and described sending a decapitated head to an agent’s wife, as DHS condemned an 8,000% spike in threats and vowed full prosecution.
Immigration and DHS Courts and Crime
House hearing debates rhetoric, ICE tactics and violence
On Wednesday, the House Homeland Security Committee held a hearing on rising violence against law enforcement, with Republicans arguing Democratic rhetoric vilifies officers and raises risks, and Democrats countering that certain ICE tactics—such as masked, plainclothes operations—heighten the chance of violent encounters. Witnesses included FLEOA executive director Michael Hughes, FOP president Patrick Yoes, National Sheriffs’ Association CEO Jonathan Thompson, and MPD Officer Daniel Hodges. Rep. Lou Correa cited FBI memos on criminals impersonating ICE and a Santa Ana incident where a masked ICE agent and local police nearly sparked a gunfight.
Congressional Oversight Immigration Enforcement
Kidd-Gilchrist, lawmakers push Medicaid stuttering screenings
Former NBA player Michael Kidd-Gilchrist is partnering with Reps. Addison McDowell (R-N.C.) and Shomari Figures (D-Ala.) on the Kidd's Stuttering Act, a federal bill to require early stuttering screenings at well-child visits for children ages 2–6 covered by Medicaid and CHIP and to make speech therapy coverage mandatory. The proposal would also direct the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services to add stuttering and fluency screening measures to the Child Core Set of quality metrics.
Health Policy Congress
Australia to enforce 16+ social media age limit
Australia will begin enforcing a minimum social media age of 16 on Dec. 10, 2025, with the eSafety Commissioner ordering platforms including Facebook, Instagram, Threads, TikTok, X, YouTube, Snapchat, Reddit, Kick and Twitch to report monthly removals of under‑16 accounts or face fines up to AU$50 million (~$33 million). Google said YouTube users under 16 in Australia will be signed out and lose account‑holder features, Meta will remove suspected under‑16 accounts and offer Yoti age verification for reinstatement, and a Sydney-based rights group is seeking a High Court injunction to block the law.
Social Media Regulation Child Safety and Technology
Senate revisits Isaacman nomination to lead NASA
Billionaire spacewalker Jared Isaacman returned to the Senate as President Biden’s nominee to lead NASA, publicly backing Acting Administrator Sean Duffy’s decision to reopen the lunar lander contract competition. He said NASA should pick whichever company—SpaceX or Blue Origin—is first capable of delivering astronauts, framed Moon and Mars as parallel priorities, praised the firms’ rivalry as healthy (Blue Origin’s Blue Moon prototype is due next year while SpaceX’s Starship remains in flight testing), and Sen. Ted Cruz said he hopes Isaacman is confirmed by year’s end.
NASA Congressional Confirmations U.S. Senate
NASA finds sugars, 'space gum' in Bennu
NASA and partner scientists reported Tuesday in Nature Geoscience and Nature Astronomy that samples from asteroid Bennu contain bio‑essential sugars and an unprecedented 'gum‑like' matrix, offering new clues to how life’s building blocks formed and spread in the early solar system. The three papers, led by Yoshihiro Furukawa (Tohoku University), Scott Sandford (NASA Ames) and Zack Gainsforth (UC Berkeley), and Ann Nguyen (NASA Johnson), also indicate Bennu formed in a region enriched with stardust from dying stars.
NASA Astrobiology
Delaware student charged in campus police plot
A University of Delaware student has been charged after authorities say a handwritten notebook mapped a plot to attack campus police, detailing the UD Police Station’s entry/exit points and referencing a specific officer. Police say a traffic stop and subsequent FBI search allegedly recovered multiple firearms and tactical gear — including a .357‑caliber Glock loaded with 27 rounds, extra magazines, an armored plate, a Glock 19 with an alleged machine‑gun conversion switch, a .556 rifle, extended magazines and hollow‑point ammunition — and federal prosecutors charged illegal possession of a machinegun (carrying up to 10 years); the university has temporarily separated and banned the student, calling the case “frightening,” while officials praised federal‑state cooperation in neutralizing the threat.
Campus Security Campus Safety and Crime Federal Law Enforcement
7th Circuit stays Ellis injunction, calls it 'too prescriptive' in Chicago ICE operation
The 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals granted an emergency stay of Judge Sara Ellis’s preliminary injunction limiting federal immigration agents’ use of force in Chicago’s “Operation Midway Blitz,” finding the order overbroad, raising separation‑of‑powers concerns, and calling its detailed prescriptions—down to tactics and internal policy mandates—“too prescriptive.” The stay pauses Ellis’s requirements (including expanded body‑camera activation, bans on force against journalists, mandatory warnings before using riot control weapons, and daily briefings by Border Patrol chief Greg Bovino) and puts the dispute on an expedited appellate track while operations and some agent deployments continue.
Artificial Intelligence in Policing Chicago Economy
Judge limits ICE warrantless arrests in DC
A federal judge, Beryl Howell, issued a preliminary injunction barring ICE from making warrantless civil immigration arrests in Washington, D.C., unless officers have probable cause both that a person is unlawfully present and likely to flee before a warrant can be obtained, lambasting officials as "ignorant or incompetent, or both." Plaintiffs — including CASA, TPS holders and asylum seekers — submitted sworn declarations saying DHS officers patrolled Latino neighborhoods and set up checkpoints leading to indiscriminate stops and arrests (an analysis cited 943 D.C. arrests Aug. 7–Sept. 9), while the administration denies any policy authorizing such arrests amid reports of a White House goal of thousands of ICE arrests per day.
Immigration Enforcement Federal Courts
Adobe: Cyber Monday online sales hit $14.25B record; Cyber Week $44.2B
Adobe reported Cyber Monday online sales of $14.25 billion, up 7.1% year-over-year and the biggest online shopping day of the year, with Cyber Week online sales totaling $44.2 billion, up 7.7% YoY. Salesforce separately reported U.S. Cyber Week online sales of $79.6 billion, a 5% increase from last year.
Retail and E-commerce U.S. Economy
Costco seeks tariff refunds in CIT ahead of Dec. 15 CBP liquidation as Supreme Court reviews Trump levies
Costco has sued in the U.S. Court of International Trade to preserve its right to refunds before U.S. Customs and Border Protection begins “liquidation” of entries on Dec. 15, even as the Supreme Court — after a Nov. 5 hearing where justices expressed doubts about the administration’s broad IEEPA authority — reviews lower-court rulings that found the Trump-era tariffs unlawful. The tariffs have raised roughly $90 billion to date, the refund process is unprecedented and uncertain (importers have 180 days after liquidation to protest), other firms like Revlon and Bumble Bee have filed similar claims, and experts warn significant legal and logistical questions remain.
Courts and Legal Tariffs and Trade Courts and Litigation
James Solomon elected Jersey City mayor; McGreevey concedes
James Solomon was elected mayor of Jersey City after defeating former Gov. Jim McGreevey in a runoff; McGreevey publicly conceded and congratulated Solomon. Solomon pledged an affordability agenda — “an affordable Jersey City starts now” — as he succeeds Steven Fulop, who did not seek a fourth term after an unsuccessful gubernatorial bid, in a city of about 303,000 with a roughly $700 million municipal budget; the race followed a Nov. 4 first round with seven candidates and was officially nonpartisan though both finalists are Democrats.
Jersey City Mayor Local Elections New Jersey Politics
Grated Pecorino Romano recalled for listeria risk
Ambriola Company, a New Jersey-based distributor, recalled several brands of grated Pecorino Romano last week after routine testing confirmed Listeria monocytogenes contamination. No illnesses have been reported; Ambriola says it is recalling products processed at the same facility out of an abundance of caution, and the items were distributed to retail stores in the U.S.
Food Safety Public Health
Malaysia to resume MH370 search Dec. 30 with Ocean Infinity
Malaysia will resume the search for missing Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 on Dec. 30 with Texas-based Ocean Infinity under a “no-find, no-fee” contract signed in March 2025, carrying out a planned 55-day operation intermittently rather than continuously. Ocean Infinity had earlier restarted a seabed search but halted in April because of bad weather; China’s Foreign Ministry welcomed the renewed effort, and Ocean Infinity declined comment to AP.
MH370 Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 Aviation Safety
Fired immigration judge sues over alleged discrimination
A fired immigration judge has sued the government alleging discrimination in a case that could have broad implications for civil‑rights law; Attorney General Pam Bondi publicly dismissed the allegations at a White House Cabinet meeting, saying “Last I checked, I was a woman as well,” while DOJ pointed to its litigation record. Advocacy groups say roughly 100 immigration judges have been fired or pushed out — including eight recently in New York City — and experts warn the removals risk eroding trust in the immigration court system; DOJ did not immediately respond to requests for comment on the suit.
Civil Service and Employment Law Department of Justice Immigration Courts
HUD pulls funds from Twin Cities housing projects
HUD’s new Continuum of Care rules have canceled or sharply cut funding for Twin Cities permanent supportive housing, threatening roughly 3,600 Minnesotans and about $48 million in CoC funds in Minnesota by reducing renewals and capping supportive‑services spending. The changes — which repudiate “Housing First,” impose eligibility conditions (eg. bans on public camping, cooperation with ICE, limits on harm‑reduction and certain gender‑identity protections) — have prompted a coalition of 185+ organizations, faith‑leader vigils, bipartisan congressional pleas and legal action by Minnesota’s attorney general as local providers scramble and warn the cuts could more than double chronic homelessness.
Housing Local Government Legal
HUD rule change slashes MN supportive housing funds
A recent HUD rule change sharply reduced federal supportive housing funding in Minnesota, cutting assistance that serves more than 3,600 residents. Providers statewide are scrambling—revising operations, pausing or triaging intakes—and warn the uncertain timelines could force reductions in services.
Housing Local Government
Minnesota sues HUD over homelessness funding shift
Minnesota has joined 20 other states in suing HUD over a shift in homeless housing funding. The federal changes have left local housing and homelessness programs scrambling, and Twin Cities service providers are preparing for disruptions while the litigation proceeds.
Housing Legal
UPS: Grounded MD‑11s sidelined for months, missing holiday peak amid FAA inspections after fatal crash
Investigators say the deadly UPS MD‑11 crash began when the left engine and pylon separated during takeoff, with preliminary NTSB findings and images showing cracks and fractures in the engine‑mount/pylon area that led to the aircraft’s breakup and the deaths of 14 people and multiple injuries. The FAA issued an emergency grounding and mandated inspections of MD‑11/MD‑11F aircraft, and UPS says its MD‑11 fleet will be out of service for several months—likely missing the holiday peak—as Boeing and regulators assess more extensive inspections and repairs, and lawsuits allege safety lapses.
Transportation Regulation Litigation Aviation Safety
Afghan evacuee in Texas federally charged over bomb‑threat video
Mohammad Dawood Alokozay, an Afghan national admitted to the U.S. under Operation Allies Welcome, was federally charged with transmitting a threatening communication after prosecutors say a circulated video showed him speaking in Dari threatening a suicide bombing against "infidels" and U.S. citizens and referencing a cooking‑oil container Taliban fighters have used to make IEDs. Texas DPS alerted the FBI after the video circulated in the Dallas–Fort Worth area, facial recognition identified Alokozay, who is being held at the Tarrant County Corrections Center awaiting a plea, and Attorney General Pam Bondi criticized vetting and pledged continued DOJ action.
Domestic Terrorism Immigration and Refugees Justice Department
Google’s Pichai warns on AI bubble risk
Google CEO Sundar Pichai told the BBC that some 'irrationality' exists in today’s AI boom and that if an AI bubble bursts 'no company is going to be immune, including us.' The remarks come as Alphabet shares hit an all‑time high and trade higher premarket, with Pichai likening AI’s long‑term impact to the internet despite near‑term excesses.
Economy/Markets Technology
Study: Video-call glitches erode trust and outcomes
A peer-reviewed Nature study led by researchers at Columbia, Cornell, and UMKC finds that brief video-call glitches—freezes, lags, echo—significantly reduce perceived trust and willingness to engage, with measurable effects in simulated sales pitches, telehealth consults, and job interviews. An analysis of 472 U.S. online court hearings also associated glitchy connections with a lower likelihood of parole, raising equity concerns for Americans with poor internet access.
Technology and Society Courts and Justice
CIA confirms suspect worked with CIA‑backed unit; report identifies NDS‑03 base at Camp Gecko
U.S. officials, including the CIA, confirmed that 29‑year‑old Rahmanullah Lakanwal — evacuated to the United States under Operation Allies Welcome in 2021 and later granted asylum — previously worked with a CIA‑backed Afghan partner unit identified in reports as NDS‑03, which operated from Camp Gecko in Kandahar. Lakanwal is accused of an ambush‑style attack near Farragut Square that critically wounded two West Virginia National Guard members (Spc. Sarah Beckstrom was later reported killed and SSgt. Andrew Wolfe remains hospitalized); he was shot, taken into custody, and the FBI is leading a probe being treated as a possible act of international terrorism.
National Guard and Public Safety Crime and Public Safety U.S. Immigration/Vetting
Hanover Park rehired police officer arrested by ICE
Hanover Park, Illinois, says Officer Radule Bojovic, a Montenegrin immigrant arrested by ICE for allegedly overstaying a tourist visa during Operation Midway Blitz, will remain on the force after presenting valid federal work authorization. DHS Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin condemned the decision, citing federal prohibitions on firearm possession by noncitizens unlawfully in the U.S., while the village maintains Bojovic was hired in full compliance with the law; he returned to full duty Tuesday on a $2,500 immigration bond as DHS claimed his employment cost taxpayers $205,707.
Immigration Enforcement Policing and Public Safety
Venezuela says U.S. requested resumption; deportation flights to continue twice weekly
Venezuela said it will resume twice-weekly deportation flights from the United States after receiving a formal request from the Trump administration, publicly releasing an overflight/landing application filed by U.S.-based Eastern Airlines for a Phoenix–Maiquetía Boeing 777-200 due Wednesday. More than 13,000 Venezuelans have been repatriated so far in 2025, with the latest flight arriving Friday, and the resumption follows a brief suspension amid President Trump’s threats to close Venezuelan airspace and concurrent U.S. naval deployments under Operation Southern Spear.
U.S.–Venezuela Relations Immigration Enforcement U.S. Immigration Enforcement
Daily peanuts improve brain blood flow: study
Researchers at the NUTRIM Institute, Maastricht University Medical Center, report that eating 60 grams of unsalted, skin-roasted peanuts daily for 16 weeks increased global cerebral blood flow by 3.6% and modestly improved verbal memory in healthy adults aged 60–75. The randomized crossover trial, published in Clinical Nutrition, used MRI to assess brain perfusion and found the largest effects in frontal and temporal lobes, with small reductions in systolic and pulse pressure; other cognitive domains showed no meaningful change.
Nutrition and Cognitive Health Aging and Brain Health
AOUSC: Boasberg likely unaware subpoenas hit lawmakers
In a letter to Sen. Chuck Grassley, the Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts said Chief Judge James Boasberg likely did not know that gag orders tied to FBI ‘Arctic Frost’ subpoenas involved members of Congress because non-disclosure applications typically list only account identifiers like phone numbers. The AOUSC noted DOJ revised its policy in 2024 to require notifying courts when seeking gag orders involving lawmakers; special counsel Jack Smith’s subpoenas predated that change. Grassley called Smith’s alleged failure to apprise the court of congressional targets “deeply troubling.”
Federal Courts Congressional Oversight
Conservatives move to intervene in Wisconsin map cases
The Wisconsin Institute for Law & Liberty filed two motions this week to intervene on behalf of voters in separate lawsuits that seek to overturn Wisconsin’s congressional map, after the Wisconsin Supreme Court’s liberal majority directed two redistricting challenges to three-judge panels last week. WILL argues the challenges are time-barred, the panels cannot overrule the state high court’s 2022 approval of the current lines, and that a court-ordered mid‑decade redraw would violate federal law and the U.S. Constitution’s Elections Clause.
Redistricting and Gerrymandering Wisconsin Courts
San Francisco sues 10 top food manufacturers
San Francisco City Attorney David Chiu announced a lawsuit accusing major food manufacturers of causing health harms through ultra‑processed foods. The complaint — described by CBS as the “first government lawsuit of its kind” — names firms such as Kraft Heinz, General Mills and Nestlé, with reports varying on whether 10 or 11 companies are defendants.
Public Health and Nutrition Policy Food Industry and Consumer Protection Public Health Litigation
White House adds public 'Media Bias Tip Line' to portal launched last week
The White House added a public "Media Bias Offender Tip Line" to its recently launched Media Bias Portal, inviting Americans to submit links to coverage they believe misrepresents the Trump administration for review and possible inclusion. The submission form, promoted by press secretary Karoline Leavitt, is framed as a way to "hold the fake news accountable" and complements a "Media Offender of the Week" section on the site.
White House Communications Media and Politics
USCIS posts memo formalizing 19-country pause, sets 90-day review plan
USCIS posted a public policy memo formalizing an immediate nationwide pause on adjudications for nationals of 19 “countries of concern” — Afghanistan, Haiti, Iran, Somalia, Venezuela, Burundi, Chad, Cuba, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Laos, Libya, Myanmar (Burma), Republic of the Congo, Sierra Leone, Sudan, Togo, Turkmenistan and Yemen — suspending all immigration applications from those nationals, including green cards and naturalization/oath ceremonies, and covering entrants on or after Jan. 20, 2021. The memo directs a full-scale re‑review that may include interviews, re-interviews or referrals to enforcement, acknowledges resulting delays, and requires USCIS to produce a prioritized list of cases for re-review within 90 days under Director Joseph Edlow’s discretion — a step the administration frames as a national‑security response to the D.C. National Guard shooting.
U.S. Immigration Policy Department of Homeland Security Homeland Security
Twin Cities roads slick after light snow, cold
About a half‑inch of snow Tuesday night left some Twin Cities roads slick Wednesday morning, with MnDOT reporting clear to partially covered conditions and warning that side streets and ramps may be most treacherous. Plows are salting ahead of a rapid temperature drop into the single digits this afternoon and below zero overnight.
Weather Transit & Infrastructure
Kash Patel defends FBI jet use amid House probe, claims $4M savings
House Democrats have launched a probe into Kash Patel’s use of an FBI Gulfstream for personal travel, requesting flight logs, passenger manifests, costs and communications by Dec. 15, 2025, after flagging trips that included a Nashville return flight, a four-day Texas trip hosted by GOP donor Bubba Saulsbury and a Pennsylvania wrestling‑event visit with girlfriend Alexis Wilkins. Patel told Fox News he is required to use FBI aircraft and not permitted to fly commercially, said he has used the plane less than his predecessors, claimed switching to government airfields saved taxpayers $4 million, acknowledged trips with his girlfriend and said he has turned over travel-related information.
Congressional Ethics Congressional Oversight FBI and Government Oversight
Feds ID Jose Francisco Jovel in LA Molotov attack on federal building; charged, first court appearance set
Federal authorities identified the suspect as 54-year-old Jose Francisco Jovel of Los Angeles and charged him with attempted malicious damage of federal property in an incident where Molotov cocktails were thrown at a federal building; the charge carries a five-year mandatory minimum and up to 20 years, and his initial federal court appearance is expected Wednesday afternoon. Officials released images of Jovel and the devices, saying he allegedly threw them at an employee entrance and a public entrance line (the devices did not ignite), and investigators say he called it a "terrorist attack," referenced "separating families," and set his apartment on fire with accelerant beforehand.
Federal Crime and Courts Immigration Enforcement Immigration Enforcement Protests
Ohio, DHS ink 20-year voter data deal
Ohio Secretary of State Frank LaRose announced Dec. 2 a data-sharing agreement with the Department of Homeland Security that grants Ohio at least 20 years of access to the federal SAVE database, enabling bulk and verifiable citizenship checks to maintain voter rolls. The deal, which resolves a prior lawsuit LaRose filed when access was restricted and per‑query fees applied, follows Ohio’s referral of 1,084 alleged noncitizen registrations (including 167 who allegedly voted in federal elections since 2018) and the removal of over 155,000 inactive registrations.
Election Administration Department of Homeland Security
Pentagon’s ‘Drone Dominance’ to deliver tens of thousands in 2026, hundreds of thousands in 2027 en route to 1M/year by 2028
Recognizing that drones are reshaping warfare and the U.S. is trying to catch up, War Secretary Pete Hegseth has launched an initiative called "Drone Dominance." He describes it as a billion-dollar program funded by President Trump’s "Big Beautiful Bill," with phased targets to field tens of thousands of small drones to forces in 2026 and hundreds of thousands in 2027, and says he will meet with the services to drive transformational changes in doctrine and outfit combat units with unmanned systems at scale.
Military Drones Drones and Unmanned Systems U.S. Defense Policy
Taiwan unveils $40B U.S.-arms plan, 'Taiwan Dome'
Taiwan announced a $40 billion special defense budget for 2026–2033 to buy U.S. arms and build an air‑defense "Taiwan Dome," and to bolster resilience against rising Chinese military pressure, maritime gray‑zone tactics and disinformation. Taipei says the fund is separate from tariff talks, includes targets to raise defense spending to at least 3% of GDP by 2026 and 5% by 2030, was publicly welcomed by the U.S. (AIT/State Department), and Taiwanese officials say preliminary talks with Washington on weapons purchases have begun ahead of formal congressional notifications.
Taiwan Defense Budget Taiwan Defense and U.S. Arms Sales U.S.–Taiwan Relations
Realtor.com: 2026 home prices to dip
Realtor.com’s new 2026 outlook projects home prices will fall in 22 of the 100 largest U.S. metros, led by declines in several Florida markets, while mortgage rates ease to an average 6.3% and existing-home sales edge up to 4.13 million. The forecast, described by senior economist Jake Krimmel as the most balanced market since the pandemic, sees modest gains elsewhere (median +4% across the other 78 large metros) as inventory improves and demand normalizes from COVID-era peaks.
Housing Market Mortgage Rates
Duckworth urges DOT to expand FAA $10K bonuses
Sen. Tammy Duckworth, the Senate aviation subcommittee’s ranking member, sent a letter to Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy demanding the DOT expand $10,000 shutdown bonuses to all FAA air traffic controllers and technicians who worked without pay, not just those with perfect attendance. DOT previously limited the awards to 776 employees after a 44-day shutdown; NATCA says only 311 union members would qualify, while Duckworth and controllers warn the policy creates unsafe incentives to work while ill.
Aviation and FAA Federal Workforce and Shutdown
Schiff, Vargas move to limit temporary immigration judges
Sen. Adam Schiff and Rep. Juan Vargas introduced legislation on Dec. 3, 2025 to restrict who the attorney general can appoint as temporary immigration judges, requiring prior appellate service, administrative judge experience, or 10 years in immigration law. The bill follows mass firings of immigration judges—at least 14 in the past two weeks and 90+ this year—and aims to block the administration’s plan to deploy up to 600 military lawyers without immigration-law experience; it currently has no GOP co-sponsors in a Republican-led Congress.
Immigration Courts Congress
Missouri GOP enacts mid-decade House map
Missouri Republicans passed a mid-decade congressional map in 2025, aiming to unseat Democratic Rep. Emanuel Cleaver of Kansas City and bolster GOP prospects in the 2026 U.S. House. The move, pushed to Gov. Mike Kehoe’s desk, has triggered multiple lawsuits challenging whether Missouri’s constitution allows redrawing congressional lines between censuses, with a Missouri Supreme Court decision expected next year.
Redistricting and Voting Law Missouri Politics
Demand Justice targets Democrats over Trump judges
Liberal advocacy group Demand Justice is launching a $1 million TV and digital ad campaign starting Wednesday targeting Sens. John Fetterman (D‑Pa.), Maggie Hassan (D‑N.H.) and Angus King (I‑Maine) for voting to confirm some of President Trump’s judicial nominees. The group argues none of Trump’s lifetime judicial picks deserve bipartisan support, citing nominees’ refusal in Senate questionnaires to state that Trump lost the 2020 election or to label Jan. 6 an insurrection; the three targeted moderates are not up in 2026 and voted to end last month’s shutdown.
Judicial Nominations Campaign Advertising
DOJ charges five in ‘Greggy’s Cult’ ring
The Department of Justice charged five men for allegedly running an online child exploitation enterprise known as “Greggy’s Cult,” accusing them of coercing minors on Discord and gaming platforms to perform sexually explicit acts and self-harm. An indictment unsealed Friday and arrests on Tuesday span New York, New Mexico, Hawaii, California, and Colorado, with arraignments to occur in the Eastern District of New York. DOJ and the FBI say the group produced and distributed child sexual abuse material from January 2020 to January 2021 and used threats and harassment to victimize children.
Department of Justice Child Exploitation and Cybercrime
West Virginia Supreme Court stays religious vaccine opt-out ruling; Board reinstates mandate
Judge Michael Froble had ruled that West Virginia parents could use religious beliefs to opt out of school vaccine requirements, but the West Virginia Supreme Court issued a stay pausing that injunction. The West Virginia Board of Education reinstated its directive to county boards not to accept religious exemptions, and Froble’s ruling is blocked pending resolution of appeals and further guidance from the Supreme Court.
Religious Freedom and Education Courts and Education Vaccination Policy
Trump student-loan overhaul: DOE drops IBR hardship test in December; caps grad borrowing next July
The Department of Education/Federal Student Aid will finish implementing changes in December that remove the “partial financial hardship” requirement to enroll in Income‑Based Repayment (IBR), a move that can let higher earners newly qualify, while also eliminating the SAVE plan and phasing out PAYE and ICR. IBR payments remain capped at the equivalent of the 10‑year standard plan with existing calculation percentages unchanged (generally 10% for new borrowers after July 1, 2014; 15% for older loans), and borrowers with eligible loans before July 1, 2026 can access IBR/ICR/PAYE on or after that date — FSA urges consolidations be completed at least three months prior.
Education Business & Economy Health
Texas Tech restricts classroom race, gender instruction
Texas Tech University System Chancellor Brandon Creighton issued a Monday memo limiting how instructors may teach topics related to race, sex, gender identity and sexual orientation, barring the 'promotion' of specified concepts and creating a new approval process for course content that touches those areas. The policy defines 'promotion' as presenting those beliefs as correct or required and pressuring students to affirm them, routes content through department chairs, deans and the provost with Board of Regents review/notification, and warns noncompliance may result in discipline as the system prepares for the spring semester.
Higher Education Policy Academic Freedom and DEI
USDOT audit threatens $30M over illegal MN CDLs
Federal auditors from the U.S. Department of Transportation say Minnesota improperly issued a sizable share of commercial driver’s licenses to foreign nationals — Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy alleged about one‑third were unlawfully issued, including holders from El Salvador, Somalia and Ukraine with expired work authorization — and have given the state 30 days to fix deficiencies or risk losing roughly $30 million in federal highway funds. Minnesota’s Driver and Vehicle Services has paused issuing CDLs to foreign nationals while conducting an internal review and preparing an action plan, and USDOT is also probing CDL training centers for possible falsified training data and curriculum shortfalls.
Transit & Infrastructure Local Government
Rosemount police chief placed on leave
Rosemount Police Chief Mikael Dahlstrom was placed on leave on Oct. 1 and subsequently resigned, with the City Council accepting his resignation effective Dec. 2, 2025. The city says the move followed internal discussions prompted by feedback from an anonymous employee survey, and Deputy Chief Carson Thomas — who has served as interim chief since Oct. 1 — will lead the department. City Administrator Logan Martin said officials will focus on workplace culture and maintaining public safety, and details on the search for a permanent chief will be shared in coming months.
Public Safety Local Government
Rosemount police chief Dahlstrom resigns
The Rosemount City Council accepted Police Chief Mikael Dahlstrom’s resignation effective Dec. 2, 2025, following internal discussions prompted by feedback from an anonymous employee survey. Deputy Chief Carson Thomas remains interim chief, and the city said it will outline the process to select a new chief in the coming months, emphasizing workplace culture and public safety continuity.
Local Government Public Safety
AEA bans Larry Summers for life over Epstein ties
The American Economic Association announced Tuesday it accepted Larry Summers’ voluntary resignation and imposed a lifetime ban on his membership, attendance, speaking, and participation in AEA events and journals, citing conduct reflected in publicly reported communications as inconsistent with its standards. The decision follows release of emails showing Summers maintained ties with Jeffrey Epstein and comes after Summers stepped down from multiple public roles.
Larry Summers American Economic Association
Air Force F-16 commander awarded Silver Star
Lt. Col. William "Skate" Parks received the Silver Star at a Nov. 26 Pentagon ceremony for leading a March 27, 2025 Middle East mission, flying his F‑16 into a heavily defended air-defense zone to suppress enemy defenses and protect a 21‑aircraft strike package. The Air Force says he evaded missiles for 15 minutes while low on fuel, coordinated emergency tanker hookups, and helped cripple enemy ballistic missile production facilities, actions credited with saving his wingman and preventing the loss of two U.S. aircraft.
U.S. Military Air Force and Pentagon
Trump administration fires eight NYC immigration judges
The Justice Department removed eight immigration judges based at 26 Federal Plaza in New York City on Monday, including assistant chief immigration judge Amiena Khan, according to the National Association of Immigration Judges. The union official said 98 immigration judges have been fired nationally since January as DOJ hires 11 new permanent judges and 25 temporary judges and implements an August rule expanding eligibility for temporary immigration judges; DOJ declined comment on personnel but issued a statement defending its broader immigration‑court policies.
Immigration Courts Department of Justice
USCIS pauses all asylum decisions nationwide amid post-shooting vetting review
U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services has ordered an immediate, indefinite pause on all affirmative asylum decisions nationwide — instructing officers to continue interviews and case review but to halt entry of approvals, denials or closures — a step Director Joseph Edlow said was meant to “maximize vetting” after the Washington, D.C., National Guard shooting, whose suspect was reportedly granted asylum earlier this year. At the same time, internal memos and administration orders direct a broad reexamination of refugees admitted during the Biden era (including potential reinterviews and holds on certain green‑card adjudications) and a freeze on adjudications and naturalization ceremonies for nationals of 19 “countries of concern,” with officials saying those who threaten security could be subject to removal.
USCIS and Refugees Federal Policy Actions Immigration Policy and Enforcement
Miami Dade revotes Trump library land transfer
Miami Dade College’s board on Dec. 2 re‑voted to transfer a nearly 3‑acre, downtown Miami parcel for Donald Trump’s future presidential library amid a Sunshine Law lawsuit that prompted a judge to temporarily block formal transfer. The September vote faces claims of inadequate notice; a trial is set for August, and a week after that initial vote Gov. Ron DeSantis and the Florida Cabinet moved to transfer and deed the land to the Trump Presidential Library Foundation, whose trustees include Eric Trump, Michael Boulos, and attorney James Kiley.
Trump Presidential Library Florida Government and Courts
DOJ seeks dismissal of Maurene Comey lawsuit, says MSPB must hear claim first
The Justice Department moved Monday to dismiss Maurene Comey’s September lawsuit, arguing she failed to exhaust administrative remedies and that the Merit Systems Protection Board is the proper forum — rejecting Comey’s contention that an MSPB appeal would be futile — ahead of a Thursday hearing before Judge Jesse M. Furman in Manhattan federal court. Comey’s lawyers counter that the MSPB lacks the expertise and independence to resolve the case and that it raises separation‑of‑powers issues unsuitable for the board; the suit names the DOJ, the Executive Office of the President, Attorney General Pamela Bondi, the Office of Personnel Management and the United States.
Department of Justice Federal Courts Justice Department
DHS: Suspect deported after fatal Colorado DUI
DHS says 19-year-old Mexican national Eduardo Parra-Corral, accused of driving over 100 mph while intoxicated and running a red light in Greeley, Colorado on Nov. 9, was taken into ICE custody Nov. 10 and deported on Nov. 25 after the crash killed 27-year-old Jasmine Faith Carpio. Prosecutors added a vehicular homicide charge following Carpio’s death; Greeley Police continue the investigation as the case fuels debate over local sanctuary-style policies.
Immigration Enforcement Colorado Crime
Plymouth officer shoots armed man after disturbance
A Plymouth police officer shot a man following a reported domestic disturbance; the Bureau of Criminal Apprehension identified the officer as Jacob Coopet, a 23‑year law enforcement veteran, and the man as 44‑year‑old Atanas Hristev of Champlin. BCA says Hristev pointed a handgun at Officer Coopet before the officer fired, investigators recovered a handgun, spent shell casings and squad‑car video, Hristev is hospitalized in stable condition, and the BCA will present its findings to the Hennepin County Attorney’s Office without making charging recommendations.
Public Safety Legal
South St. Paul teen charged after woman dragged
A teenager has been criminally charged in South St. Paul after allegedly dragging a woman with a vehicle during a dispute over a vape cartridge, according to a Dec. 2 report. The incident occurred in South St. Paul (Dakota County) and led to charges tied to the alleged assault; further details on the charging documents and injuries were not immediately available.
Public Safety Legal
St. Paul shooter Dejaun Hemphill gets 12 years
Dejaun Hemphill was sentenced to 12 years in prison for fatally shooting a St. Paul man, in a case described as the masked assailant “hunting” the victim. The sentence, reported Dec. 2, 2025, closes a Twin Cities murder case and follows a court hearing in the metro.
Legal Public Safety
Trump says he will void Biden autopen actions, including pardons and commutations
On Truth Social, former President Trump said he will declare "null and void" any documents he alleges President Biden signed using an autopen — explicitly naming executive orders, proclamations, memorandums, contracts and clemency, including pardons and commutations. The claim comes amid House Republican reports and media reporting alleging autopen use (Biden signed 162 executive orders), a 2005 DOJ opinion that autopen use can be legally permissible, Biden’s denial that aides signed directives without his knowledge, reporting that some pardons (including Hunter Biden’s) were hand-signed, and White House figures showing Trump has rescinded many Biden orders; an alleged autopen pardon list has not been publicly released and GOP investigators have not shown clear evidence aides conspired to sign directives without Biden’s awareness.
Executive Authority and Orders Executive Power and Pardons Executive Orders and Governance
Treasury orders probe of MN fraud–terror ties
The Treasury Department has opened a federal probe to trace alleged money‑laundering routes from recent Minnesota human‑services fraud to the Somali militant group Al‑Shabab, though investigators say they have not found direct evidence that fraud proceeds reached the group. Gov. Tim Walz said he welcomes federal help but questioned the timing and motives after President Trump’s posts, Republican state senators backed the inquiry, reporting noted an anonymous X account claiming to represent about 480 DHS employees was suspended and later returned, and prior probes linked some fraud proceeds to real‑estate transactions in Kenya with separate prosecutions alleging Al‑Shabab ties.
Public Safety Legal Local Government
Prada closes $1.375B purchase of Versace
The Prada Group said Dec. 2 it completed its $1.375 billion cash acquisition of Milan fashion house Versace after receiving all regulatory clearances, buying it from U.S.-based Capri Holdings. Capri said it will use the proceeds to pay down debt, while Prada heir Lorenzo Bertelli will serve as Versace executive chairman as the brand pursues a relaunch under designer Dario Vitale.
Prada Group Versace
Maduro appeals to OPEC amid U.S. pressure
Venezuela’s Nicolás Maduro sent a letter to OPEC Secretary-General Haitham Al Ghais, published Sunday by Foreign Minister Yvan Gil, urging the cartel to help stop what he called U.S. 'direct aggression' undermining Venezuela’s energy sector and global oil stability. Energy analyst Francisco J. Monaldi told Fox News Digital OPEC—particularly Saudi Arabia—is unlikely to intervene, framing the appeal as largely symbolic amid Washington’s escalating pressure campaign.
Venezuela Energy and OPEC
Bronze Line to replace Purple Line BRT
Ramsey County and Metro Transit announced on Dec. 2, 2025, that the long‑planned METRO Purple Line will be replaced by a new 'Bronze Line' hybrid bus route running between St. Paul and Maplewood. The revised corridor shortens and retools the project, shifting away from the previous Purple Line plan and setting up next steps for design, environmental review and public engagement.
Transit & Infrastructure Local Government
WHO issues obesity GLP-1 guidance; warns access may reach under 10% by 2030
The WHO has issued guidance on GLP‑1 drugs for obesity and warned that access could fall to fewer than one in 10 people who need them by 2030, with Director‑General Dr. Tedros characterizing obesity as a chronic disease and positioning GLP‑1s within comprehensive, lifelong care. The agency recommends access strategies such as pooled procurement, tiered pricing and voluntary licensing, and cites the global burden — about 3.7 million deaths and more than one billion people affected, expected to double — with obesity costs potentially reaching $3 trillion annually by 2030.
Public Health Policy Obesity and GLP‑1 Drugs World Health Organization
USDA threatens to cut Minnesota SNAP funds
Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins said Tuesday that the USDA will begin withholding SNAP funds next week from states, including Minnesota, that refuse to provide recipient names and immigration status, framing the move as anti‑fraud. Minnesota has roughly 451,966 SNAP recipients (7.8% of the population); the state’s DCYF reiterated prior reporting errors that inflated past payout totals, and AG Keith Ellison recently joined a 21‑state lawsuit seeking to block federal cutoffs.
Local Government Health
Wren Clair, KSTP seek dismissal of lawsuit
Meteorologist Wren Clair and KSTP-TV jointly asked a judge on Dec. 2, 2025 to dismiss her lawsuit against the station, according to a TwinCities.com report. The filing signals a potential end to the legal dispute pending the court’s decision; details of the request were not immediately disclosed.
Legal Business & Economy
NARA seeks to shift presidential library costs
The National Archives and Records Administration is negotiating new agreements with each presidential foundation to move day‑to‑day maintenance and operations costs from taxpayers to the foundations, a change NARA says could save about $27 million and let it focus on records access and digitization. NARA currently spends $91 million annually on presidential libraries, with a $123 million deferred maintenance backlog, and says local control would speed repairs while reducing federal contracting delays.
National Archives and Records Administration Presidential Libraries and Federal Spending
University of Alabama suspends two student magazines
The University of Alabama suspended two student publications—Alice and Nineteen Fifty-Six—on Monday, citing a July DOJ memo from Attorney General Pam Bondi that outlines non‑binding 'best practices' to avoid antidiscrimination violations, including use of 'unlawful proxies' in DEI‑labeled programs. UA said the Fall 2025 issues will be the last and it will work with students on a new publication featuring a broader range of voices for next academic year.
Higher Education Policy Civil Rights and DEI
Pressley skips Markey challenge, seeks House reelection
Rep. Ayanna Pressley announced she will not challenge Sen. Ed Markey in the Democratic primary and will instead seek reelection to the House, citing family reasons — notably her daughter's final year at home before college — and saying she isn't closing the door on a future Senate bid. She offered no endorsement in the Senate contest, a choice that avoids a progressive-on-progressive matchup with Markey and comes amid Suffolk University–Boston Globe polling showing Markey leading Rep. Seth Moulton 45%–22% but a hypothetical three‑way with Pressley tightening to 35%–34%.
U.S. Congress Democratic Party Massachusetts Politics
Nor’easter brings snow to NY/PA; NJ declares emergency in 5 counties; storm warnings issued
A Nor’easter moving into the Northeast brought snow to parts of New York and Pennsylvania Tuesday morning and prompted NWS winter storm warnings from upstate New York through eastern Maine, with expected totals of at least 6 inches across parts of ME, MA, NH, NJ, NY and VT, localized 5–10 inch bands and more than a foot at higher elevations, heaviest from the Poconos into coastal Maine with rates exceeding 1 inch per hour and coastal areas seeing mostly rain. New Jersey declared a 5 a.m. state of emergency for Hunterdon, Morris, Passaic, Sussex and Warren counties, schools and offices closed in multiple states, officials urged residents to avoid travel and stock up, and road crews treated major corridors as the system heads into Canada by Wednesday morning.
Winter Storms U.S. Weather Weather and Public Safety
Luna files discharge petition on congressional stock-trade ban
On Dec. 2 in Washington, Rep. Anna Paulina Luna filed a discharge petition to force a House vote on the bipartisan Restore Trust in Congress Act, which would prohibit members of Congress, their spouses, and dependent children from owning or trading individual stocks. The petition needs 218 signatures; the bill, introduced by Rep. Chip Roy in September, has 100+ bipartisan backers but faces opposition in both parties after a Nov. 19 House Administration Committee hearing.
Congressional Ethics U.S. House Procedure
Trump signs law boosting Medal of Honor pensions
President Donald Trump on Dec. 1, 2025 signed the Medal of Honor Act, directing the Department of Veterans Affairs to raise the special monthly pension for living Medal of Honor recipients from $16,880 to around $67,500 annually. Sponsored by Rep. Troy Nehls (R‑Texas), the law affects 63 living recipients and was accompanied by a White House statement and supportive remarks from lawmakers including Sen. Ted Cruz.
Veterans Affairs U.S. Legislation
GN Group adds 100 jobs in Shakopee
Copenhagen-based GN Group has converted Shakopee’s former Shutterfly facility into an advanced medical-device manufacturing and distribution center and plans to add about 100 jobs, the company told the Business Journal. The project brings new production and logistics activity to Scott County after a year-long retrofit of the building.
Business & Economy Health
ICE arrests violent offenders in multi-state sweep
ICE arrested several noncitizens with prior convictions on Monday across Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York, Texas, and California, including a man convicted of aggravated rape of a child and others convicted of armed robbery and aggravated assault. DHS Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said the agency is targeting the “worst of the worst” and noted assaults on ICE officers have risen 1,153% this year. The named arrestees include Jorge Alberto Menjivar (MA), Juan Ramos‑Ramos (NJ), Jean Saint‑Cyr (NYC), Luis Angel Escobar‑Negrete (TX), and Raul Rodriguez‑Martinez (CA).
Immigration Enforcement Department of Homeland Security
State revokes visas of Mexican smuggling executives
The U.S. State Department revoked visas and imposed travel restrictions on six Mexican executives at an air travel company, along with their immediate family members, for allegedly collaborating with smuggling networks to move migrants — including minors — toward the U.S. via Central America. The action, carried out under INA §212(a)(3)(C) on foreign‑policy grounds, cancels any previously valid visas and bars their entry; Mexican authorities were notified, and Deputy Principal Spokesperson Tommy Pigott said the U.S. will hold facilitators of illegal immigration accountable.
Immigration Enforcement U.S. State Department
Netanyahu seeks presidential pardon amid trial
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has formally asked President Isaac Herzog for a pardon during his long-running corruption trial, submitting two documents — a detailed letter from his lawyer and a separate letter signed by Netanyahu — an "extraordinary request" that will be routed through the President’s Office legal department, the Justice Ministry for opinions, and the president’s legal adviser before a decision. Legal experts note a pardon request cannot itself halt the trial and is typically considered after legal proceedings are exhausted; the move prompted public criticism and small protests outside Herzog’s home, opposition calls for an admission of guilt and retirement, and support from former U.S. President Donald Trump, whom Netanyahu reportedly asked for additional help.
Benjamin Netanyahu Israel Politics Israel Politics and Law
Trump announces Dulles reconstruction plan
President Donald Trump said at a Dec. 2 Cabinet meeting that his administration will rebuild Dulles International Airport, calling it 'terrible' and 'incorrectly designed.' Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy added that DOT will request bids Tuesday to repair Dulles' 'people movers' (mobile lounges), one of which crashed in November, following Trump’s November detour through the terminal to assess potential projects.
Donald Trump Transportation and Infrastructure
CBO trims tariff deficit savings by $1 trillion
The Congressional Budget Office's decision to reduce projected deficit savings from tariffs by about $1 trillion sharply undercuts President Trump's promises to finance $2,000 rebate checks, farm aid and wider deficit reduction with tariff revenue. Independent estimates — PWBM's roughly $225 billion in 2025 receipts and BPC's $258.1 billion year‑to‑date figure — stand far below the CRFB's roughly $600 billion cost estimate for $2,000 checks and come against an $1.8 trillion FY2024 deficit, while the White House says spending plans aren't finalized even as Trump vows tariff "refunds" next year and has floated eliminating income tax.
Tariffs and Trade Federal Budget and Deficit U.S. Tariff Policy
Second Chinese mitten crab found in Oregon
Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife confirmed a second 2025 sighting of the invasive Chinese mitten crab, captured alive in the Willamette River and reported in mid-November, according to a Tuesday news release. The find is about 150 miles from an April capture on the lower Columbia River, and ODFW—working with USFWS, Portland State’s Center for Lakes and Reservoirs, and the Oregon Invasive Species Council—has begun targeted monitoring using artificial habitats and eDNA sampling; the crab is prohibited to possess or sell in the state.
Invasive Species Oregon Environment
DHS presses NY AG over ICE detainers
The Department of Homeland Security publicly urged New York Attorney General Letitia James to take action after New York City declined to honor ICE detainers, saying 6,947 criminal noncitizens have been released since Jan. 20 and about 7,000 more remain in New York custody with active detainers. Acting ICE Director Todd Lyons sent a new letter on Dec. 1 detailing examples and asserting local agencies refused to assist in certain arrests, while James’ office pointed to a prior response noting the AG does not receive detainers and that policies vary by local entities.
Immigration Enforcement and Sanctuary Policies New York State Government
Costco sues to block emergency tariffs
Costco Wholesale Corporation filed a lawsuit in the U.S. Court of International Trade seeking to invalidate President Trump’s emergency tariff orders, block U.S. Customs and Border Protection from collecting such duties going forward, and recover tariffs already paid. The filing cites an imminent Dec. 15 deadline to “liquidate” import entries, after which duties become final, and argues the emergency‑powers statute used does not authorize creating or raising tariffs on goods from China, Mexico, Canada and other countries.
Legal Business & Economy
Trump warns Honduras over vote count
President Trump warned Honduras—saying there would be "hell to pay" if the election count changed—pressed officials to finish the tally, alleged fraud without evidence and publicly endorsed Nasry Asfura. Honduran election officials said results were updated around noon, noting a two‑step process of preliminary digital tallies followed by hand verification can create gaps; with 57% reported Asfura and Salvador Nasralla were each at about 40% and separated by just 515 votes, officials urged calm as hand counts continued and parts of the online results system appeared to be taken down after the preliminary tally.
Honduras Elections U.S. Foreign Policy Latin America Elections
Hawley reintroduces Afghan evacuee vetting bill
Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) reintroduced the Afghanistan Vetting and Accountability Act in Washington, D.C., requiring DHS to verify biometric and personal data for all Afghan evacuees from the 2021 withdrawal, conduct in‑person interviews, and provide quarterly vetting reports to Congress while cutting off federal aid to evacuees who have not been vetted. The move comes roughly a week after Afghan evacuee Rahmanullah Lakanwal was charged in the D.C. ambush of two National Guard members, one fatally, and amid a separate federal case against another Afghan national over a bomb‑threat video.
U.S. Congress Immigration Policy
13 Democrats file for NJ-11 special
After Gov.-elect Mikie Sherrill resigned her U.S. House seat on Nov. 20, outgoing Gov. Phil Murphy issued a writ of election Nov. 21 setting a Feb. 5, 2026 special primary and an April 16, 2026 special general in New Jersey’s 11th District. Thirteen Democrats qualified by Monday’s filing deadline (minimum 500 signatures) to face a lone Republican, with notable endorsements including Murphy backing Essex County Commissioner Brendan Gill, Sen. Bernie Sanders backing Analilia Mejia, and Sen. Andy Kim backing former Rep. Tom Malinowski.
U.S. House Elections New Jersey Politics
Wisconsin seeks to revoke Geyser’s release; defense asks judge to move her from jail to mental facility
Wisconsin filed a petition to revoke Morgan Geyser’s conditional release after she removed an ankle monitor and fled a Madison-area group home; she was located sleeping behind a truck stop in Posen, Illinois with a companion identified as Chad Mecca (charged with trespassing/obstruction and later released), extradited to Wisconsin and is being held at the Waukesha County Jail. The DOC petition was sealed, Wisconsin has up to 30 days to take custody and could return her to Winnebago Mental Health Institute or seek new charges for the escape, while her attorney has asked a judge to move her from jail to a mental‑health facility.
Crime and Courts Slender Man Case Slender Man case
Metro Transit E Line BRT launches this weekend
Metro Transit will debut the E Line bus rapid transit this weekend, replacing Route 6 and providing faster, more frequent service between Southdale and the University of Minnesota with upgraded stations and security features. The agency expects about 3,000 riders per day, and business groups at 50th & France and in Linden Hills—hit hard by construction—are cautiously optimistic the new service will boost foot traffic.
Transit & Infrastructure Business & Economy
Netanyahu says Syria deal possible if buffer zone respected after Trump push
After President Trump publicly urged Israel–Syria dialogue and stressed stabilizing Syria, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said an agreement with Damascus could be possible if it respects a buffer zone Israel deems vital to its security. U.S. officials, alarmed that recent Israeli strikes—reportedly carried out without prior notice—could undermine the administration’s push to engage Syria, have privately warned Israel to halt such operations; Netanyahu made his remarks while visiting wounded soldiers from a southern Syria operation.
Middle East Israel–Syria Relations U.S. Foreign Policy
NOAA issues geomagnetic storm watch after flare
NOAA’s Space Weather Prediction Center issued a geomagnetic storm watch for Thursday, Dec. 4, after a powerful X1.9 solar flare erupted at 9:49 p.m. EST on Sunday, Nov. 30 from newly emerging sunspot AR4299, NASA said. While the associated coronal mass ejection is not expected to directly strike Earth, NOAA warns minor, manageable impacts to some technological infrastructure are possible and says the disturbance could arrive as early as Dec. 3, with auroras potentially visible from New York to Idaho.
Space Weather NOAA and NASA
Hegseth: Combat roles must meet male standard
Secretary of War Pete Hegseth, in a new podcast interview, defended his late‑September policy requiring all combat personnel to meet the highest male physical standard and said services will implement the change over a 3–6 month window. He said women who meet the standard can serve but added 'so be it' if the policy effectively excludes some, and noted troops are being given time to get back into shape before the standards are fully enforced.
U.S. Military Policy Gender and Defense
OECD lifts 2025 global growth to 3.2%, raises U.S. to 2.0%; flags AI-bubble risk
The OECD raised its 2025 global growth forecast to 3.2% (up from 2.9% in June) and lifted the U.S. 2025 projection to 2.0% (from 1.6%), while warning that heavy AI-driven investment could create a bubble that poses a key downside risk to the U.S. economy. The report sees growth slowing to 2.9% in 2026, projects regional rates such as China 5.0%, India 6.7% and the euro area 1.3%, and says economies have been resilient despite tariffs — though higher levies could push up prices and damp consumption and investment after firms front‑loaded imports.
OECD Economic Outlook U.S. Economy Artificial Intelligence Markets
Study maps five life stages of brain wiring
Neuroscientists at the University of Cambridge report in Nature Communications that the human brain passes through five structural 'epochs' from birth to age 90, with key turning points around ages 9 and 32 and a long stable adult phase before aging-related reorganization after 66. Using diffusion MRI in 3,802 individuals, the team found adolescence-like structural changes persist into the early 30s, adulthood stabilizes roughly from 32 to 66, and early aging shows reduced connectivity and white-matter degeneration.
Neuroscience Aging and Brain Health
SCOTUS to weigh NJ AG subpoena of pro-life center donors, forum fight
The Supreme Court will decide whether New Jersey Attorney General Matthew Platkin can compel First Choice, a pro‑life crisis pregnancy center, to turn over donor names, contact information and employment records—a subpoena the center calls a First Amendment and privacy invasion and a “fishing expedition.” Oral arguments are set for Dec. 2, 2025 at 10 a.m. ET, with the ACLU and pro‑life lawyers backing First Choice while state lawyers defend broad investigatory authority (saying compliance is voluntary or the scope can be narrowed) after Platkin formed a post‑Dobbs “strike force” and warned about crisis pregnancy centers.
First Amendment & Donor Privacy Abortion and Reproductive Policy Abortion and First Amendment
Cuba reports 33 deaths from chikungunya, dengue
Cuba’s deputy health minister Carilda Peña said Monday that 33 people, including 21 children, have died from mosquito-borne chikungunya and dengue since July as outbreaks spread across all 15 provinces. Most deaths were attributed to chikungunya, with 12 from dengue, amid sanitation problems, garbage accumulation, and water storage during shortages; the CDC has issued travel notices for Americans to Cuba advising vaccination and mosquito precautions.
Chikungunya and Dengue CDC Travel Advisories
Bipartisan talks weigh dedicated security staff for House members as $20k stipend, distress app take effect
House Democrats and Republicans are quietly weighing options to expand personal security for lawmakers, including creating a funded, dedicated Law Enforcement Coordination Program staff slot focused on member security and law-enforcement liaison—likely filled by an ex-law-enforcement or military officer who could carry a firearm—and providing security professionals while members perform official duties. The member security stipend, which began as a $5,000/month pilot and rose to $10,000 in September, became permanent at $20,000/month on Dec. 1, a new mobile distress system is being deployed, and the Sergeant-at-Arms has clarified that security hired through the allowance may not enter the Capitol or its grounds.
U.S. Capitol Security Congressional Security Threats Against Lawmakers
FBI offers $50K reward in Stockton banquet hall shooting; manhunt for multiple shooters continues
Just before 6 p.m. at a banquet hall in Stockton, Calif., gunmen opened fire during a 2‑year‑old’s birthday party, killing four people — three children (ages 8, 9 and 14) and a 21‑year‑old identified as Susano Archuleta — and wounding 11 others, one critically. Sheriff Patrick Withrow said early evidence suggests a targeted attack involving multiple shooters; a manhunt continues, the FBI has offered a $50,000 reward for information, and authorities have urged witnesses to come forward while noting five people arrested on weapons and gang charges have not been tied to the killings.
Gun Violence California Mass Shooting Mass Shootings
Study: Cannabis use reduces alcohol intake
A Brown University randomized, controlled “bar lab” study of 157 U.S. adults (ages 21–44) who were heavy drinkers and regular cannabis users found that smoking higher‑THC cannabis (7.2%) led participants to drink about 27% less alcohol over the next two hours versus placebo, with a 19% reduction at 3.1% THC. Published in the American Journal of Psychiatry and funded by NIAAA, the trial also showed an immediate drop in the urge to drink, though authors cautioned results may not generalize beyond near‑daily cannabis users, other products, or real‑world settings and do not justify recommending cannabis as a substitute for alcohol.
Public Health and Addiction Research Substance Use
El Chapo’s son pleads guilty; prosecutors detail Zambada abduction, say no cooperation credit for kidnapping
Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán López pleaded guilty in federal court in Chicago to drug‑trafficking and continuing‑criminal‑enterprise charges, admitting he helped oversee production and smuggling of cocaine, heroin, methamphetamine, marijuana and fentanyl into the United States. Prosecutors said he orchestrated the abduction of Sinaloa capo Ismael “El Mayo” Zambada — removing glass so armed men could seize, hood and zip‑tie him, sedate him on a private plane and fly him to a New Mexico airport — and clarified the U.S. did not sanction the kidnapping and Guzmán López will not receive cooperation credit for that act, despite otherwise cooperating; he was arrested in July 2024 after landing on a private jet in Texas.
U.S. Federal Courts Fentanyl Trafficking U.S. Courts
20+ conservative groups back NIL SCORE Act
More than 20 conservative organizations sent a letter to House Speaker Mike Johnson supporting the Student Compensation and Opportunity through Rights and Endorsements (SCORE) Act (H.R. 4312), which would grant the NCAA a limited antitrust exemption, preempt state NIL laws, and bar classifying college athletes as employees. The letter, obtained by Fox News Digital, frames the bill as a 'free market' fix and contrasts it with the Democrat-backed SAFE Act, which supporters say would allow pooled media rights and could lead to unionization.
College Sports NIL Policy U.S. Congress
Civil-rights group asks DOJ to probe California colleges
The Equal Protection Project of the Legal Insurrection Foundation filed a complaint on Dec. 1, 2025 urging the DOJ Civil Rights Division to investigate UC, CSU, and California Community Colleges and 138 campuses for alleged discrimination in DACA/‘undocumented’ student programs. The filing, addressed to Assistant Attorney General Harmeet K. Dhillon, alleges Title VI and 14th Amendment violations by offering services restricted to undocumented students and seeks an immediate investigation and remedial action.
Higher Education Policy Civil Rights Enforcement
Judge weighs Smartmatic's $2.7B suit vs Fox
A Manhattan judge will hear arguments Tuesday, Dec. 2, 2025 on whether Smartmatic’s $2.7 billion defamation lawsuit against Fox News should proceed to a full jury trial, with newly cited legal filings including a Jesse Watters text urging Fox to go "ALL in" on Stop the Steal. Fox says Smartmatic’s damages are inflated and that its hosts covered newsworthy claims by the president and his lawyers, while the case draws comparisons to Dominion’s $787.5 million settlement in 2023.
Media Defamation Litigation 2020 Election Claims
NPR probe: firm bills vets via VA hotline
NPR reports that Trajector Medical has charged disabled veterans millions of dollars, using an automated 'CallBot' to repeatedly query a VA phone hotline with clients’ Social Security numbers and birthdates to detect disability benefit increases and trigger invoices—sometimes up to $20,000—despite repeated VA warnings the model may be unlawful. The company, not accredited by the VA, allegedly uses a network of corporate entities, aggressive collections, and a system that auto-bills veterans after VA decisions, according to 11 former employees and 60 veterans interviewed.
Veterans Affairs Consumer Protection and Debt Collection
HHS withholds rural health grant applications
HHS and CMS are declining to release states’ full applications for the $50 billion, five‑year Rural Health Transformation Program during the ongoing merit review, despite the administration’s pledge of “radical transparency,” and say only project summaries for winners will be published. Democrats and some advocates fear politicization of awards; Illinois’ Democratic House delegation wrote to CMS Administrator Mehmet Oz in November seeking “full and fair consideration,” while experts and rural stakeholders press for visibility into proposals, budgets, and scoring.
Rural Health Transformation Program HHS/CMS
TSA sets $45 Confirm.ID fee for non‑REAL ID flyers starting Feb. 1, 2026
Starting Feb. 1, 2026, TSA will charge travelers who don’t present a REAL ID or another accepted credential (such as a passport, passport card, DoD ID, DHS trusted traveler cards, enhanced driver’s licenses, permanent resident or border‑crossing cards) a $45 Confirm.ID fee to verify identity via knowledge‑based questions and issue a 10‑day verification receipt. The nonrefundable fee — which TSA had earlier proposed at $18 but raised to $45 — can be paid online in advance through private vendors or at the airport, may take 10–30+ minutes to complete, can lengthen checkpoint waits, and does not guarantee boarding if verification fails.
Transportation Security Administration TSA and REAL ID Air Travel Policy
State Dept. halts Afghan visas; experts say Afghan vetting already stringent
After a deadly attack on National Guard members, the State Department said it immediately paused issuance of visas for all travelers on Afghan passports and USCIS halted asylum decisions nationwide as part of the post‑shooting policy response. Experts counter that Afghan evacuees were among the most extensively vetted—with multiple screening layers and likely intelligence checks after programs that resettled roughly 76,000 in Operation Allies Welcome and nearly 200,000 combined—and say challenges have centered on integration, even as officials noted the suspect had been granted asylum earlier this year and called for tougher restrictions.
U.S. Immigration Policy Afghan Resettlement Immigration Policy
DHS says FEMA petition signers wrongly reinstated
DHS told Axios that 14 FEMA employees who signed the 'Katrina Declaration' criticizing the administration’s disaster response were briefly and 'without authorization' reinstated Monday, then promptly returned to administrative leave. The workers—who filed whistleblower complaints with the U.S. Office of Special Counsel after being sidelined this summer—had received return‑to‑work notices last week before senior leadership reversed the move the same day.
Department of Homeland Security FEMA and Whistleblowers
U.S. ski resorts brace for fewer foreign visitors
NPR reports U.S. ski areas, including Whitefish Mountain Resort in Montana, expect fewer international guests this season amid President Trump’s tariffs and rhetoric, with Montana officials tracking a roughly 25% drop in Canadian visitors and a 12% decline in Canadian credit card spending locally. The U.S. Travel Association projects 5 million fewer international visitors to the U.S. in 2025, while Longwoods International surveys find Canadians cite U.S. politics and a weak Canadian dollar for canceling trips; early-season warmth has also delayed some resort openings.
Tourism and Travel U.S. Economy
DHS ends Haiti TPS; ~353,000 lose status by Feb. 3; ‘self‑deportation’ app offers $1,000 bonus, free flight
DHS announced it will end Temporary Protected Status for roughly 353,000 Haitian migrants effective Feb. 3 and is advising TPS holders to use the CBP Home mobile app to report departures. The department has promoted a "self‑deportation" option — including a retro‑themed ad — saying it can arrange departures in about 10 days and will provide a free plane ticket and a $1,000 exit bonus (paid after DHS confirms return via the app), may forgive civil fines tied to failure to depart, and could preserve future legal immigration opportunities; Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin called it the "holiday deal of a lifetime," and DHS said about 2 million people have self‑deported under the Trump administration.
Immigration Policy Homeland Security Department of Homeland Security
MN GOP urges federal probe of alleged terror financing
Minnesota Senate and House Republican caucuses sent letters Monday to U.S. Attorney Daniel Rosen — joining earlier requests from four GOP U.S. House members — urging a federal probe into reports that Minnesota-linked fraud and remittances may have funded terrorism. A City Journal/Manhattan Institute report, based on unnamed sources and a former detective, alleges hawala transfers gave a cut to al‑Shabaab, but a 2019 Minnesota Office of the Legislative Auditor found no substantiated proof that money reached terrorist groups; the U.S. Treasury has now opened an investigation.
Public Safety Local Government Legal
Mamdani names Tamika Mallory to safety team
New York City mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani appointed activist Tamika Mallory to help lead his transition Committee on Public Safety, according to a transition press release published on the Brooklyn site BRIC. Mallory, a former Women’s March leader who has advocated defunding police and drawn criticism over praise for Louis Farrakhan, is among 400 advisors tapped to recommend personnel and advise on policy and agency best practices ahead of Mamdani’s Jan. 1 start.
New York City Politics Policing and Public Safety
Ex-Mpls Chamber CEO Jonathan Weinhagen pleads guilty to mail fraud; faces nearly 3 years, >$200K restitution
Jonathan Weinhagen, the former CEO of the Minneapolis Regional Chamber who had been a Mounds View school board member (he has resigned), pleaded guilty to mail fraud and could face nearly three years in prison and more than $200,000 in restitution. Prosecutors allege he diverted Chamber funds — including about $30,000 earmarked as Crime Stoppers rewards for unsolved 2021 Minneapolis child shootings — through a sham consulting firm called Synergy Partners and an alias “James Sullivan,” opened a Chamber line of credit and drew over $125,000, signed sham contracts generating more than $100,000 for himself, and attempted a fraudulent SoFi loan in a scheme said to have run from December 2019 to June 2024.
Local Government Education Legal
Bomb threats reported at Schumer’s New York offices
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer said Monday that multiple bomb threats were emailed to his offices in Rochester, Binghamton and Long Island, with subject lines referencing “MAGA” and claiming the 2020 election was rigged. Federal and local law enforcement responded and conducted security sweeps; Schumer said everyone is safe as the investigation continues amid heightened concerns about threats to lawmakers.
Congressional Security Public Safety and Law Enforcement
NY panel recommends three NYC-area casino licenses; Commission to finalize
A state panel recommended awarding three New York City‑area casino licenses — Bally’s Ferry Point project in the Bronx, Steve Cohen’s Hard Rock plan next to Citi Field, and an expansion of Resorts World near JFK — and the State Gaming Commission is expected to formally issue the licenses before year-end with revenues already included in the state budget. Bally’s proposal is a $4 billion project that would include a $115 million payment to the Trump Organization if licensed, Hard Rock is an $8.1 billion complex with a 5,000+‑seat venue, 1,000‑room hotel and retail space, and the board meeting was interrupted by anti‑casino protesters amid the elimination of several rival bids, including a Jay‑Z–backed Times Square Caesars proposal and MGM’s earlier Yonkers withdrawal.
Casinos and Gambling Industry New York State Gaming
Babson freshman deported after Boston airport detention
Babson freshman Any Lucia López Belloza was detained at Boston’s Logan Airport while traveling home for Thanksgiving and has been deported to Honduras. Babson instructed faculty and staff to provide academic and community support and campus leaders issued messages but declined further comment, while ICE says an immigration judge ordered her removal in 2015, DHS did not address an emergency court order, and the student's attorney says he cannot find a record of the 2015 order.
U.S. Immigration Enforcement Courts and Legal Process Immigration Enforcement
Millions risk power shutoffs as energy costs soar
A new report from The Century Foundation and Protect Borrowers finds nearly 1 in 20 U.S. households were in arrears or collections on utility bills as of June 2025, with higher distress in the South and Appalachia. NEADA data show residential electricity prices rose 10.5% from January–August 2025 and project average winter heating bills to climb 7.6% to $976, warning utility shutoffs could reach 4 million households this year.
Energy and Utilities Consumer Debt
Rosemount man charged in St. Paul Victoria St. homicide; victim ID’d as Tarik Hazem Hassan
Spencer Curtis McAloney, 27, of Rosemount, was charged with second-degree murder, attempted murder and illegal firearm possession after a shooting about 1:38 a.m. Sunday at an apartment on the 700 block of North Victoria Street that killed 32-year-old Tarik Hazem Hassan of St. Paul; the charging narrative describes the men as friends and neighbors/records say the apartment had drawn prior drug-related complaints, with witnesses calling McAloney paranoid and "tweaking." McAloney was arrested after a brief police pursuit and crash, officers recovered a handgun and suspected drugs, bail was set at $1.5 million, and the complaint notes prior felony convictions for aggravated robbery and illegal ammunition possession.
Public Safety Legal
House passes bill barring Oct. 7 Hamas affiliates
The U.S. House on Monday passed by voice vote the No Immigration Benefits for Hamas Terrorists Act of 2025, deeming inadmissible any foreign national who carried out, supported, planned or facilitated Hamas’s Oct. 7, 2023 attacks, and explicitly adding Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad to terror-group bars under the Immigration and Nationality Act. Introduced by Rep. Tom McClintock, the bill now heads to the Senate, where Sens. Marsha Blackburn and Jacky Rosen have a parallel measure.
U.S. Congress Immigration Policy
Bitcoin plunges below $85,000 amid global jitters
Bitcoin briefly plunged nearly 12% intraday to dip below $85,000 before settling about 5.6% down just above $85,000 by late afternoon, leaving it roughly 33% below its Oct. 6 record high. The rout—backed by $3.6 billion of spot ETF outflows in November, steep losses in crypto-exposed U.S. stocks and bitcoin futures down about 24% over the past month—has been linked to institutional selling, long-holder profit-taking, a more hawkish Fed and stalled regulation, prompting some holders such as MicroStrategy to cut year-end BTC forecasts to $85,000–$110,000.
U.S. Stocks and Finance U.S. Financial Markets Cryptocurrency Markets
DOT to revoke approval for 3,000 trucking schools
The U.S. Department of Transportation announced Monday it will revoke the accreditation of nearly 3,000 truck‑driving schools unless they meet federal standards within 30 days, and warned about 4,000 more providers could face similar action. DOT alleges widespread falsification or manipulation of training data, failure to meet curriculum and instructor standards, and poor recordkeeping; Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said the crackdown aims to keep unqualified drivers off the road. The move follows proposed limits on immigrant eligibility for CDLs, which a federal appeals court stayed last month.
U.S. Department of Transportation Trucking and Commercial Driver Licensing
Northwestern to pay $75M; feds restore ~$790M in frozen research funds under civil-rights deal
Under a civil‑rights settlement with federal agencies including the Department of Justice, Education Department and HHS, Northwestern will pay $75 million — to be paid over time through 2028 — and the government will restore roughly $790 million in previously frozen research funding. The agreement requires clearer policies on demonstrations and protests, mandatory antisemitism training, bars race‑based admissions practices and addresses a hostile educational environment toward Jewish students, while Northwestern says it was not found in violation and retains control over hiring, admissions and curriculum.
Civil Rights Enforcement Higher Education Antisemitism on Campus
IDF body-cam shows Syria raid; six wounded
Israel released IDF body‑cam footage of a raid in Syria targeting Muslim Brotherhood‑affiliated militants that wounded six. U.S. officials say Washington was not notified beforehand and Syria was not warned through military channels; during the extraction Israeli airstrikes killed 13 Syrians, many of them civilians, prompting calls for retaliation and U.S. pressure on Netanyahu to halt such operations for fear they could undermine a potential Israel–Syria security agreement.
Israel–Syria Conflict U.S. Foreign Policy Muslim Brotherhood
U.S. skips World AIDS Day for first time
The State Department said last week that “an awareness day is not a strategy” and instructed employees not to mark World AIDS Day, resulting in no official U.S. commemoration on Dec. 1, 2025—the first time since the day was created in 1988. Spokesperson Tommy Pigott said the administration is “modernizing” infectious‑disease efforts and pushing greater foreign “burden sharing,” while activists protested outside the White House and warned the move reflects broader cuts disrupting HIV care abroad.
HIV/AIDS Policy U.S. State Department
Newell to cut 900 jobs, close 20 Yankee Candle stores
Newell Brands said Monday it will lay off more than 900 employees—about 10% of its workforce—and close roughly 20 Yankee Candle stores in the U.S. and Canada early next year as part of a cost-cutting plan. The company expects up to $90 million in charges, largely for severance, and projects up to $130 million in savings while it increases automation and AI use. The moves follow Q3 results showing $1.8 billion in net sales (down 7.2% year over year) and a return to profitability with $21 million in net income.
Corporate Layoffs Retail and Consumer Goods
Study: Smartphones at 12 tied to worse health
A Pediatrics study analyzing NIH ABCD cohort data from 2018–2020 found 63.6% of participants owned smartphones (median first-phone age 11) and that, at one-year follow-up, adolescents without smartphones reported better mental health than peers who had them by age 12. Lead author Dr. Ran Barzilay (CHOP) urged families to weigh potential risks and benefits and said the team plans further research on children who get phones before age 10.
Youth Mental Health Technology and Children Public Health Research
Armed inmate escapes Atlanta hospital, manhunt underway
The Rockdale County Sheriff’s Office says inmate Timothy Shane escaped custody from Atlanta’s Grady Memorial Hospital around 1:20 a.m. Monday after being taken there for a medical evaluation following a reported suicide attempt. Authorities believe he fled on foot, then stole an SUV from which a Glock handgun was reported missing, crashed the vehicle, and escaped again on foot; he is considered armed and dangerous. Deputies and assisting agencies are searching the area, and Grady said policy requires one‑to‑one law‑enforcement oversight for inmates receiving treatment.
Crime and Law Enforcement Georgia
Florida man arrested over TikTok school-shooting threat
Authorities arrested 20-year-old Ethan Charles Ladner of Santa Rosa Beach, Florida, over the weekend after the FBI alerted the Walton County Sheriff’s Office to a TikTok livestream with threats of a school shooting. Deputies say Ladner admitted posting the comments to provoke reactions; he was booked Sunday on a Florida felony count of making electronic threats of a mass shooting as local schools returned from Thanksgiving break.
School Safety and Threats Law Enforcement and Crime
Associated Bank buying American National Bank
Associated Bank announced a $604 million deal to acquire American National Bank, adding six Twin Cities branches and bringing its metro footprint to 24 locations. The merger will elevate Associated Bank’s ranking among the region’s largest banks and expands its presence across the Minneapolis–Saint Paul market.
Business & Economy
Sen. Moreno proposes ending dual citizenship
Sen. Bernie Moreno (R-Ohio) will introduce the Exclusive Citizenship Act of 2025 on Monday to require Americans with dual nationality to choose one citizenship within a year or automatically forfeit U.S. citizenship. The bill directs the State Department and DHS to build databases and rules to track and enforce the change, and would treat those relinquishing U.S. citizenship as aliens under immigration law.
Immigration Policy U.S. Congress
Minneapolis attorney Chris Madel launches GOP governor bid with anti-fraud focus; endorsed by Minneapolis Police Federation
Minneapolis attorney Chris Madel formally launched a Republican campaign for Minnesota governor Monday with a one-hour speech and PowerPoint centered on combating fraud in programs like Feeding Our Future, Housing Stabilization Services and autism services, pledging a tough-on-crime approach and touting an endorsement from the Minneapolis Police Federation. He blamed state leaders across parties — “This is our money… the Minnesota government is to blame” — addressed past donations to Democrats (including Gov. Tim Walz and the Harris–Walz ticket) without apologizing, highlighted his defense of State Trooper Ryan Londregan (whose charges were dropped), and joins a crowded GOP field.
Elections Public Safety Local Government
White House: Trump’s October MRI of heart and abdomen ‘perfectly normal’
On Dec. 1 the White House released a letter from Physician to the President Dr. Sean Barbabella saying an MRI performed in early October as part of a preventative/annual exam to evaluate the cardiovascular and abdominal systems was "perfectly normal." Barbabella reported no arterial narrowing, inflammation, or clotting, that the heart chambers are a standard size and the abdominal organs are very healthy and well‑perfused with no acute or chronic concerns; the president said he did not know which body parts were scanned, that it was not the brain, and that he "aced" a cognitive test.
Presidential Health White House Donald Trump
Shopify outage disrupts Cyber Monday merchants
Shopify experienced a login-related outage on Cyber Monday, temporarily preventing some retailers from accessing dashboards and processing orders before the company said at 2:31 p.m. ET it had found and fixed the authentication issue and was "seeing signs of recovery." Downdetector reports peaked around 11 a.m. ET at roughly 4,000 complaints. The interruption hit as Adobe Analytics projected a U.S. Cyber Monday online sales record of $14.2 billion, potentially impacting some merchants’ operations.
E-commerce platforms Cyber Monday and holiday retail
Pedestrian struck Nov. 24 at Summit & Dale dies; case now a fatal crash
A driver struck a 75-year-old woman and her husband in a crosswalk at Summit Avenue and Dale Street on Nov. 24; the woman died about a week later. St. Paul police have reclassified the incident as a fatal crash and the investigation is ongoing.
Public Safety Legal
Edina Facebook Marketplace robbery: 2 teens arrested; ghost gun seized; 18-year-old wounded
Edina police warned neighbors after reports of shots fired during what investigators say was a Facebook Marketplace deal gone wrong in an apartment parking lot on Gallagher Drive. An 18‑year‑old man was shot in the left arm and suffered non‑life‑threatening injuries, and investigators found footprints, tire tracks and a discharged .40‑caliber casing at the scene. Two teenagers, ages 16 and 17, were arrested within 12 hours and are being held at the Hennepin County Juvenile Detention Center after a search recovered a .40‑caliber ghost gun; charges are pending.
Public Safety Legal
U.S. gas prices drop below $3 average
GasBuddy reports the U.S. average price of regular gasoline fell to $2.95 per gallon as of December 1, 2025 — the lowest since May 2021 — with AAA showing a similar ~$3 average. Prices declined in all 50 states amid lower crude costs, strong refinery output and softer seasonal demand; diesel averages $3.72, and some stations in Oklahoma, Colorado and Texas are posting sub‑$2 prices.
Energy Prices U.S. Economy
US Embassy warns of Costa Rica rental robberies
The U.S. Embassy in San Jose, Costa Rica issued a Nov. 25 security alert warning American travelers about recent property crimes, including break-ins and armed robberies at Airbnbs and other rentals, and reports of criminal gangs forcing victims to withdraw cash or make bank transfers. The advisory urges tourists to avoid displaying wealth, stay vigilant at banks/ATMs, secure rental cars due to possible key‑fob signal blockers, and research lodging security in advance; it notes a broader State Department Level 2 advisory has been in place since Dec. 10, 2024.
Travel Safety U.S. State Department
TSA finalizes $45 Confirm.ID fee for flyers without acceptable ID starting Feb. 1, 2026
TSA will charge a $45 fee for travelers without acceptable identification to use its Confirm.ID verification system, covering a 10-day travel period and taking effect Feb. 1, 2026; acceptable IDs that avoid the fee include REAL ID, passports and trusted traveler cards, and REAL ID compliance began in May 2025. TSA urges passengers to pay online before arriving (airport payment options and signage will be available but delays are expected) and says the fee shifts costs from taxpayers to travelers, according to TSA’s Adam Stahl.
Technology Transit & Infrastructure Public Safety
FDA approves glasses to slow child myopia
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration on Dec. 1, 2025 approved a new type of prescription eyeglasses designed to slow the progression of nearsightedness in children, authorizing nationwide marketing that includes the Twin Cities. The decision gives Minnesota families and eye‑care providers a federally cleared option intended to reduce the rate at which pediatric myopia worsens.
Health Technology
Minnesota judge overturns $7.2M Medicaid fraud conviction
Minnesota Judge Sarah West vacated an August jury conviction of Abdifatah Yusuf on six counts of aiding and abetting theft by swindle over an alleged $7.2 million Medicaid fraud tied to Promise Health, ruling the case relied heavily on circumstantial evidence and did not exclude reasonable alternative inferences. The Minnesota Attorney General’s Office, led by Keith Ellison, has appealed the November ruling; jurors and a state lawmaker expressed surprise, while the defense hailed the acquittal.
State Courts and Appeals Healthcare and Medicaid Fraud
NATO weighs preemptive response to Russian hybrid threats
NATO Military Committee chair Adm. Giuseppe Cavo Dragone told the Financial Times that the alliance is considering becoming 'more aggressive' against Russia’s hybrid campaign, including potentially 'preemptive' cyber or sabotage operations, while maintaining a defensive doctrine. He cited the Baltic Sentry mission’s deterrent effect but noted allied constraints from ethics, law, and jurisdiction; Russia’s Foreign Ministry called the remarks irresponsible and escalatory.
NATO Russia–NATO Tensions
Dakota County proposes 9.9% levy increase
Dakota County is proposing a 9.9% levy increase as part of its 2026 budget. A Tuesday meeting has been scheduled to take up the budget and will serve as the public hearing/Truth-in-Taxation on the proposed levy.
Business & Economy Local Government
House to vote on federal crimes database bill
A bipartisan group led by Rep. Chip Roy, with Reps. Andy Biggs, Lucy McBath and Steve Cohen, is pushing a House bill expected to be considered this week that would require the federal government to compile a comprehensive database of all federal criminal laws and regulations. The measure also directs the Department of Justice to report prosecutions by offense over the past 15 years, a step backers say could enable broader criminal‑justice reforms; a vote could come as soon as Monday evening.
U.S. Congress Criminal Justice Policy
Trump downplays ‘closed’ Venezuela airspace post, confirms call with Maduro
President Trump downplayed a social-media post saying Venezuelan airspace was "closed," telling reporters "don't read anything into it" and confirming he spoke by phone with Nicolás Maduro while declining to provide details. Venezuela's government condemned the claim as a "colonialist threat," said U.S. authorities have "unilaterally suspended" migrant repatriation flights, and warned of violations of its sovereignty as airlines briefly canceled routes after an FAA advisory—even as flight trackers showed aircraft operating—while the episode unfolds against a U.S. naval buildup and contentious maritime strikes that have killed at least 80 people and prompted congressional scrutiny.
U.S.–Venezuela Tensions Donald Trump U.S.–Venezuela Relations
Spain arrests three in The Base cell
Spanish National Police said Monday they dismantled a cell of The Base — a U.S.-founded neo-Nazi group designated a terrorist organization by the EU, U.K., Canada, Australia and New Zealand — arresting three suspects in Castellón after uncovering paramilitary training and alleged plans for targeted attacks. Authorities said the cell leader was in direct contact with founder Rinaldo Nazzaro, seized firearms and neo-Nazi materials, and charged the leader with terrorist membership, recruitment, indoctrination/training, and illegal weapons possession.
The Base (neo-Nazi group) Counterterrorism
Navy veteran appeals AP defamation dismissal, alleges bias
Zachary Young, a U.S. Navy veteran who won a CNN defamation verdict earlier this year, filed an appeal with Florida’s First District Court of Appeal challenging Judge William S. Henry’s September dismissal of his defamation suit against the Associated Press over a January 2025 article stating his business "helped smuggle people out of Afghanistan." In the filing, Young’s counsel argues the court misapplied defamation law, cites the judge’s remarks likening the case to a bad movie sequel as evidence of "lack of judicial decorum," and seeks reassignment to a different judge. Judge Henry did not immediately comment.
Media Defamation Litigation Courts and Judiciary
3rd Circuit disqualifies Alina Habba as N.J. U.S. attorney
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 3rd Circuit unanimously upheld a lower-court ruling disqualifying Alina Habba as acting U.S. attorney in New Jersey, finding her appointment unlawful under the Federal Vacancies Reform Act after a challenge by three criminal defendants and an August ruling by U.S. District Judge Matthew Brann. A three-judge panel—D. Brooks Smith, D. Michael Fisher (who authored the 32‑page opinion), and Luis Felipe Restrepo—criticized the administration’s appointment maneuver as effectively permitting “anyone to fill the U.S. Attorney role indefinitely,” and said the decision is the first federal appeals-court ruling to address the broader scheme for installing temporary U.S. attorneys without Senate confirmation.
Department of Justice Justice Department Federal Courts
NORAD F-16s intercept plane near Mar-a-Lago
NORAD says F-16s intercepted a civilian aircraft that entered temporarily restricted airspace over Palm Beach, Florida, around 4:20 p.m. EST on Nov. 30, deploying flares to gain the pilot’s attention before escorting the plane out. The incident occurred while President Trump was at Mar-a-Lago for the holiday weekend; officials urged pilots to check NOTAMs and noted more than 40 airspace-violation ‘tracks of interest’ in the West Palm Beach area since Trump took office.
NORAD and Airspace Security Donald Trump
NYCHA bribery probe ends with 70 convictions
Prosecutors said Tuesday they secured the 70th and final conviction in a decade-long corruption scheme in which New York City Housing Authority employees took bribes to steer no-bid repair work, following what DOJ called the largest single-day bribery takedown in its history in Feb. 2024. U.S. Attorney Jay Clayton and NYC Department of Investigation Commissioner Jocelyn E. Strauber said workers collected over $2.1 million in bribes tied to $15 million in contracts, with most defendants pleading guilty and three convicted at trial.
Public Corruption New York City Housing Authority
O’Hare sets November snowfall record; hundreds more Sunday cancellations as storm shifts East
A major winter storm dropped a single‑day November record 8.4 inches of snow at Chicago O’Hare and snarled air travel across the region, with O’Hare reporting 270+ cancellations and 1,200+ delays Sunday afternoon and Chicago airports seeing more than 1,400 cancellations Saturday. The system is shifting east under winter‑storm warnings from Montana to New York, with forecasts for additional heavy snow in parts of the Mid‑Atlantic and New England and weekend nationwide disruption totaling roughly 2,900 cancellations and 21,000 delays.
Travel and Transportation Weather and Transportation National Weather Service
Airbus orders urgent A320 safety fixes
Airbus ordered urgent software fixes for A320-family aircraft following a flight-control incident. The company says most jets have now been updated, with fewer than 100 planes worldwide still awaiting the required patch.
Public Safety Transit & Infrastructure Technology
UCLA off-the-shelf CAR-NKT therapy kills pancreatic tumors
UCLA researchers reported in PNAS that an engineered, off-the-shelf CAR-NKT cell therapy tracked down and killed pancreatic cancer cells in multiple mouse models, including metastases to the liver and lungs. The donor-derived CAR-NKT cells penetrated solid tumors, maintained activity in harsh tumor microenvironments, slowed growth, and extended survival; authors estimate a per-dose cost around $5,000, far below personalized CAR-T. The preclinical results suggest a scalable, more accessible approach, though human trials have not yet begun.
Medical Research Cancer and Oncology
Mexican military kills U.S.-wanted fentanyl suspect
Mexico’s Navy-led forces killed Pedro Inzunza Coronel, alias “Pichon,” on Sunday in Sinaloa during an anti-drug operation, detaining two alleged associates after an exchange in which the suspect attacked personnel, officials said. The U.S. DOJ charged Coronel and his father in May with narco-terrorism, trafficking and money laundering as leaders of a Beltrán Leyva Organization faction; Mexican authorities previously seized more than 1.65 tons of fentanyl tied to their network, and the U.S. Ambassador praised the joint results.
Drug Trafficking and Fentanyl U.S.–Mexico Security Cooperation
Supreme Court hears ISP copyright liability case
The U.S. Supreme Court heard arguments Monday, Dec. 1, in a billion‑dollar case over whether internet service providers can be held liable for subscribers’ music piracy, in a suit by major labels against Cox Communications. Labels argue Cox ignored repeated infringement notices tied to specific IP addresses and failed to terminate serial offenders; Cox counters it didn’t encourage infringement, polices abuse under its terms, and warns a loss could force cutting off entire households and institutions from internet access. A jury previously awarded the labels more than $1 billion, a decision the 4th Circuit upheld; a Supreme Court ruling is expected this summer.
U.S. Supreme Court Copyright and Technology
USDA signals SNAP overhaul, clarifies recertification
Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins said details of major structural changes to SNAP will be released this week, citing alleged 'massive fraud' identified in state data, while USDA clarified it will rely on existing recertification protocols rather than require all recipients to reapply. The push comes as SNAP faces the deepest cuts in its history from newly enacted work and eligibility rules and after Democratic senators sought clarification amid shutdown-related disruptions.
USDA and SNAP Federal Social Policy
Minneapolis declares three-day snow emergency
Minneapolis declared a three-day snow emergency Sunday after the season’s first major storm, imposing citywide parking restrictions to clear more than 1,000 miles of streets. Day 1 bans parking on Snow Emergency routes 9 p.m. Nov. 30–8 a.m. Dec. 1; Day 2 restricts the even side of non-routes and both sides of parkways 8 a.m.–8 p.m. Dec. 1; Day 3 restricts the odd side of non-routes 8 a.m.–8 p.m. Dec. 2, with ticketing and towing for violations.
Weather Transit & Infrastructure Local Government
December Social Security and SSI payment dates
The Social Security Administration set December 2025 payment dates: SSA benefits will be paid Dec. 3 for those on rolls before May 1997 and on Dec. 10, 17, or 24 based on birthdate; SSI will be paid Dec. 1 and again Dec. 31 because Jan. 1 is a federal holiday. Twin Cities recipients who don’t see an expected direct deposit should contact their bank first, then call SSA at 1-800-772-1213.
Business & Economy Government/Regulatory
Saturday snow slicks roads: 174 crashes by 4 p.m.; MSP delays, cancellations
A daylong snow event slicked roads across Minnesota Saturday, with the State Patrol reporting 174 property‑damage crashes, 13 injury crashes, 114 vehicles off the road and two jackknifed semis between midnight and 4 p.m.; MnDOT said most Twin Cities and southern Minnesota roads were snow‑covered and icy. Snow totals included about 2.8 inches in Bloomington and higher amounts in southern communities (Fairmont 7.5 inches, Faribault 5.5 inches, Albert Lea 4.5 inches), and Minneapolis–St. Paul International reported dozens of disruptions — 25 canceled and 81 delayed arrivals, and 18 canceled and 93 delayed departures — with light snow expected to continue into the night and exit around midnight.
Transit & Infrastructure Public Safety Weather
Cottage Grove seeks regional EMS backup
The City of Cottage Grove asked neighboring east‑metro communities to assist with emergency medical services coverage amid an EMS shortfall, aiming to maintain 911 response while the city addresses gaps. The outreach signals potential interim changes in ambulance/first‑responder coverage affecting Cottage Grove residents and nearby Washington County cities.
Public Safety Local Government
Rep. Morrison proposes Small Business tariff rebates
U.S. Rep. Kelly Morrison announced on Small Business Saturday that she has introduced the Small Business RELIEF Act to exempt small firms from Trump‑era tariffs and refund those that already paid them. Morrison, a member of the House Small Business Committee, made the announcement while touring local Minnesota shops to highlight tariff impacts on Twin Cities businesses.
Business & Economy Government/Policy
DNR boosts security at St. Paul office
The Minnesota Department of Natural Resources says it has increased security at its St. Paul office near a homeless encampment after a rash of break-ins. The agency confirmed the recent incidents and said additional measures are in place to secure the building and protect staff and property.
Public Safety Local Government
US halts all asylum decisions nationwide
USCIS Director Joseph Edlow said Friday, Nov. 28, 2025, that the Trump administration is pausing all asylum decisions “until we can ensure that every alien is vetted and screened to the maximum degree possible,” following a National Guard shooting in Washington, D.C. The nationwide pause applies to cases handled by USCIS offices serving Minnesota, likely delaying asylum adjudications for Twin Cities applicants and legal service providers.
Immigration Local Government
Trump Thanksgiving post targets Minnesota Somalis
Late Thanksgiving night, President Donald Trump posted a message disparaging Somali refugees in Minnesota and using a slur to describe Gov. Tim Walz, while vowing sweeping immigration restrictions; the next day, his administration announced it is halting all asylum decisions. Walz replied on social media, “Release the MRI results,” as the rhetoric and policy move raised immediate concerns for Twin Cities immigrant communities.
Legal Local Government
$3.6B federal heating aid released to states, tribes
The Department of Health and Human Services released $3.6 billion in LIHEAP heating assistance to states and tribes to help families pay to heat their homes, a move NEADA executive director Mark Wolfe called "essential and long overdue." HHS had not yet issued a formal announcement when NEADA confirmed the release; a bipartisan group of House members had urged the funds be released by Nov. 30 amid NEADA projections that winter heating costs will rise about 10.5% (electricity +13.6%/~$1,208, propane +7.3%/~$1,442, natural gas +7.2%/~$644) and noting that roughly 68% of LIHEAP households also receive SNAP, with shutdown-related delays increasing hardship.
Business & Economy Utilities Economy
St. Paul fire chief Butch Inks to retire
St. Paul Fire Chief Butch Inks is retiring, according to a Nov. 28 report, shortly after beginning his second term leading the department. The leadership change affects the city’s fire and emergency services; further details on timing and succession were not immediately available.
Local Government Public Safety
Dakota County to host 2031 horticultural expo
Organizers announced that Dakota County will host Expo 2031 Minnesota USA, the first international horticultural exposition ever held in the United States. The 2031 event, set within the Twin Cities metro, is expected to drive significant tourism and regional planning activity; next steps include formal coordination with local and state agencies on site planning, transportation, and permitting.
Business & Economy Local Government
FDA flags cheese recall over Listeria risk
The FDA announced a recall of multiple grated cheese products, including items under the Boar’s Head brand, due to potential Listeria monocytogenes contamination. The recalled cheeses were sold at major retailers such as Target and Walmart, which operate throughout the Twin Cities; consumers are advised not to eat the products and to follow recall instructions for refunds or disposal.
Health Public Safety
Shutdown ends: Feds back Thursday; back pay by Nov. 19 as LIHEAP restarts
President Trump signed a stopgap funding bill ending the 43‑day shutdown, OPM directed federal employees to return Thursday and agencies will issue back pay in four tranches beginning by Nov. 19 while the measure reverses shutdown‑era firings and bars new layoffs through January. The package restarts programs including SNAP, releases $3.6 billion in LIHEAP heating aid to states and tribes, and extends funding through Jan. 30, though SNAP and other benefits may take days or longer to reach recipients and a separate vote on ACA premium subsidies is expected in December.
Government/Regulatory Elections Government
Minneapolis house fire seriously injures one, kills dog
The Minneapolis Fire Department rescued an adult from the second floor of a burning two‑story home on the 3600 block of Garfield Avenue South around 4:45 p.m. on Thanksgiving Day, transporting the person to a hospital in serious condition; a dog died despite being removed from the home. Officials have not yet released the cause of the fire or additional details on the victim.
Public Safety
Washington County dad pleads in UTV crash case
A Washington County father pleaded guilty to child endangerment in Washington County District Court in a case stemming from a UTV crash involving a child. The plea resolves the criminal charge tied to the incident; further court proceedings, including sentencing, were not immediately detailed.
Legal Public Safety
Daycare abuse, neglect cases surge in Minnesota
State oversight records compiled by FOX 9 show abuse and neglect reports at Minnesota day cares nearly doubled from 57 in 2022 to 100 in 2023 and reached 105 in 2024, with several severe metro incidents resulting in child injuries requiring surgery. Cited cases include a Rochester pizza‑slicer attack on a 14‑month‑old, a Brooklyn Park Goddard School employee punching a 3‑year‑old, a St. Paul KinderCare staffer striking a child with an iPad, and arrests tied to alleged infant abuse at Blaine’s Small World Learning Center; DCYF Inspector General Randy Keys said the system is generally safe but could not explain the recent uptick.
Public Safety Health Legal
ICE says 14 arrested in St. Paul Bro‑Tex raid; city leaders decry chemical spray as fundraiser tops $25K
Federal authorities say 14 people were arrested for immigration violations during an ICE worksite enforcement action at Bro‑Tex in St. Paul — an operation ICE says was assisted by FBI and DEA and in which DHS noted one arrestee had past domestic‑abuse charges and another is suspected of illegal reentry; families have publicly identified several detainees and a fundraiser for one worker topped $25,000. The raid drew roughly 200 protesters, videos and officials report federal personnel used a chemical irritant (described by the mayor as tear gas) and at least one person reported being struck by rubber bullets, photographers say they were targeted, and St. Paul leaders and the city council have called for investigations into use of force and adherence to the city’s separation ordinance.
Local Government Public Safety Legal
Suicide investigation closes eastbound Hwy 36
Minnesota State Patrol says a man died by suicide around 4:52 p.m. near Highway 36 and Highlands Trail North in Lake Elmo, leading authorities to close eastbound Hwy 36 between I-694 in Pine Springs and Demontreville Trail North. MnDOT said the closure was expected to last into the evening with an estimated reopening around 10:19 p.m.; details on involvement of other vehicles were not immediately available.
Public Safety Transit & Infrastructure
AG Ellison joins SNAP eligibility lawsuit
Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison has joined a multistate lawsuit challenging federal rules on SNAP eligibility, arguing the policy unlawfully restricts access to food assistance and harms Minnesota families. Filed against the USDA, the case seeks to block the changes while litigation proceeds and protect continued benefits for eligible residents in the Minneapolis–Saint Paul metro and statewide.
Legal Health
Lakeland sets open house on City Hall plan
Lakeland will hold an open house to discuss plans for a new City Hall, but city leaders have sent the current proposal back to the drawing board and halted moving forward with acquiring the Telus building at 84 St. Croix Trail S., which had been the subject of a $525,000 letter of intent. Officials directed staff to broaden the search and reevaluate potential sites and options.
Local Government Transit & Infrastructure
Hennepin Healthcare plans $12M addiction center
Hennepin Healthcare plans to solicit construction bids for a new $12 million addiction treatment center in downtown Minneapolis, according to the Minneapolis/St. Paul Business Journal. The project would add dedicated substance‑use treatment capacity in the city’s core, with the health system moving into the bidding phase.
Health Business & Economy
Minneapolis to open 44 outdoor rinks by Dec. 22
The Minneapolis Park & Recreation Board says it will open 44 outdoor ice rinks at 22 city parks in time for Minneapolis Public Schools’ winter break on Dec. 22, weather permitting. All rinks and warming rooms will be free and open until at least 9 p.m.; Powderhorn and Webber rinks will return this season on land rather than on Powderhorn Lake or Webber Pool after prior warm winters and funding pressures disrupted operations.
Local Government Weather
Feds cut Medicare prices for 15 drugs
On Nov. 26, 2025, the Trump administration announced that Medicare will pay lower prices for 15 prescription drugs, projecting 'billions' in taxpayer savings. The change would affect Medicare beneficiaries and taxpayers in the Minneapolis–Saint Paul metro, though specific drugs and implementation details were not provided in the headline.
Health Business & Economy
Average 30‑year mortgage rate dips to 6.23%
Freddie Mac’s weekly survey shows the average U.S. 30‑year fixed mortgage rate fell to 6.23% as of Nov. 26, 2025, ending a three‑week climb. The move directly affects Minneapolis–Saint Paul borrowers and sellers by influencing monthly payments, refinancing decisions, and housing demand heading into the holiday season.
Business & Economy Housing
Winter storm: 253 crashes, 333 vehicles off road as Warning runs to 9 a.m.
A winter storm warning in effect from 6 p.m. Tuesday to 9 a.m. Wednesday across much of Minnesota, including the Twin Cities, brought a metro forecast of 3–5 inches (locally higher in the north metro) with heavier 5–8+ inch bands possible in central and northern areas, a rain-to-snow changeover during the evening commute, and gusts up to 40–45 mph causing blowing snow and poor visibility. By early Wednesday, the Minnesota State Patrol reported 253 property‑damage crashes (including 30 injury crashes), 11 spinouts, 30 jackknifed semis and 333 vehicles off the road, while MnDOT listed most Twin Cities routes as snow/ice covered with reduced speeds and active incidents. Snow is expected to taper during the Wednesday morning commute, but blustery conditions could keep travel hazardous.
Public Safety Weather Transit & Infrastructure
Cooper High custodian charged in restroom peeping
Hennepin County prosecutors charged John Ezekiel Brown, 51, of Brooklyn Center with felony interference with the privacy of a minor after a 15-year-old reported he looked over a bathroom stall at Cooper High School in New Hope on Oct. 28. Surveillance video reviewed by New Hope police shows Brown entering the restroom before the student and remaining inside for nearly three minutes; the student ran out after seeing him, and the principal notified families, noting he was a temp-service custodian, not a district employee.
Public Safety Education Legal
Washington County alert system hit by cyberattack
Washington County said Tuesday, Nov. 25, 2025, that its emergency alert system was the target of a cyberattack, prompting an investigation into the impact on public warning capabilities. Officials are assessing the scope of the incident and working to restore full alert functionality while communicating updates to residents.
Public Safety Technology
DHS to end TPS for some Myanmar nationals
The Department of Homeland Security announced it will end Temporary Protected Status for some Myanmar nationals, citing planned December “free and fair” elections and “successful ceasefire agreements”; rights groups and Myanmar’s shadow National Unity Government sharply criticized the move, saying Myanmar remains in a brutal civil war with forced conscription and daily attacks on civilians. Advocates warned of harms to Burmese communities in the Twin Cities, and observers note that ICC prosecutors previously sought an arrest warrant for junta leader Min Aung Hlaing over alleged crimes against humanity related to the Rohingya.
Legal Immigration Government
20-year-old charged in fatal Shakopee DWI crash
Goay Jikany, 20, was charged with criminal vehicular homicide after troopers say he rear‑ended a Chevy Cobalt at high speed on Hwy. 169 near Marystown Road late Nov. 23, pushing it off the road and killing 46-year-old Kala Henry of Chaska. A criminal complaint says Jikany’s BAC tested 0.144, he showed signs of impairment, admitted drinking, and his account conflicted with evidence; he was arrested about four weeks after a separate Shakopee DWI case.
Public Safety Legal
FOF defendant Abdimajid Nur sentenced to 10 years, ~$48M restitution
Abdimajid Nur, convicted in the Feeding Our Future fraud, was sentenced to 10 years in prison and ordered to pay roughly $48 million in restitution after evidence showed he created and submitted most of the fake meal counts, rosters and invoices for Empire Cuisine & Market sites — at some locations no food was served and at others meals were provided by Shakopee Public Schools. Judge Nancy Brasel said, “It is so disappointing and so disheartening that where others saw a crisis and rushed to help, you saw money and rushed to steal,” and prosecutors detailed Nur’s spending of proceeds on vehicles (including a $64,000 Dodge Ram and $35,000 Hyundai Santa Fe), a Maldives honeymoon, jewelry in Dubai and about $12,000 paid to complete online coursework; he faces a separate sentencing for attempting to bribe a juror.
Legal Public Safety
FHFA raises conforming loan limit to $832,750
The Federal Housing Finance Agency announced it is increasing the baseline conforming loan limit for single-family mortgages to $832,750, raising the maximum size of most loans that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac can back. The change applies in the Twin Cities’ seven-county metro in the upcoming loan-limit year, meaning more buyers can use conforming financing instead of higher-cost jumbo loans; higher limits may apply in designated high-cost areas elsewhere.
Housing Business & Economy
EPA moves to roll back soot standard
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency signaled it will abandon a tougher national fine‑particulate (PM2.5) air‑quality standard on Nov. 25, 2025. Reversing the stricter limit would affect how Minnesota and Twin Cities regulators assess air quality and industrial permitting, with implications for public health and compliance planning if the change proceeds through rulemaking.
Environment Health Local Government
ByHeart tests find botulism bacteria; all lots may be contaminated
ByHeart has recalled all of its baby formula nationwide after tests found 5 of 36 samples from three lots positive for Clostridium botulinum type A and the company said it "cannot rule out" contamination across all lots. The outbreak has sickened at least 31 infants in 15 states since August (with some ByHeart-fed infants treated as far back as Nov. 2024), at least 107 infants have received BabyBIG treatment since Aug. 1, regulators say some product remained on shelves despite the Nov. 11 recall, and ByHeart has expanded refunds to customers who bought from its website on or after Aug. 1.
Health Public Safety Consumer
Stillwater schools sell Lake Elmo Elementary site
Stillwater Area Public Schools will sell the current Lake Elmo Elementary property at 11030 Stillwater Blvd. N. to Valley Community Center Partners, Inc. for $4.25 million, with plans for an indoor pool and community center on the 12.86‑acre site. The nonprofit has a 210‑day due‑diligence period, and closing is scheduled for Dec. 1, 2026; demolition costs are covered by voter‑approved bond proceeds, and the new Lake Elmo Elementary opens next fall at 10th St. and Lake Elmo Ave.
Education Local Government
Minnesota ERPO gun cases set to double in 2025
Minnesota's extreme risk protection order (ERPO) petitions are on pace to double in 2025, with several agencies increasingly using the state's "red flag" law. The Mankato Department of Public Safety has filed the most ERPOs (25) and says it has confiscated more than 60 firearms over the past two years—crediting a coordinated approach and line‑level training—while other city totals include Minneapolis (19), St. Paul (14), Duluth (6) and Bloomington (5).
Public Safety Legal
Ex-Twin Cities teacher gets life for child abuse
Former Twin Cities teacher and coach Aaron Hjermstad was sentenced Monday to life in prison with the possibility of parole after 30 years for sexually abusing 12 additional boys, adding to a prior 12-year sentence tied to four victims. Prosecutors say the abuse occurred while he worked at Excell Academy in Brooklyn Park and Mastery School/Harvest Best Academy in Minneapolis; a search warrant cited a catalog of videos labeled with 127 sets of initials, and Hjermstad pled guilty to the new counts in September 2025.
Legal Public Safety Education
Free entry Friday at state, Washington County parks
Washington County Parks will waive entry fees at all 10 county parks and regional trails on Friday, Nov. 28, while the Minnesota DNR will waive vehicle permits at all 73 state parks the same day. Some parks will host free programs, including a naturalist‑led hike at Wild River State Park; Dakota and Ramsey county parks do not require vehicle permits.
Local Government Environment
NWS warns of slushy Tuesday commute
The NWS warns of a slushy start to Tuesday that could affect the morning commute across southern Minnesota and the southern Twin Cities metro, with MnDOT crews monitoring roads and a west–east band most likely to see accumulation from Marshall/Redwood Falls through Mankato, Faribault and Rochester. Early reports showed light slush and slick spots east of Norwood Young America, south of Hutchinson and near Olivia, with precipitation reaching Jordan–Lakeville–Hastings and expected to shift east by mid‑ to late morning; a Winter Storm Warning for the Twin Cities from 9 p.m. Tuesday to 9 a.m. Wednesday calls for 4–8 inches and heavy snowfall rates, and officials advise avoiding nonessential travel Tuesday night through Wednesday morning.
Transit & Infrastructure Weather
RFK Jr. says he ordered CDC vaccine–autism webpage change
HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. told The New York Times he personally ordered the CDC on Nov. 19 to revise its vaccine–autism webpage to say studies have not definitively ruled out a link, while acknowledging research finding no link to thimerosal or the MMR vaccine but saying gaps remain and more study is needed. The change — which retained a “vaccines do not cause autism” line with a disclaimer noting his pledge to Sen. Bill Cassidy (who called the move “wrong” and “irresponsible”) — comes as Kennedy has pulled $500 million from vaccine development, replaced federal vaccine advisory committee members, fired the CDC director and pushed ACIP to review adjuvants and contaminants, a review HHS says ACIP is conducting independently.
Health Government/Regulatory
Bus driver rescues 4-year-old from Lake Owasso
The Ramsey County Sheriff’s Office says a nonverbal 4-year-old who wandered from home in Shoreview was saved by school bus driver Mebal Kaanyi, who jumped into Lake Owasso during her Thursday route to pull the child from neck‑deep water. Deputies and medics met them at the scene and took the child to a hospital, where he met his mother and is expected to recover; Roseville Area Schools students later honored Kaanyi for her actions.
Public Safety Education
White House starts dismantling Education Dept; most school funds shift to Labor, other agencies
The White House has begun dismantling the Education Department by signing six interagency agreements that shift most K–12 and higher‑education programs and school funding/support to the Department of Labor and other agencies (HHS, State, Interior), with adult education already moved; Education will retain policy guidance and oversight of Labor’s education work and continue to administer FAFSA, Pell Grants, federal student loans and college accreditation. Secretary Linda McMahon says the transfers won’t disrupt funding and will give states more flexibility, but officials and state leaders warn of added bureaucracy and confusion, staff retention remains unclear, and the department—hobbled by mass layoffs upheld by the Supreme Court—now sits in a limbo only Congress can resolve.
Education Local Government Government/Regulatory
USCIS to re-interview Biden-era refugees
A memo obtained by the AP shows USCIS will conduct a comprehensive review and re-interview of all refugees admitted from Jan. 20, 2021 to Feb. 20, 2025, and has immediately suspended green card approvals for those refugees. The nationwide action, signed Nov. 21 by USCIS Director Joseph Edlow, cites concerns that 'expediency' was prioritized over vetting under Biden; advocates warn the move will traumatize refugees, including many living in the Twin Cities.
Legal Local Government
DOJ proposes RealPage settlement on rent algorithm
The U.S. Department of Justice proposed a settlement with RealPage, the rent‑pricing software firm at the center of an antitrust case, that would bar the company from using real‑time, nonpublic data, training models on leases less than 12 months old, or surveying landlords for private pricing information. RealPage would also cooperate in DOJ’s ongoing lawsuit against major landlords — including four that operate in the Twin Cities — accused of using the software and shared data to inflate rents; Minneapolis previously passed an ordinance banning algorithmic rent price‑fixing.
Legal Housing
White House draft would extend ACA subsidies two years, add minimum premiums
A White House draft circulated would extend the enhanced ACA marketplace subsidies for two years, cap eligibility at 700% of the federal poverty level, and end zero‑premium plans by requiring enrollees to pay a minimum premium (reported options include 2% of income or at least $5/month). Officials say the plan isn’t final as lawmakers from both parties — with Democrats proposing different extension lengths and some Republicans signaling opposition — consider negotiations amid warnings that without action millions of enrollees nationally (and tens of thousands in Minnesota) could face steep premium hikes.
Local Government Health Business & Economy
Trump says he’ll immediately end Somali TPS; AP cites 705 affected nationwide
President Trump said he would "immediately" terminate Temporary Protected Status for Somali nationals, accusing Minnesota of being a "hub" of fraudulent money laundering and claiming Somali gangs are "terrorizing" the state; the AP cites an August report estimating just 705 Somali nationals hold TPS nationwide. Minnesota leaders, including Rep. Ilhan Omar, say the president does not have unilateral authority to end TPS or target one state, DHS Secretary Kristi Noem says any review will follow the law and apply nationwide with a required 60‑day notice, and advocates note Minnesota has more than 37,000 Somali-born residents but only a few hundred currently hold TPS.
Elections Legal Local Government
78th defendant charged in Feeding Our Future case
Federal prosecutors charged Abdirashid Bixi Dool, 36, with seven counts including wire fraud and money laundering, alleging he used two nonprofits sponsored by Feeding Our Future to claim tens of thousands of children’s meals per week at sites in Moorhead and Pelican Rapids from March 2021 to February 2022. The U.S. Attorney’s Office says the entities received more than $1.1 million based on falsified invoices and meal counts, with funds allegedly diverted to Dool, a co‑conspirator, and their families for real estate and travel; the indictment references an unnamed 'Conspirator A,' suggesting additional charges may follow.
Legal Public Safety
Bloomington sting nets 16 in minor-solicitation arrests
A Bloomington police sting dubbed "Operation Creep" netted 16 arrests on minor-solicitation allegations, with at least four people formally charged so far. Among those arrested on Nov. 13 was 41-year-old Alexander Steven Back of Robbinsdale, a civilian ICE auditor who has been federally indicted for attempted enticement of a minor and faces a Hennepin County charge of soliciting a minor for prostitution after allegedly continuing explicit texts after being told the purported victim was 17, arriving to meet her, surrendering two phones and his ICE ID, and acknowledging the incriminating messages.
Legal Public Safety
Margot Lewis sentenced to 40 years for Minneapolis murder of Liara Tsai
Margot Gerald Lewis was sentenced to 40 years in prison by Judge Paul Scoggin for the June 2024 murder of her partner, Liara Tsai, after being convicted of killing Tsai in a Minneapolis apartment and hiding her body in a car. Lewis received 517 days credit for time served and, under Minnesota’s two‑thirds rule, is projected to be eligible for release in 2051; Scoggin rebuked the "callous handling" of Tsai’s body, said a subsequent I‑90 crash appeared intended to cover tracks, and Lewis is being held at MCF–St. Cloud.
Legal Public Safety
Twin Cities sets Nov. 23 record high at 56°F
The Twin Cities hit a record high of 56°F on Nov. 23, breaking a roughly 120-year mark. The NWS says a storm will bring rain Tuesday—then change to snow late Tuesday into Wednesday (metro timeline roughly 9 a.m.–5 p.m. rain, changeover 5 p.m.–2 a.m., snow 2–9 a.m. Wed), with 1–2 inches expected in the Twin Cities (3–6 inches in central/northern MN), gusts over 40 mph possible in central Minnesota and a winter storm watch in effect for northern Minnesota and eastern North Dakota; wet roads could freeze and create travel hazards.
Environment Weather
MSP food-service strike averted with HMSHost deal
The union representing hundreds of food-service workers at Minneapolis–Saint Paul International Airport called off a threatened strike after reaching a labor agreement with HMSHost, avoiding disruptions during a busy travel week. The tentative deal means airport restaurants and concessions can continue operating without a walkout while details are finalized.
Business & Economy Transit & Infrastructure
Edina unveils draft ban on assault‑style weapons, >20‑round mags and ghost guns; delays action, will hold town hall
Edina unveiled a draft ordinance, modeled on St. Paul’s, that would ban possession, manufacture and transfer of “assault weapons,” magazines holding more than 20 rounds, ghost guns and binary triggers and would impose a firearms storage mandate, but states it would take effect only when the council passes a resolution affirming it is not preempted by state law. Council leaders put a vote on hold and will hold a public hearing/town hall after the city manager said he could not support the currently unenforceable draft and the city attorney said it cannot be enforced until state law changes, while the Minnesota Gun Owners Caucus has threatened legal action if the ban is enacted.
Local Government Public Safety Legal
Four finalists named for Minnesota appeals court
Gov. Tim Walz’s judicial selection panel recommended Stephanie Beckman, Lisa Beane, Liz Kramer and Anne Rasmusson for two upcoming Minnesota Court of Appeals vacancies, per a Nov. 24 release. The seats open upon the retirements of Judges Louise Dovre Bjorkman and Randall J. Slieter; one is an at‑large position and the other is designated for the 7th Congressional District.
Legal Local Government
Greystar settles rent‑fixing suit; Minnesota gets $483K
Minnesota’s Attorney General and eight other states filed a proposed $7 million settlement with Greystar Management Services over alleged rent‑fixing tied to RealPage’s pricing software. Greystar, which manages 31 Twin Cities apartment properties, would pay roughly $483,000 to Minnesota and accept limits on algorithmic rent‑setting, stop sharing competitively sensitive information, avoid RealPage events, and cooperate in ongoing litigation against RealPage.
Legal Housing
DHS awards $10K bonuses to MSP TSA agents
On Nov. 23 at Minneapolis–Saint Paul International Airport, DHS Secretary Kristi Noem handed out $10,000 bonus checks to several dozen TSA agents and announced a $1 billion national investment in TSA security checkpoint technology. The bonuses recognize staff who worked through the federal shutdown, and the upgrade plan includes new scanning, X‑ray and AIT equipment across U.S. airports; FAA separately said 776 air traffic controllers/technicians with perfect attendance will also receive $10,000, while DHS has not specified the total number of TSA recipients.
Transit & Infrastructure Government
Minnesota Chamber unveils growth plan as report shows GDP, tech, innovation lag
At an Economic Summit in Eagan, the Minnesota Chamber released its 2026 Business Benchmarks report and unveiled an "Economic Imperative for Growth" multiyear campaign to unite lawmakers and business leaders after finding the state's economy has fallen behind on nearly every measure of growth. The report cites about 1% per‑capita GDP growth versus 1.8% nationally, a slide in state rankings into the 30s (as low as 38th since 2019), weak tech job growth (44th in 2024), high patents per capita but poor patent growth, and warns employers that taxes, regulations and new mandates — including a paid family and medical leave program starting Jan. 1 — are deepening competitiveness concerns.
Business & Economy
Minnesota paid leave on track for Jan. 1; early applications open and 0.88% payroll tax set
Minnesota’s paid family and medical leave program remains on track to begin Jan. 1, is already accepting early parental‑bonding applications, and will be funded by a 0.88% payroll tax (employers may pass on roughly half, about 0.44%, to workers). DEED says the program — projected to serve about 130,000 people in year one at an estimated $1.6 billion cost and staffed by roughly 400 state employees — will deploy layered fraud controls (LoginMN ID verification with a live selfie, mandatory health‑care provider certification and integration of electronic health records, unemployment‑insurance data flags, analytics and random audits) and drew on lessons from other states to help preserve solvency.
Business & Economy Technology Local Government
Minneapolis police chief apologizes for comments
Minneapolis Police Chief Brian O’Hara apologized Wednesday to members of the Somali community for comments he made in a WCCO interview linking 'East African kids' to juvenile crime, saying any harm caused was not his intent while emphasizing the need to address real problems together. In a video posted by Xogmaal Media, O’Hara thanked the Somali community, reiterated his focus on youth safety, and did not retract the substance of his earlier remarks about groups coming to Dinkytown from surrounding communities; MPD did not immediately respond to a request for clarification.
Public Safety Local Government
CDC flags new H3N2 variant; flu still low
The CDC said Friday that U.S. flu activity remains low but a new H3N2 subclade (K) is now driving most infections, with early analysis suggesting current vaccines offer partial protection. With holidays approaching, experts warn vaccination rates appear soft—especially in pharmacies—after last winter’s severe season, heightening risk for Twin Cities residents despite only one state (Louisiana) at moderate activity so far.
Health
DHS adds Dec. 2 ICS payment stops; 97 affected as St. Paul tenants get eviction notices
The Minnesota Department of Human Services said it will stop Integrated Community Supports (ICS) payments on Dec. 2 to five providers covering about a dozen properties, affecting 97 participants, after investigations by the DHS inspector general found credible allegations that some providers billed for services not provided and put clients’ health and safety at risk. The suspension has prompted 60‑day and eviction notices at St. Paul’s Granite Pointe Apartments tied to Metro Care Human Services and follows an earlier halt in September that provider Jama Mahamod of American Home Health Care says led him to evict four tenants and close his business; DHS stressed that ICS service payments are separate from housing or rent.
Government/Regulatory Health Local Government
Palace Theatre sues Wrecktangle for $1.6M
The Palace Theatre’s operators have sued Wrecktangle Pizza in Hennepin County District Court, alleging the company owes more than $1.6 million on a loan tied to their short‑lived joint venture, Wrestaurant at the Palace, which opened in 2023 and closed a year later amid water damage. Wrecktangle’s response admits no payments were made but counters that the Palace failed to dissolve the joint LLC, is using joint‑owned equipment for the new Palace Pub without crediting Wrecktangle, and disputes the claims; both sides tentatively agreed to a November 2026 trial if no settlement is reached.
Legal Business & Economy
Maplewood drive-by shooter gets 6-year sentence
Ramsey County District Court sentenced Muhnee Jaleel Bailey, 24, to six years and three months after he pleaded guilty to drive-by shooting for firing a fully automatic handgun at a car in a Maplewood apartment lot on April 16, wounding a 22-year-old passenger as two nearby juveniles cowered. Prosecutors dismissed attempted murder and four firearm-possession counts under a plea agreement; surveillance video showed three rapid volleys and police recovered 18 casings, while Bailey received 175 days’ credit for time served.
Legal Public Safety
Minnesota employers must send PFML notices Dec. 1
Minnesota’s Paid Family and Medical Leave program starts Jan. 1, 2026, but employers statewide—including in the Twin Cities—must individually notify workers of their benefits and rights by Dec. 1, 2025, in each employee’s primary language, with acknowledgment. New hires must be notified within 30 days, and workplaces must display required posters; the Minnesota State Council of SHRM warns missed deadlines can trigger complaints, investigations, and penalties.
Local Government Business & Economy
Met Council opens search for transit police chief
The Metropolitan Council has opened applications for a new Metro Transit Police Department chief, with interim chief Joseph Dotseth confirming he will apply. The department cited improving safety trends — serious crime down 21% year‑over‑year and officer‑initiated calls up 129% — alongside ongoing efforts such as de‑escalation training, station upgrades and the Transit Rider Investment Program; applications close Dec. 17.
Transit & Infrastructure Public Safety Local Government
90-unit senior housing planned in Maple Grove
A developer plans a 90-unit senior housing building on a city-owned site in Maple Grove, Hennepin County, aiming to provide affordable options that help residents on fixed incomes age in place. The plan, reported Nov. 21, 2025, would add new senior housing capacity within the Twin Cities metro; further city reviews and approvals are expected as the project advances.
Housing Business & Economy
Education Dept finalizes PSLF employer ban rule; takes effect July 1, 2026
The Education Department finalized a rule, taking effect July 1, 2026, that bars employers from qualifying for Public Service Loan Forgiveness if the department finds they are substantially involved in certain alleged illegal activities—ranging from aiding or abetting illegal immigration, supporting terrorism or violence, trafficking children across state lines, or illegal discrimination, to providing gender‑affirming care (the rule defines “chemical castration” to include puberty blockers and hormone therapy for transgender youth)—with the education secretary having final authority under a preponderance‑of‑the‑evidence standard; PSLF credit earned before the effective date is preserved and disqualified employers may reapply after 10 years or sooner via an approved corrective action plan. The rule, which stems from a March executive order, has prompted multiple legal challenges from more than 20 Democratic‑led states (led by New York, Massachusetts, California and Colorado), several cities and nonprofit and advocacy groups that say the standard is vague and exceeds the department’s authority.
Legal Education
Minneapolis issues Thanksgiving cooking safety tips
The Minneapolis Fire Department, with the Minnesota State Fire Marshal, released holiday cooking safety guidance ahead of Thanksgiving, citing NFPA data that cooking is the leading cause of house fires and that 1,446 home cooking fires occurred nationwide on Thanksgiving Day 2023. Officials urge residents not to leave stovetop cooking unattended, keep combustibles away, verify smoke detectors, and, for turkey frying, never fry a frozen turkey and do it outdoors away from structures; they also outlined steps to handle small grease and oven fires.
Public Safety Local Government
St. Paul designates Hamm’s Brewery historic district
St. Paul has designated the Hamm’s Brewery campus as a local heritage preservation district, a move approved this month that positions the project to use state and federal historic tax credits and guides preservation of stairways and other key elements (with some graffiti possibly retained depending on condition). Developer JB Vang plans 86 affordable artist-style lofts and a multi-story indoor marketplace in the stock house and laboratory buildings, aims to present a site plan in early 2026 and secure financing through 2026 to begin historically sensitive construction by fall 2027, and is planning practical interventions such as overhauling glass-block windows and reusing former barrel floor openings as a central 2½‑story marketplace feature; the city and developer led a Nov. 18 walking tour for stakeholders.
Local Government Housing
Critics: SAMHSA cuts imperil overdose progress
The Trump administration has sharply reduced staffing and funding at SAMHSA — cutting $1.7 billion in state block grants, eliminating roughly $350 million for addiction/overdose prevention, and moving to fold the agency into a new structure — prompting warnings from public‑health leaders that national gains against overdose deaths could stall. HHS says it is prioritizing treatment and accountability, while a July court injunction temporarily blocked the reorganization; recent CDC‑linked data show U.S. overdose deaths down to 76,500 in the latest 12 months, with Minnesota among states seeing smaller increases in nonfatal overdoses. These federal cuts could reduce resources to Minnesota and Twin Cities providers that rely on SAMHSA grants for treatment and naloxone access.
Health Government/Regulatory
St. Paul OKs 2 a.m. service, unveils World Juniors fest
St. Paul approved temporary ordinance changes allowing bars and restaurants with liquor licenses to apply for 2 a.m. service and noise variances during the Dec. 26–Jan. 5 World Junior Hockey Championship, while launching the free Bold North Breakaway fan festival around Rice Park and Grand Casino Arena. The 10‑day downtown festival adds ice bumper cars, ‘glice’ skating, street hockey, kids’ zones, 40 indoor vendors and New Year’s Eve fireworks as the 29‑game tournament is split between St. Paul and the University of Minnesota’s 3M Arena at Mariucci.
Local Government Business & Economy
Woodbury man gets 30 years for sextorting minors
A Woodbury man was sentenced to 30 years in federal prison after prosecutors said he posed as a teenager using 66 different Snapchat aliases to coerce sexually explicit videos from minors, at times sending gruesome violent videos and hateful threats to force compliance. U.S. District Judge Jerry W. Blackwell called it a “deliberate, persistent sextortion scheme,” and authorities including the FBI, Woodbury Police and Indiana State Police investigated; under federal rules the inmate is expected to serve at least 85% of the sentence.
Legal Public Safety
77th defendant in Feeding Our Future: Minneapolis grocer Ousman Camara pleads not guilty
Ousman Camara, a Minneapolis grocer, was charged as the 77th defendant in the Feeding Our Future fraud scheme and entered a not guilty plea at his first court appearance Thursday. Prosecutors allege he used scheme proceeds to buy a north Minneapolis building and sent more than $100,000 abroad; the broader investigation has resulted in 56 guilty pleas and seven convictions so far, including Aimee Bock’s conviction on all counts.
Public Safety Legal
Judge hears closing arguments on Google ad-tech remedies
After an April ruling that parts of Google's ad‑tech business constitute an illegal monopoly, Judge Leonie Brinkema held an 11‑day remedies trial this fall and heard closing arguments Friday in Alexandria, Virginia, with a ruling expected early next year. The DOJ urged structural divestitures, calling Google a "recidivist monopolist," while Google called such remedies legally unprecedented and risky for a system that handles roughly 55 million ad requests per second, citing AI‑driven market changes as a reason for caution and DOJ witnesses warning about subtle algorithm manipulation; for context, a separate search case saw Judge Amit Mehta reject a proposed Chrome divestiture and order reforms seen as relatively lenient.
Business & Economy Legal Technology
Solventum to buy Acera Surgical for $725M
Solventum, the 3M health-care spinoff, said Friday it agreed to acquire regenerative wound care maker Acera Surgical for more than $725 million. It is Solventum’s first major deal since separating from 3M last year and signals expansion in advanced wound‑care products with potential impacts on the company’s Twin Cities operations.
Business & Economy Health
PHS West leases 91,000 sq. ft. for new HQ
Manufacturer PHS West signed a 91,000‑square‑foot lease at Brockton Business Park in Corcoran, where it will establish a new headquarters, the Minneapolis/St. Paul Business Journal reports on Nov. 21, 2025. The company said expansion needs, driven by growth in the data‑center industry, prompted the move within the Twin Cities metro.
Business & Economy Real Estate
SNAP work rules expand; USDA weighs mass ‘reapply’ review, cites standard recertification
The USDA under Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins is moving to expand SNAP work requirements to additional groups — including people ages 55–64 and some parents of 14–18‑year‑olds — and will fully enforce the three‑month time limit for adults who don’t meet work rules starting in December after a waiver was lifted in November. Rollins has said the agency plans to have all SNAP recipients reapply now that the government has reopened, citing “standard recertification processes” and further regulatory and state‑data reviews, but details for a mass reapplication of roughly 42 million beneficiaries are not yet formalized; analysts warn it could create backlogs and loss of benefits for eligible families (about 40% of recipients are children), while the CBO estimates expanded rules could reduce enrollment by about 2.4 million on average per month over 10 years.
Health Business & Economy
DOC reduces Stillwater prison population
The Minnesota DOC has reduced the population at MCF–Stillwater — now nearing half capacity as officials advance plans to close the facility in 2029 — and has been relocating inmates to other prisons. Ahead of the closure the agency is piloting "earned living units" and on a Nov. 20 tour showcased new inmate programming spaces, including an inmate-run barbershop, a licensed tattoo studio, an art studio, a greenhouse set up in an empty cell, ongoing SUD small-group therapy and a mural program, with Commissioner Paul Schnell and Warden William Bolin participating.
Public Safety Local Government
DOC pilots 'earned living units' at Stillwater
The Minnesota Department of Corrections showcased 'earned living units' inside MCF–Stillwater during a Nov. 20 media tour in Bayport, unveiling inmate‑operated spaces such as a barbershop ('Street Cuts'), a licensed tattoo studio, a greenhouse and an art studio as the facility winds down toward a 2029 closure. Commissioner Paul Schnell and Warden William Bolin said inmates are being moved to other facilities as part of the transition, with ongoing SUD therapy and creative programs continuing on site.
Public Safety Local Government
Judge orders USCIS to restore SIJS protections
A federal judge ordered U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services on Wednesday, Nov. 19, 2025, to resume considering deferred action (deportation protection) and work permits for youths with Special Immigrant Juvenile Status, after the Trump administration rescinded the 2022 program in June. The ruling by U.S. District Judge Eric Komitee requires USCIS to accept applications from new and existing SIJS designees while the lawsuit proceeds, affecting eligible immigrant youth nationwide, including in the Twin Cities.
Legal Health & Human Services
Home insurance costs spike across Minnesota
FOX 9 reports Nov. 20 that Minnesota homeowners — including in the Twin Cities — are seeing hazard insurance premiums jump as much as 40% and significant increases to wind and hail deductibles (often from $1,500 to $5,000 or to a percentage of home value), driven by severe weather losses and claims. The Minnesota Department of Commerce urges consumers to shop policies and consider weatherproofing for discounts, while State Farm says it paid out $1.30 in claims/expenses per $1 in Minnesota premiums over the past five years.
Business & Economy Housing
Jury convicts 2nd man in Coon Rapids triple murder
An Anoka County jury convicted Demetrius Trenton Shumpert, 32, of Minneapolis, on three counts of aiding and abetting first-degree murder and six other charges for a Jan. 26, 2024 home-invasion triple killing in Coon Rapids. Prosecutors said Shumpert and two accomplices posed as UPS drivers, demanded money, and fatally shot Shannon Jungwirth, her son Jorge Reyes‑Jungwirth, and her husband Mario Trejo Estrada; Shumpert will be sentenced Jan. 8, while co-defendant Alonzo Mingo is already serving life and Shumpert’s brother Omar faces trial next month.
Legal Public Safety
White House expands tariff relief to Brazilian coffee, fruit and beef
The White House said it will extend tariff relief to Brazilian imports by excluding certain products from both April’s global rollback under Executive Order 14257 and the punitive July tariffs on Brazil, covering coffee, fruit and beef as well as related items such as tea, tropical fruits and juices, cocoa, spices, bananas, oranges, tomatoes and some fertilizers. The move — framed as easing grocery-price pressures (roasted coffee and ground beef have shown large year‑over‑year CPI gains) — resolves a gap Brazil had flagged, draws industry praise, and comes as President Trump and Brazil’s President Lula negotiate further trade steps.
Government & Policy Government/Regulatory National Policy
Annunciation shooting: Minneapolis police search-warrant updates victim count to 30
A Minneapolis police search warrant updates the Aug. 27 Annunciation Church shooting victim count to 30, saying two were killed and reporting 29 victims injured by gunfire (three adults and 26 juveniles) plus one additional non‑gunfire injury, with some shrapnel wounds identified after initial triage and several victims going to hospitals on their own. Survivors including Sophia Forchas and 12‑year‑old Lydia Kaiser underwent major surgeries — including removal of part of the skull — with Forchas discharged after nearly two months; meanwhile Minnesota doctors who treated victims are calling for a special legislative session to ban assault‑style weapons and high‑capacity magazines, and suspect Kilmar Abrego Garcia continues to face federal and immigration proceedings amid judicial scrutiny of government statements.
Education Government/Regulatory Legal
Ortega to seek re‑election to Ramsey County Board
Ramsey County Board Chair Rafael Ortega said Thursday he will run for re‑election in District 5, the seat he has held since 1994. The announcement comes a day after St. Paul City Council President Rebecca Noecker told supporters she plans to run for the same seat; both represent downtown St. Paul and West Seventh, areas affected by county transit and economic‑development decisions.
Elections Local Government
Ramsey County names deputy manager, reorganizes services
Ramsey County appointed CFO Alex Kotze as deputy county manager and chief operating officer effective Dec. 1, 2025, and outlined an internal restructuring that creates an Operations Service Team and sunsets the Strategic Team and Information and Public Records Service Team as of Jan. 1. Kotze, who has overseen the county’s $870 million budget since 2020 and previously served as interim deputy for Health and Wellness, will lead strategy for property management, finance and information services as the county streamlines operations.
Local Government Business & Economy
Ramsey County drops final case against ex‑Bethel player
The Ramsey County Attorney’s Office on Monday dismissed its last remaining criminal sexual conduct case against former Bethel University football player Gideon Osamwonyi Erhabor, saying it could not prove the charge beyond a reasonable doubt. The dismissed case alleged a 2018 assault at a Roseville house party; Erhabor had already been acquitted in two separate 2018 incidents after an October 2022 jury trial and a June 2025 bench trial.
Legal Public Safety
St. Paul mayor‑elect Her names transition team
St. Paul Mayor‑elect Kaohly Vang Her announced her transition team on Nov. 20, appointing Erica Schumacher and Hnu Vang as co‑leaders to help select department heads and senior City Hall staff. The team also includes Nick Stumo‑Langer as transition advisor, Matt Wagenius as communications director/press secretary, and Bridget Hajny as scheduler/office manager; Her resigned her state House seat earlier this week following her Nov. 4 victory.
Local Government Elections
Target cuts prices on 3,000 everyday items
Target said it will reduce prices on 3,000 food and household items to boost value during the holidays and help reverse a sales slump. The company also narrowed its 2025 earnings outlook, cited continued traffic softness, and outlined a $5 billion 2026 investment plan for store remodels, new large-format locations, and supply chain/tech upgrades.
Business & Economy
Hennepin touts data showing youth diversion works
The Hennepin County Attorney’s Office and the University of Minnesota presented new juvenile justice data indicating early‑intervention diversion programs reduce reoffending and teen auto thefts. Officials said that among 127 youths who received early intervention last year, fewer than one‑third reoffended, and teen auto‑theft cases are down 58% since the county launched a youth auto‑theft initiative.
Public Safety Local Government
St. Paul OKs trash cart sharing for small multifamily
The St. Paul City Council voted 7–0 on Nov. 19 to allow tenants in duplexes, triplexes and fourplexes to share trash carts starting Jan. 1, 2026, with defined overflow penalties and potential revocation if carts repeatedly overflow. The ordinance also lets adjacent properties under the same owner request dumpster service from the city and, if unavailable, seek city‑approved private service; owners of 5+ unit buildings may opt into coordinated collection to share carts.
Local Government Utilities
Average 30-year mortgage rate ticks up to 6.22% after four-week slide
Freddie Mac said the average 30-year fixed mortgage rate rose to 6.22% from 6.17%, the first uptick after a four-week slide, while the 15-year fixed rate climbed to about 5.50%. The rise coincided with a roughly 4.09%–4.10% 10-year Treasury yield midday Thursday and comes amid mixed Fed signals — recent rate cuts but Chair Powell’s caution that a December cut isn’t guaranteed and tariff-driven inflation risks — with traders pricing roughly a 44% chance of a December cut.
Housing Business & Economy
30-year mortgage rate edges up to 6.26%
Freddie Mac said Thursday, Nov. 20, that the average U.S. 30‑year fixed mortgage rate rose to 6.26% from 6.24% a week earlier, the third straight weekly increase, while the 15‑year average rose to 5.54%. The update, which influences homebuying power in the Twin Cities, comes as the 10‑year Treasury hovered near 4.10% and markets trimmed expectations for a December Fed rate cut.
Housing Business & Economy
Waymo begins Minneapolis mapping with <10 cars, human drivers; seeks approval for autonomous rides
Waymo has begun mapping and early testing in Minneapolis with a fleet of "less than 10" Jaguar I‑PACE and Zeekr RT vehicles driven by humans, using its sixth‑generation Waymo Driver and self‑cleaning sensors tuned for snow and ice after winter‑prep testing in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula, California’s Sierra Nevada and upstate New York. The company says no permits are required for this mapping phase but will work with state and city officials as it seeks commercial approval and plans a phased expansion model like San Francisco aiming for airport and freeway connectivity, drawing support from state House transportation co-chairs and MADD Minnesota.
Technology Transit & Infrastructure
Opioid settlement funds used for K-9s, admin
A Minnesota Reformer analysis details how cities and counties spent opioid settlement dollars in 2024, including Hennepin County’s administrative hires and medical examiner costs and Minneapolis’ $500,000 grant to Turning Point. While most spending went to treatment, recovery and prevention, some counties used funds for law-enforcement K‑9 units and drug‑crime investigator salaries; overall local spending rose to more than $17 million in 2024 as settlements are set to deliver roughly $633 million to Minnesota, with 75% going directly to local governments.
Health Local Government Public Safety
St. Paul seeks 120-day pause in $22M permit-fee suit
St. Paul City Attorney Lyndsey Olson asked Ramsey County Judge Leonardo Castro on Nov. 10 for another 120-day stay in a class-action lawsuit alleging the city overcharged building-permit fees by more than $22 million from 2018–2023, citing records still not migrated to the new PAULIE system after a cyberattack. Plaintiff Patrick Bollom’s attorney, Shawn Raiter, said they would accept a partial stay while allowing other case work to proceed; a prior 120-day pause was granted in August, and a new continuance could push the case into February under the incoming mayoral administration.
Legal Local Government
Officials cite federal reimbursement cuts, mandates behind 2026 levy hikes nearing $1B
Preliminary data show Minnesota’s proposed 2026 property tax levies could rise by about $948 million statewide — up to roughly 6.9% in preliminary figures — with every county proposing increases (more than a dozen double‑digit hikes) and steep city proposals in places such as Otsego (~19%), Arden Hills (~18%) and Lino Lakes (~16%), while Hennepin County’s proposal is nearly 8%. Officials and local government groups say the pressure stems largely from federal reimbursement cuts and new mandates — including reduced SNAP and Medicaid administrative reimbursements and EMT reimbursement cuts — coupled with rising labor, materials and insurance costs; truth‑in‑taxation meetings are scheduled late November–December, final levies are due Dec. 29, and the Department of Revenue will release final totals after the February forecast.
Local Government Business & Economy
Lakeville OKs first mosque at former office
The Lakeville City Council unanimously approved establishing the city’s first mosque at the former Lakeville Area Schools district office on 210th Street near McGuire Middle School. Project leaders said staggered daily worship times and a 75‑space lot will manage parking, and supporters noted it will spare worshipers long drives to mosques in Rosemount or Burnsville despite some resident concerns about traffic and noise.
Local Government
St. Paul council president eyes Ramsey County seat
St. Paul City Council President Rebecca Noecker told key supporters she intends to run for the Ramsey County Board’s District 5 seat, which covers downtown St. Paul and adjacent neighborhoods. The seat is held by Board Chair Rafael Ortega, who hasn’t announced if he’ll seek reelection; Noecker says she will make a public announcement in December and cites priorities including economic development, housing, child care, transit and fentanyl response.
Elections Local Government
THC drink startup cofounder charged with theft
Minnesota-based Crooked Beverage Company co-founder Richard Schenk has been charged with two felony theft counts, accused of taking tens of thousands of dollars from the THC beverage startup. Court documents and co-founder Ryan Winkler say Schenk spent company funds on personal expenses (including mortgage and luxury items), allegedly faked an email to dodge a $300,000 debt to his ex-wife, resigned when confronted, and then allegedly withdrew another $48,000; the company says it remains in operation with products in hundreds of Minnesota locations and 10 states.
Legal Business & Economy Cannabis
Washington County unveils $12M emergency shelter
Washington County held a Nov. 19 ribbon cutting for its first county-run homeless shelter on the Stillwater Government Center campus, a $12 million, 30-room Emergency Housing Services Building set to open in the second week of December. The 24/7 facility offers private rooms with bathrooms (including two fully accessible rooms), on-site supports (social services, transportation, legal help, computer lab), and is designed for average 90-day stays while staff connect adults to permanent housing and jobs.
Housing Local Government
St. Paul bans cryptocurrency kiosks citywide in 6–1 vote
The St. Paul City Council adopted an ordinance Nov. 19, 2025, banning cryptocurrency kiosks citywide in a 6–1 vote. Council President Rebecca Noecker led the push after presentations on scams — councilmembers Saura Jost and Cheniqua Johnson cited concerns about at least 32 kiosks in the city and 51 scam reports totaling about $700,000 statewide — while Council Member Anika Bowie was the lone dissent, saying a ban would shift the problem to neighboring cities; a Bitcoin Depot representative spoke at the hearing but did not signal immediate legal action, though the company sued over a similar Stillwater ban.
Legal Local Government Public Safety
Starbucks Red Cup Day strike includes Minneapolis
A nationwide Starbucks strike that has indefinitely shuttered more than 65 stores in about 40 cities coincided with the company’s busy Red Cup Day after bargaining broke down in April. Two Twin Cities locations — the unionized St. Anthony store at 3704 Silverlake Rd (unionized 2022) and the unionized Chanhassen store at 190 Lake Dr (unionized 2024) — remained closed after Thursday’s walkout, and there are currently no remaining unionized St. Paul locations while employees at Seventh & Davern have petitioned the NLRB. At the St. Anthony site police arrested a man and woman after super glue and expanding foam were found in the locks and demonstrators later blocked the drive‑through; Starbucks said it was on track to meet or exceed same‑day sales, touts its wages and benefits, and accused the union of walking away from talks.
Public Safety Business & Economy Legal
Two arrested after St. Anthony Starbucks vandalism
St. Anthony police arrested a man and a woman Wednesday morning after workers found the Silver Lake Road Starbucks’ door locks filled with super glue and expanding foam, preventing opening amid an ongoing strike. The pair allegedly fled in a vehicle, were stopped and booked into the Ramsey County Adult Detention Center on suspicion of felony property damage, and police later returned when demonstrators blocked the drive‑through.
Public Safety Legal
FOF juror‑bribe defendant Ladan Ali jailed for probation violation
Court records indicate Ladan Mohamed Ali was arrested Nov. 9 and is being held in the Scott County jail after failing to appear for a probation‑violation hearing; she was ordered last week to serve 30 days in county jail after admitting to a violation. Ali previously pleaded guilty in Sept. 2024 to attempting to bribe a juror in the Feeding Our Future case and earlier received probation in a Scott County check‑forgery case.
Legal Public Safety
Trump move extends acting CFPB chief, signals shutdown
President Donald Trump nominated OMB associate director Stuart Levenbach to lead the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, a step the White House acknowledges is intended to pause the vacancies clock and keep Budget Director Russell Vought as acting CFPB chief while pursuing plans to shut the agency. The administration also said it will not draw Federal Reserve funds to operate the CFPB beyond Dec. 31, relying on a disputed legal theory, a move that could curtail federal consumer‑finance oversight for Twin Cities residents and institutions.
Government/Regulatory Business & Economy
MnDOT sets Robert Street project meetings
MnDOT will hold public meetings in St. Paul as it begins visual quality planning for the Robert Street reconstruction between Page Street and Cesar Chavez Street, part of a project to replace pavement and sidewalks and improve safety. Meetings are at Backstory Coffee Roasters, 432 Wabasha St. S., on Monday from 9–11 a.m. and Dec. 10 from noon–1 p.m.; Project Manager Chris Bower and partners will gather feedback to reduce community impacts ahead of phased construction slated for 2027–2028.
Transit & Infrastructure Local Government
Ford recalls 229,609 Broncos, Bronco Sports
Ford is recalling 229,609 U.S. vehicles — 101,002 Ford Broncos and 128,607 Bronco Sports from model years 2025–2026 — because the instrument panel may fail to display at startup, leaving drivers without critical safety information and increasing crash risk. NHTSA says owner notification letters begin Dec. 8 and dealers will install a software update at no cost; Ford reports no known injuries. Twin Cities owners can reference NHTSA recall 25V540 and contact local Ford/Lincoln dealers for repairs.
Public Safety Transportation
Target Q3 profit falls 19%, warns on holidays
Minneapolis-based Target reported third-quarter profit of $689 million, down 19% year over year, with adjusted EPS of $1.78 on $25.27 billion in sales (-1.5%). Comparable sales fell 2.7% and the company expects the sales slump to extend through the holiday season; Target also plans to invest an additional $1 billion next year to remodel and build stores (total makeover now $5 billion) and said Michael Fiddelke will succeed CEO Brian Cornell on Feb. 1.
Business & Economy
Capitol security officer pleads guilty to DWI
Cristian Orea, a Minnesota State Capitol security officer, pleaded guilty Monday in Hennepin County District Court to fourth-degree DWI tied to a July 14 incident at a Minneapolis Lake Street bar where he allegedly posed as an undercover officer. He’ll serve just under a month on house arrest and two years’ probation; the impersonating-a-peace-officer charge will be dismissed upon successful completion, prosecutors dropped third-degree DWI and carrying a pistol under the influence, and the State Patrol says he remains on paid investigatory leave.
Legal Public Safety
ICE deportation flight observed at MSP
A Minnesota Reformer reporter and photographer documented about 20 ICE detainees in shackles boarding a Key Lime Air charter on the MSP tarmac the morning of Nov. 12, 2025, as three unmarked vans delivered them under federal escort. The Metropolitan Airports Commission said federal law prevents MSP from restricting such operations and that it receives no advance notice of non‑commercial flights; one detainee described being flown to Louisiana before removal to Ecuador amid an uptick in deportations.
Public Safety Transit & Infrastructure
Mifepristone lawsuits update; new FOIA case
Amid ongoing litigation over mifepristone, HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. ordered a new FDA safety review citing a self‑published white paper funded and publicized by anti‑abortion groups, including Americans United for Life, which criticized the FDA’s approval of a new generic. Alliance Defending Freedom says it represents a Louisiana plaintiff in related litigation and expects an appeal of a recent court order, while the ACLU’s Nov. 13 FOIA suit seeks the parameters of the FDA review and the agency’s communications with outside groups.
Legal Health
MN Senate probes Twin Cities college grant cuts
A Minnesota Senate subcommittee heard testimony that federal agencies have terminated or suspended more than $50 million in higher‑education awards statewide, including 101 University of Minnesota research awards worth $33 million and five St. Catherine University grants totaling $2.4 million, with Augsburg University’s McNair Scholars program among those defunded. The hearing, held last week, examined how Trump administration policy shifts canceling or suspending awards—some tied to diversity or antiracism references—are affecting research, workforce pipelines, and first‑generation and underrepresented students at Twin Cities institutions.
Education Local Government
St. Paul man admits 2022 fatal stabbing
Maurice Angelo McClinton Smith, 42, pleaded guilty Tuesday in Ramsey County District Court to second-degree intentional murder for fatally stabbing 47-year-old Tina M. McCombs in her North End St. Paul apartment on Jan. 9, 2022. Appearing via Zoom from St. Peter Regional Treatment Center, Smith acknowledged drug and alcohol use before the attack and told his attorney he wrongly believed McCombs was his mother; sentencing is set for Feb. 13.
Legal Public Safety
State records show Savage daycare was cited for safety violations before infant's death
State inspection records show Rocking Horse Ranch Childcare in Savage had been cited for safety violations before the infant boy’s September death, and state officials have suspended the facility’s license. A Savage Police affidavit focuses on a specific employee linked to two prior medical incidents in which an infant girl vomited a "blood‑like" substance and to the infant boy, and investigators say the employee re‑created events for them. Preliminary autopsy results reportedly found no physical injuries and no common poisons; police say the final cause of death is pending, are not ruling out any possible causes, and have urged parents to closely monitor their children.
Legal Public Safety Health
MnDOT denies permit for Lift Bridge tug-of-war
MnDOT denied a permit for the annual Vikings-Packers tug-of-war on the Stillwater Lift Bridge, prompting organizer Ryan Nelson of Guv’s Place in Hudson to relocate the event to Hudson’s Old Toll Bridge. Last year’s event drew about 150 participants and raised $4,000 for first responders; organizers say the move could boost Wisconsin businesses while Stillwater’s mayor explores whether the city could assume permitting to bring it back, though MnDOT’s willingness to reconsider remains unclear.
Transit & Infrastructure Local Government
Mpls man charged in New Hope burglaries
Jonte Jamel Yates, 36, of Minneapolis, is charged in Hennepin County with one count of first‑degree burglary and four counts of second‑degree burglary tied to a string of New Hope break‑ins between Nov. 1 and 12. A court complaint says surveillance video led the Hennepin County Intelligence Unit to identify Yates; he was arrested after a pursuit, and a search recovered items resembling those seen in the footage, with phone data placing him near the scenes. The complaint notes Yates previously admitted in an earlier case to targeting Hispanic residents, believing they were less likely to report crimes.
Public Safety Legal
DOJ sues Minnesota for full voter rolls
The Department of Justice has sued Minnesota Secretary of State Steve Simon, demanding the state's voter registration records as part of a coordinated set of lawsuits against six states within a broader push that included data requests to about 40 states. Ten Democratic secretaries of state, including Simon, have asked DOJ and DHS for details and security assurances after learning DOJ shared state rolls with DHS to run citizenship checks through the SAVE system despite earlier assurances the data would be used only to assess HAVA/NVRA compliance and amid contradictory statements from federal officials.
Legal Elections
Honda recalls 256K Accord Hybrids for power-loss risk
Honda is recalling 256,603 Accord Hybrids from model years 2023–2025 nationwide because a software error can reset the integrated control module CPU while driving, potentially causing a sudden loss of drive power, according to NHTSA filings on Nov. 18, 2025. Dealers will reprogram the software free; owner letters are slated for Jan. 5, and Honda reports 832 warranty claims and no injuries to date. Twin Cities owners can verify VINs on NHTSA’s recall site or Honda’s lookup and call 1-888-234-2138 for assistance.
Public Safety Technology
Mohamud Bulle sentenced to 19.5 years for 2013 Minneapolis park rape after DNA backlog testing
Mohamud Bulle, 36, was sentenced to 235 months (19.5 years) — 187 months for first‑degree criminal sexual conduct and 48 months for kidnapping, to run consecutively — after a jury convicted him in the Oct. 13, 2013 rape of Melissa Zimmerman in a Minneapolis park. The case was solved after the BCA tested a 2013 sexual‑assault kit in 2020 under the federal SAKI backlog program, producing a DNA profile that linked to another case in May 2024 and to Bulle in October 2024 when his DNA was obtained in an unrelated matter; Hennepin County Attorney Mary Moriarty apologized for earlier delays, and Bulle, who received a separate 36‑month sentence in 2025, is incarcerated at MCF–Rush City with a projected release in March 2038 (248 days credit).
Legal Public Safety
Judge OKs Purdue deal; Sacklers to pay $7B
A U.S. Bankruptcy Court judge said he will issue his reasoning Tuesday for approving Purdue Pharma’s nationwide opioid settlement, which includes up to $7 billion from the Sackler family over 15 years and creates a successor company, Knoa Pharma, overseen by a state‑appointed board. The plan directs most funds to governments for opioid abatement and reserves about $850 million for individual victims, with eligible OxyContin patients and survivors slated to receive payments as soon as next year; those who opt out may still sue Sackler family members.
Legal Health
Medica to acquire UCare’s 2026 Medicaid and individual plans; ~300,000 members transition in MN/WI
Medica, the Minnetonka-based insurer, will acquire all of UCare’s 2026 Medicaid and individual/family plans, absorbing roughly 300,000 members in Minnesota and western Wisconsin — the bulk of UCare’s business — in a transaction expected to close in Q1 2026 pending regulatory approvals, with financial terms undisclosed. Both CEOs say services will continue without interruption, MNsure says exchange coverage and costs won’t change for 2026 and is coordinating the transition, and Senate Commerce Chair Sen. Matt Klein will monitor impacts on consumer choice and access; UCare had earlier ended its Medicare Advantage contracts as its board explored options.
Health Business & Economy
White Bear Lake father gets 128 months for infant’s death
Mark Russell Forster, 40, of White Bear Lake, was sentenced Monday to 128 months in prison in Ramsey County District Court after entering a Norgaard plea to second‑degree unintentional murder in the March 2024 death of his 8‑week‑old son, Jackson Dallas Forster. Prosecutors said medical findings showed injuries consistent with abusive head trauma; Forster received 460 days’ credit for time served and the negotiated term falls at the low end of state guidelines.
Legal Public Safety
St. Paul hit-and-run: Michael Kentrell Smith charged with vehicular homicide in death of Amber Deneen
Michael Kentrell Smith, 39, was arrested and charged with vehicular homicide in Ramsey County after a hit-and-run on St. Anthony Avenue that killed 30-year-old Amber O. Deneen and her two dogs; police allege Smith slowed but did not stop at a stop sign before striking Deneen and witnesses say they followed and honked at the dark-colored SUV as it fled. Surveillance video shows the SUV at a nearby Speedway inspecting the front passenger tire, Smith told officers he thought he hit bike-lane cones and later said, “I don’t remember hitting nobody,” and his first court appearance is set for Tuesday while neighbors plan a memorial and police increase local speed enforcement.
Legal Public Safety Transit & Infrastructure
Walz sets Jan. 27 specials for HD64A, HD47A
Gov. Tim Walz called special elections for Jan. 27, 2026 in House District 64A (St. Paul) and House District 47A (Woodbury/south Maplewood) to fill vacancies created by Rep. Kaohly Vang Her’s resignation to become St. Paul mayor and Rep. Amanda Hemmingsen‑Jaeger’s move to the Senate. Special primaries are scheduled for Dec. 16 if needed; outcomes are expected to restore the 67–67 tie in the Minnesota House before the 2026 session begins Feb. 17.
Elections Local Government
Metro Transit settles bus–skateboarder suit for $500K
Metro Transit agreed to pay $500,000 — the maximum allowed under Minnesota’s liability cap for government entities — to Bradley Legrid, who was run over by a bus while riding a motorized skateboard in the crosswalk at Lake Street and Hennepin Avenue in Minneapolis. Legrid suffered severe injuries, and his attorney criticized the state cap as incentivizing agencies to delay settlements; Metro Transit declined to comment on the case’s details.
Legal Transit & Infrastructure
Sen. Steve Cwodzinski to retire in 2026
Sen. Steve Cwodzinski announced he will retire and will not seek reelection in 2026. In a statement thanking constituents in Eden Prairie and Minnetonka, he invoked the Constitution’s “more perfect union” language, and his Senate District 49 is forecast to significantly favor the DFL in 2026.
Local Government Elections
Rep. Sandra Feist to retire after term
Rep. Sandra Feist said she will not seek reelection in 2026 and plans to pivot back to immigration work after her term. Feist represents HD 39B, which covers parts of Hennepin, Ramsey and Anoka counties and is considered a safe DFL seat, and her legislative record includes authoring the North Star Act (a sanctuary-state proposal) and notable positions on a menstrual-products bill.
Local Government Elections
Wayzata sets April 14, 2026 special election; $465M bonds plus separate $31M pool question on ballot
The Wayzata School Board voted 6–1 on Nov. 10, 2025, to hold a special election April 14, 2026, with three ballot questions: an extension of the tech levy, $465 million in general obligation bonds for new schools and upgrades, and a separate $31 million GO bond for an eight‑lane pool with a diving well at Wayzata High School (contingent on passage of the second question) that would be permitted for community use. The district—enrollment topped 13,000 and is projected to exceed capacity at every grade level by 2027–28—has submitted the proposal to the Minnesota Department of Education for approval; Director Valentina Eyres cast the lone no vote questioning the pool and the April special election, and Superintendent Dr. Chace Anderson plans to retire at the end of the 2025–26 school year.
Local Government Elections Education
Bird flu drives MN turkey losses, prices higher
A Chicago Tribune/Pioneer Press report says Minnesota has accounted for over a third of recent U.S. bird‑flu turkey cases, with more than 716,000 commercial turkeys affected since August and over 1 million since the start of 2025, contributing to higher wholesale and fresh‑bird prices ahead of Thanksgiving. Experts note national turkey production is down nearly 10% year over year, labor costs are up, and fresh birds are most affected while frozen supplies are less impacted; officials expect the fall surge to ease but warn spring migration could renew risks and breeder‑hen losses may tighten supply into 2026.
Health Business & Economy
U-Haul chase ends in St. Paul arrest
The Chisago County Sheriff’s Office says a U-Haul van fled a traffic stop near Stacy on Sunday night for lane violations and no plates, leading to a multi-agency pursuit that ended in St. Paul when the driver ran and was arrested. Authorities attempted stop sticks multiple times; the driver, who had an outstanding warrant, was booked into the Chisago County Jail for fleeing, warrants, and traffic violations, with additional charges under review.
Public Safety Legal
South St. Paul woman critically hurt in hit-and-run
South St. Paul police say a woman was found early Monday with life-threatening injuries consistent with being struck and/or dragged by a vehicle. Chief Brian Wicke said police believe the driver and victim knew each other; the driver fled before officers arrived, the vehicle was later found, and no arrests had been made as of Monday morning. Investigators are canvassing the area and ask anyone with information to call 651-413-8300.
Public Safety Legal
St. Paul foundations launch $23M housing initiative
The St. Paul & Minnesota Foundation, with the F.R. Bigelow and Mardag foundations, announced a five‑year, $20 million “Our Home State” initiative on Nov. 17 to expand access to safe, stable and affordable housing across Minnesota; St. Paul–based Ecolab added $3 million, bringing the total to $23 million. Early investments will focus on eviction prevention, shelter capacity, affordable housing production and policy/narrative work, with leaders emphasizing support for community‑led solutions that include the Twin Cities.
Housing Business & Economy
Novo cuts Wegovy list price to $349
Novo Nordisk said Monday it reduced the list price for higher-dose Wegovy to $349/month (from $499) for cash‑paying patients and launched a temporary $199/month offer for the first two months of low‑dose Wegovy and Ozempic, aligning with a recent federal drug‑pricing framework. The price changes apply nationwide via pharmacies, home delivery and some telemedicine providers; clinicians and surveys still cite affordability challenges for patients without insurance.
Health Business & Economy
St. Paul eases mixed‑use zoning, launches corridor study
The St. Paul City Council voted 7–0 on Wednesday to simplify and update standards in its T1–T4 'Traditional Neighborhood' zoning districts—aimed at encouraging pedestrian‑oriented, mixed‑use development—and immediately launched a follow‑up study to consider expanding T zoning along transit corridors. Changes include new corner parking setbacks, strengthened street‑level frontage requirements, floor‑area bonuses tied to affordable units, and clarification of height allowances; the Planning Commission recommended approval 12–0 on Sept. 5 and the council held a public hearing Nov. 5.
Local Government Housing
MnDOT to brief Hastings U.S. 61 rebuild Tuesday
MnDOT will hold a public meeting at 5 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 18, at Hastings City Hall to outline a $30–$40 million reconstruction of U.S. 61 between just north of 3rd Street and just south of 36th Street. Plans include roundabouts at MN 316 and 36th Street, a new signal at 18th Street, new sidewalks and ADA ramps, and replacement of the historic Todd Field wall to meet safety standards, with construction slated for fall 2027 through spring 2029 (most work in 2028). Funding comes from the Metropolitan Council’s Regional Solicitation and MnDOT’s Transportation Economic Development program.
Transit & Infrastructure Local Government
Wrong-way crash on Hwy 169 kills Shakopee woman
A Pontiac Grand Am traveling south in the northbound lanes of Highway 169 in Bloomington collided with a Hyundai Sonata near Anderson Lakes Parkway just before 10 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 15, pushing the Hyundai into a Ford F-150. The Pontiac’s driver, 29-year-old Jasmine Jayde Nanclares of Shakopee, died at the scene; the Hyundai driver suffered non-life-threatening injuries and those in the F-150 were unhurt. The Minnesota State Patrol is investigating and said seat belt use and alcohol remain unknown.
Public Safety Transit & Infrastructure
Man shot at Maple Grove Benihana, suspect flees
Maple Grove police say a 33-year-old man was shot in the groin during an altercation with another man at the Benihana on Fountains Drive around 4:30 p.m. Friday. The victim was hospitalized with a non-life-threatening injury, and the suspect fled in a vehicle; investigators believe the incident was not random and ask anyone with information to call 763-494-6100.
Public Safety Legal
Shakopee shooting critically injures 40-year-old man
Shakopee police say a 40-year-old man was found with multiple gunshot wounds around 3:13 a.m. Saturday, Nov. 15, on Grove Drive and was hospitalized in critical condition. Investigators believe the shooting was not random and report no ongoing danger to the area; no arrests or suspect information have been released.
Public Safety
St. Paul police adopt first AI-use policy
The St. Paul Police Department has implemented its first policy governing artificial intelligence, currently limiting use to automated transcription of interviews, and says it has no short‑term plan to adopt Axon’s Draft One report‑writing tool. Neighboring agencies differ: Eagan police use Draft One for non‑felonies (accepted by the Eagan City Attorney), while Hennepin and Dakota county attorneys won’t accept Draft One reports and Ramsey County requires notice when AI tools are used in investigations; civil oversight members and the ACLU of Minnesota are urging public input and guardrails.
Local Government Public Safety Technology
Congress passes shutdown bill with 0.4 mg hemp‑THC cap; 1‑year phase‑in alarms MN beverage industry
Congress has passed a stopgap funding bill that includes a national cap of 0.4 mg hemp‑derived THC per container, taking effect in one year and overriding higher state per‑serving limits (Minnesota currently allows ~5 mg), a measure pushed to close a 2018 Farm Bill looph and intended to block unregulated intoxicating hemp products. Minnesota brewers, retailers and hemp beverage makers warn the cap would effectively ban most THC edibles and drinks and devastate a roughly $140–200 million local market — though regulators say licensing and oversight remain unchanged until the cap’s effective date and industry groups urge business as usual in the interim.
Legal & Regulatory Local Government Business & Economy
Disney, YouTube TV end blackout, restore channels
Disney and YouTube TV reached a new carriage agreement that ended a blackout that began the night of Oct. 30 and lasted just over two weeks, with ABC, ESPN and other Disney‑owned channels including NatGeo, FX, Freeform, the SEC Network and ACC Network restored over the course of Nov. 14, the companies said. The sides traded public accusations during negotiations — Disney executives Alan Bergman, Dana Walden and Jimmy Pitaro said YouTube TV refused fair rates and was leveraging its dominance, while YouTube TV said Disney's terms were costly and would reduce consumer choice — after a prior 2021 disruption that lasted less than two days.
Business & Economy Technology
Twin Cities hits 72°F, latest‑season record warmth; fall likely top‑10 warmest
The Twin Cities reached 72°F Friday — the warmest temperature ever recorded this late in the season in records back to 1872 — while St. Cloud tied its daily high at 68°F. State climatologist says autumn 2025 is likely to rank among Minnesota’s top-10 warmest seasons and nearly 63% of the state is abnormally dry or in drought, though a weak cold front should bring temperatures closer to normal in the coming days.
Weather Environment
Couple pleads guilty in Twin Cities Lululemon thefts
A Connecticut couple, Jadion Anthony Richards, 45, and Akwele Nickeisha Lawes‑Richards, 46, pleaded guilty in Ramsey County District Court on Nov. 14 to one felony count each of organized retail theft in a global deal covering Ramsey and Hennepin charges tied to Lululemon thefts in Roseville, Edina, Minneapolis and Minnetonka. The case marks Ramsey County’s first convictions under Minnesota’s 2023 organized retail theft law; police previously recovered over $50,000 in stolen merchandise from a JW Marriott Mall of America hotel room after a Nov. 14, 2024 Roseville theft, and sentencing with restitution is set for Jan. 30, with stayed prison terms and probation expected.
Legal Public Safety
DNA IDs mother in 1983 Blaine infant case
Forensic DNA analysis by Othram has identified the mother of the newborn found in 1983 on Main Street between MN 65 and Radisson Road in Blaine, confirming the infant as "Rachel Marie Doe." The mother told investigators she gave birth alone at home, found the baby unresponsive and believed it was stillborn before leaving the infant roadside; a community funeral was held in 1983 and the child was buried in a local church cemetery, authorities say the Midwest Medical Examiner’s re-examination could not determine live birth and relatives, including the father, were reportedly unaware of the pregnancy.
Legal Public Safety
St. Paul death after Westminster St. assault
St. Paul police say a man died Friday after officers responding about 11:40 a.m. to an assault at an apartment complex on the 1500 block of Westminster Street found him with lacerations to his back and head. A woman who reported the assault was taken to Regions Hospital with non-life-threatening injuries; no arrests have been made, police say there is no ongoing public threat, and the Ramsey County Medical Examiner will identify the man and determine cause of death.
Public Safety
Fridley man charged with criminal vehicular homicide in I-94 Dale St. crash that killed St. Paul driver
Musab Ibrahim Kosar, 22, of Fridley, has been charged with criminal vehicular homicide after his Tesla sped off I‑94, exited at Dale Street with its headlights reportedly turned off, and struck a Toyota RAV4 at Dale and Rondo Avenue in St. Paul, killing 31‑year‑old St. Paul baker Benjamin Michael Villano. A state trooper who followed the Tesla clocked it at 84 mph and later over 100 mph but did not activate lights or sirens before the crash; Kosar and a 19‑year‑old passenger were hospitalized with serious injuries. The passenger, who suffered fractures and a dislocated hip, told investigators she had asked Kosar to stop speeding and that they had broken up earlier that day, and the criminal complaint alleges Kosar’s operation was “grossly negligent.”
Transit & Infrastructure Legal Public Safety
FDA adds boxed warning to Duchenne gene therapy
The FDA on Nov. 14 added a boxed warning to Sarepta Therapeutics’ Elevidys gene therapy for Duchenne muscular dystrophy after two patient deaths and limited its approved use to ambulatory patients age 4 and older. New labeling also recommends weekly liver‑function monitoring for the first three months post‑infusion and other precautions, affecting how Twin Cities providers prescribe and monitor the one‑time treatment.
Health Government/Regulatory
Leaked DHS emails flag 2022 grant draw risk
Internal Minnesota DHS messages from December 2022 show CFO Dave Greeman warning of a 'critical' situation with behavioral‑health grants and a narrow window to draw federal funds, saying 'we can’t continue to miss federal draws' and citing potential taxpayer exposure of 'hundreds of thousands or even millions.' DHS told Alpha News it is not aware of any missed federal draws, attributing late-year concerns to grantee underspending and noting invoices submitted after award expiration could not be paid with federal dollars.
Local Government Health
Court blocks federal immigrant CDL restrictions
The D.C. Circuit on Thursday stayed U.S. DOT’s new rule that would have limited commercial driver’s licenses for noncitizens to holders of H‑2A, H‑2B or E‑2 visas, finding the agency skipped proper procedure and failed to justify safety benefits. The rule—spurred by several fatal crashes—would have required immigration‑status checks and cut eligibility to roughly 10,000 of 200,000 noncitizen CDL holders; California this week revoked 17,000 CDLs amid audits tied to the issue. The stay halts enforcement nationwide, preserving current licensing standards while litigation proceeds.
Legal Transit & Infrastructure
I-494 weekend closure from Hwy 77 to Hwy 100
MnDOT will close westbound I-494 between Highway 77 (Cedar Ave.) and Highway 100 from 10 p.m. Friday, Nov. 14, through the weekend for winter prep work; eastbound I-494 will also close Saturday night for utility work, with detours via Hwy 77, Hwy 62 and Hwy 100. The agency says lanes will reopen by Monday morning weather permitting, and the I-494 ramps at Nicollet Ave. and 12th Ave. will be permanently closed by the end of the year for bridge construction.
Transit & Infrastructure Local Government
Mounds View High teacher Ted Bennett resigns; judge sets $75K bail in sex‑crimes case
Ted Bennett, a 58-year-old longtime English teacher at Mounds View High School, resigned this week after being arrested and charged with third- and fourth-degree criminal sexual conduct involving a minor student; the school board accepted his resignation. Authorities allege he provided the student alcohol and Adderall, exchanged explicit messages, and had sexual contact on multiple occasions — including in vehicles and a school theater storage area — and he was arrested at his home, held in Ramsey County Jail with bail set at $75,000 and ordered to stay away from the victim; investigators say there may be additional victims and have opened a tip line.
Public Safety Education Legal
Marine on St. Croix getting first cell tower
Marine on St. Croix is installing a 180‑foot cellular tower on city‑owned land near its compost site and septic drainfield, officials said November 13, 2025. AT&T will be the core tenant, other carriers may co‑locate, and the city will receive $22,000 per year for the land lease; the site lies outside the St. Croix National Scenic Riverway boundary and is intended to improve public safety communications on the river and in town.
Utilities Public Safety
Judge weighs new-trial motion on Wiggins’ sentencing day in Monique Baugh case
A Hennepin County jury on Nov. 3, 2025 found Lyndon Akeem Wiggins guilty on four counts, including aiding and abetting first‑degree premeditated murder, with sentencing set for Nov. 13 after a jury of six women and six men returned the verdict following about six hours of deliberation. On the day of sentencing Wiggins’ attorney filed a 13‑page motion seeking a third retrial, alleging cumulative due‑process violations — including witness warnings, refusal to revisit CSLI suppression, emotional outbursts by the victim’s mother, and an unresolved recusal motion — which Judge Kappelhoff took under advisement amid sharp criticism from prosecutors and the victim’s family.
Legal Public Safety
Macalester senior dies after off‑campus fall
Macalester College senior Binta Maina, 21, died after accidentally falling down a flight of stairs at an off‑campus residence in St. Paul’s Snelling‑Hamline neighborhood late Sunday, according to St. Paul police. Officers responded just before 11:30 p.m. to the 1500 block of Hague Ave.; medics transported Maina to a hospital, and the college said the community is “heartbroken” by the loss.
Public Safety Education
MLS shifts to July–May season; Apple changes access
MLS owners voted Nov. 13 to move to a late‑summer‑to‑spring calendar starting in 2027, aligning with international leagues and adding a long winter break—changes that will affect Minnesota United’s home schedule at Allianz Field. Separately, Apple said all MLS matches will be available to Apple TV subscribers without the separate Season Pass starting in 2026, changing how Twin Cities fans access broadcasts.
Business & Economy Technology
Woodbury son charged in father's neglect death
Washington County has charged Michael Cornelius Dailey, 51, of Woodbury with criminal neglect after charging documents allege he mismanaged the care of his 80-year-old father, a vulnerable adult, who died April 28, 2025 following hypoglycemia from a severe insulin overdose. The complaint cites multiple recent hospitalizations tied to uncontrolled Type 2 diabetes, malnutrition concerns, a recommended facility placement Dailey allegedly refused, and an October 2024 incident where home health services were rejected.
Legal Public Safety
Ryan Winkler launches bid for HD 43B
Former MN House Majority Leader Ryan Winkler announced he is running for House District 43B, which covers Golden Valley, Robbinsdale and a small part of Plymouth. The open seat follows DFL Rep. Mike Freiberg’s run for the Minnesota Senate; Winkler joins state tax auditor and former Robbinsdale school board member Sam Sant in the DFL field ahead of the August primary.
Elections Local Government
IRS raises 401(k), IRA limits for 2026
The IRS announced on Nov. 13, 2025, that the maximum employee contribution to 401(k), 403(b) and most 457 plans will rise to $24,500 in 2026, with the age‑50 catch‑up increasing to $8,000. The agency also set the 2026 IRA limit at $7,500 and the IRA catch‑up at $1,100, while keeping the special age 60–63 catch‑up at $11,250. The nationwide changes directly affect Twin Cities workers and retirees saving in tax‑advantaged plans.
Business & Economy Government/Regulatory
AT&T $177M breach settlement sets Dec. 18 deadline
AT&T agreed to a $177 million settlement over two data breaches disclosed in 2024, and impacted customers — including those in the Twin Cities — have until Dec. 18, 2025 to file claims. The deal, reached in U.S. District Court in Texas, covers a dark‑web leak of data from 2019 or earlier affecting about 7.6 million current and 65.4 million former account holders, and a separate breach of 2022 call/text records; payments of up to $5,000 or $2,500 are available depending on documented losses, with final court approval set for Jan. 15, 2026.
Legal Technology
Metro Transit to increase winter officer presence
Metro Transit will boost uniformed security across nearly every light‑rail route this winter, deploying agency police, community service officers, transit ambassadors and contract security beginning this weekend. Officials say serious crime has fallen but minor offenses such as drug use and vandalism have remained steady, driving rider safety concerns.
Public Safety Transit & Infrastructure
Hennepin, metro cities boost food aid amid SNAP delays
Hennepin County and other Twin Cities cities and counties have stepped in to fund emergency food aid after SNAP payments were delayed during the federal shutdown. With the shutdown over, states are transitioning from partial or paused SNAP payments to full November benefits — USDA guidance says most states can access funds within 24 hours but beneficiaries may see staggered deposits spread over several days up to about a week, so local aid remains important in the short term.
Local Government Health Government/Regulatory
St. Paul passes contingent assault‑weapons ban; gun‑rights group files lawsuit
St. Paul’s City Council unanimously approved a contingent ordinance (7–0) that would ban public possession of assault‑style firearms, magazines holding more than 20 rounds and binary triggers, require serial numbers to curb ghost guns, and bar guns in most city‑owned spaces — but the law is written to take effect only if state firearm preemption is repealed, amended or judicially invalidated. The Minnesota Gun Owners Caucus immediately sued in Ramsey County, calling the measure unlawful, while the city attorney says St. Paul is prepared to defend the contingent approach amid the broader push by about 17 Minnesota cities and significant public comment (including over 700 “vote no” emails).
Public Safety Legal Local Government
St. Paul offers $2,500 eviction-prevention aid
St. Paul opened applications for its Emergency Rental Assistance and Eviction Prevention Program, offering one-time grants up to $2,500 to low‑income tenants facing eviction, effective Nov. 13, 2025. Funded with $1 million in the 2025 city budget, the program requires landlords to agree not to evict aided tenants and limits eligibility to households at or below 80% AMI with proof of a pending eviction; the City Council is exploring funding in 2026.
Housing Local Government
Xcel proposes $430M distributed battery network
Xcel Energy filed with the Minnesota Public Utilities Commission to recover costs for a new distributed battery program, Capacity*Connect, that would deploy dozens of 1–3 MW batteries at commercial sites statewide and scale to 50–200 MW by 2028, forming a utility‑controlled virtual power plant. Xcel says the plan will bolster reliability and help meet the 2040 carbon‑free mandate while shifting purchases to lower‑cost periods, but watchdogs question the value for ratepayers and note Xcel’s Colorado virtual power plant is far cheaper per megawatt and includes broader customer‑side resources.
Utilities Energy
Judge grants TRO barring encampments on Sabri Minneapolis properties
A Hennepin County judge on Tuesday granted a temporary restraining order barring homeless encampments on any Minneapolis properties owned by Hamoudi Sabri after negotiations between Sabri and the city broke down and following a Sept. 16 mass shooting near E. Lake St. that injured seven people. Mayor Jacob Frey said the TRO lets the city close encampments once services and shelter are offered; city crews cleared the site, estimate the cleanup cost about $50,000 and may seek reimbursement, and police have increased patrols and placed fencing around the area. Sabri says he plans to convert the cleared lot into a "hygiene and outreach hub," has not obtained required permits, faces possible citations if he violates the order, and is weighing further legal action while criticizing the city's homelessness response.
Housing Public Safety Legal
Hospitals join suit alleging insurer price fixing
A coalition of hospitals and health systems has joined or expanded a federal lawsuit alleging a cartel-like scheme to depress out‑of‑network reimbursements, describing a third‑party repricing firm as a 'mafia enforcer' working for major insurers including Minnetonka‑based UnitedHealth Group. The case accuses the parties of antitrust violations that harmed providers and patients by fixing prices below competitive levels; Twin Cities impact stems from UHG’s role and potential effects on local health systems and consumers.
Legal Health Business & Economy
Walz orders veteran food pantry network
Gov. Tim Walz issued a Veterans Day executive order directing the Minnesota Department of Veterans Affairs to create a statewide Veteran Food Pantry Network and authorizing the agency to use existing resources, partner with nonprofits and private entities, and accept donations. The move aims to reduce food insecurity among Minnesota’s 296,000 veterans — including many in the Twin Cities — amid data showing 13% of veterans in VA care are food insecure and roughly 12,000 Minnesota veterans use SNAP.
Local Government Health
Parents plan suit in Stillwater AI child-porn case
Parents are threatening to sue the Stillwater School District after former employee William Haslach was accused of producing AI child pornography, and the district now acknowledges some victims are Stillwater students. Facing scrutiny, the district has implemented new rules—no personal cell phones around students, photos only pre‑approved and taken on district devices, and mandatory sexual‑exploitation training—while attorney Imran Ali has launched a civil investigation citing outdated policies, training gaps and poor communication.
Education Public Safety Legal
Stillwater schools weigh boundary changes
Stillwater Area Public Schools outlined three attendance-boundary scenarios to prepare for new Lake Elmo and Bayport elementary schools opening next fall, with scenarios affecting either 135 or 39 students. An open house is set for 6 p.m. Thursday at Oak-Land Middle School, a School Board study session is Dec. 2, and a final decision is expected Dec. 16; the district also listed the current Lake Elmo Elementary for $5 million and plans to consolidate central services into the current Andersen Elementary building in Bayport.
Education Local Government
Fridley teen sentenced to life with parole eligibility in 15 years for ex’s murder
A jury convicted 19-year-old Fenan Abdurezak Uso of Fridley of fatally shooting his ex-girlfriend Jayden Kline, and Judge Jenny Walker Jasper imposed a mandatory life sentence with parole eligibility after 15 years under a 2023 law for juveniles certified as adults. Prosecutors say Uso bought a stolen handgun the night before and planned the Dec. 21, 2023 shooting outside Kline’s Fridley home (captured in neighbor doorbell video showing a gold minivan); Kline died at North Memorial Hospital, Uso was initially charged by juvenile petition and later indicted for first-degree murder in July 2024, and Kline’s mother and brothers delivered victim impact statements at sentencing.
Legal Public Safety
CBP building $15.6M facility at Holman Field
The Metropolitan Airports Commission says a 4,800‑sq‑ft U.S. Customs and Border Protection facility at St. Paul’s Holman Field received a city building permit on Nov. 4, replacing a small in‑building CBP site to better process international charter passengers and cargo. The project, funded with federal/state grants and General Airport Revenue bonds, will handle 100–150 international flights per year and feature LEED Gold design with geothermal, solar, and a green roof.
Transit & Infrastructure Local Government
U.S. Mint strikes final penny Wednesday
The U.S. Mint in Philadelphia will press the final penny Wednesday, and U.S. Treasurer Brandon Beach said those last coins will be auctioned. Each penny costs roughly four cents to make, and the Treasury estimates ending production will save about $56 million a year in materials, even as tens of billions of pennies remain in circulation and banks and retailers may round cash transactions to the nearest five cents.
Business & Economy Government/Regulatory
Washington County plans Ideal Avenue upgrades
Washington County announced an Ideal Avenue (County Road 13) improvement project between Stillwater Blvd and 34th St N on the Oakdale–Lake Elmo border, adding wider shoulders, turn lanes, and better pedestrian/bike facilities, drainage, and capacity. An open house is set for 4–6 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 19, at the Oakdale Discovery Center, with online feedback accepted Nov. 19–Dec. 10; the $7.8 million project is slated to start in spring 2029 and will be funded by the county’s transportation sales tax, the Minnesota Transportation Advancement Account, and the cities of Lake Elmo and Oakdale.
Transit & Infrastructure Local Government
Prosecutors turn over 130,000 pages in Boelter case; next hearing Feb. 12
Prosecutors have provided substantially all discovery in the case against Vance Boelter — more than 130,000 PDF pages as part of roughly 9 terabytes of material that the defense says includes about 800–825 hours of audio/video, roughly 2,000 photos and thousands of documents, though some lab reports remain pending. Magistrate Judge Dulce Foster set the next status conference for Feb. 12 and requested updates on the DOJ’s undecided death‑penalty decision (which federal prosecutor Harry Jacobs said rests with AG Pam Bondi), while defense counsel Manny Atwal said downloading and reviewing the evidence — slowed by a federal shutdown and some 110 hours of work already — could push trial scheduling out at least six months.
Legal Public Safety
Police unions condemn $10K bail in deputy assault
Minnesota’s two largest police organizations criticized a judge’s decision to allow a $10,000 conditional bail for Robert J. Kozicky, 41, charged with first-degree burglary, third-degree assault, and fourth-degree assault of a peace officer after a Nov. 6 incident in Ham Lake where a deputy was violently attacked. Prosecutors sought $150,000 unconditional or $75,000 conditional bail, but Judge Jennifer Peterson set $75,000 unconditional or $10,000 with conditions; Kozicky was arrested Nov. 7 and released Nov. 9, and unions MPPOA and LELS are calling for a review citing the deputy’s concussion and head laceration.
Public Safety Legal
Visa, Mastercard propose card-acceptance changes
Visa and Mastercard proposed a national class‑action settlement that would let merchants refuse higher‑tier rewards cards or add surcharges to cover their higher fees, a shift from the networks’ long‑standing “honor all cards” rule. The deal also includes a temporary 10‑basis‑point cut to swipe fees for five years and sets standard transactions at 1.25% for eight years; major retail groups oppose the proposal, which still requires court approval, meaning Twin Cities shoppers with premium rewards cards could eventually see declines or surcharges at checkout if it’s finalized.
Business & Economy Legal
Centerspace reviews options, sells Minneapolis portfolio for $76M
Minot-based apartment REIT Centerspace said Wednesday its board has begun a review of strategic alternatives that could include a sale or merger, and separately announced it sold its Minneapolis-area portfolio for $76 million, including properties in Minneapolis and New Hope. The moves signal a potential change in ownership and strategy affecting Twin Cities multifamily real estate.
Business & Economy Housing
MSP airport retail unit spins off, new CEO
The Minneapolis–St. Paul International Airport retail operations of St. Paul-based Airport Retail Group are being split into a standalone business, with investor Megan Bender buying a stake and becoming CEO. The new entity plans to nearly double sales, including by opening a new travel convenience store in MSP’s Terminal 2.
Business & Economy Transit & Infrastructure
Judge weighs Planned Parenthood Medicaid cutoff
A federal judge will hear arguments Wednesday on whether a July federal law ending Medicaid reimbursements to providers that both offer abortions and receive over $800,000 in Medicaid funds should remain in effect during ongoing lawsuits. Planned Parenthood says an appeals court allowed the law to take effect in September, costing the organization $45 million that month as clinics covered Medicaid care out of pocket, and warns of closures and reduced access; seven states have temporarily backfilled some funding, but Minnesota is not among them. The case was brought by Planned Parenthood and affiliates in Massachusetts and Utah and a Maine provider against HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
Health Legal
Sonder abruptly closes Twin Cities locations
Sonder, which operated extended‑stay hotels in downtown St. Paul and multiple Minneapolis sites, shut down operations Monday night after Marriott Bonvoy said its licensing agreement with Sonder was terminated for default. A sign at The Fitz (77 Ninth St. E., St. Paul) states operations ceased Nov. 10, 2025; Marriott directed customers to seek refunds through their credit‑card issuers and rebook within its portfolio as reports indicate Sonder plans a Chapter 7 filing.
Business & Economy
St. Paul keeps staff-led review for reparations study
The St. Paul City Council voted 6–1 on Nov. 5 to stick with a staff‑led procurement process for a reparations 'harm study' budgeted up to $250,000, rejecting a proposal from Council Member Anika Bowie to restart the evaluation with a community‑driven review panel. The RFP, extended in September and closed Oct. 3, drew three research firms; a preferred vendor has been identified but not yet finalized, and the contract will come back to the council for approval amid objections from some Black elders and split views among the council’s two Black members.
Local Government Business & Economy
IACP to review 43-hour response to June 14 lawmaker shootings; $429.5K cost
The Minnesota Department of Public Safety, Brooklyn Park, Champlin and New Hope police departments and Hennepin County have hired the International Association of Chiefs of Police to conduct an independent after-action review of the 43-hour law enforcement response to the June 14 lawmaker shootings — from the first 911 call just after 2:30 a.m. to the arrest of Vance Boelter — a manhunt DPS calls the largest in state history. The six-month review, announced in a DPS Veterans Day release, will cost $429,500 (the state covering $210,000 and Hennepin County $165,000), will be released publicly, and has drawn support and questions from officials including Ramsey County Sheriff Bob Fletcher about early communication to legislators.
Legal Local Government Public Safety
Minneapolis CM Jamal Osman carjacked amid spree; two teens arrested, VW recovered
Minneapolis City Council Member Jamal Osman was carjacked shortly before 8 p.m. at Lake St. & Portland Ave.; MPD says he was threatened with mace and his Volkswagen Atlas was stolen as part of a same-day spree that began with a 2 p.m. Subaru Outback theft and included an attempted carjacking and another vehicle theft earlier in the evening. Officers later spotted the stolen vehicles near Lake & Pillsbury, one car hit a hydrant during a pursuit, and two teens (15 and 16) were arrested after fleeing on foot and Osman's VW was recovered near Lyndale Place; police say one arrested teen has a prior history, and separately two adults were arrested in an unrelated early-morning carjacking near Penn Ave. N. and 26th Ave. N.
Local Government Public Safety
Five charged in Twin Cities odometer fraud
Hennepin County prosecutors charged five relatives — Ilie Tudor, 27; Ionut Todur, 29; Florin Tudor, 31; Vasile Tudor, 26; and David Tudor, 22 — with odometer tampering, theft by swindle and concealing criminal proceeds after a scheme to buy vehicles cheaply, roll back miles and resell them on Facebook Marketplace. Investigators recovered a Toyota Tundra in north Minneapolis showing more than 110,000 fewer miles than previously recorded and say all five suspects have left Minnesota, with warrants issued and at least two believed to have fled the country.
Legal Public Safety
Minneapolis weighs downtown public restroom expansion
Minneapolis’ Public Health and Safety Committee is reviewing a 62-page city report on the shortage of public restrooms downtown and options to increase access, including installing standalone “Portland Loo” units or compelling businesses to open facilities. The analysis cites 27 city 311 complaints about human feces and 26 about public urination from July 1, 2024 through June 30, 2025, and notes costs of $152,000–$185,000 per unit (or ~$24,000/year to rent) as the Council considers next steps.
Local Government Public Health
FDA drops boxed warnings on menopause hormones
The FDA removed the long-standing boxed warning from hormone-based menopause drugs, saying updated evidence shows benefits for women. Officials — including HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who called the move “challenging outdated thinking” — said the change was made without convening a formal advisory committee to avoid a “bureaucratic” and costly process, and Makary explained why an advisory panel was not used.
Health Government/Regulatory
NOAA issues rare G4 aurora watch
NOAA’s Space Weather Prediction Center issued geomagnetic storm watches for Nov. 11–13, including a rare G4 ('severe') watch on Wednesday that could make the Northern Lights visible across Minnesota, including the Twin Cities’ darker outskirts. The agency says a G2 watch is in effect Nov. 11 and a G3 watch Nov. 13, with visibility potentially extending as far south as Alabama depending on timing, storm strength, and cloud cover.
Weather Environment
Two hospitalized after New Hope house fire
West Metro Fire and New Hope police responded to a house fire around 6:12 a.m. Tuesday on the 8100 block of 38 ½ Avenue North, removing two occupants who were transported to North Memorial Hospital and Hennepin Healthcare. Their conditions are unknown; the cause is under investigation by West Metro Fire and the Minnesota State Fire Marshal.
Public Safety
IRS cancels Direct File for 2026 season
The IRS has canceled its Direct File free online tax-filing system for the 2026 season and, per an IRS email from Cynthia Noe, there is no relaunch date set; the program had been piloted in 12 states and was slated to expand to 12 more before the cancellation. Treasury Secretary/IRS Commissioner Scott Bessent said the private sector can do a better job and that Direct File “wasn't used very much.” The 2026 filing season will still include higher standard deductions under OBBBA: $16,100 for single filers and $32,200 for married filing jointly, with brackets adjusted for inflation.
Government & Policy Government/Regulatory Business & Economy
Judge denies stay on binary trigger ban ruling
Ramsey County District Court Judge Leonardo Castro on Nov. 5 denied the State of Minnesota’s request to stay his Aug. 18 ruling that struck down the 2024 omnibus bill’s "binary trigger" ban under the state constitution’s Single Subject Clause. The decision leaves the ban unenforceable and, in the order, the judge wrote that the public interest favors not enforcing unconstitutional laws and cited due-process concerns with arresting people under an invalid statute.
Legal Local Government
Rondo Library to close Dec. 15 for renovations
St. Paul’s Rondo Community Library at University Avenue and Dale Street will close Dec. 15 for up to a year for interior and public-safety renovations funded up to $793,000 from state public safety aid, with services relocated to the Hallie Q. Brown Community Center (270 N. Kent St.) beginning Jan. 3. The temporary site will mirror Rondo’s seven‑day hours and offer holds, returns, collections, computers, WiFi, notary/printing, rooms, and all existing programs; Rondo item due dates are extended to Jan. 31.
Local Government Education
Appeals court orders full SNAP funding; Supreme Court to decide whether 65% cap remains
After the federal shutdown prompted USDA to pause SNAP disbursements and initially push a roughly 65% partial‑payment plan, a coalition of states sued and district judges in Rhode Island and Massachusetts ordered USDA to use contingency and other funds to provide full November benefits. The 1st Circuit upheld the lower‑court order requiring full funding (after a brief Supreme Court stay), leaving some states that already issued full payments in limbo as the Supreme Court prepares to decide whether the administration may enforce the 65% cap.
Legal Government/Regulatory Politics
AG’s conviction review of 2002 Dakota murder nears
Minnesota AG Keith Ellison’s Conviction Review Unit says its report on Philip Vance’s 2002 South St. Paul murder conviction is in final review after four years of investigation, even as Vance’s separate court bid based on witness recantations remains paused pending the CRU outcome. The case highlights growing scrutiny of the three‑person unit’s pace—five completed reviews since 2021—with the defense warning delays risk witness availability and prosecutors notified of an anticipated report as far back as February.
Legal Local Government
Swing‑district Sen. Seeberger backs assault‑weapon ban
Swing‑district Sen. Seeberger told a Stillwater town hall with Gov. Tim Walz that “everything’s on the table” and she will vote yes on measures that save lives, signaling support for an assault‑weapons ban while noting she is a gun owner and unsure any Republicans would back such a ban. Her stance comes as her district stretches from Grant to Hastings amid razor‑thin legislative margins (an evenly divided House and a one‑seat DFL Senate majority) and with House Republicans pushing a counterplan focused on school security, school resource officers and more mental‑health treatment beds.
Local Government Public Safety
Veterans Day closures and services in Twin Cities
For Tuesday, Nov. 11, most government offices and post offices are closed across Minneapolis–Saint Paul, while many grocery stores and malls remain open. Minneapolis and St. Paul will not enforce parking meters (UMN meters are enforced), Metro Transit buses and Blue/Green lines run regular schedules and offer free rides to veterans and active‑duty military with ID, most libraries and many schools are closed, and select museums have varied hours.
Transit & Infrastructure Local Government
Two men wounded in separate St. Paul shootings
Two men were wounded in separate shootings in St. Paul about 15 minutes apart that police say are believed to be unrelated. In the Payne-Phalen incident, a 43-year-old man was shot during an apparent carjacking, is recovering, could not describe his attacker, and investigators who have made no arrests are asking the public for tips (Sgt. Nichole Sipes, 651-266-5760).
Public Safety
Demuth names Ryan Wilson running mate in 2026 governor bid
Minnesota House Speaker Lisa Demuth named former state auditor candidate Ryan Wilson as her running mate in her 2026 gubernatorial bid; Wilson is an attorney, founder and former CEO of a clinical‑trials company who narrowly lost the 2022 auditor race. The Demuth‑Wilson ticket — the first prominent GOP campaign this cycle to announce a lieutenant governor pick — will begin a statewide tour and frames its priorities around fighting government fraud, education and public safety amid a GOP primary that includes Scott Jensen, Kristin Robbins and Kendall Qualls.
Elections Local Government
Graco plans Dayton headquarters, leaving NE Minneapolis
Graco said Nov. 10 it plans to build a new headquarters in Dayton, Minnesota, and relocate from its current Northeast Minneapolis riverfront campus. The move would shift the company’s corporate base within the Twin Cities and could open Graco’s high‑profile riverfront site to future redevelopment; project details and approvals will follow local review.
Business & Economy Housing
Hennepin County revises North Arm landing plan
Hennepin County dropped a proposed second ‘vertical’ access at Lake Minnetonka’s North Arm public landing in Orono after resident and city pushback, revising its redesign to add a picnic area instead. The county still plans safety and sustainability upgrades — including ramp realignment, parking changes, stormwater controls, shoreline pods for anglers/paddlers, lighting and solar features — and Commissioner Heather Edelson said the controversy will spur broader coordination among 14 lakeshore cities, the county, LMCD and the DNR on commercial use of public landings.
Local Government Transit & Infrastructure Environment
I-394 E‑ZPass lanes reopen after July closure
MnDOT reopened the reversible E‑ZPass lanes on I‑394 between downtown Minneapolis and Golden Valley on Sunday after months of bridge and pavement work, but warns overnight closures will continue through December and major traffic shifts resume in spring. Starting in February, all westbound traffic will be routed into the E‑ZPass lanes during construction, then eastbound traffic will follow as crews rehab concrete, repair bridges and ramps to Hwy. 55/I‑94, and replace the Penn Avenue bridge deck.
Transit & Infrastructure Local Government
Minneapolis teachers deal adds 2% raise this year; class-size and special-ed caseload limits set; ratification Thu–Fri
Minneapolis Public Schools and the Minneapolis Federation of Educators reached a tentative agreement late Saturday covering three contracts for more than 4,300 employees that includes a 2% pay increase this year and enforceable smaller class sizes and special-education caseload limits. The deal, which averts a planned Nov. 11 strike, goes to union ratification votes Thursday–Friday and then the School Board for approval amid district warnings of a roughly $75 million shortfall this year and further projected deficits.
Business & Economy Education
Minneapolis vehicle break‑in spree: 124 cases in mid‑Oct; ~20 more in Lowry Hill on Nov. 9
Minneapolis police say a mid‑October spree damaged 124 vehicles over five days, and the rash continued with about 20 vehicles having windows smashed before dawn on Nov. 9 in Lowry Hill near Fremont Ave. S. and W. Franklin Ave. MPD noted the October surge followed a two‑month lull, cited an Aug. 19 arrest of three teens in north Minneapolis, and urged people to report incidents (911/311/online/in‑person) and to use well‑lit parking, remove or hide valuables, and never leave keys in vehicles.
Public Safety
Bernie Sanders backs Peggy Flanagan for Senate
Sen. Bernie Sanders endorsed Minnesota Lt. Gov. Peggy Flanagan for the U.S. Senate, praising her background and tying his support to her backing of Medicare for All; Flanagan said, "Folks deserve to afford the lives they want to live... not just the fights we think we can win." Flanagan’s growing coalition includes Sens. Elizabeth Warren and Ed Markey, Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison and former Sen. Al Franken, while Democratic rival Rep. Angie Craig is backed by House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries, former Speaker Nancy Pelosi, more than a dozen labor unions and Dave Wellstone; GOP contenders include Royce White and retired Navy SEAL Adam Schwarze.
Local Government Elections
Ex-Hennepin sheriff’s captain charged with stealing lab generator for ice fishing
A former Hennepin County Sheriff’s Office captain, Labatt, has been charged with felony theft after a complaint says he took a department-owned generator from the HCSO forensic lab, used it while ice fishing Feb. 1–28 and left it on the lake. The complaint and records say lab staff sent multiple unanswered emails about the missing unit, Labatt did not offer to replace it until after a new generator ($1,209), a gas can and two gallons of gas ($26.97) and $80 for AirTags were purchased, and that Labatt — who joined HCSO in 1989 and became forensic lab director in January 2021 — was separated from employment on April 30, 2025; the HCSO crime lab serves 35 local agencies plus state and federal partners.
Legal Public Safety
Envoy Medical hearing implant gets FDA fast track
White Bear Lake–based Envoy Medical says the latest version of its fully implanted Acclaim hearing device has received FDA breakthrough device designation, placing it on a fast track and expanding clinical trials from 10 to 46 patients. The company, which earlier secured 2010 FDA approval for its Esteem implant, is targeting 2027 approval for the new system after roughly $250 million in cumulative investment.
Health Technology
Ramsey County approves $450K for food shelves; 11 recipients named, $70K reserved for infant formula
Ramsey County approved $450,000 in emergency funds for 11 food shelf providers — Keystone Community Services; Neighborhood House; Open Cupboard; Sanneh Foundation; Merrick Community Services; White Bear Area Food Shelf; Corner Shelf; CLUES; Hallie Q. Brown Community Center; Interfaith Action (Department of Indian Work); and Vineyard Community Services — and reserved $70,000 specifically to buy infant formula if WIC benefits are disrupted. The emergency allocation, prompted by SNAP and MFIP stoppages that affect roughly 35,500 SNAP households (about 68,500 people) and 3,500 MFIP households (about 9,800 people) in Ramsey County, mirrors similar funding moves by nearby counties and cities.
Health Local Government
State awards $69M from MN Forward Fund, including $50M for Rosemount 'North Wind,' $5M for UST and $4M for Hennepin Tech
The state’s Minnesota Forward Fund awarded $69 million across four projects — including a $50 million forgivable loan for North Wind’s $1 billion, 250,000‑sq.‑ft. Minnesota Aerospace Complex at the UMore site in Rosemount, $10 million for Niron Magnetics in Sartell, $5 million for the University of St. Thomas in St. Paul and $4 million for Hennepin Technical College (Brooklyn Park and Eden Prairie). The Rosemount project, which UMN sold 60 acres for and will partner on, will house three hypersonic wind tunnels, is backed by an additional $99 million U.S. Army contract and $85 million in company investment, targets completion in 2030–31, and has drawn some campus protests over military ties.
Technology Business & Economy Local Government
Judges in Minnesota rebuff ICE bond denials
Federal judges in Minnesota and nationwide are rejecting ICE’s bid to hold immigrants without bond hearings under a Trump‑era DHS policy expanding detention, with 177 recent rulings favoring immigrants versus nine for the government as of Oct. 31. In Minneapolis, a federal judge ordered a bond hearing Oct. 27 for Jose Andres Robles—detained a month at Freeborn County Jail without a hearing—after which his family posted $10,000 to secure his release; more than 1,000 immigrants have been detained in Minnesota since January.
Legal Local Government
Shepard Road lights still dark after thefts
St. Paul officials say repeated copper wire thefts have kept roughly 250 streetlights dark along a four‑mile stretch of Shepard/Warner Road from Lowertown to Otto Avenue, despite citywide progress restoring lights. Public Works estimates it will cost $750,000 or more to fully restore the corridor; the city spent $2 million in 2024 replacing stolen wiring and installing high‑access poles, and 2025 service calls about dark lights are down about 30% year‑over‑year. Council President Rebecca Noecker is urging residents to press City Hall for dedicated funding, citing public‑safety concerns and recent related vandalism along the corridor.
Transit & Infrastructure Public Safety Local Government
Progressives keep 7–6 edge on Minneapolis council; veto overrides no longer possible
Progressive-aligned candidates won seven of 13 Minneapolis City Council seats, preserving a narrow majority but losing a veto‑proof supermajority after a moderate pickup in Ward 7; all races are now decided, including Ward 5 where Tinitha “Pearll” Warren prevailed in a ranked‑choice second round. Mayor Jacob Frey and council leaders say the result will require more negotiation on issues like public safety and the budget, and the new council will be sworn in January for a four‑year term.
Local Government Elections
M Health Fairview, UHC talks risk 125K patients
M Health Fairview warns it could go out-of-network for UnitedHealthcare and UMR members on Jan. 1, 2026 if no new commercial contract is reached, potentially affecting about 125,000 patients in the Twin Cities. Fairview says UHC’s demands would force service cuts and reduced access, while UnitedHealthcare says Fairview is seeking a more than 23% rate increase that would add roughly $121 million in employer costs; the current five‑year contract expires this year.
Health Business & Economy
Columbia Heights home invasion injures man
Columbia Heights Police and the Anoka County Sheriff’s Office say two men followed a resident into his home on the 1400 block of 47th Avenue NE around 10:20 p.m. Friday and tried to rob him, leading to a struggle that left the victim injured. He was taken to a hospital in stable condition; other occupants were unharmed. The suspects fled and remain at large as the investigation continues.
Public Safety Legal
Man shot after dispute in downtown Minneapolis alley
Minneapolis police say a man was shot just before 9:15 p.m. Nov. 8 in an alley behind a nightclub on the 300 block of 1st Avenue North after he asked a group of unhoused individuals to leave. The victim was hospitalized and is expected to survive; the group fled and no arrests have been announced as the investigation continues.
Public Safety
United Way reports 150% surge in food requests; $105K in grants distributed
United Way says its 211 helpline has seen a 150% increase in food-related requests since mid-October as Minnesota food shelves feel pressure from the federal shutdown, and the organization has distributed approximately $105,000 in emergency grants to local nonprofits, including funding Route 1 produce pop-up events. 211 is available 24/7 for food access and other services, and United Way is inviting donations and volunteers.
Business & Economy Local Government Health
Minnesota State Grant faces $102M shortfall
Minnesota’s largest college financial-aid program is projecting a $102 million deficit in the current biennium, and officials say awards may need to be reduced again in coming semesters. The Office of Higher Education cites higher enrollment (+4,000 students), more recipients (+2,200), and FAFSA-driven need and Pell changes as key drivers, following July fixes that boosted funding by $44.5M but cut average awards by $475 after addressing a prior $239M shortfall. Lawmakers signaled hearings are likely, with Rep. Marion Rarick warning rationing may be unavoidable while OHE advises families not to be overly worried.
Education Local Government
Man found shot dead in Columbia Heights car
Anoka County authorities are investigating a homicide after a man was found with apparent gunshot wounds inside a vehicle around 6:31 a.m. Friday on the 500 block of 38th Avenue NE in Columbia Heights. No arrests have been made; anyone with information is asked to call Anoka County’s non‑emergency line at 763-427-1212.
Public Safety Legal
Minnesota to correct SNAP payout overcount
The Minnesota Department of Children, Youth and Families said Friday it mistakenly included and double‑counted Pandemic EBT in federal FNS‑46 reports, inflating reported SNAP payouts from about $725 million in 2020 to roughly $1.9 billion in 2021. The agency said the reporting errors did not reflect improper payments and it will submit corrected figures to USDA after the federal shutdown ends; the correct totals are not yet known.
Local Government Business & Economy
Marshals arrest Minnesotan in deadly Dallas RV arson
U.S. Marshals arrested Lamont Curtis Richardson, 30, of St. Cloud, on I-94 near Sauk Centre Friday on a Texas arson charge tied to an Oct. 19 Dallas RV fire that killed 68-year-old Leslie Denise McBride. Apple Valley police executed search warrants at a Fjord Avenue address, seizing documents bearing Richardson’s name and seeking a woman’s DNA and cellphone data after investigators traced a Hertz rental from MSP and GPS logs to Texas and back. Surveillance captured a hooded, masked man igniting the RV before fleeing; motive has not been disclosed.
Public Safety Legal
St. Paul launches SNAP relief food drive
St. Paul launched a food drive for SNAP recipients and has collected more than 10,000 pounds to date. The city lists drop-off locations and partner agencies — Keystone, Merrick, Feeding Frogtown, Hallie Q. Brown, with Neighborhood House beginning pickups next week — and says donations include hygiene supplies, culturally familiar staples, pet food and recipe kits, with the Office of Financial Empowerment noting a strong community response.
Local Government Health
Nonprofit buys condemned St. Paul parking ramp
The St. Paul Downtown Development Corporation purchased the condemned Capital City Plaza parking ramp at 50 Fourth St. from Madison Equities and will begin work to address safety violations, aiming to reopen it by late 2026. The privately funded deal, near the Green Line’s Central Station, keeps the ramp and the adjacent Alliance Bank Center closed for now while skyway connections to Osborn370 and Treasure Island Center remain open.
Transit & Infrastructure Business & Economy
Walz appoints Robin Hutcheson Met Council chair
Gov. Tim Walz appointed transit specialist Robin Hutcheson as chair of the Metropolitan Council, with her term beginning Dec. 1, 2025 and running through Jan. 4, 2027; she succeeds Charlie Zelle, who retired in September, and interim chair Deb Barber is currently serving. Walz called Hutcheson a "proven leader" focused on roadway safety and quality of life. Hutcheson, a former Minneapolis Public Works director and Salt Lake City transportation director, is a Senate‑confirmed former administrator of the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration who worked on the bipartisan infrastructure bill, and she also serves as a senior fellow at the University of Minnesota’s Center for Transportation Studies, runs Hutcheson Advisory, formerly led NACTO’s board, and holds degrees from CU Boulder and the University of Utah.
Transit & Infrastructure Local Government
3 charged in $564K immigration-services fraud targeting Spanish-language churches; 25 victims, ICE threats alleged
Three people — Kira Romero Pinto, Denis Aquino Martinez and Luis Leiva Aquino — have been charged in a scheme that allegedly swindled about $563,700 from at least 25 victims, primarily Spanish-speaking churchgoers in the Twin Cities, by promising expedited citizenship through a fictitious attorney named “Isabella Jason” and threatening to call ICE on anyone who reported the scheme. Authorities say personal documents were seized, one defendant faces a racketeering charge, known Washington County losses exceed $118,000, the case is being prosecuted jointly by Washington and Dakota counties, and all three remain jailed with bail set at $500,000, $100,000 and $75,000 respectively.
Public Safety Legal
Ex-wife of DOC chief gets 3-year sentence
A Scott County judge, Joy Bartscher, sentenced Paul Schnell’s ex‑wife, Myhre‑Schnell, to three years in prison after she admitted on Dec. 3, 2023, to putting lorazepam and water into her disabled son’s feeding bag — filings quote her saying she hoped he would "go to sleep forever" and later telling investigators she intended to kill him, while the victim, who requires round‑the‑clock ventilator care for spina bifida, told investigators "I made it, I’m still here." The three‑year term was a downward durational departure from guidelines that drew criticism from prosecutors who had sought about 18 years; court records show she received 22 days credit for time served and is expected under Minnesota’s two‑thirds rule to serve roughly two years in custody with the remainder on supervised release, and Commissioner Schnell filed a memo abstaining from any DOC involvement in the case.
Public Safety Legal
Retired Woodbury police chief Bill Hering dies at 76
William “Bill” Frederick Hering IV, former Woodbury police chief and public safety director, died Nov. 1, 2025 at age 76 following a brain cancer diagnosis. Hering led Woodbury Public Safety for 32 years and was praised by current Director Jason Posel for shaping a culture of respectful, service‑oriented policing; visitation is Nov. 13 in Stillwater and funeral services are Nov. 14 in Afton, with donations requested to the Public Safety Woodbury Community Support Fund.
Public Safety Local Government
Walz orders half‑staff flags for Farmington officer
Gov. Tim Walz ordered all U.S. and Minnesota flags at state buildings to fly at half‑staff on Friday, Nov. 7, 2025, to honor Farmington Police Officer Pete Zajac, a 15‑year veteran and former school resource officer who died by suicide on Oct. 28. The proclamation encourages all Minnesotans and organizations to lower flags; a Mass was held Friday in Hastings, and a GoFundMe has been set up for his family.
Public Safety Local Government
EPA moves to relax HFC refrigerant limits
The EPA under Administrator Lee Zeldin proposed loosening parts of a Biden‑era 2023 rule that accelerates the phaseout of hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs) under the 2020 AIM Act, arguing businesses need more time and flexibility. The plan, which follows a September step easing requirements for cold‑storage warehouses and delaying some compliance to 2032, would affect grocery chains, refrigeration firms, and HVAC companies nationwide, including in the Twin Cities, while environmental groups warn it will worsen climate pollution and disrupt ongoing industry transitions.
Environment Government/Regulatory
Two charged in Bar Zia killing; prosecutors cite security lapses, city shutters bar
Prosecutors say a July shooting at downtown Minneapolis’ Bar Zia left 21-year-old Damarco Fletcher Jr. dead and three others wounded (women, 35 and 22, and a 24-year-old man) and led to charges against Arlonzo Williams Jr., 26, for second‑degree murder, illegal gun possession and three counts of attempted murder, and Dantrell DaJuan Clark, 24, as an accomplice on murder and attempted murder counts. Charging documents allege coordinated, gang-related conduct and security lapses — including patrons being allowed to re‑enter without screening after suspects briefly exited to retrieve a gun — and the city closed Bar Zia three days later for a licensing violation tied to lack of insurance.
Legal Public Safety Local Government
Supreme Court allows Trump passport sex‑marker policy to take effect during lawsuit
The U.S. Supreme Court granted the Trump administration’s request to let its passport sex‑marker policy take effect while litigation continues, staying a June injunction by U.S. District Judge Julia E. Kobick that had blocked the policy. The unsigned order—reasoning that listing sex at birth is a historical fact akin to country of birth and implicates foreign‑affairs authority, and echoing Solicitor General D. John Sauer’s argument that the president has passport authority (citing a recent ruling on transgender care)—drew dissents from the Court’s three liberal justices, with Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson warning it will harm transgender Americans barred from selecting markers such as “X.”
Government/Regulatory Legal Government
Nicolet to rebrand 13 Twin Cities branches
Nicolet Bank will acquire MidWestOne Bank in an $864 million merger and rebrand MidWestOne’s 13 Twin Cities branches, significantly expanding its presence beyond its current two metro locations. The combined entity’s CEO said Friday that the Minneapolis–Saint Paul region will be a primary growth market, with potential for additional acquisitions.
Business & Economy
DHS cites Care Crossings for 27 violations
Minnesota’s Department of Human Services issued an Oct. 24 correction order to Care Crossings in Oak Park Heights, finding 27 violations and more than 100 breaches of laws or rules after late-July site visits. The report cites billing for services not provided, falsified documentation, illegal group sizes, excessive caseloads and unlicensed staff leading sessions; DHS previously fined the owner $200 in August for using a disqualified staffer and warned that failure to correct could result in additional fines or license sanctions.
Health Legal
CFPB says FCRA preempts state medical‑debt credit-report bans; Minnesota law at risk
The CFPB has issued guidance interpreting the federal Fair Credit Reporting Act as preempting state bans on reporting medical debt to credit reports, putting Minnesota’s law — one of 14 states that bar such reporting (and five that restrict it) — at risk. Credit bureaus and credit unions sued to block a January CFPB rule advancing that view, the incoming administration declined to defend it and a federal judge blocked the rule, leaving uncertainty for states even as Americans carry at least $220 billion in medical debt and roughly 6% of adults owe more than $1,000.
Legal Health Business & Economy
Kaohly Her wins St. Paul mayor with 51.5% after RCV
Rep. Kaohly Vang Her won St. Paul’s mayoral race after ranked‑choice tabulation, finishing with 51.5% to defeat incumbent Melvin Carter, who led first‑choice ballots (Carter ~40.8%, Her ~38.4%). Using new open‑source RCV software that produced same‑night results, transfers — which added about 6,411 votes to Her and 2,807 to Carter — delivered a roughly 2.8‑point (~1,877‑vote) margin; Her becomes St. Paul’s first Hmong‑American and first woman mayor and will serve a three‑year term.
Local Government Elections
Four arrested after stolen Jeep chase in Minneapolis
The Hennepin County Sheriff’s Office Violent Offender Task Force arrested four people Thursday after pursuing a white Jeep stolen in Maple Grove that was linked to auto-theft tampering, dangerous driving, and a report of a suspect pointing a gun. The pursuit ended near W. 28th St. and Aldrich Ave. S. in south Minneapolis after stop sticks were used; the driver fled on foot, the passenger moved to the driver’s seat and struck the original driver before the vehicle stopped. All occupants were arrested, two were hospitalized, and six guns were recovered, according to HCSO.
Public Safety Legal
Frey wins third term after single RCV round; precinct map shows bases
Jacob Frey was declared the winner of the 2025 Minneapolis mayoral race, earning a third term after a single round of ranked‑choice reallocation Wednesday morning that left him with about 50% of the final vote (he led first‑choice totals roughly 42% to Omar Fateh’s 32%) and prompted Fateh to concede. The count — finished around 11 a.m. after Hennepin County’s cast‑vote record arrived and city teams manually reallocated rankings — came amid record turnout (147,702 voters, 55%), and precinct results show Frey’s strength in southwest Minneapolis, the city core and parts of north Minneapolis while Fateh’s support clustered in Powderhorn, LynLake, Phillips, the university area and Cedar‑Riverside; Fateh received nearly 20,000 second‑choice votes but could not overcome Frey’s first‑round lead.
Local Government Elections
Why Minneapolis reported RCV results later
Ramsey County delivered St. Paul’s ranked‑choice outcome around midnight using new open‑source tabulation software, while Minneapolis waited for a Hennepin County file and then followed a city‑ordinance process requiring manual write‑in review and spreadsheet‑based reallocation, finishing late Wednesday morning. Officials detailed exact timelines, software used, and legacy costs that shaped how quickly results were posted in each city.
Elections Local Government Technology
Minnesota Rusco bankruptcy spurs at least 10 lawsuits; recovery fund capped at $550K per contractor
Minnesota Rusco, a 70-year-old New Hope home‑improvement company, abruptly ceased operations after parent Renovo Home Partners filed Chapter 7 bankruptcy for itself and 19 subsidiaries, leaving employees — who received only three days of health insurance — and customers with unfinished work and large prepaid sums; court filings list $100–$500 million in liabilities against $1–$10 million in assets, and at least 10 lawsuits have been filed. Because Rusco was DLI‑licensed, affected homeowners must first sue and obtain a court judgment to seek reimbursement from Minnesota’s Contractor Recovery Fund, but recoveries are constrained by limits of up to $550,000 per licensed contractor (and $100,000 per consumer), and state officials are urging consumers to file complaints and dispute charges.
Consumer Business & Economy Housing
Ramsey judge tosses 2021 St. Paul arson case
Ramsey County District Judge Leonardo Castro dismissed the first-degree arson case against Matthew Ryan Gieske on Tuesday, citing insufficient evidence after prosecutors said their key eyewitness who could identify the arsonist left Minnesota and could not be located. The case stemmed from a Sept. 7, 2021 fire that severely damaged a North End apartment building on the 1600 block of Marion St.; the judge excluded body-cam clothing IDs as hearsay and found no remaining evidence tying Gieske to starting the blaze.
Legal Public Safety
Farmington officer Pete Zajac dies by suicide
Community and state officials are mourning 41-year-old Officer Pete Zajac, a 15-year Farmington police veteran who was born in Hastings, grew up in Wyoming, Minn., lived in Hastings for the past 11 years and worked in Faribault from 2006–2010. Gov. Tim Walz ordered state and U.S. flags at government buildings to fly at half-staff on the day of Zajac’s funeral, and a GoFundMe has been established to support his family.
Health Local Government Public Safety
St. Paul renews call in 1990 cold-case killing
St. Paul police marked the 35th anniversary of the unsolved Nov. 6, 1990 homicide of Robert Spann, a 27-year-old William Mitchell law school graduate, with a renewed public appeal for tips. Spann was found shot and stabbed in the basement of his Marshall Avenue home between Milton and Victoria; robbery was a possible motive, and investigators ask anyone with information to call 651-266-5650.
Public Safety Legal
Cottage Grove OKs EIS for riverbed mine
The Cottage Grove City Council voted 5–0 on Nov. 6 to deem adequate the final environmental impact statement for Amrize Nelson’s proposal to shift and expand sand-and-gravel mining into the Mississippi River backwaters near Lower Grey Cloud Island, moving the project to state and federal permitting. Friends of the Mississippi River objected, arguing shoreline mining is illegal under MRCCA rules, while the mayor said the three‑year review only assessed EIS adequacy; the expansion would tap about 400 acres and extend mine life by 20–25 years.
Local Government Environment
St. Paul Sen. Sandy Pappas retiring in 2026
DFL Sen. Sandy Pappas, who represents St. Paul’s SD 65 and chairs the Senate Capital Investment Committee, announced she will retire after the 2026 session, ending a 42‑year legislative career. The former Senate president (2013–2016) highlighted work on bonding and local projects like Pedro Park, the Third Street–Kellogg Bridge, the North End Community Center and Union Depot; her departure creates an open seat in central St. Paul and a change in leadership over statewide infrastructure funding.
Local Government Elections
Peloton recalls 878K Bike+ units for seat-post hazard
Peloton is recalling about 878,000 Original Series Bike+ exercise bikes (model PL02) in the U.S. and Canada after reports that seat posts can break, posing a fall risk. The Nov. 6 action, announced by the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission and Health Canada, covers bikes sold from 2020 through April 2025; owners are urged to stop using affected bikes and contact Peloton for a free redesigned seat-post replacement.
Public Safety Health
Burnsville police seek more victims in sex case
Burnsville police are asking additional victims or witnesses to come forward after charging 19-year-old Teodros Raymond Pluntz with multiple counts of criminal sexual conduct tied to two younger teens. A Sept. 13 incident allegedly occurred at his parents’ home on Sibley Court in Burnsville, with prosecutors citing video evidence and documented injuries; a second case involves a 15-year-old who says videos were posted online. Pluntz was charged in September by the Dakota County Attorney’s Office and remains jailed as the investigations continue.
Public Safety Legal
Judge admonishes Lazzaro over juror contact scheme
Minnesota’s chief federal judge Patrick Schiltz issued a sharply worded order Thursday admonishing convicted GOP operative Anton “Tony” Lazzaro over an alleged effort to “deceive and bribe” a former juror via a fake survey offering gift cards, and barred Lazzaro or anyone on his behalf from contacting jurors without court permission. The survey, titled “Gopher Women’s Institute 2025 Study,” asked sensitive questions about sexual abuse and was used to support Lazzaro’s bid for a new trial; prosecutors argue a juror’s answers could have changed over time, while defense claims the responses show dishonesty on the original juror questionnaire.
Legal Public Safety
DHS speeds up protest‑charge rules near federal sites
The Trump administration put into effect on Nov. 5 new DHS regulations expanding Federal Protective Service authority to arrest and charge a broader array of offenses on and off federal property, citing a surge in violence. The rules apply to federal facilities nationwide, including those in Minneapolis and St. Paul, and newly address conduct such as obstructing access, wearing a mask while committing a crime, drone use, and tampering with government IT systems; critics warn the changes could be used to target protesters.
Legal Public Safety
Minneapolis speed cameras cut speeding 30%; citations begin Friday
Minneapolis this week activated five traffic‑safety cameras (Fremont Ave N near W Broadway; 18th Ave NE near Central Ave NE; 3rd St N near 1st Ave N; Chicago Ave S near Franklin Ave E; Nicollet Ave S near 46th St) as part of a pilot through July 2029 that could expand to 42 cameras and later add red‑light enforcement; the cameras capture license plates only (no facial recognition) and enforcement areas are signed as required by state law. Preliminary results show speeding fell about 30% at the camera sites and drivers exceeding limits by 20+ mph dropped 76% after a month, with 12,633 warnings issued; October warnings count as a first offense, citations begin Friday (first detected offense is a warning) and subsequent fines are $40 or $80 if 20+ mph over, though drivers may contest tickets or take a free traffic‑safety class in lieu of paying the first citation.
Public Safety Transit & Infrastructure Local Government
Patrick Knight launches Minnesota governor campaign
Patrick Knight, a businessman and retired U.S. Marine who grew up in Plymouth and is CEO of Good Sense Foods, announced a Republican bid for Minnesota governor. In an announcement video and website, he outlined priorities including pushing Minnesota into the Top 10 for GDP, job and wage growth, improving public safety and student proficiency, and making homeownership more affordable; he joins a crowded GOP field seeking to challenge Gov. Tim Walz, who is running for a third term.
Elections Local Government
St. Paul orders demo of former CVS at Snelling & University; 15-day deadline
St. Paul’s City Council voted unanimously to order demolition of the vacant former CVS at 499 Snelling Ave. N., giving a 15‑day deadline after Hearing Officer Marcia Moermond detailed severe building deterioration (missing ventilation, compromised electrical) and an extensive nuisance history. Council Member Molly Coleman cited roughly 600 police visits in five years; CVS, which holds a lease through January 2031, asked for a 120‑day delay to seek buyers, while neighborhood groups urged demolition but worried about the consequences of an interim empty lot.
Housing Local Government
Woman fatally shot in Minneapolis apartment; man arrested
Minneapolis police say a woman was shot and killed around 5:45 p.m. Wednesday inside an apartment on the 2600 block of W. Broadway; a 65-year-old Minneapolis man, described as an acquaintance, was arrested that evening and remains jailed with charges pending. Officers recovered a gun in the apartment and a knife on the living room floor; the victim’s identity has not yet been released. The killing is the city’s 59th homicide of the year and the fifth in the past week.
Public Safety
NOAA: Auroras possible over Minnesota tonight
NOAA’s Space Weather Prediction Center issued a strong geomagnetic storm watch as a coronal mass ejection is expected to arrive between Thursday evening, Nov. 6, and Friday morning, Nov. 7, potentially making northern lights visible across Minnesota, including the Twin Cities’ darker outskirts. Forecasters do not expect major radio or communications disruptions; a bright moon may reduce visibility, and viewing could continue Friday night depending on solar activity.
Weather Environment
Trump announces Medicare coverage for obesity drugs
President Donald Trump said Nov. 6 the administration reached deals with Eli Lilly and Novo Nordisk to expand Medicare coverage for GLP-1 obesity drugs Zepbound and Wegovy starting next year, while phasing in lower prices for some uninsured patients. The plan also sets a $149/month price for starting doses of new pill versions if approved, though officials cautioned consumer savings will vary by insurance and market competition.
Health Business & Economy
Minnesota on pace for record eight 2025 specials
Minnesota is on pace for a record eight special elections in 2025 after two more were announced, joining six earlier special-election triggers: the resignation of Sen. Nicole Mitchell, the death of Sen. Bruce Anderson, the assassination of Speaker Emerita Melissa Hortman, the resignation of former Sen. Justin Eichorn, a residency dispute involving Rep.-elect Curtis Johnson, and the death of former Sen. Kari Dziedzic. Gov. Tim Walz will set the dates; the two new House vacancies are in heavily DFL districts (Kaohly Her won HD 64A with 83% and Amanda Hemmingsen‑Jaeger won HD 47A with 61%, with presidential margins of roughly +70 and +25 for Kamala Harris), but with the House tied 67–67 a single GOP flip would create a Republican majority — though any GOP bills would still face a DFL Senate and the governor — and big 2026 issues already being floated include gun control and barring transgender women and girls from female sports.
Local Government Elections
Most MN school levies pass; MSBA says 62% of 96 questions approved, ~$1B okayed statewide
Minnesota voters approved 60 of 96 school referendum questions (just over 62%) across roughly 70 districts in the 2025 election, the Minnesota School Boards Association said, OKaying about $1 billion of the roughly $1.6 billion districts sought. MSBA cautioned results are unofficial until certified; local outcomes include St. Paul Public Schools’ levy, confirmed to generate about $37.2 million annually for 10 years, and high pass rates in many rural districts as districts contend with inflation and the 10‑year referendum limit.
Elections Local Government Education
Stillwater denies cannabis shop near rec center
The Stillwater City Council on Nov. 5 denied permits for two adult‑use cannabis retailers — including one at 1754 Washington Ave. near the St. Croix Valley Recreation Center and another near Chesterton Academy — while approving a third location. Council debate focused on how Minnesota’s buffer rules apply, including whether the recreation center is a 'public park attraction' regularly used by minors and how to measure distance; the city attorney said Curio Dance does not meet the state definition of a school for the 1,000‑ft buffer.
Local Government Business & Economy
Mpls Park Board appoints interim District 2 commissioner
The Minneapolis Park and Recreation Board appointed educator Averi Turner, 29, on Nov. 5 to temporarily fill the North Side’s District 2 seat through year‑end after Becka Thompson resigned to run for City Council. Turner will attend four meetings and represent District 2 during debate and approval of the park system’s proposed $160 million budget; her pay will be prorated, and Charles Rucker will assume the elected District 2 seat in January.
Local Government Elections
Ex-Minneapolis teacher pleads in child-porn case
A former Minneapolis substitute teacher, identified as Palmer, pleaded guilty to possession of child pornography and solicitation of a minor after an anti-child-porn vigilante’s sting that lured him to a park, where a child reportedly said, "That's my teacher." Palmer — who originally faced 14 counts — is scheduled to be sentenced Dec. 3, 2025, and Minneapolis Public Schools issued a statement emphasizing student safety and reporting channels.
Education Legal
16-year-old charged in north Minneapolis birthday-party killing of Aundre Loyd
Sixteen-year-old Raymond Valentino Bowser was arrested inside a north Minneapolis home and charged with second-degree murder after 15-year-old Aundre Loyd was fatally shot in the basement during a birthday party shortly after 10:45 p.m. on the 2900 block of Russell Ave. N. Charging documents say the shooting followed an “interaction” after Loyd complimented Bowser’s shoes, a semiautomatic handgun and a bullet hole were found at the scene, witnesses said they fled in fear, Bowser admitted touching the gun, and Hennepin County intends to prosecute him as an adult; the killing was one of three deadly shootings in Minneapolis over a four-day span.
Public Safety Legal
Lakeville man gets probation in FOF case
U.S. District Judge Nancy Brasel sentenced Lakeville resident Khadar Adan to one year of probation and $1,000 restitution on Nov. 5 after he pled guilty to misdemeanor theft of government property for allowing a sham meal site to operate out of his Minneapolis JigJiga business center and accepting $1,000 in proceeds. Prosecutors said Adan and co-defendants falsely claimed 70,000 meals via the Lake Street Kitchen site from Dec. 2020 to Apr. 2021; Adan is the third and final co-defendant from that site to plead guilty in the broader Feeding Our Future fraud probe.
Legal Public Safety
Lakeville booster treasurer charged in $80K theft
A former treasurer of two Lakeville gymnastics booster clubs was charged by summons with two felony theft counts after police allege she stole more than $80,000 — nearly $51,000 from one club between March 2021 and 2024 and just over $32,000 from the other between August 2022 and June 2024. Court papers say casino records show an estimated $41,000 in losses in 2022–2023, the defendant repaid about $30,300 (mostly by cashier’s check) after resigning, admitted taking the funds due to personal financial problems and gambling, and is set for a first court appearance Dec. 9, 2025.
Public Safety Education Legal
States sue DHS over FEMA grant restrictions
Eleven states and Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear sued DHS and FEMA in federal court in Eugene, Oregon, challenging new conditions on core emergency-preparedness grants, including cutting the spend period from three years to one and requiring states to certify populations excluding people removed under immigration law. The suit targets the $320M Emergency Management Performance Grant and $1B Homeland Security Grant Program after FEMA issued an Oct. 1 funding hold pending states’ methodology submissions; DHS says the changes ensure effective use aligned with current threats.
Legal Local Government
Roseville police: Two found dead in Best Buy parking lot, suspected murder-suicide
Two adults were found dead inside a vehicle in the Best Buy parking lot on the 1600 block of County Road B2 in Roseville, both located in the front seats. A customer reported hearing multiple gunshots shortly before 2 p.m., and police are investigating the incident as a potential murder‑suicide.
Public Safety
Allina clinic providers hold one-day metro strike
Clinic providers employed by Allina Health staged a one-day strike across metro-area clinics — a historic first for Minnesota that the Doctors Council–SEIU called the largest strike of its kind — and did not include hospital providers. Bargaining, which began in February 2024, continues after the union said it offered multiple proposals on pay, leaves and PTO while Allina made a single offer the union says would reduce pay and benefits and fail to address staffing and burnout; Allina cited rising costs and expected government funding cuts, said contingency plans kept more than 25% of represented providers working, and further bargaining sessions begin Dec. 5 with union members set to return Thursday.
Health Business & Economy
CMS orders states to verify Medicaid immigration status
The Trump administration directed state Medicaid agencies to investigate certain enrollees’ immigration status, with CMS beginning in August to send states lists of names to review. CMS Administrator Mehmet Oz claimed on Oct. 31 that over $1 billion was spent on Medicaid for undocumented immigrants in five states and D.C., a figure several states dispute as inaccurate; initial tallies show more than 170,000 names flagged across Colorado, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Texas and Utah, with more to come. The directive could lead to coverage losses for enrollees who miss paperwork deadlines and adds administrative burden for states, including Minnesota.
Health Government/Regulatory
Only 1 Parents Alliance candidate wins in metros
FOX 9 reports that only one of 11 Minnesota Parents Alliance–endorsed school board candidates won on Nov. 4, 2025 — incumbent Matt Audette in Anoka‑Hennepin District 4 — while all others, including candidates in Lakeville, South Washington County, Wayzata and Fridley, lost. The report notes heavy outside spending, including more than $100,000 by Excellence Minnesota in Anoka‑Hennepin, amid heightened post‑pandemic interest in school board races.
Elections Education
Supreme Court hears challenge to Trump’s emergency tariffs; justices signal skepticism
The Supreme Court on Nov. 5 heard nearly three hours of consolidated challenges to former President Trump’s unprecedented use of the 1977 IEEPA to impose two waves of emergency tariffs — February duties tied to a fentanyl/drug‑trafficking emergency on imports from Canada, China and Mexico and sweeping April “reciprocal” tariffs on most countries — measures estimated to raise roughly $3 trillion over a decade and amounting to 10–50% import taxes. Justices across the ideological spectrum, including Chief Justice John Roberts, pressed the government on whether IEEPA permits such sweeping trade authority as lower courts have struck down much of the program and challengers (Democratic states and small businesses) invoke the major‑questions and nondelegation doctrines while the government cites core foreign‑affairs power.
Legal Business & Economy
Xcel trims Ten Mile Creek solar, adds batteries
Xcel Energy canceled phase two of its Ten Mile Creek Solar project in St. Croix County, WI, proceeding with a 300‑MW first phase over 2,980 acres and adding a battery energy storage system that will interconnect via a new line to the Allen S. King site in Oak Park Heights. Xcel will file with the Public Service Commission of Wisconsin by year‑end 2025, kicking off a 12–18 month review, with construction possible in late 2027 and service by late 2029 as the coal‑fired King plant retires in 2028.
Utilities & Energy Transit & Infrastructure
Driver named in fatal St. Paul crash; suspected DUI, charges possible
Police say a single-vehicle crash and fire about 3:25 a.m. Sunday at Arlington and Prosperity avenues on St. Paul’s East Side left passenger Qiara “Keke” Gleason, 26, a mother of four, dead; the driver was identified as 30-year-old Ralohn L. Hare, an acquaintance who attempted to pull Gleason from the burning vehicle and was hospitalized with a leg injury. Hare is suspected of driving under the influence, a court-approved blood draw was taken and results are pending, criminal vehicular homicide charges are possible, and court records show multiple prior driving-related convictions; Gleason’s family has launched a GoFundMe.
Legal Public Safety
Minneapolis man Billy Ray Wiley convicted of sex trafficking, assaults at Mahtomedi apartment; sentencing Jan. 7
Minneapolis man Billy Ray Wiley was convicted of sex trafficking and sexually assaulting a 14‑year‑old and a 20‑year‑old at a Mahtomedi apartment and is set to be sentenced Jan. 7. Prosecutors say Wiley recruited women and girls near Twin Cities streets and stores by offering rides, drugs or money; jurors answered yes to four special‑verdict questions allowing an upward departure, County Attorney Kevin Magnuson praised the victims and noted Wiley self‑represented and cross‑examined them, and investigators tied a June 13 assault video to the apartment, found a 14‑year‑old at Piccadilly Square Apartments on June 30 with condoms and drug paraphernalia, and arrested Wiley July 8 after a tracking warrant when a 17‑year‑old was in his car and drug paraphernalia was seized.
Public Safety Legal
Plymouth industrial complex sells for $26M
A California-based investment firm bought the seven-building Park Industrial Village in Plymouth for $26 million, more than triple what the seller paid in 2016. The deal expands the buyer’s Minnesota portfolio and marks a sizable industrial real-estate transaction in Hennepin County.
Business & Economy Housing
FDA warns 18 websites over unapproved Botox
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration sent warning letters to 18 websites for selling counterfeit or unapproved versions of Botox and similar injectables, citing reported injuries and toxic side effects. Announced Wednesday, the FDA urged patients to receive injections only from licensed, trained health professionals and warned that botulism-like symptoms after treatment require immediate medical care.
Health Legal
Minneapolis police probe Drew Avenue murder-suicide
Minneapolis police are investigating a suspected murder–suicide on Drew Avenue near Cedar Lake after a welfare check was requested when the residents — an elderly man and woman in their 80s — hadn't been heard from for several days. Authorities say the deaths are being treated as a shooting, but have not released the victims' identities or said which person was responsible for the gunfire.
Public Safety
Epic, Google settle Android app-store case
Epic Games and Google told a federal judge in San Francisco they’ve reached a comprehensive settlement resolving Epic’s antitrust case over the Google Play Store, proposing terms that align with Judge James Donato’s prior order to open Android to competing app stores and lower fees. The sealed deal, which requires court approval, includes reducing in‑app payment commissions to 9%–20% and obligates distribution of rival third‑party app stores, following a Ninth Circuit decision upholding a jury verdict against Google and the Supreme Court’s refusal to block remedies.
Technology Legal
Minneapolis sets record municipal turnout
Minneapolis reported a record 147,702 ballots cast (55% of registered voters) in the 2025 municipal election, surpassing the city’s 2021 high-water mark. Ranked-choice tabulation for the mayoral race and a close City Council contest will resume Wednesday, Nov. 5, with final results to be certified by the City Council acting as the Municipal Canvassing Board on Monday, Nov. 10.
Elections Local Government
Kaohly Her defeats Carter for St. Paul mayor
Rep. Kaohly Vang Her won St. Paul’s mayoral election on Nov. 4, defeating incumbent Melvin Carter and becoming the city’s first Hmong-American and first woman mayor. The result follows ranked-choice tabulation and ushers in a women-led city government alongside St. Paul’s all-women City Council.
Elections Local Government
DFL retains Minnesota Senate after SD47 win; GOP takes SD29
Special elections Tuesday left the DFL with a 34–33 Senate majority after state Rep. Amanda Hemmingsen‑Jaeger won open Senate District 47 roughly 61–39 to replace Nicole Mitchell, who resigned following a felony burglary conviction. Republican Michael Holmstrom Jr. captured Senate District 29 by about a 24‑point margin to fill the seat vacated by the late Sen. Bruce Anderson; the House remains evenly split and the Legislature is slated to reconvene Feb. 17, 2026.
Elections Local Government
DFL keeps one-seat Senate majority after Nov. 4 specials
Special elections Nov. 4 for SD47 (Woodbury/south Maplewood) and SD29 (parts of Wright, Meeker and Hennepin counties), vacated by DFL Sen. Nicole Mitchell’s resignation and the death of GOP Sen. Bruce Anderson, resulted in DFL Amanda Hemmingsen‑Jaeger winning SD47 and Republican Michael Holmstrom Jr. winning SD29, leaving the Minnesota Senate at a 34–33 DFL majority. The House remains evenly divided heading into the 2026 session (scheduled to resume Feb. 17, 2026), and Hemmingsen‑Jaeger’s victory will trigger a special election to fill her Woodbury-area House seat.
Elections Local Government
St. Paul mayoral race advances to RCV; first count: Carter ~40%, Her ~38%
After first-round unofficial tallies in the five-way St. Paul mayoral race, incumbent Melvin Carter led with just over 40% to challenger Kaohly Her’s just over 38%, so no candidate reached a majority and ranked‑choice reallocations are next. Ramsey County plans to post RCV results late Tuesday using new open‑source tabulation software (ending prior multi‑day hand counts); early returns briefly showed Her slightly ahead, turnout was heavier than expected, and the ballot also included a 10‑year school levy and a charter amendment on administrative citations.
Local Government Elections
St. Paul voters back administrative citations charter amendment; Yes leads 68–32 with 78 of 86 precincts reporting
Unofficial returns show St. Paul voters backing an administrative‑citations charter amendment — "Yes" leading 68% to 32% with 78 of 86 precincts reporting. The amendment would authorize the City Council to create civil‑fine penalties for ordinance violations (with specific fines and covered offenses to be set later after public hearings); supporters including Mayor Melvin Carter and Rep. Kaohly Her say it will help enforce everything from building codes to wage and sick‑time rules, while critics such as former councilmember Jane Prince warn fines could be overused or become a budget tool after prior charter attempts failed and a petition forced the measure onto the 2025 ballot.
Local Government Elections
South Washington County Schools elects 3 incumbents, union-backed newcomer
In a nine-candidate race for the South Washington County Schools board, voters elected Elizabeth Bockman Eckberg (15.4%), Kathleen (Katie) Schwartz (15.2%), Sharon H. Van Leer (14.5%) and Louise Hinz (14.5%), returning three incumbents to the board. Eckberg was endorsed by the United Teachers for South Washington County; the district covers parts or all of Cottage Grove, Newport, St. Paul Park, Woodbury, Afton, Denmark and Grey Cloud Island Townships.
Education Elections
Mahtomedi voters OK levy hike, $28M bond
Mahtomedi Public Schools voters on Nov. 4 approved raising the operating levy from $1,570 to $2,145 per pupil (64% yes) and a $28 million capital referendum (59% yes) for school security, classroom, mechanical and athletic field upgrades. Passage of the second question depended on the first; district officials estimate taxes on a $500,000 home will rise about $382 per year starting next year.
Elections Education
Ramsey County election results and levies
On Nov. 4, 2025, Ramsey County communities reported municipal and school election results and levy outcomes. White Bear Lake’s mayoral race showed Mary Nicklawske leading 64%–36% with 3 of 6 precincts reporting; Falcon Heights council leaders were Georgiana May (42%) and Jim Mogen (40%) with 1 of 2 precincts; St. Anthony’s two council seats were uncontested. School board outcomes included SANB reelecting Annie Bosmans, Laura Haas and Prachi Striker, with Daniel Turner leading a special race; Mounds View, Roseville and North St. Paul–Maplewood–Oakdale posted partial board tallies, and levies passed in Mounds View (64%) and Roseville (68%) but failed in North St. Paul–Maplewood–Oakdale (56% No).
Elections Education Local Government
Bomb threat delays LaGuardia–MSP Delta flight
Delta Flight 2313 from New York’s LaGuardia to Minneapolis–St. Paul was evacuated Tuesday evening after the crew reported a bomb threat around 8 p.m. ET, according to the Port Authority. Passengers deplaned while the aircraft was searched and cleared by about 10 p.m., but Delta delayed the flight until Wednesday morning.
Public Safety Transit & Infrastructure
Dakota County voters approve school levies; Reichenberger, Mikel‑Mulder win board seats
Dakota County voters approved school levies in three districts: Farmington’s operating levy passed with more than 57% support, providing $1,236.60 per student (about $8 million a year for 10 years) and raising taxes on a median $350,000 home by roughly $534 a year; Lakeville renewed its 2015 capital projects levy with nearly 70% support, continuing about $4 million a year for 10 years with no new tax increase; and Rosemount‑Apple Valley‑Eagan (ISD 196) voters renewed and increased the tech levy from 3.015% to 5.015% (about 68% approval), adding roughly $6.4 million a year to reach about $15.5 million annually for 10 years. In board races, Tony Reichenberger defeated Lakeville incumbent Brett Nicholson 51%–48%, and Elaine K. Mikel‑Mulder won a Hastings ISD 200 special election with more than 60% of the vote to fill a seat through Jan. 1, 2029.
Local Government Elections Education
Dakota County voters pass school levies, elect board members
On Nov. 4, 2025, Dakota County voters approved school funding measures in Farmington, Lakeville, and Rosemount‑Apple Valley‑Eagan and chose new school board members in Hastings and Lakeville. Farmington’s per‑pupil operating levy will raise about $8M annually (adding ~$534/year for a median $350,000 home), Lakeville renewed its tech levy with no tax increase, ISD 196 expanded its tech levy to ~$15.5M/year, and Elaine K. Mikel‑Mulder and Tony Reichenberger won board seats in Hastings and Lakeville, respectively.
Elections Education
SPPS uses public funds for levy outreach
St. Paul Public Schools used taxpayer funds to conduct outreach about a special levy ahead of the Nov. 4 referendum. As of Oct. 29 the district had spent $59,977 on outreach materials and $108,257 in total including the required mailing.
Education Elections Local Government
St. Paul schools seek $1,073-per-pupil levy
St. Paul Public Schools is asking voters to approve a $1,073-per-pupil levy referendum that would generate about $37.2 million a year; district officials say failing to pass it would force at least $37 million in budget cuts for 2026–27. The district reported spending roughly $60,000 on levy communications ($108,257 including the required mailed notice), estimates the median homeowner would pay about $309 per year if it passes, and warns that percentage property‑tax increases would vary by neighborhood, with the North End, Payne‑Phalen, Thomas‑Dale/Frogtown and the West Side facing the largest increases.
Education Elections Local Government
Deschene, Audette, Simon win Anoka-Hennepin board; 87-vote margin may trigger recount
Kacy Deschene (55.95%, 3,441 votes), Matt Audette (56.56%, 5,115 votes) and Jeff Simon (50.56%, 3,232 votes) won Anoka-Hennepin School Board seats. Simon’s 87-vote margin over Tiffany Strabala (3,145 votes; 49.2%) is likely to trigger an automatic recount amid increased outside involvement in the races, including MN Parents Alliance endorsements and more than $100,000 in spending by Excellence Minnesota.
Elections Education
Brooklyn Park clears officers in Hortman response
Brooklyn Park Police’s preliminary internal investigation cleared Officers Zachary Baumtrog and Jay Bloyer in their response to the June 14 slaying of Rep. Melissa Hortman, finding their actions and Baumtrog’s use of force consistent with policy and training. The review says officers attempted to aid Mark Hortman, were unaware of other victims, and waited to enter the home until 4:38 a.m. after deploying a drone; the department has requested a broader third‑party review of the response and communications. Suspect Vance Boelter is charged in the attacks on the Hortmans and an earlier shooting at Sen. John Hoffman’s Champlin home.
Public Safety Legal
Walz breaks ground on $67M Mankato BCA lab
Gov. Tim Walz and state public-safety leaders broke ground Monday on a $67 million Bureau of Criminal Apprehension regional office and forensic lab at 2350 Bassett Drive in Mankato. The 56,000‑square‑foot facility, slated to open in early 2027 with about 50 staff, will handle up to 6,000 cases and 12,000 evidence items per year, expand DNA/firearms/drug testing and training, and is expected to ease caseload pressure on the St. Paul BCA lab that serves the Twin Cities.
Public Safety Transit & Infrastructure
Man critical after St. Paul hotel pool rescue
St. Paul police say hotel staff pulled a man from the Quality Inn pool at University and Prior just after 4 p.m. Monday, began CPR, and St. Paul Fire medics transported him to a hospital where he remained in critical condition Tuesday. Police interviewed witnesses and said preliminary information indicates an accidental, but tragic, drowning.
Public Safety Health
St. Louis Park Metropoint office headed to auction
A Minneapolis/St. Paul Business Journal report says one of the Metropoint office buildings in St. Louis Park is scheduled for auction. The Hennepin County property is part of the multi‑building Metropoint complex, and an auction would mark a notable development in the Twin Cities office market affecting local tenants and tax revenues.
Business & Economy Housing
Judge caps Metro Transit bus injury award at $500K under state law
Hennepin County Judge Laura Thomas reduced a jury’s roughly $4.26 million award in favor of Christopher Lee Swickard to $500,000, citing Minnesota’s statutory damages cap on claims against public entities. A jury had found Metro Transit 80% at fault (Swickard 20%) after Swickard, 52, had his left leg amputated below the knee following a February 2023 incident on E. Lake St.; the probationary driver, Said Muse, resigned and argued Swickard caused his own injuries by chasing the bus, and Metro Transit notes warnings against running after buses.
Transit & Infrastructure Legal
Dependable Home Healthcare to close; 406 layoffs begin Jan. 3 in St. Paul
Dependable Home Healthcare, a St. Paul company located at 23 Empire Drive and in business since 1991, will shut down and suspend services at the end of January, laying off all 406 employees in six phases beginning Jan. 3 and running through Mar. 13, 2026; the workforce includes 368 caregivers and the remainder administrative staff. CEO Katie Fleury cited business challenges and upcoming regulatory changes affecting Minnesota home care, and the closure follows a recent DHS order pausing payments/audits for Medicaid-funded programs (including PCA/CFSS) that could delay payments up to 90 days.
Business & Economy Health
Audit finds 12 compliance issues at MN Governor’s Office
A legislative audit found 12 compliance issues at Minnesota Governor Tim Walz’s office, citing failures to follow state policies including not recovering costs for private events at the Governor’s Residence, missing or late retroactive pay, inaccurate reimbursements, failure to maintain an updated electronics inventory, and late vendor payments. Auditors examined controls over receipts/reimbursements and vendor/employee payments, prompting criticism from GOP leaders, while confirming no problems with the governor’s and lieutenant governor’s salaries or staff who worked on the 2024 presidential campaign.
Legal Local Government
St. Paul proposes cannabis business manager post
St. Paul plans to add a cannabis oversight position in its proposed 2026 budget to guide entrepreneurs through registration, zoning and local compliance, with pay between $73,000 and $102,000 funded by cannabis registration fees. City officials say they hope to fill the role internally, mirroring Minneapolis’ existing specialist, as the Office of Cannabis Management notes cities are still shaping oversight in the evolving market.
Local Government Business & Economy
Employee fatally shot after confronting theft suspect in Seward lot
A Cornerstone Parking Group employee in his 40s was fatally shot in the fenced employee lot in the 2600 block of 32nd Ave. S. in Seward after confronting someone allegedly rifling through a vehicle; a brief struggle occurred around 6:30 a.m. and co-workers found him about 20 minutes later. Police say the killing — called "senseless" by Chief Brian O'Hara — appears tied to an attempted petty theft, and no arrests or suspect details have been released.
Public Safety
Dinkytown Halloween shooting kills 1, injures 2; MPD recovers 3 guns
A Halloween-night triple shooting in Dinkytown near the University of Minnesota left one man dead and two others — including a UMN undergraduate and a juvenile — wounded; the deceased is not believed to be a UMN student and the two survivors were hospitalized with non-life-threatening injuries. Minneapolis police recovered three guns at the scene, say officers heard two bursts of fully automatic fire and suspect illegal conversion devices, no arrests have been announced, and MPD will increase patrols (CrimeStoppers tip line: 1-800-222-TIPS).
Public Safety Education
Three Minneapolis homicides in four days
Minneapolis recorded three fatal shootings between Thursday and Sunday, including a teen killed during a basement birthday gathering on the 2900 block of Russell Ave. N., a Dinkytown shooting that killed one and injured two (including a UMN student), and a south Minneapolis worker fatally shot after confronting a prowler. MPD’s dashboard shows 54 homicides year-to-date — not including the Sunday teen — compared with 66 at this time last year and 37 in 2019; no arrests had been announced in the Dinkytown or worker cases at the time of this report.
Public Safety
Chrysler recalls 320K Jeep plug-in hybrids
Chrysler (Stellantis) is recalling more than 320,000 Jeep Wrangler 4xe (MY 2020–2025) and Grand Cherokee 4xe (MY 2022–2026) plug-in hybrids nationwide due to faulty batteries that can fail and catch fire, the NHTSA announced Nov. 4, 2025. Owners are instructed to park outside away from structures and not charge their vehicles until a remedy is determined; VINs will be searchable Nov. 6 and interim owner letters mail by Dec. 2 under recall 68C.
Public Safety Technology
Austin man gets workhouse for MSP DUI crash
Michael John Tindal, 33, of Austin, was sentenced Nov. 3 in Hennepin County District Court to six months in the county workhouse and five years’ probation after pleading guilty to four counts of criminal vehicular operation for a Jan. 30 head-on crash on 34th Ave. S. near I-494 in Bloomington that injured six, including two young children in his pickup. Judge Sarah West stayed a 15-month prison term; police said Tindal’s BAC was 0.281 and he was driving after his license was revoked from an earlier DWI.
Legal Public Safety
Minneapolis election to decide council control
Minneapolis voters are deciding whether the City Council’s seven-member progressive bloc will retain its veto-proof edge over Mayor Jacob Frey, with three open seats and three competitive incumbent races — including Ward 2 (Shelley Madore raised $129,000 to Robin Wonsley’s $72,000) and a costly Ward 7 contest in which incumbent Katie Cashman lost the DFL endorsement to Elizabeth Shaffer — poised to determine control. Only first-choice ranked-choice totals will be reported Tuesday night and reallocations resume Wednesday, and the council outcome is tied to the broader mayoral showdown between Frey and democratic-socialist Omar Fateh, who is running as part of a coordinated “slate for change.”
Elections Local Government
Pro-labor challengers surge in Mpls Park races
A surge of pro-labor challengers and democratic-socialist newcomers is reshaping the Minneapolis Park and Recreation Board races, with all nine seats on the ballot, several incumbents not seeking re-election, and results that may take days to finalize. At-large contests include incumbents Meg Forney and Tom Olsen, DFL endorsements for Olsen, Michael Wilson and Amber Frederick, three newcomers who identify as democratic socialists (Adam Schneider, Averi Turner and Michael Wilson) and mayoral backing for Mary McKelvey and Matthew Dowgwillo; District 1 now features DFL-backed union organizer Dan Engelhart after incumbent Billy Menz suspended his bid, Districts 2 and 3 are uncontested (Charles Rucker and Kedar Deshpande) and District 4 pits Jeannette Colby and Andrew Gebo against DFL-endorsed Jason Garcia.
Elections Local Government
Minneapolis voters decide Park Board, BET seats
On Nov. 4, Minneapolis voters are casting ballots for all nine Minneapolis Park and Recreation Board seats and the Board of Estimate and Taxation, with four Park Board incumbents not seeking re‑election and results potentially taking days. The at‑large field includes incumbents Meg Forney and Tom Olsen, DFL endorsements for Olsen, Michael Wilson and Amber Frederick, and mayoral picks Mary McKelvey and Matthew Dowgwillo; district races feature unopposed candidates in Districts 2 (Charles Rucker) and 3 (Kedar Deshpande), a reshuffled District 1 after Billy Menz suspended his bid, and a three‑way District 4 contest to replace Elizabeth Shaffer.
Elections Local Government
Suburban Twin Cities elect local leaders
On Election Day, Nov. 4, 2025, voters in Bloomington, Minnetonka and Lino Lakes are choosing mayors and City Council members amid debates over taxes, development and affordability; polls are open 7 a.m.–8 p.m. The article details candidate slates and priorities, including Bloomington’s at‑large race (Jonathan Minks, Danielle Robertson, Isaak Rooble) plus two district contests, Minnetonka’s open mayoral race with five candidates and one contested at‑large seat, and Lino Lakes’ mayoral race centered on rapid development and a controversial housing/mosque project with incumbent Rob Rafferty seeking reelection.
Elections Local Government
Anoka-Hennepin school board race draws big spending
FOX 9 reports a surge of outside spending in Anoka-Hennepin’s school board races ahead of the Nov. 4 election, with campaign finance records showing Excellence Minnesota has spent over $100,000 statewide and is linked to the Minnesota Parents Alliance. The local teachers union president warns of unprecedented out-of-district and out-of-state money as three seats could shift the six-member board’s balance; the Minnesota School Boards Association urges voters to research candidates and issues.
Elections Education
Community campaign saves Lake of the Isles rink
After the Minneapolis Park and Recreation Board considered closing the Lake of the Isles outdoor skating rink due to climate pressures and budget shortfalls, a neighborhood campaign led by Kenwood resident Janet Hallaway gathered nearly 3,000 signatures, prompting staff to keep the rink open for the upcoming winter season. District 4 Park Commissioner Elizabeth Shaffer said the push also spurred plans to restore and maintain several other rinks that were slated for closure or were closed last year.
Local Government Environment
Allina Doctors Council sets Nov. 9 one-day strike with rally at HQ
Allina Doctors Council SEIU has scheduled a one-day strike for Nov. 9 with a large rally at Allina’s Minneapolis headquarters, calling it “the largest strike of its kind” to protect primary care after earlier reports of a 10-day strike notice and a previously reported Nov. 5 date. Allina says two bargaining sessions are set before the walkout, will maintain safe patient care, argues the union’s compensation and benefits demands are unsustainable, and is closing four clinics on Nov. 1, 2025 (Inver Grove Heights, Maplewood, Nicollet Mall and Oakdale).
Health Business & Economy
Arrest, charges in Nicollet Ave music‑video robbery
Minneapolis police say a 20-year-old St. Paul man has been arrested and charged with two felonies after allegedly robbing two men at gunpoint while they filmed a music video on Oct. 18 near the 1800 block of Nicollet Ave. S. The robbery was captured on the victims’ video; hours later the suspect was seen on city cameras in the same clothing and arrested after a short foot chase, with a Glock handgun and 31‑round magazine recovered along with some stolen cash and jewelry. Due to a prior felony, the suspect is barred from possessing firearms or ammunition.
Public Safety Legal
Construction mishap triggers Stillwater power outages near hospital
Xcel Energy says construction equipment at HealthPartners’ new Lakeview Hospital site in Stillwater struck power lines Friday, cutting electricity to about 3,000 customers for roughly two hours and damaging a power pole. A controlled outage Sunday affected about 300 customers for under an hour to complete repairs, and crews plan to replace the damaged pole on Tuesday; residents report multiple outages since work began this summer near MN 36 and Manning Ave.
Utilities Public Safety
Lake St. Croix Beach fires administrator; suit planned
Lake St. Croix Beach’s council voted 3–2 on Oct. 20 to terminate City Clerk/Administrator Dave Engstrom, 71, after a 90‑day performance plan; Engstrom says he will sue for age discrimination and has retained Minneapolis‑based Halunen Law Firm. During an open review, officials cited attendance, communication and meeting‑minutes oversight issues, while Engstrom disputed the findings and alleged a council member previously called for “new blood.”
Local Government Legal
Police ID men in St. Paul Front Ave. shootout: Lawrence Harris, 30, and Lasean Williams, 28
St. Paul police identified the two men killed in an apparent exchange of gunfire on Front Avenue as Lawrence A. Harris, 30, of St. Paul, and Lasean T. Williams, 28, of St. Louis Park. Officers responded about 4:20 a.m. Friday to the 400 block of Front Avenue where Harris was found in the street and Williams was driven to a nearby fire station before being transported to a hospital; police say both — who knew each other — sustained multiple gunshot wounds, and their deaths are the city’s 10th and 11th homicides of 2025.
Public Safety
Avery Severson launches bid for House 36A
Avery Severson announced Monday, Nov. 3, 2025, that she is running as a Republican for Minnesota House District 36A, which covers Lino Lakes, Circle Pines, North Oaks, Centerville, and most of White Bear Township. The swing‑district race is endorsed by outgoing Rep. Elliott Engen, now running for state auditor, and comes as the House is split 67–67, making 36A one of several seats likely to decide majority control in 2026.
Elections Local Government
Tou Thao released from federal prison; now under Anoka County supervision
Tou Thao, a former Minneapolis police officer convicted in the murder of George Floyd, was released Monday from a federal prison in Lexington, Kentucky. He is now under post-release supervision through Anoka County Corrections.
Public Safety Legal
Eagan HSI agent pleads to child-sex videos
An Eagan Homeland Security Investigations agent, Gregg, pleaded guilty after admitting he recorded sex acts with a 17‑year‑old and sent the videos to her; he met the victim on Tinder (where she was listed as 19), checked a law‑enforcement database after their fourth meeting and learned she was 17 but continued to see her. Court documents say they met at least nine times from early March to May, mostly at a local hotel, and the case began when the victim’s father found explicit images on her phone; Gregg pleaded to transportation of child pornography—avoiding a production charge with a 15‑year mandatory minimum—and faces a statutory range of 5–20 years (prosecutors suggest 14–17.5 years), with no sentencing date set.
Public Safety Legal
Second ambush reported at Minneapolis church
A second ambush was reported outside a Minneapolis Catholic church when would-be robbers staged an attack around 6:20 p.m. Saturday during evening Mass, police said. The suspects fled before officers arrived, neither victim required medical treatment, and police remained on-site for the rest of Saturday’s Mass and provided extra security on Sunday.
Public Safety
Developers propose 181 apartments in downtown Rogers
Developers Bader and Ebert plan a 181‑unit market‑rate apartment project on a former semi‑truck site in downtown Rogers, according to a Nov. 3 report. The Hennepin County proposal would add substantial new housing to the northwest Twin Cities suburb; further city review and approvals were not detailed in the report.
Housing Business & Economy
BCA says recalculations confirm DWI breath tests accurate; amended reports forthcoming
The Minnesota BCA found operator data‑entry errors tied to dry‑gas cylinder changes that led to a temporary suspension and an initial estimate of at least 146 (later up to 276) potentially affected DWI breath tests in counties including Hennepin, Olmsted, Aitkin, Winona and Chippewa and ordered inspections and verification of DataMaster instruments. After mathematical recalculations, the BCA says the flagged results are accurate and within established margins, has secured more than half the instruments with full verification expected in weeks, will issue amended reports to law enforcement, prosecutors and defense attorneys, and will restrict future cylinder changes to BCA personnel while defense attorneys press for transparency on the recalculations.
Public Safety Legal
Minneapolis early voting at second-highest pace
Minneapolis reports more than 23,000 early ballots cast as of Sunday, about 9% of eligible voters, putting the city on pace for its second‑highest municipal early turnout behind 2021. The Early Vote Center (980 E. Hennepin Ave.) is open until 5 p.m. Monday ahead of Tuesday’s election for mayor, all 13 City Council seats, all nine Park Board seats, and the two Board of Estimate and Taxation seats; Ward 6 currently leads early turnout, followed by Ward 3.
Elections Local Government
Man shot inside St. Paul Saloon; suspect sought
A man was shot in the leg inside the St. Paul Saloon and chased and returned fire at the suspected gunman, Sgt. Toy Vixayvong said. Officers applied a tourniquet and St. Paul Fire medics transported the victim with non-life-threatening injuries; as of Monday morning police had not located the suspect and it was unclear whether the suspect was struck.
Public Safety
Ex-Lakeville dance teacher sentenced for assault
A former Lakeville dance instructor, Olson, was sentenced to two months in jail after being accused and later admitting to sexually assaulting a former teen student. Probation bars him from holding positions of authority over minors or vulnerable people and includes monitoring of his internet use; the complaint says he began messaging the student on Instagram when she was in ninth grade, later gave private lessons in 11th grade, allegedly threatened suicide to coerce contact, and had five to eight sexual encounters with her at his home before she turned 18.
Public Safety Legal
AAA: 36% ignore Move Over; 1,500 MN citations
The AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety reports that 36% of drivers observed at roadside incident scenes neither slowed down nor moved over, based on traffic‑camera analysis of 12,360 motorists in 13 states. Minnesota’s Move Over (Ted Foss) law requires motorists to change lanes—or slow down if they cannot—when passing emergency, maintenance, and, since 2023, stalled or disabled vehicles with hazards flashing; state records show nearly 1,500 Minnesotans have been cited so far in 2025 (about 1,680 in 2024 and 1,400 in 2023). Officials and AAA Minnesota say increased awareness and consistent messaging could improve compliance and protect responders and stranded motorists on Twin Cities roads.
Public Safety Transit & Infrastructure
Walz directs $4M to Minnesota food shelves as SNAP cutoff nears
Gov. Tim Walz this week formally directed $4 million to Minnesota food shelves as an emergency stopgap ahead of an expected Nov. 1 interruption to SNAP and other federal food and preschool aid if the partial federal shutdown continues. The one‑time allocation — small compared with roughly $73 million in monthly SNAP benefits that reach more than 440,000 Minnesotans — supplements relief from United Way, local governments and food pantries preparing expanded distributions, but advocates warn food shelves alone cannot close the gap.
Health Local Government Business & Economy
Washington County allocates $250K to food shelves
Washington County Board approved a one-time $250,000 allocation to area food shelves to help meet rising need as federal aid is strained. The move mirrors other metro stopgaps—Bloomington also approved $250,000 in grants—and comes as United Way launches a relief campaign while city departments coordinate donation drives and urge support for pantries such as VEAP.
Health Local Government
Ramsey County elections: races and ballot measures
Ahead of Tuesday’s vote, the Pioneer Press lists Ramsey County ballots: St. Paul and White Bear Lake mayoral races; city council contests in Falcon Heights, St. Anthony and White Bear Lake; and school board races in St. Anthony–New Brighton, Mounds View, North St. Paul–Maplewood–Oakdale and Roseville. St. Paul voters will also decide a St. Paul Public Schools levy that would raise $37 million annually for 10 years (inflation‑adjusted) and a charter amendment allowing administrative citations; several districts also have levy questions.
Elections Local Government Education
Minnesota ends Housing Stabilization Services after fraud; $100M paid to 700+ providers last year
Minnesota is ending its Medicaid-funded Housing Stabilization Services program effective Oct. 31 amid FBI probes and fraud allegations, with CMS approving the termination; Temporary DHS Commissioner Shireen Gandhi said the agency is working to connect participants to other services and is coordinating with counties, tribes and managed care organizations to redirect those affected. The program paid more than $100 million last year to over 700 providers — far above the original $2.6 million estimate — prompting DHS to say it "cannot afford to wait" and to pledge a redesign with the Legislature, providers, community partners and federal officials, even as tribal leaders called the cancellation an overreaction and Gov. Tim Walz ordered a third‑party audit of 14 high‑risk Medicaid services, including HSS.
Health Housing Local Government
Isanti man gets 4 years in Forest Lake teen kidnapping
Shawn Patrick Bellach, 39, of Dalbo was sentenced Friday to four years in prison after pleading guilty to kidnapping and second-degree criminal sexual conduct in a case involving a Forest Lake teen who was found living with him in a tent near Grasston in July 2023. The Tenth Judicial District Court imposed four years on each count to run concurrently, credited 25 days served, dismissed three other charges under an August plea deal, and ordered lifetime predatory‑offender registration.
Legal Public Safety
Where Minneapolis mayoral frontrunners stand on issues
With Minneapolis voters heading to the polls Tuesday, the Star Tribune details where the four leading mayoral candidates — Jacob Frey, Omar Fateh, DeWayne Davis and Jazz Hampton — stand on downtown revival, public safety, housing and homelessness. The report outlines shared support for a more mixed‑use downtown and key differences, including Frey’s backing to move bus routes off Nicollet Mall, Fateh’s push to expand Vibrant Storefronts and partner with the Downtown Council, Davis’ focus on smaller leasable spaces, tax incentives and ‘third spaces,’ and Hampton’s call to streamline permitting/inspections and strengthen walkable neighborhood connections.
Elections Local Government
St. Paul decertifies Westminster Junction TIF early
The St. Paul Port Authority board voted Monday to decertify the 26-year Westminster Junction TIF redevelopment district five years early, returning the East Side business center to the full tax rolls after outperforming projections. The 25-acre site along Phalen Boulevard and Cayuga Street has grown from a blighted rail yard with about 50 jobs to 15 companies with 913 jobs, lifting annual property taxes from $138,000 to $2.6 million, which officials say will help reduce the city’s levy.
Local Government Business & Economy
Half of Skyline Tower residents return; east tower reopens, west tower under repair
Of the 773 residents evacuated after a small Sunday fire that began on the 12th floor and activated sprinklers on multiple floors—causing a building-wide power outage that knocked out heat, water, fire alarms and elevators—all 141 households in the east tower had returned by Friday, while the west tower remains closed for repairs because of significant sprinkler water damage. St. Paul inspectors certified the building structurally sound, no injuries were reported, the fire is under investigation with no signs of suspicious activity, and CommonBond and the city continue to coordinate housing, donations and assistance for displaced residents.
Utilities Local Government Housing
White Bear Lake stabbing nets 7½-year sentence
Ramsey County District Court on Oct. 31, 2025 sentenced 20-year-old Jeffrey Thomas Rice to 90 months in prison for repeatedly stabbing 22-year-old Mason Fike during a July 27, 2024 confrontation on Southwood Drive in White Bear Lake, after Rice pled guilty to first-degree assault. An attempted murder charge was dismissed under the August plea agreement; Fike’s victim-impact statement detailed life-threatening injuries as police records describe Rice fleeing before being stopped and a pocketknife recovered nearby.
Legal Public Safety
FDA limits fluoride supplements for children
The FDA on Oct. 31 restricted pediatric fluoride supplements nationwide, saying they are no longer recommended for children under 3 and for older children unless they face serious tooth‑decay risk, and warned four companies not to market outside these limits. The agency released a new analysis finding limited dental benefits and potential risks such as gut microbiome effects, weight gain, and cognition, and sent a provider advisory; toothpaste, mouthwash, and in‑office treatments are unaffected. The policy applies to Twin Cities families and clinicians, especially in areas without fluoridated water.
Health Legal
Tristen Leritz charged in Vadnais Heights sexual assault; DNA match, confession cited
Tristen Alan Leritz, 21, of White Bear Township was arrested Oct. 30 on the 5100 block of Mead Road and charged Oct. 31 in Ramsey County with one count of criminal sexual conduct after a woman was tackled and assaulted near Centerville Road and Pond View Court in Vadnais Heights. Authorities say a hospital sexual-assault exam produced DNA matching Leritz, he confessed when confronted and admitted ambushing the victim after riding ahead on a bicycle, and investigators credited the victim’s actions (knocking off his glasses, biting his hand), community tips and BCA crime-lab processing for the arrest; he faces up to 30 years and has a prior 2024 motor-vehicle theft conviction and a pending 2025 burglary case.
Legal Public Safety
Judge blocks citizenship proof on federal voter form
U.S. District Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly ruled Oct. 31 that President Trump cannot require documentary proof of citizenship on the federal voter registration form, finding the directive unconstitutional and outside presidential authority. The decision grants partial summary judgment to the DNC and civil-rights groups and permanently bars the U.S. Election Assistance Commission from adding the requirement, while other challenges to Trump’s elections order — including a mailed-ballot receipt-by-Election-Day mandate — continue.
Elections Legal
CDC links Sam’s Club greens powder to salmonella
Federal officials say Member’s Mark Super Greens Powder Supplements sold at Sam’s Club and online are linked to at least 11 salmonella illnesses, including three hospitalizations, in cases reported from May to September. The CDC and FDA report the product has been pulled after contamination was traced to a single lot of organic moringa leaf powder imported from Vallon Farm Direct in India; consumers should throw it away or return it for a refund.
Health Public Safety
Pioneer Acquisitions buys two Washington Square towers
Pioneer Acquisitions has purchased the 100 and 111 Washington Square office buildings in downtown Minneapolis, marking the investor’s first acquisition in the Twin Cities. The Business Journal reports the deal signals the company’s entry into the local office market and suggests more acquisitions may follow.
Business & Economy
U.S. Ed Dept furloughs hit OCR, special ed
Furloughs tied to the government shutdown have hit Education Department offices that oversee special education and civil‑rights enforcement (OCR), coming after staffing at the department fell from about 4,100 to roughly 2,400 since the Trump administration began and leaving only about 330 employees deemed “essential.” The cuts have halted new grants and frozen competitions, slowed reimbursements—raising concerns about school‑meal reimbursements and Head Start funding—while Pell Grants and FAFSA processing have continued.
Government/Regulatory Education Local Government
Pro‑Frey PACs outspend Fateh allies in Mpls
Campaign‑finance reports through Oct. 20 show PACs aligned with Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey and his allies have raised about $1.6 million, in addition to nearly $1 million raised by Frey’s campaign, far outpacing groups backing state Sen. Omar Fateh and his allies ahead of the Nov. 4 election. The largest PAC, All of Minneapolis, has raised $1.2 million, while We Love Minneapolis has raised $309,000 and transferred $130,000 to Thrive MPLS, as both sides mobilize for the mayoral and 13 council races.
Elections Local Government
Judge dismisses complaint over St. Paul ‘Vote Yes’ mailer
An administrative law judge with the Minnesota Court of Administrative Hearings rejected an Oct. 27 complaint by Peter Butler against Rick Varco, treasurer of the 'Vote Yes for a Fairer St. Paul' campaign, alleging a false claim of St. Paul DFL support on a charter‑amendment mailer. Judge James LaFave found no prima facie evidence that Varco made or disseminated the allegedly false statement, and noted the complaint did not tie him to creating the mailer’s content; a separate Sept. 28 meeting convened by the Ramsey County DFL backed both the school levy and administrative‑citations charter question.
Legal Elections
Ex-Minneapolis council member Espejel charged with 3rd-degree DWI refusal; $6K bond, Nov. 13 hearing
Former Minneapolis City Council member Espejel was charged with third-degree DWI for refusing a breath test (and a related fourth-degree DWI for driving under the influence) after a crash just before 11:15 p.m. on the 300 block of 4th Street South near City Hall, during which police say she recorded officers, refused to provide license/insurance, put her Honda CR‑V in drive and attempted to leave before officers stopped the vehicle. Officers reported slurred speech, bloodshot eyes and inability to complete sobriety tests; Espejel refused a breath test at the station, was released on $6,000 bond and is due in court Nov. 13, 2025.
Legal Public Safety
FDA: 580,000 prazosin bottles recalled for nitrosamines
The FDA says Teva Pharmaceuticals USA and Amerisource Health Services voluntarily recalled more than 580,000 bottles of prazosin hydrochloride capsules nationwide earlier this month due to potential nitrosamine impurities, which are considered possibly cancer‑causing. The agency classified the affected lots as Class II risk; prazosin is used to treat high blood pressure and sometimes PTSD‑related nightmares, and Twin Cities patients are advised to check their medication and consult pharmacists or physicians.
Health Government/Regulatory
St. Paul charges Eh Doe Soe; off-duty officer halted assault on 13-year-old
St. Paul police arrested Eh Doe Soe on Oct. 3 and charged him after an off-duty officer intervened Sept. 30 to stop an attempted sexual assault of a 13-year-old on the Earl St. and York Ave. overpass above Phalen Boulevard. Authorities say a second related encounter occurred Oct. 2 near Phalen Boulevard and Johnson Parkway when the suspect approached the girl on a bicycle, ditched the bike and fled into nearby woods; bail was set at $70,000, his first court date is Nov. 12, and records show a Dec. 2023 fifth-degree criminal sexual conduct conviction for lewd conduct before children.
Legal Public Safety
Minnesota clarifies Medicaid audit: only flagged claims paused up to 90 days; Optum reviewing
Gov. Tim Walz ordered a third‑party audit of Medicaid billing across 14 designated “high‑risk” services, contracting Optum to run analytics and flag anomalous claims for DHS review — a move funded in the 2025 session and prompted in part by recent federal fraud prosecutions. DHS clarified it is not withholding all payments but will pause only Optum‑flagged claims for up to 90 days for prepayment review (and possible denial if found fraudulent), saying it will still meet federal 90‑day payment rules, a step that providers warn could destabilize care and has drawn mixed political reactions.
Health Local Government
MSP starts weekly food aid for unpaid feds
Minneapolis–Saint Paul International Airport has launched a weekly food aid program for unpaid federal workers affected by the government shutdown. AFGE leader and MSP TSA agent Neal Gosman said TSA employees took home donated food boxes after their shifts, and AFGE representative Mark Johnson said many workers cannot pay rent due Nov. 1 and face $50/day late fees.
Health Public Safety Business & Economy
MN Senate hears shutdown’s toll on TSA, WIC
At an Oct. 30 hearing of the Minnesota Senate’s Subcommittee on Federal Impacts, union leaders said MSP TSA agents are missing rent and taking home donated food boxes, while advocates warned Minnesota’s WIC funds (about $9M/month) will last only through the third week of November. State officials cited diminished communication with USDA and Attorney General Keith Ellison said a judge is expected to rule soon in the 25‑state lawsuit seeking to restore SNAP during the shutdown.
Local Government Health Business & Economy
St. Paul administrative citations on ballot: full question, backers, and how it would work
Ordinance Ord 25-2, on the St. Paul ballot, would amend the city charter to authorize administrative citations, and city leaders — including Mayor Carter, Rep. Kaohly Her, all seven council members, the Charter Commission and a broad coalition of labor, faith and community groups — have urged residents to vote “yes.” The charter change itself sets no fine amounts or covered violations (those would be adopted later through separate ordinances after public hearings for roughly 15 enforcement areas such as animal control, neglected construction, landlord code/rent issues, illegal sewer discharges and employer wage/sick‑time violations); critics warn fines could become a “tax on the poor” or a revenue source, the measure was put on the ballot after a petition by former City Hall employee Peter Butler, and some mayoral candidates (Yan Chen, Mike Hilborn) say they will vote no while Kaohly Her supports it.
Local Government Elections
Judge dismisses Macalester animal-testing lawsuit by alum
A judge dismissed an alum’s animal‑welfare lawsuit against Macalester College, throwing out two of three counts without prejudice and prompting plaintiff Dr. Neal Barnard to say he plans to refile; Judge Karen Janisch found Barnard had conducted an independent investigation and could not reasonably rely on alleged misrepresentations, and noted the college had made no promise to change its practices. Macalester says its psychology program still uses operant‑conditioning "Skinner box" experiments and about 100 rats a year (many used in multiple activities and living 2–3 years) that are euthanized by an experienced technician with carbon dioxide, and President Suzanne Rivera said the ruling affirms academic freedom and prevents outside groups from dictating curriculum.
Legal Education
MPD orders review and retraining after Willard-Hay domestic-violence killing
After Mariah Samuels was fatally shot in her Willard‑Hay home on Sept. 14 — allegedly by ex‑boyfriend David Wright, who has been arrested and charged with second‑degree murder and was under a court order to stay away — reviews found MPD failed to assign an investigator after an August assault despite a risk assessment, witness statement and surveillance video, and body‑camera footage contradicted an officer’s report. Chief Brian O’Hara has ordered a thorough review and department‑wide retraining on domestic‑violence protocols to be completed by the end of 2025 amid criticism over understaffing in the domestic assault unit, numerous unassigned “gone on arrival” cases, City Council demands and public rallies by the victim’s family.
Public Safety Legal Local Government
St. Paul chiefs warn pay gaps risk retention
St. Paul Police Chief Axel Henry and Fire Chief Butch Inks say they now earn less than their potential pensions and below market for their roles, as the city raised non‑union manager salary ranges by 9% in Dec. 2024 but has not moved managers within those ranges pending union negotiations. Henry earns $207,688 and Inks $201,968, while the new top ranges would be $226,387 (police) and $220,147 (fire); Henry cites a city job study suggesting about $256,000 as market. Mayor Melvin Carter acknowledges budget pressures — including a $7.5M lawsuit payout, cyberattack costs, and threatened federal funding — and proposed limited raises as top police and fire staff consider unionizing.
Local Government Public Safety
Judge: FDA mifepristone limits unlawful; no change yet
U.S. District Judge Jill Otake in Hawaii ruled Oct. 30 that the FDA violated the Administrative Procedure Act by failing to adequately justify its 2023 decision to keep special REMS restrictions on mifepristone, used for abortion and miscarriage care. The court ordered FDA to reconsider evidence it allegedly disregarded, but left current restrictions in place for now; the ACLU brought the case and says the limits burden access, while DOJ did not immediately comment.
Legal Health
CDC: Listeria in pasta kills six
The CDC says a listeria outbreak tied to recalled pre‑cooked pasta meals has grown to 6 deaths and 27 illnesses in 18 states, with the latest case on Oct. 16. The outbreak is linked to pasta from Nate’s Fine Foods (Roseville, Calif.) used in heat‑and‑eat meals made by FreshRealm and sold at national retailers including Trader Joe’s and Walmart; multiple specific products and best‑by dates have been recalled, and consumers are urged to discard or return affected items.
Health Public Safety
Alleged mass shooter charged in Hennepin jail escape bid
Around 4:17 p.m. at the Hennepin County jail, alleged mass shooter Ortley pushed past a professional visitor in the visiting area, grabbed a wall-mounted fire extinguisher, used its base to break an exit door near public elevators and sprayed deputies with its contents. Five deputies were evaluated at HCMC for chemical exposure to swollen, burning eyes, and Ortley is charged with five counts of assault, one count of property damage and one count of attempting to flee custody after he reportedly lay down and shouted, "I'm done! I'm done! Lock me up!"
Legal Public Safety
CBP mandates facial scans for non-citizen travelers
The Department of Homeland Security said U.S. Customs and Border Protection will require facial recognition and photo capture for all non‑U.S. citizens, including green‑card holders, at all ports of entry and departure starting Dec. 26, 2025. The Federal Register rule expands CBP’s existing program to land, sea, and air locations, authorizes biometric capture for children under 14 and adults over 79, and aims to combat document fraud and enhance border security.
Government/Regulatory Transit & Infrastructure Technology
US penny mint halt triggers shortages
AP reports the U.S. stopped producing pennies in mid‑2025 under President Trump, and with the last coins minted in June and distributed by August, banks are now rationing pennies and retailers nationwide are running out as the holiday season approaches. The Treasury placed its last planchet order in May; 2024 saw 3.23 billion pennies minted even as each cost 3.7 cents to make, and merchants are asking for exact change or rounding to avoid legal exposure—operational shifts that will affect Twin Cities cash transactions.
Business & Economy Government/Regulatory
Walz backs Frey in Minneapolis mayor race
Days before the Nov. 4 election, Gov. Tim Walz endorsed incumbent Jacob Frey in Minneapolis’s 15‑candidate mayoral race, which uses ranked‑choice voting allowing voters to select up to three choices. The article identifies four frontrunners — Frey, Sen. Omar Fateh, Rev. DeWayne Davis and Jazz Hampton — outlines their public‑safety and wage positions, and notes the DFL revoked its earlier endorsement of Fateh after internal disputes.
Elections Local Government
After Trump–Xi meeting, China says it will work with U.S. on TikTok; no ownership deal yet
After the Trump–Xi meeting, China’s Commerce Ministry said it would work with the U.S. to resolve TikTok-related issues but provided no details and said no ownership agreement was reached. That statement contrasts with U.S. reports — including Trump saying Xi approved a proposed U.S. ownership deal, the White House suggesting the transaction could be finalized in South Korea, and earlier plans for Oracle to manage TikTok’s U.S. algorithm — as negotiations continue under U.S. divestiture requirements.
Business & Economy Technology Legal
Shutdown halts Medicare telehealth waivers
The federal shutdown prevented Congress from extending pandemic‑era Medicare telehealth flexibilities before their Sept. 30 expiration, temporarily halting reimbursement for many home‑based virtual visits. Providers are canceling or weighing unreimbursed appointments, and millions of Medicare fee‑for‑service patients nationwide — including Twin Cities seniors who cannot easily travel — are losing access to remote care while the shutdown continues.
Health Government/Regulatory
Cargill cuts 80 jobs at Minnetonka headquarters
Cargill is laying off 80 employees at its Minnetonka headquarters, the company confirmed Oct. 30, 2025, citing a sales decline. The move affects corporate roles at the global agribusiness’s Twin Cities base and follows softer revenue performance.
Business & Economy
Trump, Xi deal trims China tariffs
President Donald Trump said Thursday after a 100‑minute meeting with China’s Xi Jinping in Busan that the U.S. will reduce tariffs on Chinese goods, lowering one tranche tied to fentanyl-chemical sales from 20% to 10% and cutting the combined rate from 57% to 47%. China agreed to allow rare earth exports and resume U.S. soybean purchases, and Trump said Nvidia will hold talks on advanced chip exports as both sides work toward a trade deal.
Business & Economy Technology
Osseo schools settle $61.5K MDHR harassment case
The Minnesota Department of Human Rights announced Oct. 28, 2025 a settlement with a former Osseo Area Schools student who, at age 9, was sexually harassed by an assistant principal; documents say the district knew of the conduct and did not act until after the family withdrew the student in March 2022. The district issued a written reprimand in June 2022 and the administrator resigned that August; the student’s parents filed an MDHR complaint in September 2022, and the district agreed in July 2025 to pay $61,500 while denying wrongdoing and citing increased staff training.
Education Legal
St. Paul probes suspected carport arson
St. Paul police are investigating a suspected arson that ignited around 5:50 a.m. Oct. 29 at a carport, destroying at least three vehicles; surveillance video shows people near the structure moments before the fire. A property manager said the group appeared to have a lookout, and police are examining possible links to a similar early‑morning garage fire last week on Birmingham Street; no arrests have been made and investigators are seeking tips.
Public Safety Legal
Sheriffs warn of SNAP 'emergency relief' text scams amid shutdown (now includes Anoka County)
Scammers are sending fraudulent text messages to Minnesota SNAP recipients offering fake $1,000 "emergency relief," with some messages using the phrase "Food Debit Emergency Relief" and appearing amid a shutdown. The Anoka County Sheriff’s Office warned about the scam on X, noting roughly 440,000 Minnesotans rely on SNAP and may be targeted.
Public Safety Local Government Government
Oak Park Heights OKs Mango Cannabis at Joseph’s
The Oak Park Heights City Council unanimously approved a conditional-use permit Tuesday for Mango Cannabis to occupy the entire Joseph’s restaurant building at 14608 60th St. N. City officials said Joseph’s plans to relocate nearby, while applicants ABJKM Holdings and Boundary Waters Capital also seek a Stillwater site as both cities raise caps to four cannabis retailers. The Hwy. 36 corridor is drawing interest due to Wisconsin’s cannabis ban, and Oak Park Heights previously approved Oak Park Heights Canna for a 2026 opening.
Local Government Business & Economy
Senate votes to block Trump’s Canada tariffs
The U.S. Senate on Wednesday, Oct. 29, held a vote on a resolution to nullify President Trump’s tariffs on Canadian imports by terminating the national emergencies underpinning them. Led by Sen. Tim Kaine and joined by some Republicans including Sen. Rand Paul, the effort spotlights GOP divisions even as House GOP rules can block a vote there and the White House could veto. The action comes amid active U.S.–Asia trade talks and a tense U.S.–Canada dispute with potential consumer price impacts for Twin Cities residents.
Business & Economy Government & Politics
University of Minnesota ends hosting high school graduations
The University of Minnesota said this week it will no longer host high school commencement ceremonies at any campus venue, ending more than 20 events each spring at 3M Arena at Mariucci and other sites. Citing an unsustainable strain on resources—and following heightened security after a May 30 shooting outside a graduation—the decision leaves Twin Cities districts that relied on Mariucci’s 6,000+ indoor capacity scrambling to secure new locations, adjust dates, or implement ticketing.
Education Local Government
Minnesota pauses payments for 14 Medicaid services
Gov. Tim Walz has paused payments for 14 "high‑risk" Medicaid services and ordered a state-contracted audit of Medicaid billing — funded through legislative appropriations — after suspected fraud tied to recent federal prosecutions. The administration says vendor Optum will flag suspicious claims for DHS verification and referral to the DHS Office of Inspector General, and is adding measures such as enhanced fingerprint checks and unannounced visits, prompting responses from provider groups, Republican lawmakers and federal prosecutors calling for accountability.
Local Government Health
St. Paul man charged in Pride, anti‑Trump vandalism; phone evidence shows address list, rally link
A St. Paul man was charged after authorities allege he vandalized LGBT Pride flags and anti‑Trump signs in a spree that also included broken windows at two businesses and a school. Police say a seized cellphone contained GPS‑tagged photos tying him to vandalism sites and a June 4 note listing 69 addresses (some later damaged), and that he described himself in texts as a “right‑wing libertarian,” attended the June 14 “No Kings” Capitol rally with a Trump sign, installed the Neighbors app and shared a Ring video link before a July 2 traffic stop and search recovered clothing matching surveillance; charges were issued by summons and his first court date is Nov. 13.
Legal Public Safety
Fed cuts benchmark rate to about 3.9%
The Federal Reserve made its second rate cut of 2025, trimming the benchmark to about 3.9%. Consumers should expect top high‑yield savings rates to drift lower as banks pare offerings, mortgage rates—which recently fell to their lowest in over a year—may decline further while auto‑loan rates are likely to ease only slowly; the Fed projects another cut before year‑end and advisers say borrowers may want to consider refinancing or consolidating debt as rates fall.
Consumer Business & Economy Housing
FDA proposes streamlined biosimilar testing
The FDA released draft guidance on Oct. 29, 2025 to simplify studies for biosimilar versions of biologic drugs, aiming to remove what it calls unnecessary, resource‑intensive clinical comparisons. The proposal opens a 60‑day public comment period, with non‑binding final guidance expected in three to six months, and federal officials say the change is intended to spur competition, lower prices, and speed access to treatments such as those for autoimmune disease and cancer.
Health Business & Economy
Sun Country adds MSP–Tulsa route for 2026
Minneapolis-based Sun Country Airlines will launch a new route between Minneapolis–Saint Paul International Airport (MSP) and Tulsa, Oklahoma, and increase frequencies to other coastal destinations as part of its summer 2026 schedule. The expansion adds a new nonstop option for Twin Cities travelers and boosts flights to popular coastal markets during the peak summer season.
Transit & Infrastructure Business & Economy
United Properties plans 36-acre Newport project
United Properties is proposing a 36-acre development in Newport, Washington County, that would include industrial buildings, apartments and a Kwik Trip, according to a report published Oct. 29, 2025. The project would add new housing and commercial uses in the east‑metro suburb, with city review and approvals expected as the plan advances.
Business & Economy Housing
Microsoft Azure outage disrupts key services
Microsoft reported on Oct. 29 that issues with its Azure Front Door content delivery network are causing access problems to Azure and services like Office 365, Minecraft, Xbox Live and Copilot. The company says it is investigating and mitigating; outage reports surged on Downdetector, and Microsoft acknowledged the incident on its status page and social media. The disruption could affect Twin Cities businesses and consumers that rely on Microsoft cloud services.
Technology Transit & Infrastructure
Man admits killing mother in Minneapolis Uptown
A Minneapolis man admitted to killing his mother in the city’s Uptown neighborhood, according to court records cited by the Star Tribune. The victim had twice sought court protection from him before the homicide; authorities are proceeding with the case as investigators and prosecutors continue their work.
Public Safety Legal
Francisco Partners to acquire Jamf for $2.2B
Private equity firm Francisco Partners will buy Minneapolis-based Apple device‑management software maker Jamf in a $2.2 billion deal announced Oct. 29, 2025. Jamf, which went public in 2020 at $26 per share, is a prominent Twin Cities tech employer; the transaction would transfer ownership of the company, with further details on closing and any local impacts not yet disclosed.
Business & Economy Technology
39 AGs urge Congress to ban intoxicating hemp
Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison joined 38 other state attorneys general in a letter asking Congress to ban intoxicating hemp products such as delta‑8 and delta‑10 THC by closing federal loopholes. The AGs cite consumer‑safety concerns and urge changes to federal law that allowed psychoactive products to proliferate since the 2018 Farm Bill. Any ban would immediately affect Twin Cities retailers and consumers who buy hemp‑derived THC products.
Legal Health Business & Economy
Hennepin Ave in Uptown reopens Friday after $30M, 1.5‑year rebuild
Hennepin Avenue in Uptown Minneapolis reopens Friday after roughly 1.5 years of reconstruction between Lake Street and Douglas Avenue, a project that topped $30 million and added protected bike lanes, wider sidewalks and new bus shelters. Businesses along the corridor — some of which reported steep revenue losses (Autopia said a 60% drop) and closures such as Pizza Shark while the Uptown Art Fair relocated — received support from the city, which awarded grants to 36 businesses between Franklin and W. 36th Street through its business technical assistance program over the past two years.
Transit & Infrastructure Business & Economy
Wayzata realtor charged in $397K tax case
The Minnesota Department of Revenue says Wayzata real estate owner Kevin Patrick Mullen, 42, has been charged in Hennepin County with five felony counts of failing to file individual tax returns and five felony counts of willfully failing to pay income tax for 2019–2023, alleging about $397,000 is owed. Court documents say Mullen acknowledged missing returns in Dec. 2024, filed some in Feb. 2025, and has a first court appearance set for Nov. 12; his income came through Ideal Properties and Investments LLC, and investigators cite prior contacts about tax debts and additional unfiled years back to 2008.
Legal Business & Economy
Minnesota Capitol to add 20 officers, threats investigator as threats surge
Facing a surge in threats — roughly 50 reported in under 10 months this year, with 13 leading to charges and on pace to triple 2024’s 19 — Minnesota’s Capitol will add 20 security officers (training begins mid‑ to late‑November) and a dedicated threats investigator by year‑end. Since August all but four public entrances have been closed, further enhancements and a legislative vote on additional security changes are expected in February, while the building still lacks metal detectors and allows firearms, a policy Republicans are not backing to change.
Local Government Public Safety
Crystal daycare teacher charged in child slap
Javell Lena Cooper, 24, of Coon Rapids, has been charged in Hennepin County with two counts of malicious punishment of a child after surveillance video allegedly showed her slapping a 3-year-old’s ear at a church-based daycare in Crystal. The incident occurred July 25, 2025, at a facility on the 5000 block of West Broadway; the child’s parent reported finding their child crying, and later the family and church provided video to police. The complaint also notes the child previously came home with ear bruising about a year earlier.
Public Safety Legal
Senate rejects Trump tariffs on Brazil
The U.S. Senate voted in bipartisan fashion on Oct. 28, 2025, to reject the Trump administration’s proposed tariffs on Brazilian imports, a move that comes amid spiking coffee prices. The decision averts new duties that could have further increased consumer costs in the Twin Cities and nationwide; details of next steps now shift back to the administration and trade agencies.
Business & Economy Government/Regulatory
Judge blocks federal-worker layoffs during shutdown, citing political retribution
A judge has extended an order barring the Trump administration from carrying out shutdown-related federal-worker layoffs, finding the planned firings amounted to political retribution. The ruling reinforces protections for federal employees while the government funding lapse continues.
Government Legal Local Government
St. Paul man sentenced in neighbor’s fatal stabbing
A 65-year-old St. Paul man was sentenced for fatally stabbing his 70-year-old apartment neighbor during a dispute over money, according to a report on Oct. 28, 2025. The case stems from a confrontation inside a St. Paul apartment building that ended in the neighbor’s death; sentencing concludes the criminal proceedings against the defendant.
Legal Public Safety
Wisconsin man killed in I-94 Afton crash
A Wisconsin man died in a two‑vehicle crash on Interstate 94 in Afton, Minnesota, on Tuesday, Oct. 28, 2025. The collision occurred in Washington County on the east‑metro interstate corridor; authorities are investigating the cause and have not yet released further details.
Public Safety Transit & Infrastructure
Judge blocks funding cuts over gender‑diversity sex ed
A federal judge issued an injunction blocking the Trump administration from pulling federal funding from sex‑education programs that include instruction on gender diversity. Announced Oct. 28, 2025, the ruling preserves funding while litigation proceeds and could affect Twin Cities school districts and nonprofits that rely on federal grants for sex‑education programming.
Legal Education
Hwy 65 closed after bridge strike in Spring Lake Park
MnDOT closed Highway 65 in both directions between Highway 10 and 85th Avenue NE in Spring Lake Park on Tuesday after a semi hauling a metal pedestrian bridge struck the County Road 10 bridge deck around 11:25 a.m. The Minnesota State Patrol says the impact disconnected the trailer, which was then hit by another vehicle; no injuries were reported. The closure was announced just before noon with an estimated reopening by 4 p.m.
Transit & Infrastructure Public Safety
Target to eliminate 1,800 corporate jobs (8%)
Target will eliminate about 1,800 corporate jobs — roughly 8% of its corporate workforce — by laying off about 1,000 employees and closing about 800 open roles, with impacted staff to be notified Tuesday, Oct. 28, 2025, and told to work from home next week. The cuts, concentrated at Target’s Minneapolis headquarters and not affecting in‑store associates, are described as a restructuring to simplify decision‑making and move faster rather than primarily to cut costs; those laid off will receive pay and benefits through Jan. 3 plus severance and support services.
Employment Business & Economy
MN Supreme Court appeal delays Deshaun Hill retrial
The Hennepin County Attorney’s Office has asked the Minnesota Supreme Court to allow use of a videotaped, post-Miranda interrogation of Cody Fohrenkam in the 2022 killing of Minneapolis North High student Deshaun Hill Jr., delaying a retrial that was set to begin next week. The Court of Appeals overturned Fohrenkam’s prior conviction and suppressed the interview as the product of unlawful detention; prosecutors now seek high‑court review to admit the video at the new trial.
Legal Public Safety
Court narrows Minneapolis duty to defend officers
A Minnesota court ruled Tuesday that the City of Minneapolis is not obligated to provide a legal defense to some police officers being sued over their conduct during the 2020 George Floyd protests. The decision clarifies when the city’s duty to defend applies, indicating certain alleged actions fall outside what Minneapolis must cover and potentially reducing taxpayer exposure in ongoing civil cases.
Legal Local Government
Eastside Food Co-op restores operations after rooftop copper theft
A rooftop copper theft knocked out refrigeration at the Eastside Food Co-op, leaving shelves bare and causing a large loss of food that management called a “massive hit.” The co‑op says it has largely bounced back, with affected departments reopened and products restocked as normal operations are restored.
Business & Economy Public Safety
Cigna to drop drug rebates in many private plans
Cigna said Oct. 27, 2025 it will end drug manufacturer rebates in many private health plans, altering pharmacy benefit design for employers and members nationwide, including in the Twin Cities. The move affects plans administered by its pharmacy benefit operations; the company did not immediately specify which plans or the effective date.
Health Business & Economy
Edina police seek Hwy 169 shooting suspect
Edina police are searching for a man who fired a shot at a woman’s SUV on northbound Highway 169 just north of I‑494 around 7 a.m. on Oct. 11; no one was injured. On Oct. 27, police released photos of the suspect’s older sedan with tinted windows and asked anyone with information to email EdinaPoliceTips@EdinaMN.gov after the victim reported the sedan was weaving and the driver pointed a gun and fired as she passed.
Public Safety Transit & Infrastructure
Judge lets Kirk murder suspect wear street clothes
A Twin Cities district court judge granted a defense request allowing the suspect in the killing of Charlie Kirk to appear in street clothes and without visible restraints during court proceedings, citing the case’s 'extraordinary' public attention. The order, issued Oct. 27, aims to mitigate potential juror prejudice and security concerns as the high‑profile case proceeds.
Legal Public Safety
Minneapolis clears 234 OPCR misconduct cases backlog
The Minneapolis Office of Police Conduct Review said Monday, Oct. 27, 2025, it completed investigative work on 234 backlogged police‑misconduct complaints received on or before May 23, 2024, after hiring/reassigning 12 staff, adding supervisors, and restructuring investigations. Cases now move to panel review and a final decision by the police chief, and OPCR will focus on newer complaints as the city works toward compliance with its Minnesota Department of Human Rights settlement agreement.
Local Government Public Safety
Suicidal man shuts Highway 61 in Forest Lake
Forest Lake police closed Highway 61 late Sunday after a man threatening suicide prompted an emergency response on the roadway. Officers shut the highway to protect the public and manage the situation in Forest Lake, Washington County; the report details how police handled the incident.
Public Safety Transit & Infrastructure
St. Paul man charged over TikTok bounty on AG
Federal prosecutors charged St. Paul resident Tyler Maxon Avalos in October 2025 with making an online threat after a TikTok post offered a $45,000 'dead or alive (preferably dead)' bounty on U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi. Investigators say they traced the 'Wacko' account to Avalos via a Samsung phone and IP address at his Hyacinth Avenue West apartment; he was arrested and released on recognizance, and the complaint includes screenshots of the post.
Legal Public Safety
Nov. 4 voting guide for Twin Cities
FOX 9 outlines what’s on 2025 ballots and how/where to vote ahead of Minnesota’s Nov. 4 municipal and school board elections, including Minneapolis and St. Paul mayoral races and St. Paul’s ballot question. The guide details polling hours (most 7 a.m.–8 p.m., but metro polling places in municipal/school-only elections may open as late as 10 a.m.), early in‑person voting through Nov. 3, absentee ballot rules, and how to find polling places and register via mnvotes.org.
Elections Local Government
MAC Chair Rick King to retire
Rick King, chair of the Metropolitan Airports Commission, announced his retirement on Oct. 26, 2025. The MAC oversees Minneapolis–Saint Paul International Airport and several reliever airports, making the leadership change significant for the Twin Cities’ primary aviation infrastructure; the report did not immediately specify timing or succession details.
Transit & Infrastructure Local Government
32 newly planted trees cut along Shepard Road
St. Paul Parks and Recreation says 32 recently planted trees were found cut a few feet above the ground along Shepard Road south of the Smith Avenue High Bridge on Friday, Oct. 24. The trees were planted last fall with nonprofit partner Tree Trust; officials are determining replacement options but no funding source is identified. Police are investigating, and the city notes a similar November 2024 incident in the same area destroyed 60 trees, causing roughly $40,000 in damage.
Public Safety Environment
Attempted St. Paul carjacking sparks gunfire, injures one
An attempted carjacking in St. Paul on Friday night escalated to gunfire, leaving one person injured, according to an initial report. Police are investigating; details about suspects or arrests were not immediately available.
Public Safety
Delta flight to Portland aborts MSP takeoff after aircraft fire
A Delta Air Lines flight bound for Portland aborted its takeoff at Minneapolis–Saint Paul International Airport after flames were seen shooting from an engine. Authorities and reports described the incident as an "aircraft fire."
Public Safety Transit & Infrastructure
Afton, William O’Brien parks closed for hunts
The Minnesota DNR will close Afton State Park and William O’Brien State Park in Washington County to the public for a weekend deer hunt. The temporary closures are intended to facilitate the controlled hunt and maintain visitor safety, with normal access resuming after the weekend.
Public Safety Environment
USCIS details $100K H‑1B fee: applies to overseas applicants; renewals exempt
USCIS says a $100,000 fee will apply to H‑1B petitions filed on or after Sept. 21, 2025 for beneficiaries outside the U.S. who do not already hold a valid H‑1B visa, while exemptions include amendments, changes of status, extensions of stay and petitions tied to existing valid H‑1Bs submitted before Sept. 21, 2025; F‑1 graduates changing status inside the U.S. and current H‑1B holders traveling abroad are likewise not subject to the fee. The agency has set up an online portal for paying the fee, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce has filed a major legal challenge, and employers—particularly Minnesota schools, retail and health‑care providers—warn of higher costs, potential hiring delays and adjusted recruiting plans.
Business & Economy Legal Government/Regulatory
DHS chief says ‘dozens’ of new ICE agents coming to Minnesota; ‘No Trump No Troops’ Capitol rally set for Saturday
DHS Secretary Kristi Noem visited the Twin Cities and held a press conference at Fort Snelling, saying Minnesota will see “dozens” of new ICE agents as part of a national expansion, criticizing local leaders, urging state and city cooperation and noting National Guard deployments are a presidential decision while hundreds protested onsite. Organizers including the People’s Action Coalition Against Trump planned a Friday noon response and a “No Trump No Troops” rally and march is scheduled for Saturday at 1 p.m. at the Minnesota State Capitol.
Public Safety Legal Local Government
2M pounds of pork jerky recalled
USDA’s Food Safety and Inspection Service announced on Oct. 24, 2025, that a South Dakota manufacturer is recalling about 2 million pounds of Korean barbecue pork jerky due to possible metal wire contamination. The recall is nationwide and may affect Twin Cities retailers and consumers; FSIS advises not to eat the product and to discard or return it to the place of purchase.
Health Public Safety
Weinhagen resigns from Mounds View school board
Jonathan Weinhagen has resigned from the Mounds View (ISD 621) school board amid federal fraud allegations. The departure changes leadership for the Ramsey County district and follows his recent federal indictment tied to his prior role outside the district.
Education Local Government
Developer seeks $3.5M St. Paul loan for Grand/Victoria project
A developer has asked the City of St. Paul to approve a $3.5 million public loan to support a mixed‑use housing and retail project at Grand Avenue and Victoria Street, according to a Friday report. City officials are expected to consider the request as part of the project’s financing review.
Housing Local Government
Gun found at Champlin Park High; 2 arrested
Brooklyn Park police say a handgun was recovered from a backpack at Champlin Park High School around 8:45 a.m. Friday after a tip led the school resource officer and staff to the students involved. Two 15-year-old boys, both students, were arrested and booked into the Hennepin County Juvenile Detention Center; the investigation is ongoing.
Public Safety Education
Shutdown delays Social Security COLA announcement
A government shutdown delayed the usual announcement of the Social Security cost-of-living adjustment, leaving recipients uncertain about next year’s benefit increase. Officials have now set the 2026 COLA at 2.8%, which will raise average monthly benefits by about $56 and ends the uncertainty caused by the earlier delay.
Business & Economy Government Government/Regulatory
Social Security sets 2026 COLA at 2.8%
Social Security recipients will receive a 2.8% cost-of-living adjustment in 2026, translating to an average increase of about $56 per month, according to a report published Oct. 24, 2025. The nationwide change directly affects beneficiaries in the Minneapolis–Saint Paul metro as monthly payments adjust in the new year.
Business & Economy Government
Alaska Airlines resumes after IT outage grounds flights
Alaska Airlines said Friday, Oct. 24, 2025, that it has resumed operations after an IT outage grounded its flights for hours, causing delays and cancellations across its network. The disruption affected flights serving Minneapolis–Saint Paul International Airport (MSP) before service restarted.
Transit & Infrastructure Business & Economy
Fridley man charged with two counts in Fletcher’s firebombings; community rallies
Prosecutors have charged a Fridley man with two counts of first‑degree arson after two Molotov cocktail attacks on Fletcher’s Ice Cream in Minneapolis — one Sunday night that broke a window but was extinguished and a second in daylight Monday that failed to ignite when the wick fell out. A witness photo of a suspect in a minivan helped police make an arrest about a half‑mile away, and the community, joined by Mayor Jacob Frey and others, rallied at the shop Thursday while officials say motive — including whether it was related to the shop’s pride flag — remains undetermined.
Public Safety Legal Business & Economy
State investment board cites safety, moves online
The Minnesota State Board of Investment delayed parts of its agenda and shifted its Oct. 23 meeting to a virtual format, citing concerns about political violence and safety. The board, which oversees public pension investments for state and local employees including many in the Twin Cities, said the changes were precautionary as it conducted business remotely.
Local Government Public Safety
St. Paul family seeks DOC accountability after prison death
The family of Stephen Williams, a St. Paul man who died while incarcerated at the state’s Rush City prison, is calling for accountability from the Minnesota Department of Corrections. In reporting published Oct. 23, 2025, relatives urged transparency and action regarding the circumstances of his death at MCF–Rush City.
Public Safety Legal
Southwest LRT begins on‑track testing
Trains on the Southwest Light Rail have begun moving along the new tracks for on‑track testing. The Metropolitan Council says the Green Line extension to the west metro is still targeted to begin service in 2027, reaffirming that timeline after testing started.
Public Safety Local Government Transit & Infrastructure
Secondary market emerges for MN cannabis licenses
FOX 9 reports Minnesota recreational cannabis licenses are being listed and resold on secondary markets, with more than 80 licenses recently posted at combined asking prices once above $100 million. One local example is a former Wendy’s site in Roseville marketed with city approval and a lease, though any change in majority ownership would reset its place in the city’s queue for three retail licenses; all transfers require approval from the Office of Cannabis Management.
Business & Economy Local Government
Eagan man pleads guilty in apartment rape
An Eagan man pleaded guilty on Oct. 23, 2025, to raping a woman after sneaking into her first‑floor apartment in Eagan. The plea resolves a violent sexual assault case in the Twin Cities suburb and advances the case toward sentencing in Dakota County.
Legal Public Safety
St. Paul Mayor Carter seeks third term
St. Paul Mayor Melvin Carter said he is seeking a third term, citing ongoing work he wants to complete as the Nov. 4, 2025 election approaches. The announcement comes with early voting already underway; Carter faces challengers Kaohly Vang Her, Adam Dullinger, Yan Chen and Mike Hilborn.
Elections Local Government
Eight charged in MN Housing Stabilization Services fraud allegedly spent millions on Kenya real estate, luxury cars
Federal prosecutors in Minnesota have charged eight people with wire fraud in an alleged scheme to siphon more than $8 million from the state's Medicaid Housing Stabilization Services program, and one defendant has already pleaded guilty. Authorities say the funds were spent on Kenya real estate, leased luxury vehicles (including BMWs and Mercedes), a Roseville apartment, nearly $500,000 on a joint American Express Platinum card and were funneled through companies such as Brilliant Minds Services LLC, Leo Human Services LLC, Faladcare Inc. and Liberty Plus LLC; the FBI raided sites July 16 and the investigation is ongoing with more charges expected.
Housing Legal
Early voting starts Sept. 19 in Twin Cities
Early voting in the Twin Cities begins Sept. 19 for 2025 contests, including a Nov. 4 special election for Minnesota Senate District 29. The SD29 race pits GOP nominee Michael Holmstrom Jr., a Buffalo small‑business owner, against DFL nominee Louis McNutt, a MnDOT heavy equipment mechanic and AFSCME Council 5 secretary, and because the district leans GOP (Anderson won 68–32 in 2022) the result could affect the DFL’s narrow 33–32 Senate majority with two open seats (SD47 and SD29).
Local Government Elections
Tesla recalls 63,000+ Cybertrucks for bright headlights
Tesla has issued a nationwide recall of more than 63,000 Cybertrucks because the front lights are too bright and can cause glare for other drivers, a violation of federal safety standards. Announced Oct. 23, 2025, the recall affects owners in the Twin Cities; Tesla says it will provide a free remedy (expected via software update) and notify owners and dealers.
Public Safety Technology
US, EU sanctions lift oil; gas prices may rise
The United States and European Union imposed new sanctions on Russian oil companies on Thursday, prompting a jump in global oil prices that could raise gasoline costs for Minneapolis–Saint Paul drivers in coming days. Analysts and industry watchers say higher crude and wholesale fuel prices typically flow through to the pump, with timing dependent on station inventories and supply contracts.
Energy Business & Economy
Evergreen Recovery leaders plead guilty in Medicaid fraud, kickback scheme
Two leaders of Evergreen Recovery, Shantel Magadanz and Heather Heim, pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit wire fraud in a scheme prosecutors say involved illegal kickbacks with Sber Chances Sober Living—offering housing in exchange for attendance at Evergreen programming that was often not provided, with falsified records and coercion that allegedly cost taxpayers millions. A third Evergreen leader, Shawn Grygo, was indicted in December 2024 and has not pleaded guilty, and Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison condemned the theft of Medicaid funds and vowed continued enforcement.
Legal Health
Rep. Elliott Engen launches auditor bid
Republican state Rep. Elliott Engen announced he is running for Minnesota state auditor, entering the 2026 statewide race for the office that audits state and local governments. The auditor’s work directly affects metro cities, counties and school districts, and Twin Cities voters will help decide the contest.
Elections Local Government
Express buses to replace Northstar at two stops
Metro Transit will replace Northstar commuter rail service at the Big Lake and Elk River stations with new express bus service, affecting riders who use those stations to reach Minneapolis and other Twin Cities stops. The change shifts how Sherburne County commuters access the Northstar corridor and downtown, with officials outlining the replacement service to maintain connectivity.
Transit & Infrastructure Local Government
Minneapolis posts full 2025 mayor, council ballot
FOX 9 lists all candidates for Minneapolis’ 2025 mayoral and City Council races and details where and when residents can vote. Fifteen candidates are on the mayoral ballot, including incumbent Jacob Frey and Sen. Omar Fateh, with ranked-choice voting in use; early voting is open now at the Early Vote Center (980 E Hennepin Ave) ahead of Election Day on Nov. 4, 2025. The guide also notes at least three open council seats (Wards 5, 8, 11) and publishes ward-by-ward candidate lineups.
Elections Local Government
St. Paul meeting addresses racist fliers
About two dozen St. Paul residents met with police and Mayor Melvin Carter Wednesday night at Bethlehem Lutheran Church to discuss racist fliers found Oct. 2 in several Merriam Park locations targeting Black and Somali people. Police said they are investigating who distributed the fliers—tossed on the ground at four spots—and noted it is unclear whether a crime occurred, though littering or trespassing could apply.
Public Safety Local Government
Brooklyn Park police search for missing boy
Brooklyn Park police issued a public alert Wednesday night for a missing 10-year-old boy last seen near Single Creek Drive and Hampshire Avenue. He was wearing green pants, a green sweater, a blue Ralph Lauren jacket with patches, an army backpack, and tan shoes. Police ask anyone who sees the child or knows his whereabouts to call 911.
Public Safety Legal
Lakeville weighs 390-acre, 1,440-home project
Lakeville officials are reviewing a proposal for a roughly 390-acre development in the city’s southwest corner that could include up to 1,440 homes and substantial commercial space. The plan, reported Oct. 22, 2025, would significantly reshape land use and could impact housing supply, retail mix, and local services if approved.
Housing Local Government
MPD seeks two cyclists in Temple Israel bias‑graffiti case; asks public for video
Minneapolis police are treating anti‑Semitic graffiti at Temple Israel as a bias crime and are seeking two cyclists seen leaving the scene — both wearing dark hoodies, masks and blue surgical gloves — and have issued a public appeal for tips and surveillance footage. The pair were observed arriving and leaving via 24th St W to Fremont Ave S, seen near 25th St W & Humboldt Ave S and last seen southbound at 26th St W & Irving Ave S; residents with video from Oct. 8 between 2–3 a.m. are asked to contact policetips@minneapolismn.gov, 612‑673‑5845 or CrimeStoppersMN.org/1‑800‑TIPS.
Legal Local Government Public Safety
Legrand’s Minnetonka HQ building sells for $23M
Buhl Investors has sold the Minnetonka office building that houses Legrand’s new headquarters for $23 million, marking a major markup on the asset. The transaction, reported Oct. 22, 2025, underscores investor demand for single-tenant, HQ‑anchored properties in the Twin Cities market.
Business & Economy Real Estate
Wind advisory brings 45–50 mph gusts Tuesday
A wind advisory on Tuesday produced widespread gusts in the mid-40s to low-50s, including a 53 mph peak at Redwood Falls and a 43 mph gust in the Twin Cities, with numerous communities reporting gusts in the mid-40s. Cloud cover should clear midweek, with sunshine returning and highs climbing into the upper 50s toward the weekend with generally dry conditions.
Weather
MN Supreme Court: USAPL discriminated against trans athlete; remands ‘business purpose’ defense
The Minnesota Supreme Court ruled that USA Powerlifting discriminated against transgender weightlifter JayCee Cooper under the Minnesota Human Rights Act’s public‑accommodations provision, affirming partial summary judgment that USAPL’s policy constituted sexual‑orientation discrimination. The court remanded a separate business‑statute claim to district court so USAPL can pursue a “legitimate business purposes” defense; Cooper, who sued in 2021 after being denied entry to women’s events in 2018, and her advocates say the public‑accommodations ruling would still leave USAPL liable even if it prevailed on the remanded claim.
Legal
I-94 downtown St. Paul closed this weekend
MnDOT says sections of I-94 through downtown St. Paul will be closed from Friday through Monday for construction work, with posted detours and significant travel delays expected. The shutdown affects a core interstate corridor used by commuters and event traffic, and is part of ongoing road and bridge work in the downtown St. Paul area.
Transit & Infrastructure Public Safety
Robins Kaplan downsizes, moves to Wells Fargo Center
Robins Kaplan will reduce its Minneapolis office footprint and relocate to the Wells Fargo Center downtown, with a multimillion‑dollar build‑out planned, firm leaders said on Oct. 22, 2025. The move reflects a strategic shift in how the law firm uses office space in the Twin Cities’ core business district.
Business & Economy Real Estate
Brooklyn Center school bus fire; 8 evacuated
The Brooklyn Center Fire Department extinguished a school bus fire near 55th Avenue and Brooklyn Boulevard shortly before 3 p.m., safely evacuating eight children with help from the driver and bystanders. Metro Transit provided a bus to keep students warm and Brooklyn Center police coordinated reunification at a nearby elementary school; the bus was a total loss and the cause is under investigation, with an initial suspicion of a mechanical issue near the engine.
Public Safety Transit & Infrastructure
3M lifts outlook; shares jump nearly 8%
Maplewood-based 3M raised its full-year earnings outlook on Tuesday, Oct. 21, 2025, citing progress in its turnaround, and its shares climbed about 7.7% on the day. As one of the Twin Cities’ largest employers, the improved guidance and market reaction signal strengthening business conditions with potential implications for local operations and jobs.
Business & Economy
Union stages protest against Ramsey County detox program closure
On Oct. 21 union members held a public protest opposing Ramsey County’s planned closure of its detox/withdrawal management program, escalating organized labor’s pushback beyond earlier statements. Protesters urged county commissioners to keep the program open, emphasizing the closure’s impact on St. Paul and Ramsey County residents.
Health Local Government
East Bethel mom alerts driver, saves bus riders
A school bus caught fire in East Bethel, and parent Kari Thorp alerted the driver after spotting flames near a tire, allowing all 22 children and the driver to evacuate safely, according to FOX 9. The bus tires later exploded after firefighters arrived; a week later, the community presented thank‑you baskets to both the driver and Thorp for their actions.
Public Safety Education
Hennepin County releases 911 call transcript
Hennepin County has released the 911 transcript from an attempted political assassination in Minnesota after a legal fight, making the emergency call record public. The newly released transcript pertains to a case involving Vance Boelter and follows a dispute over access to the document.
Public Safety Legal
St. Paul joins lawsuit over $100M emergency grants
The City of St. Paul said Tuesday it has joined a coalition of cities suing the federal government over a policy that threatens more than $100 million in emergency grants. City officials argue the federal conditions unlawfully put critical emergency funding at risk for municipalities, and the suit seeks to block the changes while the case proceeds.
Local Government Legal
Grand Ave Macalester–Wheeler segment reopens Tuesday; $6.7M project ribbon cutting 4:30 p.m.
Grand Avenue between Macalester and Wheeler streets reopens Tuesday, Oct. 21, with a free community celebration from 4–6 p.m. and a ribbon cutting at 4:30 p.m.; traffic is expected to reopen by 11 p.m. The $6.7 million phase — part of the larger Grand Ave. project between Snelling and Fairview and partly funded by the 1% sales tax approved in 2023 — aims to improve pedestrian safety and crossings, modernize infrastructure, and upgrade environmental and transit amenities, with most construction due to finish by year‑end 2025 and final cleanup into 2026.
Transit & Infrastructure Local Government
St. Paul man charged in teen sex assault
A St. Paul man has been charged with sexually assaulting a 13-year-old girl he allegedly met through a dating app, according to a Tuesday report. The case, filed in Ramsey County, involves an alleged assault of a minor and remains under investigation by authorities.
Public Safety Legal
Funding secured for 600+ Twin Cities homes
Emerging developers have secured financing to build more than 600 housing units in Minneapolis and St. Paul, according to the Minneapolis/St. Paul Business Journal on Oct. 21, 2025. The funding advances multiple projects that would add significant new apartments/homes in both cities, marking a notable boost to the metro’s housing pipeline.
Housing Business & Economy
Minnesota measles cases rise to 21 after Mayo case
Minnesota’s measles total for 2025 has risen to 21 after a newly identified case linked to the Mayo Clinic in Rochester/Olmsted County; officials and local outlets have reported recent additional cases, including reports of 10 new infections among unvaccinated patients. Public health authorities and reporters say the surge is tied in part to declines in routine childhood vaccination, increasing the risk of transmission.
Public Safety Health
Xcel names Bria Shea regional president
Xcel Energy has promoted Bria Shea to regional president overseeing its operations in Minnesota, North Dakota and South Dakota. Shea brings more than 15 years of experience at Xcel Energy to the role.
Utilities Business & Economy
State lifts cap on Hennepin jail capacity
The Minnesota Department of Corrections has approved an increase in the Hennepin County jail’s allowable population after a hiring spree boosted detention staffing, officials said this week. The change, affecting the Adult Detention Center in downtown Minneapolis, relaxes earlier limits tied to staffing shortfalls and enables the county to hold more detainees locally under DOC standards.
Public Safety Local Government
Rollover crash shuts I-35W in Burnsville
A rollover crash closed a stretch of I-35W in Burnsville during the morning commute, forcing traffic to divert, according to a local report. Authorities warned of significant delays as detours were set up; no immediate information on injuries or a reopening timeline was available.
Transit & Infrastructure Public Safety
AG Keith Ellison seeks third term
Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison announced he will run for a third term, launching his 2026 re‑election campaign. As the state’s top legal officer, Ellison’s bid sets up the statewide race that will shape consumer protection, public safety, and civil enforcement priorities affecting Minneapolis–Saint Paul.
Elections Legal
Supreme Court to review federal gun ban for marijuana users (922(g)(3))
The Supreme Court will decide whether the federal ban on firearm possession by "unlawful users" of controlled substances (18 U.S.C. 922(g)(3)) applies to people who regularly use marijuana, a question arising after a Texas man's gun conviction was overturned post‑Bruen because he wasn’t found actively using while armed. The Biden administration argues the prohibition is justified for "regular drug users" on public‑safety grounds, while challengers point to historical laws that punished carrying while intoxicated rather than mere use; the case also underscores ATF and DOJ reminders that combining guns and marijuana remains illegal under federal law despite state legalization, with arguments likely early next year.
Public Safety Legal
MPS denies race-only classes, updates course guides
Minneapolis Public Schools said it does not restrict class enrollment by race or gender after course guides at South and Roosevelt high schools listed Black culture courses as open only to Black boys or Black girls. The district said the posted language is not reflective of actual practice and will be updated, while an attorney interviewed by FOX 9 argued race-based restrictions would violate Title VI and risk federal funding.
Education Legal
Ramsey County settles foster parents data case
Ramsey County will pay $875,000 to foster parents from Little Canada to resolve a data practices dispute, according to a report published Oct. 20, 2025. The settlement closes a legal conflict over the county’s handling of data, ending the case without further litigation and carrying financial implications for the county.
Legal Local Government
Walz, Prairie Island sign cannabis compact; wholesale to state dispensaries could begin in November
Gov. Tim Walz and leaders of the Prairie Island Indian Community signed a tribal-state cannabis compact on Monday, Oct. 20, 2025, establishing terms for the tribe to supply recreational cannabis to state dispensaries. If implementation proceeds as planned, wholesale deliveries to state-licensed retailers could begin as soon as November.
Local Government Business & Economy
Minnesota ends same-day license pilot Oct. 31
The Minnesota Department of Public Safety’s Driver and Vehicle Services will discontinue its pilot for same‑day printing of standard Class D driver’s licenses on Oct. 31, 2025, after recommending against expansion due to quality and appearance differences that led to acceptance issues at bars and airports. The pilot, launched in May 2023 at the Dakota County License Center in Lakeville and in Moorhead, will shift all standard licenses, IDs, and permits back to vendor‑printed cards mailed to customers.
Local Government Transit & Infrastructure
Itasca Project leadership to end group
The Itasca Project, a business-led regional development group in the Minneapolis–Saint Paul area, is being ended by its leadership, the Star Tribune reports. The change affects a long‑running CEO and civic leader forum that has played a role in shaping metro economic strategy; details on timelines and how work may transition to other organizations were not immediately specified.
Business & Economy
Federal cuts slash Minnesota food aid
USDA funding reductions to The Emergency Food Assistance Program (TEFAP) have removed roughly 1 million pounds of food from Minnesota’s supply, and state and nonprofit officials warn deeper cuts could follow. The shortfall affects food shelves statewide, including in the Twin Cities, forcing pantries to stretch resources as demand remains high.
Health Local Government Business & Economy
Wayzata sued over short-term rental ban
Five Wayzata rental owners have filed a lawsuit challenging the city’s September ordinance that bans short‑term rentals like Airbnb and Vrbo, which is set to take effect next April. The suit argues the city failed to follow required procedures such as holding a public hearing and that the ordinance conflicts with city and state laws; plaintiffs are asking a judge to block enforcement so they can continue operating. The ordinance allows rentals only if they are 30 days or longer.
Legal Local Government Housing
Maple Grove woman takes lesser plea after appeal
A Maple Grove woman who fatally shot her boyfriend pleaded to a lesser charge in Hennepin County District Court after the Minnesota Court of Appeals overturned her murder conviction. The plea, reported Oct. 20, 2025, resolves a high‑profile domestic violence case rooted in allegations of abuse and shifts the outcome from a prior murder verdict to a reduced offense.
Legal Public Safety
Minneapolis starts fall street sweeping Tuesday
Minneapolis Public Works will begin its fall street sweeping on Tuesday, enforcing temporary 'No Parking' rules on posted streets while crews clean. Residents are urged to watch for signs, use the city’s online map or call 311 to check their block’s schedule; vehicles parked in violation may be ticketed and towed.
Transit & Infrastructure Local Government
Stillwater Lift Bridge closes for the season
The Stillwater Lift Bridge in Washington County closed for the season on Oct. 20, affecting pedestrian and bicycle crossings on the St. Croix River in the Twin Cities metro. The seasonal shutdown diverts trail users to alternative routes such as the St. Croix Crossing path until the bridge reopens in spring.
Transit & Infrastructure
Bemidji teen, infant may be in St. Paul
The Minnesota BCA issued an alert Monday for 17-year-old Laura Wright and her 7-month-old son, Kylo, reported missing from Bemidji after they were last seen Saturday entering a sedan with LED lights. Authorities say the pair may be in the St. Paul area and released physical descriptions to aid the search. Anyone with information is asked to call 218-333-9111.
Public Safety
Bouncer charged in Rick's Cabaret shooting that critically injured man
Andrew Jordan Thompson, 30, a bouncer at Rick’s Cabaret, has been charged with second-degree assault in the Oct. 5 shooting outside the downtown Minneapolis strip club that left a man hospitalized with potentially life‑threatening injuries; police have released the victim’s identity and said the incident occurred near 300 3rd St. S. Witness video and accounts show a fight in which Thompson was knocked down before he allegedly followed the pair clutching his waistband and fired a shot, then three more; officers recovered multiple shell casings and a live round, found handgun ammunition in Thompson’s apartment, and booked him into Hennepin County Jail where he is also being held on a 2023 Hopkins weapons case.
Public Safety Legal Crime
AWS outage disrupts Snapchat, Ring services
A major Amazon Web Services outage on Monday, Oct. 20, 2025, disrupted Snapchat, Ring and other online services nationwide, affecting users in the Minneapolis–Saint Paul metro. The scope extended across multiple AWS-reliant apps and sites, with service interruptions reported as restoration efforts proceeded.
Technology
Speeding motorcyclist dies on Minneapolis ramp
The Minnesota State Patrol says a motorcyclist who was speeding crashed on a downtown Minneapolis freeway ramp and died. The fatal single-vehicle crash occurred on a ramp serving the city’s downtown; the State Patrol is investigating and has not yet released further details.
Public Safety Transit & Infrastructure
Former Minnesota Teacher of the Year Abdul Wright sentenced to 14 years
Abdul Wright, a former Minnesota Teacher of the Year, was sentenced to 14 years in prison on Oct. 17, 2025, in Hennepin County District Court after being convicted of sexually assaulting a 14-year-old student. During the sex-crimes trial the judge found that Wright lied while testifying.
Public Safety Education Legal
Minneapolis board weighs school closures
The Minneapolis School Board signaled on Oct. 20, 2025, that school closures are on the table, according to a Minnesota Reformer report. The indication suggests the district may pursue consolidation or closures, with details, affected schools, and a decision timeline not yet specified.
Education Local Government
Group attacks, robs men outside Minneapolis church
Minneapolis police say two men leaving St. Joan of Arc Catholic Church were attacked around 8 a.m. Sunday by a group of 7–8 men who jumped out of two gray vehicles near 3rd Ave. S. and E. 46th St. One victim was pushed to the ground and robbed while the other was injured dodging objects thrown by the group. The suspects fled in the vehicles; no arrests have been made and the victims chose private transport to a hospital after on‑scene evaluation.
Public Safety
Minneapolis raid seizes nearly 10 pounds fentanyl
Hennepin County Sheriff’s deputies executing a search warrant Oct. 16 at a home on Fremont Ave. N near Lowry Ave. in Minneapolis’ Folwell neighborhood recovered about 4.5 kg (9.9 lb) of suspected fentanyl, 726 g of meth, 13 lb of cannabis, three firearms and $46,000 in cash. Kiron Jamoll Williams, 43, of Phoenix, Arizona, was charged with first-degree drug and weapons offenses after allegedly trying to dump a bag of white powder into a toilet as officers entered; deputies initiated exposure protocols due to airborne powder. Investigators also found a kilo press, blender with residue, ammunition and packing materials; a neighbor reported another man jumped from a window and has not been identified.
Public Safety Legal
Scott Jensen launches second run for governor
Former Minnesota gubernatorial candidate Scott Jensen announced a second bid for governor and said he is embracing Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and the “Make America Healthy Again” theme. The Star Tribune reports the move positions Jensen in the emerging 2026 field, which includes Gov. Tim Walz seeking a third term, and signals the messaging he plans to center in his campaign.
Elections Local Government
Body found in Richfield’s Wood Lake Saturday
A pedestrian reported a body floating in Wood Lake in Richfield just after 10 a.m. Saturday, and responders recovered an unidentified adult male. The Hennepin County Sheriff’s Office is leading the investigation while the Medical Examiner works to determine the man’s identity and cause of death; police have not said whether the death appears suspicious.
Public Safety Legal
Off-duty St. Cloud officer Ryan Ebert dies after Apple Valley bus crash
Ryan Ebert, 44, an 18‑year veteran of the St. Cloud Police Department, died Oct. 18 at Hennepin County Medical Center after being gravely injured in a crash Oct. 13 on northbound Highway 77 just south of I‑35E in Apple Valley. The Minnesota State Patrol report says Ebert’s pickup struck a transit bus and a cable barrier, the 65‑year‑old bus driver suffered non‑life‑threatening injuries, the report lists alcohol as a factor and notes Ebert was not wearing a seat belt, though St. Cloud Chief Jeff Oxton said medical records showed only a trace amount well below impairment levels; family members have authorized organ donation and final MSP findings are pending.
Public Safety Transit & Infrastructure
South St. Paul tannery strike ends with deal
A weeklong strike at a tannery in South St. Paul ended after workers and management reached an agreement reported Saturday, Oct. 18, 2025. Details of the pact were not immediately disclosed, but the resolution concludes a work stoppage affecting a Dakota County industrial employer.
Business & Economy
Prior Lake medspa owner Nancy Anderberg charged over 'black market' Botox, fake RN license
Prior Lake medspa owner Nancy Anderberg, who operates Regen Life Antiaging Medspa, has been charged with unlawfully practicing medicine after allegedly buying "black market" Botox and administering injections — including Botox and semaglutide/Ozempic — without proper licensure or prescriptions, allegedly faking a registered nurse license and listing a medical director who was unaware of the listing. The investigation, which began in May 2024, includes witness texts saying she sourced products and learned injection techniques from YouTube, and a collaborating physician told investigators she lacked qualifications; the unlawful-practice charge carries up to one year in jail and a $3,000 fine.
Legal Health
BCA: Twin Cities violent crime up 1% in 2024
The Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension reports violent crime in the Twin Cities rose 1% in 2024, even as statewide data show murders and assaults continued to decline, extending a post‑pandemic downward trend. The BCA framed 2024 as a continuation of post‑pandemic normalization in key violent‑crime categories.
Public Safety Local Government
Minnesota federal courts limit operations amid shutdown
The U.S. District Court for Minnesota announced it is shifting to limited operations due to the federal funding lapse tied to the government shutdown, affecting the Minneapolis and St. Paul courthouses. Essential criminal proceedings will continue while some civil matters and court services are curtailed until funding is restored.
Legal Local Government
USDA flags critical issues at UMN labs
USDA inspection reports cite 'critical' animal‑welfare and compliance problems at University of Minnesota animal research labs, according to the Star Tribune. The findings, classified at the most serious level by federal regulators, concern UMN facilities in the Twin Cities and could require corrective actions under the Animal Welfare Act.
Education Government/Regulatory
Census: Minnesota poverty rate second-lowest
The U.S. Census Bureau’s latest figures show Minnesota has the nation’s second‑lowest poverty rate, though the rate has risen in recent measurements. Released this week, the new data provide a current snapshot of economic hardship that will inform policy and service planning for Minneapolis–Saint Paul and the rest of the state.
Business & Economy Health
Ford recalls 290,000 U.S. vehicles for camera issue
Ford Motor Company announced a U.S. safety recall affecting more than 290,000 vehicles due to a rearview camera system issue that may impair the display of the rear image. The recall applies nationwide, including Twin Cities owners, with Ford indicating affected vehicles will be eligible for a no‑cost remedy at dealers and advising owners to check their VINs for recall status.
Public Safety Business & Economy
Guide to 2025 metro county elections
The Pioneer Press provides a 2025 election guide for Dakota, Ramsey, and Washington counties, detailing local races and ballot questions ahead of Election Day on Nov. 4, 2025. The guide consolidates what’s on ballots across the three Twin Cities counties with timing reminders as early voting continues.
Elections Local Government
Minnesota drops 800 inactive Medicaid providers statewide
Minnesota’s Department of Human Services disenrolled about 800 inactive Medicaid providers on Oct. 15, 2025, under Gov. Tim Walz’s Executive Order 25-10 directing immediate removal of providers who haven’t billed in the past 12 months. DHS said the step, which excludes 621 inactive Housing Stabilization Services providers slated to end Oct. 31, is part of tightening oversight after widespread fraud allegations, with additional rounds of eliminations planned.
Health Local Government
HistoSonics raises $250M for global expansion
Minneapolis‑based medtech HistoSonics raised $250 million to scale its noninvasive ultrasound tumor‑treatment platform globally, according to the Twin Cities Business Journal on Oct. 16, 2025. Investors include Bezos Expeditions and Thiel Capital, and the company says the financing will accelerate commercialization and expansion of its histotripsy technology, with implications for its Twin Cities operations.
Business & Economy Health Technology
Meta expands land holdings in Rosemount
The Minneapolis/St. Paul Business Journal reports that Meta Platforms, Facebook’s parent company, has purchased additional land near its prospective data center site in Rosemount, Minnesota. The acquisition expands Meta’s footprint in Dakota County and signals continued movement on the potential data center project.
Business & Economy Technology
Burned body found at Lake Minnetonka dock
South Lake Minnetonka police launched a death investigation after a badly burned body was found in Lake Minnetonka beside a smoldering dock on the 4500 block of Enchanted Point in Shorewood just before 2 p.m. on Oct. 14. A Hennepin County search warrant cites signs of accelerants near the body, notes a possible fractured leg and burned dock canopy, and lists seized items including laptops, phones, paperwork that may include a note or will, and a can; court records show one person tied to the property was under an Extreme Risk Protection Order earlier this year and was civilly committed.
Public Safety Legal
Lakeville I-35W stop nets 200-pound meth haul
A Minnesota State Patrol trooper conducting a Sept. 26 traffic stop on I-35W in Lakeville found about 200 pounds of methamphetamine in a commercial truck after a K9 alert, according to Dakota County charges. Driver Jonathan Israel Tirado-Juarez, 43, who lacked required commercial paperwork and produced only a photo of a Mexican CDL, was charged with possession and intent to sell and is detained pending further proceedings.
Public Safety Legal
Minneapolis mayoral hopefuls split on policing
At a Wednesday forum at The Capri Theater in Minneapolis, mayoral candidates outlined contrasting approaches to policing and public safety with less than three weeks before Election Day. All agreed the city needs officers for violent crime, while diverging on funding priorities and responses to non‑violent calls, with Mayor Jacob Frey emphasizing hiring more officers and others focusing on reallocating resources toward behavioral crisis response and alternatives to police.
Elections Public Safety Local Government
Mercy Hospital - Unity Campus lockdown lifted after bomb threat
Fridley Police say the Allina Health Call Center received a bomb threat around 3 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 15, targeting Mercy Hospital - Unity Campus in Fridley. The campus was placed on lockdown while police and security searched the area; the lockdown was lifted after the search, and the investigation is ongoing with a public tip line open.
Public Safety Health
Edina High students allowed to carry Narcan
Edina High School has adopted a new policy allowing students in grades 9–12 to carry and administer Narcan (naloxone), making the district one of the early adopters in Minnesota after a 2025 state revision that built on a 2023 law requiring at least two doses per school. Superintendent Dan Bittman said he expects other districts may consider similar policies; the Minnesota Department of Education does not track district-level student-carry naloxone policies, and Edina reports overwhelmingly positive parent feedback with no negative responses so far.
Education Health
FAFSA 2026–27 application now open
Federal Student Aid opened the 2026–27 Free Application for Federal Student Aid on Oct. 15, 2025, allowing Twin Cities students and families to begin applying for federal, state, and institutional aid for the 2026–27 academic year. Applicants use FSA IDs, invite required contributors (such as a parent) to consent to IRS data sharing, and should file ahead of college and state priority deadlines.
Education
Minneapolis crash with train critically injures driver
A chain-reaction collision in Minneapolis involving two SUVs and a moving train left one driver in critical condition, according to the Star Tribune. The crash occurred at a rail crossing in Minneapolis; emergency responders transported the critically injured driver as investigators worked to determine how the sequence of impacts unfolded.
Public Safety Transit & Infrastructure
Medicare open enrollment starts amid MA cuts
Medicare open enrollment runs Oct. 15–Dec. 7, allowing Twin Cities Medicare members—especially those losing Medicare Advantage plans in 2026 due to insurer pullbacks—to join, drop, or switch plans. Enrollees in Medicare Advantage also have an additional Jan. 1–March 31 window to change MA plans, with coverage effective the month after enrollment; assistance is available via 1-800-MEDICARE and Minnesota Aging Pathways (800-333-2433).
Health Business & Economy
St. Paul teen admits fatal University Ave. shooting
A St. Paul teenager has admitted to killing a man with a shot to the head along University Avenue in St. Paul, according to the Star Tribune. The admission marks a major development in the homicide case tied to the University Avenue shooting; further court proceedings, including sentencing, are expected to follow.
Public Safety Legal
Two killed in wrong-way crash on U.S. 52
Two drivers were killed in a wrong-way collision on U.S. Highway 52 in Inver Grove Heights on Wednesday, Oct. 15, 2025. Authorities responded to the scene in Dakota County and have opened an investigation into how the wrong-way vehicle entered the roadway.
Public Safety Transit & Infrastructure
Report: Downtown St. Paul vacancies ease
Greater Saint Paul BOMA’s 2025 Market Report, released Oct. 14, finds downtown St. Paul’s competitive office vacancy improved to about 31% from a peak above 32% last year, after rising from roughly 18% in 2020. BOMA president Tina Gassman says the district is stabilizing with public‑private efforts underway, while more than 1 million square feet left vacant by Madison Equities remains a major drag.
Business & Economy Housing
Highway 7 closes Minnetonka–Shorewood Oct. 15–20
MnDOT will close both directions of Highway 7 between Vine Hill Road in Shorewood/Deephaven and County Road 101 in Minnetonka from 7 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 15, to 5 a.m. Monday, Oct. 20, for a culvert replacement. Drivers will be detoured via I-494, Highway 5, and Highway 41 during the shutdown.
Transit & Infrastructure
Commerce Dept. bans unlicensed insurer in Minnesota
The Minnesota Department of Commerce announced on Oct. 14, 2025, that it has barred an unlicensed insurance seller from operating in the state. The regulatory action applies statewide, protecting consumers in the Minneapolis–Saint Paul metro and across Minnesota from unlawful insurance sales.
Legal Business & Economy
AG: Two contractors accused in $1.5M fraud
The Minnesota Attorney General’s Office alleges contractors Ryan Pietron and Earl Bode took more than $1.5 million from families for home projects they abandoned or never started, with victims in Maplewood and Apple Valley among those affected. The state has already imposed a lifetime contractor ban on Bode and barred Pietron from applying for a license until at least 2030, and lawsuits are seeking further penalties and restitution.
Legal Local Government
Judge: DHS can’t tie FEMA aid to immigration cooperation, calls tactic ‘bullying’
A federal judge ruled that the Department of Homeland Security cannot condition FEMA disaster aid on state cooperation with federal immigration enforcement, issuing an injunction barring the DHS-imposed eligibility requirement. In his opinion the judge said DHS was "bullying" states into accepting those immigration-enforcement conditions, a prohibition that affects states and localities including Minnesota.
Legal Local Government
Ex-St. Paul police employee Jamond Glass charged after 11-lb meth, fentanyl seizure at Woodbury home
Ex-St. Paul police employee Jamond Leroy Glass, 34, a former civilian worker in the SPPD non-fatal shooting unit who has been fired, was charged after detectives seized about 9.8 pounds of methamphetamine, 1.68 pounds of fentanyl, 10.5 grams of cocaine and several firearms from a Woodbury home. The package was intercepted by Minneapolis Airport Police and a controlled delivery was made to a Woodbury address listed to “Kay Wilson”; Glass was formally charged Oct. 13 in Washington County with first-degree possession, posted a $50,000 bond and is next due in court Dec. 1.
Legal Public Safety
Search warrant: 22-year-old who posed as White Bear Lake student allegedly received nude images from a student
Authorities say 22-year-old Kelvin Luebke (aka "KJ Perry") enrolled at White Bear Lake High School Sept. 3–29, 2025 using fraudulent documents — including a Liberian birth certificate listing a 2007 birth year — and registered for football practices while the district, citing McKinney‑Vento rules, says it followed enrollment procedures and has launched a review; FOX 9 reported he has a prior conviction for sending explicit images to a 15‑year‑old and was previously enrolled at Forest Lake Area High School. A Ramsey County search warrant alleges Luebke received nude photos from a student, investigators have sought his phone and other records and say multiple parents came forward, and authorities are probing possible fraud, forgery and criminal sexual conduct while no school‑related charges had been filed as of mid‑October.
Public Safety Education Government/Regulatory
Downtown Council steps back from Holidazzle, Aquatennial
The Minneapolis Downtown Council says it will stop directly producing the Holidazzle and Aquatennial festivals and is seeking another organization to take over, citing inconsistent sponsorship funding and evolving needs of downtown Minneapolis. MDC will continue to promote the events and says Holidazzle will evolve into “Winterapolis,” a season‑long campaign highlighting winter activities rather than a single festival.
Business & Economy
Target pilots THC beverages at select Minnesota liquor stores
Target is piloting the sale of THC beverages at select Minnesota liquor stores, rather than in general store aisles. The move taps into what industry observers call the nation’s most competitive THC beverage market, with the pilot reported on Oct. 13, 2025.
Health Government/Regulatory Business & Economy
Maple Grove seeks SUV in Oct. 2 hit-and-run
Maple Grove Police are asking the public to help identify a newer black Dodge Durango that allegedly struck a motorcyclist and fled around 7:45 a.m. on Oct. 2 at the four-way stop in front of the Sam’s Club and Walmart in Maple Grove. Police say the motorcyclist, a woman, suffered non-life-threatening injuries but lost her leg; anyone with information is urged to call (763) 494-6100.
Public Safety
Minneapolis seeks developer for Dania Hall site
The City of Minneapolis is seeking a developer to revive the former Dania Hall site in the Cedar-Riverside neighborhood, a historically significant parcel where the 1886-built Danish cultural center was destroyed by fires in 1991 and 2000. The move signals a new push to redevelop the long-vacant site; formal solicitation details were not included in the preview.
Local Government Housing
Rep. Ilhan Omar backs Fateh for mayor
U.S. Rep. Ilhan Omar endorsed state Sen. Omar Fateh for Minneapolis mayor, the Minnesota Reformer reports. The high‑profile backing comes during Minneapolis’s ongoing 2025 mayoral campaign as early voting is underway ahead of the Nov. 4 election.
Elections Local Government
MSP opens Terminal 1 FLEX Lane for MEA
MSP Airport and the Metropolitan Airports Commission say MEA-week travel will surge about 19% over a typical fall day, with more than 52,000 passengers expected at TSA on Thursday, Oct. 16, and over 50,000 on Wednesday, Oct. 15. To ease congestion, a new free FLEX Lane at Terminal 1 on the left side of Departures Drive (access via doors 5–8; connected to ramps and sky bridges) is now available, while officials expect only minimal local impacts from the ongoing federal government shutdown. Travelers are urged to arrive two hours early for domestic flights, three hours for international, consider MSP RESERVE for security, prebook parking, and use cell phone lots for pickups.
Transit & Infrastructure Local Government
Supreme Court to hear Voting Rights Act challenge
The U.S. Supreme Court agreed to hear a Republican-backed challenge to the Voting Rights Act’s Section 2 involving Black representation, a case that could alter how states draw districts and how voters enforce voting-rights protections. A ruling would apply nationwide, directly affecting Minnesota redistricting practices and Twin Cities voters’ ability to challenge maps and election rules.
Legal Elections
CDC urges COVID shots; Walz gets vaccinated
Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz received a COVID-19 vaccination as the CDC recommended that Americans get vaccinated this fall to reduce severe illness. The nationwide guidance applies to Twin Cities residents and comes ahead of the colder season when respiratory viruses typically rise.
Health Local Government
Nonprofit takes over Alliance Bank Center
The Saint Paul Downtown Development Corporation has acquired the vacant Alliance Bank Center in downtown St. Paul from Madison Equities and will assume property management and security from the city, officials confirmed. The nonprofit, a subsidiary of the St. Paul Downtown Alliance, will keep the building and connected skyways closed while conducting a 12‑month redevelopment evaluation, with updated skyway maps coming before winter.
Business & Economy Local Government
Minneapolis Fire Chief Bryan Tyner to retire Dec. 31; to lead Phyllis Wheatley Community Center
Minneapolis Fire Chief Bryan Tyner, who began his Minneapolis Fire Department career in 1995 and was appointed the city's second Black fire chief in December 2020, will retire effective Dec. 31, 2025, to become executive director of the Phyllis Wheatley Community Center. During his 30-year career—raised in North Minneapolis and holding an Executive Fire Officer certification—Tyner led the department through COVID-19 and civil unrest, increased firefighter staffing, launched EMS Pathways and Safe Station programs and a nationally recognized commercial building inspection program; a national search for his successor is underway and an interim chief will be appointed.
Public Safety Local Government
UPS may destroy uncleared imports under new rules
UPS told FOX Business Friday it has implemented procedures for imported packages that cannot clear U.S. Customs under newly tightened rules, saying parcels will either be returned to the shipper at their expense or, if customers don’t respond and clearance isn’t possible, disposed of in compliance with regulations. Citing Trump administration changes like suspended de minimis exemptions and stricter documentation, UPS said about 90% of shipments clear on day one and that it makes multiple contact attempts to obtain missing information, but a growing number of parcels are stranded at hubs nationwide.
Business & Economy Government/Regulatory
IRS shifts high-earner 401(k) catch-ups to Roth
The IRS issued regulations implementing SECURE 2.0 that require workers who earned $145,000 or more in the prior year to make 401(k) catch-up contributions to after-tax Roth accounts starting with the 2026 tax year. For 2025, the standard 401(k) contribution limit is $23,500 with an additional $7,500 catch-up for ages 50+ (and $11,250 for ages 60–63), but high earners will lose the option to make pre-tax catch-ups in 2026; plans without a Roth option may need updates or affected workers could be unable to make catch-ups. This change affects Twin Cities employees and employers administering retirement plans.
Business & Economy Government/Regulatory
Two men shot in St. Paul Battle Creek
St. Paul police say two men were shot just after 10:30 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 11, in the Battle Creek area, with one found in a parking lot on the 1800 block of Suburban Avenue and another located near White Bear Avenue and Old Hudson Road. Both were transported to Regions Hospital; investigators believe the shooting occurred in the parking lot and no arrests have been made as the probe continues.
Public Safety
Bloomington used COVID relief for City Hall bathroom
The City of Bloomington spent nearly $1 million in federal COVID‑19 relief funds to renovate a bathroom at City Hall, according to a Star Tribune report. The use of federal aid for a municipal facility upgrade highlights how pandemic funds were allocated locally and raises oversight and prioritization questions for residents and officials.
Local Government Transit & Infrastructure
Minnesota exports fall 19% in Q2 2025
Minnesota DEED reported Friday that state exports of agricultural, mining, and manufactured goods totaled $5.8 billion in Q2 2025, a $1.3 billion (19%) drop from Q2 2024, led by a 96% plunge in mineral fuel and oil exports to Canada (-$703 million). Exports to Mexico and China also fell more than 20%, while shipments to Ireland, the UK, Germany and Switzerland increased; officials completed a business mission to Ireland and plan a November trade mission to Germany and Switzerland.
Business & Economy Government
Lakeville wrong-way crash kills man, injures woman
An 85-year-old Lakeville man died and a 44-year-old Farmington woman was critically injured after a wrong-way crash around 11:45 a.m. Saturday, Oct. 11, on Cedar Avenue just south of 185th St. W in Lakeville. Police say preliminary information indicates the man was driving south in the northbound lanes when the vehicles collided; both were transported to Hennepin County Medical Center, and investigators report no signs of impairment at the scene as the probe continues.
Public Safety Transit & Infrastructure
UnitedHealth to cut MN Medicare Advantage counties from 72 to 27 in 2026; UCare exits; Blue Cross maintains statewide coverage via MA/Cost
UnitedHealth Group will sharply shrink its Minnesota Medicare Advantage footprint from 72 counties to 27 in 2026 (part of a national pullback from 109 counties affecting up to 180,000 members), a change that will affect roughly 20% of its Minnesota MA subscribers; UCare is exiting Medicare Advantage entirely while Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Minnesota will offer MA in 66 counties and Medicare Cost plans in the other 21, preserving Blue Cross options across all 87 counties. Beneficiaries who lose MA plans will revert to Original Medicare Parts A and B and could lose supplemental benefits and drug coverage, with guarantee-issue Medigap enrollment and stand‑alone Part D plans (with widely varying premiums) cited as immediate replacement options.
Business & Economy Health
FOF defendant accused of tampering pleads guilty
A defendant in Minnesota’s Feeding Our Future fraud case who had been accused of witness tampering pleaded guilty to fraud in federal court ahead of trial. The plea is the latest development in the wide‑ranging prosecution over alleged misuse of federal child‑nutrition funds tied to operations in the Twin Cities and across Minnesota.
Legal Public Safety
Minneapolis opens RFP for 'New Nicollet' Phase One
The City of Minneapolis has issued a formal Request for Proposals this week for Phase One of the 'New Nicollet' redevelopment at Lake Street and Nicollet Avenue, the former Kmart site long blamed for severing the corridor. Phase One targets the southeast quadrant with subsidized and affordable apartments; bids are due in January 2026, with a developer to be approved later in 2026 and construction still several years away.
Housing Local Government Transit & Infrastructure
Judge blocks conditions on domestic-violence grants
A federal judge ruled on Oct. 10, 2025, that the Trump administration cannot impose additional conditions on federal domestic‑violence grants, limiting the administration’s ability to tie funding to new requirements. The decision has direct implications for Twin Cities governments and victim‑service providers that depend on these grants to fund domestic‑violence programs.
Legal Local Government
Shakopee neighbor feud triggers 232 police calls
Shakopee police say a long-running shared-driveway dispute between neighbors Juan Salas and Jessica Keil generated 232 calls and 260 officer hours over the past year in Shakopee, with Police Chief Jeff Tate estimating the saga has cost taxpayers tens of thousands of dollars. Both parties hold harassment restraining orders against each other and accuse the other of violations, as the city and courts seek a resolution to the escalating conflict.
Public Safety Local Government
Mississippi Market, River Market co-ops to merge
Member-owners of Mississippi Market Natural Foods Co-op in St. Paul and River Market Community Co-op in Stillwater voted to approve a merger on Friday, Oct. 10, 2025, combining the two Twin Cities–area cooperatives. The vote paves the way for legal and operational integration affecting co-op members, shoppers, and staff in Ramsey and Washington counties; further details on timeline and branding were not immediately disclosed.
Business & Economy
Bloomington mulls 9.44% levy, $100M complex
City of Bloomington officials are considering a 9.44% property tax increase alongside plans for a $100 million complex, according to a new report. The proposal would affect Bloomington taxpayers in Hennepin County as city leaders review budget and capital project options.
Local Government Transit & Infrastructure
I-94 St. Paul weekend closure for bridge work
MnDOT will close sections of I-94 in St. Paul from 10 p.m. Friday, Oct. 10, to 5 a.m. Monday, Oct. 13, for John Ireland Boulevard bridge replacement work tied to a nine-bridge repair program. Westbound I-94 will be closed between I-35E and Dale Street and eastbound I-94 between Highway 280 and University Ave East, with detours via I-35E, Highway 36, and Highway 280; the bridge is slated to reopen next summer.
Transit & Infrastructure Local Government
Family sues Eagan, Dakota County over jail death
The family of Kingsley Bimpong, 50, filed a federal wrongful death lawsuit alleging Eagan police and Dakota County jail staff ignored signs he was suffering a massive stroke after a Nov. 16, 2024 traffic stop, delaying medical care for more than three hours before he was taken to a hospital where he died three days later. Court filings cite surveillance video of his collapse and body‑camera audio suggesting an officer suspected a stroke; Eagan’s attorney called the death tragic but said he did not exhibit an obvious emergent condition, while Dakota County declined comment.
Legal Public Safety
UMN regents approve 9-2 transfer of Eastcliff to University Foundation
The University of Minnesota Board of Regents voted 9-2 on Oct. 9, 2025, to transfer Eastcliff to the University of Minnesota Foundation. The approval clears a $2.2 million sale of the property to the Foundation.
Education Local Government Business & Economy
State settles sex-discrimination cases with two businesses
The Minnesota Department of Human Rights announced Oct. 2025 settlements with Lakes Concrete Plus of Bemidji and Key Lime Air of Thief River Falls after finding both violated the Minnesota Human Rights Act through gender stereotyping. Each company will pay $45,000 to an aggrieved job applicant or former employee and must revise workplace policies to prevent future sex discrimination.
Legal Business & Economy
Jerrod Rentist Johnson charged with attempted murder after St. Paul Green Line table-leg attack
Jerrod Rentist Johnson, 20, of Minneapolis, has been charged with attempted murder after allegedly using a large wooden table leg to repeatedly beat a woman at the Fairview and University Avenue Green Line platform in St. Paul about 5:45 p.m. on Oct. 7, 2025; surveillance footage reportedly shows initial swings, 21 additional strikes and about 17 seconds of continued blows after the victim lost consciousness. The victim suffered a fractured skull, multiple fractures in her right arm, a swollen‑shut eye, a concussion and head wounds closed with staples; officers found a bloodied table leg on the platform and arrested Johnson with blood on his hands, and he faces a separate pending assault charge in Hennepin County.
Legal Public Safety Transit & Infrastructure
St. Paul officers give CPR to collapsed 10K runner
During the Twin Cities Marathon 10K on Oct. 9, 2025, a runner collapsed and was given CPR by a St. Paul police officer and three other officers. The officer told reporters, 'God put us there,' describing the on-scene lifesaving effort; the incident prompted an emergency medical response at the race in St. Paul.
Public Safety Health
Walz Threatens Lawsuit if Federal Troops Are Sent to Minnesota
Gov. Tim Walz warned he would sue the Trump administration if it sent federal troops to Minnesota, directly tying the threat of legal action to suggestions President Trump might deploy National Guard forces to the state. His statement follows reporting that the administration could consider such deployments.
Government/Regulatory Legal Public Safety
Minnesota launches 10-year Drinking Water Action Plan to address PFAS and nitrate contamination
Minnesota launched a 10-year Drinking Water Action Plan to tackle PFAS and nitrate contamination, with the Minnesota Department of Health reporting 97% of the state's drinking water meets federal standards while about 3% of communities fall below standards due to excessive nitrate and arsenic. The plan — financed by the Clean Water Fund (which expires in 2034) and updated every two years — directs the Clean Water Council to fund grants for testing and remediation, cites projects like a $330 million Woodbury treatment plant funded in part by the 3M settlement, and responds to more PFAS-positive residential wells and a PFAS plume moving toward the Mississippi and St. Croix rivers.
Environment Health
Hao Nguyen enters Hennepin County Attorney race
Senior prosecutor Hao Nguyen has declared his candidacy for Hennepin County Attorney, becoming the second person to announce a run and one of four publicly declared contenders. Nguyen has 15 years of experience as a prosecutor and previously served as a corrections officer, police officer and sheriff’s deputy.
Legal Elections
Matt Pelikan launches Hennepin County attorney bid
Matt Pelikan has officially launched a campaign for Hennepin County Attorney, declaring his candidacy in the emerging 2026 contest. FOX 9 lists him among four declared contenders, noting his entry follows incumbent Mary Moriarty’s decision not to seek re-election.
Legal Elections Local Government
Four candidates now running for Hennepin County Attorney
Four candidates have publicly announced runs for Hennepin County Attorney ahead of the November 2026 election: Anders Folk (former acting U.S. attorney and DOJ official), state Rep. Cedrick Frazier, Hao Nguyen (former assistant Ramsey County attorney), and Matt Pelikan (Minneapolis attorney). The Fox9 roundup summarizes each campaign announcement, cites endorsements (Andy Luger for Folk, Lt. Gov. Peggy Flangan and several mayors for Frazier), and notes the race is open after incumbent Mary Moriarty said she will not seek reelection.
Elections Legal Local Government
Duos raises $130M to expand aging-at-home care
Duos, a Minnesota digital-health startup launched by a former Optum executive to help seniors age at home, announced Oct. 9, 2025 that it raised $130 million in a funding round led by investors including FTV and Forerunner. The infusion ranks among the largest investments for a Minnesota startup this year and positions the company to scale its senior-care technology and services from its Twin Cities base.
Business & Economy Health
Former Minnesota trooper pleads guilty
Jeremy Plonski, a former Minnesota state trooper and National Guard member, pleaded guilty in federal court to producing and distributing child pornography after investigators say he made and shared video(s) showing sexual abuse of an infant. The federal plea was filed this week; separate Scott County charges for first‑degree criminal sexual conduct related to the same alleged video remain pending. Authorities including the FBI and state law‑enforcement leaders have described the allegations as horrifying and say the case remains under active review ahead of sentencing and state proceedings.
Public Safety Courts/Legal
Burnsville Meridian Pointe Apartments sold for $63M
Meridian Pointe Apartments, a 339-unit complex in Burnsville (Dakota County), was sold in a $63 million transaction to a New York–based multifamily real-estate buyer, the Minneapolis / St. Paul Business Journal reported on Oct. 9, 2025. The deal transfers ownership of a large metro rental property and could affect management, rents, or operations for the hundreds of tenants who live there.
Business & Economy Housing
Breezy, warmer Thursday with light shower chance
FOX 9 meteorologists forecast a warmer, breezy Thursday for the Twin Cities metro (Oct. 9, 2025), with highs near 70°F and southerly winds of 10–20+ mph. Clouds increase through the afternoon with an isolated late shower possible; milder overnight lows in the 50s are expected and sunshine returns Friday with highs in the 60s.
Weather Local News
Largest Twin Cities credit unions, 2025 rankings
The Minneapolis / St. Paul Business Journal published a ranked list of the region’s largest credit unions on Oct. 9, 2025, reporting June 30, 2025 balances and metrics. The list names Wings Financial Credit Union as the largest with $9.48 billion in assets and provides assets, year-over-year asset changes, net income, membership counts and local executive contacts for the top institutions in the metro.
Business & Economy Banking and Finance
Isanti sheriff’s foundation treasurer charged in $100K swindle
Isanti County Sheriff's Foundation treasurer Kim Nordenstrom has been charged with two counts of theft by swindle after a criminal complaint alleges she diverted nearly $100,000 in grant money that was to be stewarded for Project 612, a Minneapolis nonprofit serving at-risk youth. Investigators from the Chisago County Sheriff's Office say Nordenstrom used funds for personal debt and farm equipment; the case is filed in Isanti County District Court and could carry up to 20 years on the theft count.
Legal Public Safety
Shipt driver accused of stealing $16K from Target orders
A Minneapolis man, Khang Huu Hoang, 25, was charged in Hennepin County with theft by swindle after court documents say he marked Target deliveries as delivered then took the merchandise himself. Investigators found empty Target boxes in an apartment building tied to Hoang and recovered more than $6,000 during a search; total undelivered items linked to him are valued at about $16,541.69. Hoang is in custody and has a first court appearance set for Oct. 27, 2025.
Public Safety Legal
Hundreds of Minnesota clergy demand assault-weapons ban
About 750 clergy from across Minnesota gathered at the State Capitol in St. Paul, delivering a letter to Gov. Tim Walz and lawmakers calling for a special legislative session to ban assault-style weapons and high-capacity magazines. The group — representing more than 60 of the state's 87 counties — launched a "Seven Days of Prayer and Action," holding noon prayer vigils on the Capitol steps for a week; the action was organized in response to the Annunciation Church mass shooting that killed two children and wounded dozens.
Local Government Public Safety
Robbinsdale agrees $3.2M police-shooting settlement
The City of Robbinsdale has agreed to pay $3.2 million to resolve a civil lawsuit arising from a police shooting, the Star Tribune reports. The settlement covers claims tied to the incident in Robbinsdale and represents a significant municipal liability with implications for the city's budget and police oversight.
Legal Public Safety
Ron Schutz launches Minnesota attorney general campaign
Republican Ron Schutz has announced he is entering the race for Minnesota attorney general, according to a Star Tribune report. The campaign entry makes Schutz a declared candidate in the statewide contest that will shape legal priorities affecting Minneapolis–Saint Paul residents and local governments.
Elections Legal
Daniel Rosen confirmed as U.S. Attorney for Minnesota
The U.S. Senate confirmed Minneapolis attorney Daniel Rosen as the U.S. Attorney for the District of Minnesota by a 51-47 vote. Rosen, principal of Rosen LLC with about 30 years of federal and state litigation experience and a University of Minnesota graduate, was nominated by President Trump in May after recommendations from Minnesota's Republican congressional delegation; he will take over federal prosecutorial leadership previously handled by acting U.S. Attorney Joe Thompson following Andy Luger's resignation.
Legal Public Safety
Frost advisory for Twin Cities; freeze warning for central and northern Minnesota
A frost advisory is in effect for the Twin Cities until 8 a.m. Wednesday, Oct. 8, 2025, and a freeze warning covers most of central and northern Minnesota until 10 a.m.; overnight lows are expected in the 30s in the Twin Cities and the 20s farther north (the Twin Cities’ average first 32°F day is Oct. 18). Daytime highs Wednesday should rebound to about 64°F in the Twin Cities and generally the 50s–60s statewide with southwestern Minnesota near 70°F, with a warming trend into the upper 60s–low 70s Thursday and back into the 70s by Friday and through the weekend.
Public Safety Weather
Evereve doubling Edina headquarters, plans hiring surge
Evereve, a women’s fashion retailer headquartered in Edina, announced on Oct. 8, 2025 a multiyear plan to double its Edina headquarters footprint, double its corporate workforce, and triple its digital revenue as it expands operations in the Twin Cities suburb. The move signals increased local hiring and investment in digital channels tied to the company’s Edina base.
Business & Economy Jobs/Employment
Anoka extends downtown social district through 2025
The Anoka City Council voted Oct. 6, 2025 to extend its downtown 'social district' open-container rules through the end of 2025, allowing patrons to legally carry beer, wine and cocktails within a defined area of downtown and Riverfront Park from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. The program includes a color-coded sign system for participating businesses, requires drinks to be served in special recyclable plastic cups, and excludes use during the city's Halloween parades; the council also approved allowing the expanded hours annually going forward.
Local Government Public Safety
Ramsey County to pay $100,000 settlement
Ramsey County has agreed to pay $100,000 to a former detainee of the county’s Juvenile Detention Center, the Twin Cities–area news outlet reported on Oct. 7, 2025. The payment was announced by county officials (or reported by the paper) and concerns a former juvenile held at the Ramsey County facility; the action raises questions about the county’s handling of the underlying claim and potential oversight or policy implications.
Local Government Courts/Legal
St. Paul bar customer dies after security guard’s punch; charges filed
A St. Paul bar customer, 33-year-old Melvin A. Martinez Altamirano of Madison, Wisconsin, has died after suffering a devastating brain bleed following a punch by 28-year-old security guard Jose Eucario Conejo Marquez of North St. Paul, with surveillance video showing Marquez step between the couple and strike Altamirano in the parking lot as pepper spray was deployed. Marquez was arrested Sunday night, remains in custody at the Ramsey County Jail, and has been formally charged with one count of first-degree manslaughter.
Public Safety Legal Courts/Legal
L.L. Bean to open Maple Grove Arbor Lakes store
L.L. Bean announced plans to open a new store at the Arbor Lakes retail complex in Maple Grove, Minnesota, scheduled for 2026. The store will consolidate space by replacing four former retail units at the development, marking the retailer’s expansion into the Twin Cities regional market and altering occupancy at a major suburban shopping hub.
Business & Economy Retail
SSI recipients get two payments in October
The Social Security Administration will disburse Supplemental Security Income (SSI) benefits twice in October — on Oct. 1 and Oct. 31 — because November's scheduled payment date (Nov. 1) falls on a weekend, prompting the SSA to issue November benefits on the last business day of October. The government shutdown is not expected to interrupt Social Security payments, though a COLA announcement tied to benefits could be delayed.
Government/Regulatory Economy & Benefits
USDA warns HelloFresh spinach may contain listeria
The U.S. Department of Agriculture issued a warning that HelloFresh meals containing spinach may be contaminated with Listeria monocytogenes, a foodborne pathogen. The advisory was reported Oct. 7, 2025 by TwinCities.com and affects HelloFresh customers nationwide, including residents of the Minneapolis–Saint Paul metro, who should check USDA and HelloFresh notices for product details and safety instructions.
Health Public Safety
Outdoor Retailer to move trade show to Minneapolis
Outdoor Retailer announced it will relocate its major outdoor-industry expo to Minneapolis, scheduling a reimagined three-day trade show for Aug. 19–21, 2026 at the Minneapolis Convention Center. Organizers say the move positions the show to focus on collaboration and innovation, and city leaders expect convention activity to bring measurable economic benefits to the metro.
Business & Economy Events
Tile Shop to Delist in $6.60 Cash-Out Deal
Minnesota-based retailer Tile Shop announced plans to exit public markets via a cash-out offer of $6.60 per share, a move the Business Journal reports is the company's second attempt to delist since 2019. The proposal would take the firm private, with the cash-per-share figure and the timing of the announcement provided by company filings and the Business Journal report.
Business & Economy Corporate
Wells Fargo raises checking fee 50%
Wells Fargo announced Oct. 7, 2025 that it will increase the monthly fee on its common checking account by 50%, a change that will raise costs for customers in the Minneapolis–Saint Paul metro as well as nationwide. The change was reported by the Twin Cities Business Journal and stems from the bank’s pricing update communicated to customers.
Business & Economy
U.S. News ranks two Minnesota children's hospitals
U.S. News & World Report's annual Best Children's Hospitals list (published Oct. 7, 2025) named Mayo Clinic and M Health Fairview among the top children's hospitals in the Midwest. The recognition highlights M Health Fairview's standing in the Twin Cities metro and Mayo Clinic's regional prominence in Rochester, information that may influence patient referrals and consumer choices.
Health Business & Economy
Loma Bonita Market to Open in Richfield
Loma Bonita Market, a locally owned Mexican grocery chain, will occupy the long-vacant Rainbow Foods building at The Hub in Richfield and is set to open in the next few weeks. The store — the chain's largest at more than 50,000 square feet — will include a bakery, butcher shop, taqueria and tortilleria, and city officials say the project will revitalize the strip-mall area and expand grocery options for local residents.
Business & Economy Local Government
Minnesota DFL probes Minneapolis DFL mailers amid Fateh endorsement dispute
Following a contentious review that saw the Minnesota DFL State Executive Committee vote 40–7 to uphold the revocation of Sen. Omar Fateh’s Minneapolis mayoral endorsement and form a subcommittee to ensure convention compliance, the party has opened an investigation into postcards mailed by the Minneapolis DFL that featured Fateh. A complaint to the DFL’s Constitution, Rules and Bylaws Committee alleges the mailer contradicted the party’s retraction, while Minneapolis DFL says the postcards were delivered to its printer before a leaked draft ruling and bulk-mail delays explain late arrival; party leaders cited a “substantially flawed” first ballot and complications after the convention operator suffered a stroke, and Hennepin County judges previously fined Fateh’s campaign $500 for using the endorsement logo after it was rescinded.
Local Government Elections
All five St. Paul mayoral candidates speak at Gloria Dei forum
All five St. Paul mayoral candidates — incumbent Melvin Carter, Kaohly Her, Adam Dullinger, Yan Chen and Mike Hilborn — spoke at a forum held at Gloria Dei Lutheran Church and organized by Fair Vote Minnesota. Candidates addressed public safety, housing and property taxes, with early voting already under way ahead of Election Day on Nov. 4, 2025.
Local Government Elections
Minnesota school board members urge ban on trans girls' sports
A coalition of school board members from 40 Minnesota districts sent a letter this week to the Minnesota Department of Education, the Minnesota State High School League, the attorney general and the governor, asking state leaders to bar transgender athletes assigned male at birth from competing in girls' sports. The move follows a recent U.S. Department of Education finding that Minnesota is in violation of Title IX and comes amid a separate lawsuit by an advocacy group challenging current participation policies; the case has seen a denied emergency injunction and an appeal to the Court of Appeals.
Education Legal Local Government
St. Francis police: school threat claims fabricated
St. Francis police investigated reports that a middle school student threatened the school after a loaded rifle magazine was found near the football bleachers following a Thursday night sporting event; by Monday officers said the threat claims — including an alleged Snapchat post — were fabricated by other students and that the magazine belonged to a person who said they unintentionally left it at the event. The department says there is no evidence of any real threat to students, staff or the public, though the rumors prompted some parents to keep children home.
Public Safety Education
Former Golden Valley chief alleges department racism
Virgil Green, who resigned as Golden Valley police chief after four months and a period on paid administrative leave, told FOX 9 that he felt unsupported and believes racism remains within the city’s police department. His resignation followed two internal investigations — one into the alleged improper release of body-worn-camera footage and another into alleged interference with an internal probe — and comes amid deep staffing turnover at the department.
Local Government Public Safety
I-494 overnight closure for Portland Ave bridge work
MnDOT will close I-494 between I-35W and Highway 77 overnight Friday at 10 p.m. through Saturday at 5 a.m. to pour concrete for the Portland Avenue bridge decks; drivers are detoured to Highway 62. Two ramps — I-494 east to Lyndale Avenue and I-35W north to eastbound I-494 — are scheduled to close starting Sunday night, Oct. 12 and will remain closed through November.
Transit & Infrastructure Local Government
Toro buys Canadian vacuum truck maker Tornado
The Toro Co., a Bloomington-based manufacturer, announced on Oct. 6, 2025 that it will acquire Tornado Infrastructure Equipment, a Canadian maker of vacuum excavation trucks, for $200 million to expand its construction product lineup and establish a manufacturing footprint in Canada. The deal aims to broaden Toro’s presence in construction markets and add specialized vacuum truck capabilities to its portfolio.
Business & Economy Manufacturing
WalletHub: Minnesota ranks eighth-safest state
A WalletHub study released Oct. 6, 2025 ranked Minnesota the eighth-safest state in America for 2025, citing 52 indicators across personal/residential safety, financial safety, road safety, workplace safety and emergency preparedness. The analysis puts Minnesota at No. 2 for road safety but flags lower performance in residential safety and emergency preparedness, with WalletHub analyst Chip Lupo quoted describing the methodology and factors.
Public Safety Health
Minnesota Sen. Jim Carlson to Retire in 2026
State Sen. Jim Carlson (DFL‑Eagan), who has represented Senate District 52 since first being elected in 2006, announced Oct. 6, 2025 that he will retire at the end of his current term. Carlson — a five‑term senator who chaired the Senate Elections Committee and served on Judiciary, Public Safety, State and Local Government and Veterans, and Transportation committees — cited satisfaction with his legislative accomplishments; his seat will be contested Nov. 3, 2026.
Local Government Elections
Medical examiner rules March Minneapolis death a homicide
The medical examiner has determined that a man who died from a head injury sustained in March in Minneapolis was the victim of a homicide, according to a Star Tribune report. The official ruling reclassifies the March injury after autopsy review and is expected to inform an ongoing police investigation.
Public Safety Legal
John Ireland Blvd bridge closed until summer 2026
MnDOT announced the John Ireland Boulevard bridge over I-94 in St. Paul will close starting Monday, Oct. 6, 2025, for a teardown and rebuild and is expected to remain closed until August 2026. The long-term project is part of repairs to nine bridges on I-94 and I-35E in St. Paul; MnDOT published driver and pedestrian detours and warned of construction noise and traffic impacts for nearby residents and commuters.
Transit & Infrastructure Local Government
Man critically wounded after strip-club fight
A dispute inside a Minneapolis strip club spilled into the street, where a man was shot and critically wounded, Minneapolis police told the Star Tribune. Police say investigators are on scene and the shooting remains under investigation; the victim was taken to a hospital and no further details or arrests have been publicly announced.
Public Safety Local Crime
Minnesota wildland firefighter dies during Idaho burn
Isabella "Bella" Oscarson, 26, of Watertown, Minnesota, died while participating in a prescribed burn in Idaho. Oscarson began her career with the Wildland Fire Conservation Corps of Minnesota and Iowa, was trained by the Minnesota DNR and served as a lead firefighter near Grand Rapids before taking a job with the Idaho Department of Lands in March; Minnesota has honored her with flags at half-staff as officials, including Gov. Tim Walz and state DNR supervisors, praised her service.
Government/Regulatory Public Safety
Ramsey deputies dodge gunfire; man shot
Ramsey County deputies investigating a reported stolen vehicle in a parking lot off Maryland Avenue East near Herbert Street in St. Paul were forced to take cover Friday evening when someone opened fire across the lot. A 39-year-old man was shot in the chest; deputies applied chest seals and transported him to a hospital, and the St. Paul Police Department is leading the investigation. At least one bullet struck a squad car; officials say the shooting appears unrelated to the traffic stop and the victim is expected to survive.
Public Safety Law Enforcement
Blue, green ribbons along TC Marathon for Annunciation
Organizers and volunteers have installed hundreds of blue and green ribbons along about four miles of Summit Avenue in St. Paul to honor victims of the Annunciation Church mass shooting during this weekend’s Twin Cities Marathon. The display — organized by Kristen Lyrek with help from volunteers and coordinated with group Bows of Love — runs up to the marathon finish line; family members of one victim will run in tribute during the race.
Public Safety Education
Twin Cities hit record 90°F Saturday; cooler weather expected Sunday
Forecasts had warned of record warmth — even a possible 91°F — and gusty 30–40 mph winds Saturday with overnight lows in the low 70s Friday night. Saturday’s high reached 90°F in the Twin Cities, topping the previous 89°F record, and other Minnesota locations also set records (Hibbing 83°F, Brainerd 86°F, Rochester 86°F, Duluth 84°F); cooler weather is expected Sunday with highs near 78°F and a further cooldown into the 60s next week as winds shift.
Public Health Public Safety Environment
Andrew Nietz charged with murder, arson in NE Minneapolis duplex fire that killed Housten Housley
Around 11:20 p.m. Wednesday, a fire on the 900 block of 22nd Avenue NE gutted a northeast Minneapolis duplex, killing 39-year-old Housten Housley — firefighters found him on the first floor, three other residents were displaced and aided by the Red Cross, and the unit where Housley was found sustained extensive damage and heavy flames. Authorities have charged longtime friend Andrew Nietz with second-degree murder and arson, saying surveillance showed him returning to the scene while crews were present, police recovered Housley’s car being driven by Nietz and observed scratches on his hands, arm and face, and court records list prior arson convictions in 2012 and 2023.
Legal Public Safety
Hennepin County seeks help identifying two 1990s bodies
The Hennepin County Medical Examiner this week released details and images seeking public help to identify two men found dead in the Mississippi River in 1995 and 1996 in Minneapolis. Officials provided forensic approximations, clothing and personal-item descriptions, locations where the bodies were recovered, and a contact number for tips as part of an active effort to close the cold cases.
Public Safety Local Government
Twin Cities Marathon adds heat preparations as yellow-flag alert issued
Twin Cities Marathon organizers and Twin Cities in Motion medical directors have issued yellow‑flag heat conditions for Saturday and Sunday but say the races are still a "full go" while adding extra preparations. Measures include 14 water stations along the courses and planning "as though they’re going to be red flag conditions," with organizers noting Saturday events finish by noon while Sunday’s marathoners are expected to finish around 2:30–3 p.m., affecting heat exposure.
Events Weather Public Safety
Forest Lake superintendent Steve Massey to retire
Forest Lake Schools Superintendent Steve Massey announced plans to retire, according to a TwinCities.com article published Oct. 3, 2025. The announcement concerns leadership at the public school district serving Forest Lake in Washington County and is expected to prompt local officials and the school board to begin transition planning.
Education Local Government
Golden Valley police chief resigns after probe
Golden Valley announced the resignation of Police Chief Virgil Green after internal investigations concluded he released confidential body-worn camera footage from an active criminal investigation to a local news outlet and improperly attempted to interfere with an internal affairs probe. Green was placed on administrative leave in June (initially placed on leave in late May), and a city memorandum says he acknowledged the mistake; City Manager Noah Schuchman thanked assistant chiefs for interim leadership and said a search for a new chief will be announced.
Local Government Public Safety
I-35W Burnsville overnight lane closures start Oct. 6
MnDOT announced overnight lane reductions and targeted closures on I-35W in Burnsville beginning Monday, Oct. 6, to allow crews to stripe and deck the westbound Highway 13 bridge. Southbound I-35W will be closed nightly from 9 p.m. to 5 a.m. Oct. 6–8 while northbound is reduced to one lane; then northbound will be closed nightly 9 p.m.–5 a.m. Oct. 8–10, with detours and traffic impacts between I-494 and the I-35/I-35E/I-35W split.
Transit & Infrastructure Local Government
Prep Network lands private equity investment in Plymouth
Plymouth-based sports-media company Prep Network announced its first private-equity investment Oct. 3, 2025, a deal the company says will fund expansion of its sports-media operations. The business, which began as a side hustle and now employs about 60 full-time staff, intends to use the capital to scale content, technology and distribution from its Twin Cities base.
Business & Economy Technology
Driver sentenced for deadly Lyndale Avenue crash
Talon Covie-Cadrell Walker, 30, was sentenced Oct. 2, 2025 to 10 years in prison after pleading guilty to criminal vehicular homicide and related counts for an October 2024 DWI crash on Lyndale Avenue in Minneapolis that killed 26-year-old Natalie Gubbay and injured 10 others. Authorities say Walker was driving over 100 mph, over the legal alcohol limit, and an open bottle of liquor was found in his Chevy Avalanche; the collision involved seven vehicles and produced significant force that spun two cars 180 degrees.
Public Safety Legal
North Loop building lands 50,000-s.f. Stagwell lease
A North Loop office building in Minneapolis has signed Stagwell to a 50,000-square-foot lease, the latest major tenant commitment downtown. The property, purchased last fall by Crowe Cos., has been rebranded and is undergoing a multimillion-dollar renovation that the owner says will reposition the asset for creative-office tenants.
Business & Economy Real Estate
St. Paul man jailed 10 years for I-94 crash
A St. Paul man was sentenced to 10 years in prison after driving about 100 mph and causing a deadly crash off Interstate 94 in Minneapolis, the Twin Cities news site reported on Oct. 3, 2025. The sentencing resolves a criminal case tied to a fatal motor-vehicle collision that occurred on the I-94 corridor in Minneapolis and is being reported as a matter of public safety and legal accountability.
Public Safety Courts/Legal
Fridley man indicted in thallium poisoning death
Stuart Hanmer, 35, a Fridley resident, was indicted by a grand jury on a count of premeditated first-degree murder and faces an existing second-degree murder charge after his roommate Cody Ernst, 33, died of thallium poisoning. Court records say Ernst fell ill May 15, was hospitalized and died June 22; prosecutors cite internet searches and three purchases of thallium found in connection with Hanmer, and bail was raised to $5 million without conditions ($2.5 million with conditions). Hanmer remains in custody at the Stearns County Jail pending further court proceedings.
Public Safety Legal
Kaohly Her outlines St. Paul downtown plan
State Rep. Kaohly Her, a leading challenger to St. Paul Mayor Melvin Carter, told FOX 9 she would prioritize improving city operations (permitting and licensing) and immediately work with partners to structure an "urban wealth fund" to finance downtown investment. Her framed the approach as combining operational reforms with an investment vehicle leveraging city assets to turn the Downtown Investment Strategy into concrete projects ahead of the Nov. 4, 2025 mayoral election.
Elections Local Government
Annunciation students' cards reach the Pope
Students at Annunciation Catholic School in Minneapolis created cards and acts of service to mark the school’s feast day as part of healing after an August mass shooting that killed two students and injured nearly two dozen. Archbishop Bernard Hebda personally delivered the students' cards and a centennial button to Pope Leo XIV at the Vatican, and said the Pope promised prayers for the families and the Archdiocese.
Education Religion
Minnesota doctors demand assault-weapon ban
At a news conference at the State Capitol, physicians who treated victims of the Aug. 27 Annunciation Church mass shooting in Minneapolis urged lawmakers to call a special legislative session and enact statewide gun measures, including bans on assault-style weapons and high-capacity magazines, mandatory locked-and-unloaded storage, and removal of the state preemption preventing local governments from adopting stricter firearm rules.
Public Safety Health Government/Regulatory
West St. Paul police add therapy dog Rocky
West St. Paul Police Department has adopted an abandoned eight-month-old black lab found in April at the Thompson Park pavilion and named him Rocky. Officer Isabelle Lalor is training Rocky with Soldier’s Six to serve as a therapy dog on the department’s peer-support team; training is ongoing and a K-9 foundation fundraiser is scheduled for Oct. 5 in Lilydale.
Public Safety Community
ICE detains roofing crew in St. Paul
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents detained an entire roofing crew working in St. Paul’s North End neighborhood on Thursday morning, witnesses and immigrant-advocacy groups said. Advocacy organizations and state Rep. Athena Hollins condemned the action and organized a 5:30 p.m. vigil at Marydale Park while FOX 9 has sought confirmation from DHS/ICE.
Public Safety Legal
Dunwoody College enrollment hits 17-year high
Dunwoody College of Technology in Minneapolis reports enrollment reaching a 17-year high as of an Oct. 2, 2025 report, with college leaders attributing the surge to strengthened industry partnerships and demand for technical-skills programs. The growth is presented as bolstering the Twin Cities skilled-trades pipeline and meeting employer needs for machinists and other technicians.
Education Business & Economy
Driver in Andover school bus crash identified as Dustin King
Authorities identified the pickup driver killed in the head-on Andover crash with a school bus as Dustin King, according to a GoFundMe page set up by a family friend. Deputies said the pickup, which was towing a trailer, crossed the center line on Roanoke Street at 175th Avenue NW (just south of the Rum River) and struck the school bus; the driver was pronounced dead at the scene and two people on the bus were injured.
Public Safety Education Transit & Infrastructure
Best man arrested after Maplewood wedding shooting; stolen gun recovered
Authorities say a 36-year-old wedding guest was shot in both legs during an argument at a Sept. 27 wedding in Maplewood. Ramsey County deputies arrested a 34-year-old South St. Paul man identified as the wedding's best man on Oct. 1 in St. Paul and recovered two guns — including one reportedly stolen — and he has been arrested but not yet formally charged.
Public Safety Legal
Minnesota SNAP benefits increase, new monthly amounts
The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s annual cost-of-living update raises maximum SNAP monthly allotments in Minnesota effective Oct. 1, 2025, with new household amounts published using the USDA Thrifty Food Plan. The change yields modest increases for most household sizes (e.g., $298 for one person, $994 for four), while the article also notes recent federal legislation that tightened SNAP work and eligibility rules and will reduce some state reimbursements.
Government/Regulatory Health
Roseville parents charged after toddler falls from balcony
Roseville parents Aisha Ali, 30, and Hanad Hassan Jama, 35, were charged with manslaughter after their 15-month-old daughter fell from a two-story apartment balcony on July 6, 2025, and died the following day. Police and a criminal complaint say property management warned the couple in 2024 after seeing children hanging from the balcony, and investigators found a torn screen door and a partially open sliding door at the Lexington Avenue North apartment building.
Public Safety Courts/Legal
U.S. Bank Center in St. Paul set for auction
The U.S. Bank Center, a 380,170-square-foot office tower in downtown St. Paul owned by Madison Equities, is going to auction with a $1 million starting bid, the BizJ reports. The building was part of a 10-building portfolio put up for sale last year and saw a major tenant contraction after U.S. Bank relinquished about 118,000 square feet last year.
Business & Economy Real Estate
Plymouth daycare teacher sentenced for abuse
Katie Voigt, a former teacher at Lil' Explorers Child Care Center in Plymouth, pleaded guilty in July to two counts of malicious punishment of a child after videos showed her yelling at and pushing toddlers. Hennepin County court documents filed Sept. 30, 2025 say she received stayed sentences (no jail if no further violations), must complete 10 days of community service within six months, undergo anger-awareness training and therapy, and is barred from working with children or vulnerable adults; 16 families have since hired a law firm to investigate.
Legal Education
Twin Cities suburbs face fierce apartment competition
A RentCafe report cited by the Twin Cities Business Journal on Oct. 2, 2025, shows rental demand in Twin Cities suburbs has surged, with about 12 prospective renters competing for each apartment that hits the market—up from 10 a year earlier—outpacing competition in many large U.S. markets. The increase signals tightening supply and growing pressure on affordability for metro-area renters across the Minneapolis–Saint Paul suburbs.
Housing Business & Economy
Sylvan franchise owner files bankruptcy, closes multiple Twin Cities tutoring centers
Paul Ripon, the franchise owner of multiple Sylvan Learning centers in the Twin Cities, filed for bankruptcy in U.S. Bankruptcy Court and listed more than a dozen creditors after reporting debts exceeding $600,000 — including about $205,000 owed to Sylvan Corporation and an estimated $100,000 owed to individual customers. Sylvan revoked Ripon’s tutoring licenses, forcing closures of centers in Edina, Maple Grove, Roseville and Woodbury as the Minnesota school year begins; in an owner email he wrote, "There are no funds available at this moment."
Education Business & Economy
50 sticks of suspected dynamite prompt Medina evacuation
A Medina resident discovered a container holding 50 sticks of suspected dynamite in an old garage on the 4600 block of Mohawk Drive just after 11:30 a.m. Wednesday, prompting an immediate evacuation of the immediate area. The Minneapolis bomb squad responded, removed the explosives, and police said there was no danger to the public once the scene was cleared, according to a Medina Police Department press release.
Public Safety Local Government
Weidner buys downtown Minneapolis apartments for $77M
Weidner Acquisitions purchased a 13-story apartment building in downtown Minneapolis for $77 million and has rebranded the property The Grand Mill District Apartments. The sale, reported Oct. 1, 2025, expands Weidner’s Twin Cities portfolio and follows the building’s recent summer listing.
Business & Economy Housing
South St. Paul council member's daycare license reinstated
South St. Paul City Council member Pam Bakken had her in-home daycare license conditionally reinstated after appealing the state's revocation tied to a Dec. 6, 2024 incident in which a 3-year-old tested positive for methamphetamine. Dakota County prosecutors rescinded a maltreatment determination, saying they could not prove exposure occurred at the daycare beyond a reasonable doubt, but a separate DHS order keeps the facility closed pending conditions; residents have launched a recall petition with over 2,500 signatures.
Local Government Public Safety
Omar Jamal released after settlement following ICE arrest
Omar Jamal, a Somali community advocate who has served as a civilian Community Service Officer and liaison to the Somali community with the Ramsey County Sheriff’s Office since 2020, was arrested by ICE in Minneapolis on Aug. 29 and later released after a mutually agreed-upon settlement that resulted in a court order directing his release, prompting a lawsuit over his detention. DHS said Jamal had a final order of removal issued in 2011 and publicly listed alleged prior offenses, while Jamal’s attorney thanked the local U.S. Attorney’s Office and ICE personnel for their cooperation.
Local Government Legal Public Safety
Minneapolis man Robert Warren charged in Loring Park double homicide
Minneapolis man Robert Warren, 51, has been charged in the Loring Park double homicide after surveillance footage allegedly showed him ambushing two people as they exited an apartment elevator; both victims were killed and a shotgun and shells were recovered. Hennepin County prosecutors filed two counts of second-degree murder with intent and two counts of possessing a firearm after a violent-crime conviction; Warren, who has prior felony convictions for domestic assault and third-degree assault, was arrested at the scene and is scheduled for a first court appearance on Oct. 1, 2025.
Courts/Legal Legal Public Safety
Nonprofits convert former Havenbrook rentals to single-family homes
Nonprofits have acquired and are renovating hundreds of former Havenbrook rental properties in north Minneapolis after an Attorney General investigation and settlement over poor conditions. About 345 homes went to local nonprofits, roughly 110 have been renovated and sold to single-family buyers, and the AG secured roughly $2 million in payments plus about $2 million in rent forgiveness for affected tenants.
Housing Legal
U.S. Bank to spend $200M yearly renovating branches
U.S. Bancorp announced it will invest $200 million a year to renovate its retail-branch network, beginning with upgrades in five key markets and signaling a strategic reappraisal of physical locations as digital banking grows. The plan, announced Sept. 30, 2025, implicates branches in the Twin Cities—where U.S. Bank is headquartered—and could affect branch operations, customer access and local construction work.
Business & Economy Corporate
Feds uncover immigration‑fraud ring in Twin Cities
Federal authorities — USCIS, ICE and the FBI — said Operation Twin Shields, conducted in the Twin Cities Sept. 19–28, flagged roughly 1,000 suspect cases involving about 900 people for sham marriages, forged documents and fake death certificates. Officials reported four arrests, 42 notices to appear in immigration court, and highlighted abuses tied to Uniting for Ukraine sponsorships and a fake Kenyan death certificate used to allege a spouse was deceased.
Legal Public Safety
New Brighton man charged in Frogtown fatal shooting
TwinCities.com reports that a man from New Brighton was arrested and charged in connection with a fatal shooting in the Frogtown neighborhood of St. Paul. The arrest and charges were reported Sept. 30, 2025; police say the incident involved a deadly shooting in the neighborhood and authorities have moved to file criminal charges against the suspect.
Public Safety Legal
DOJ sues Minnesota, Minneapolis over 'sanctuary' policies
The U.S. Department of Justice filed a lawsuit on Sept. 29, 2025, against Minnesota, the cities of Minneapolis and St. Paul, Hennepin County, Attorney General Keith Ellison, and Sheriff Dawanna S. Witt, alleging policies that obstruct federal immigration enforcement. DOJ, citing a DHS directive, claims local noncooperation results in the release of removable offenders; Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey vowed to fight the lawsuit, calling it politically motivated.
Legal Local Government
MnDOT holds first-ever statewide safety stand-down Sept. 29 after two Twin Cities work-zone deaths
The Minnesota Department of Transportation will hold its first-ever statewide safety stand-down on Sept. 29, pausing projects and requiring all employees to reflect and recommit to work-zone safety in honor of two contractors killed in Twin Cities work zones last week. One worker was struck by a construction vehicle with a boom on I-35W in Burnsville on Sept. 24 and another by a dump truck on Hwy. 610 in Maple Grove on Sept. 26; MnDOT says it is coordinating with the State Patrol and Minnesota OSHA on investigations, noting the deaths are Minnesota’s fifth and sixth construction-related fatalities this year.
Transit & Infrastructure Public Safety
Nilfisk closing Brooklyn Park plant; 105 layoffs
Nilfisk, a professional cleaning equipment manufacturer, will close its plant in Brooklyn Park, cutting 105 jobs. The shutdown affects Hennepin County workers in the Twin Cities metro; the company confirmed the closure and workforce reductions.
Business & Economy
Driver charged in Maplewood fatal hit-and-run; intoxication alleged
Ramsey County prosecutors have charged a driver in a Maplewood fatal hit-and-run that killed a 31-year-old man around 4:30 a.m. on the 2300 block of Maryland Avenue East; the complaint alleges the driver was intoxicated, fled the scene, and then drove roughly two hours to work. Police say a witness saw a large conversion van with a ladder rack near the victim, who was pronounced dead at the scene, and investigators obtained suspected vehicle information and surveillance video, with the Minnesota State Patrol assisting.
Legal Public Safety
Minneapolis man admits twice trying to join ISIS
A Minneapolis resident pleaded guilty in Minnesota court to twice trying to join the Islamic State group, concluding the guilt phase of a terrorism-related case tied to the Twin Cities. The plea was entered in Minneapolis, with sentencing to follow.
Legal Public Safety
Normandale 8500 Tower sells at steep discount
The Minneapolis/St. Paul Business Journal reports that the 8500 Tower at Normandale Lake Office Park in Bloomington has been sold at a price nearly 94% below what the lender paid when it took the property at a 2024 foreclosure auction. The Sept. 29 report cites industry experts on factors contributing to the lower price, highlighting ongoing stress in the Twin Cities office market.
Business & Economy
Trump imposes 100% tariffs on foreign films
President Donald Trump announced Monday, Sept. 29, 2025, that the U.S. will levy 100% tariffs on foreign-made films, a nationwide move that could affect how imported movies are distributed and priced in Minneapolis–Saint Paul. The White House framed the measure as part of its broader tariff policy; implementation details were not immediately available.
Business & Economy Government/Regulatory
Spirit Airlines to exit MSP in December
Spirit Airlines will end all flights and service at Minneapolis–Saint Paul International Airport, exiting the market in December. The move follows the carrier’s Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing earlier this year and comes after it had already scaled back most of its MSP flights.
Transit & Infrastructure Business & Economy
Woman killed as car hits St. Paul yard
St. Paul police say a vehicle left the roadway around 2:30 p.m. Sunday and crashed into a backyard along Stinson Street near Oxford Street North, striking and killing a 36-year-old woman. The driver remained at the scene and is cooperating; the cause of the crash is under investigation.
Public Safety Transportation
Pedestrian killed by car and bus in Minneapolis
Minneapolis police say a man died after being struck by a white sedan and a bus while crossing mid-block near Franklin Avenue East and Cedar Avenue South just after 3 p.m. Saturday. Both drivers remained at the scene and are cooperating; no arrests or citations have been issued. The victim’s identity and official cause of death have not yet been released.
Public Safety
Bicyclist seriously injured in Stillwater Township crash
A bicyclist was struck and seriously injured in a crash in Stillwater Township on Saturday, Sept. 27, 2025, according to a Pioneer Press report. The incident occurred in Washington County within the Twin Cities metro; authorities are investigating and additional details were not immediately released.
Public Safety
Pedestrian killed in St. Paul Maryland Avenue crash
St. Paul police say a male pedestrian died after being struck by a vehicle near Maryland Avenue and Clarence Street around 12:45 a.m. Saturday, Sept. 27. The driver, who reported traveling westbound on Maryland and not seeing the victim, showed no signs of impairment, is cooperating with investigators, and has not been arrested as the investigation continues.
Public Safety
Three wounded in downtown Minneapolis shooting
Minneapolis police say three men were shot just after 6:30 p.m. Friday on the 700 block of Hennepin Avenue in downtown Minneapolis, and all are expected to survive. The shooter fled before officers arrived, and no arrests have been announced as MPD investigates.
Public Safety
MSP Airport $600M renovation nears completion
A Sept. 27 report says a $600 million renovation program at Minneapolis–Saint Paul International Airport is nearing completion. The multi‑year capital project, overseen by the Metropolitan Airports Commission, modernizes facilities at the region’s primary airport and is entering its final phase.
Transit & Infrastructure Business & Economy
Essentia leaves UMN–Fairview health talks
Essentia Health said Friday, Sept. 26, 2025, it has exited negotiations with the University of Minnesota and Fairview Health Services over an 'All‑Minnesota' health solution intended to reshape the state’s academic health system. The move forces UMN and Fairview—operators of major Twin Cities hospitals and clinics—to reassess next steps for a Minnesota‑based model and the future governance of university‑affiliated facilities.
Health Business & Economy
Frey, Fateh clash in first Minneapolis debate
On Friday, Sept. 26, 2025, the Citizens League hosted the first Minneapolis mayoral debate at Westminster Presbyterian, featuring Mayor Jacob Frey, Sen. Omar Fateh, Rev. Dewayne Davis, Jazz Hampton, and Brenda Short. The 82‑minute forum highlighted divisions on encampment clearances and public safety response models, with only Fateh backing rent control; candidates also agreed against using more city funds to keep the Timberwolves/Lynx. Early voting is already open, and another debate is scheduled for Oct. 13.
Elections Local Government
Woman dies after Lake Street encampment shooting; victim identified
A woman shot during a Sept. 15 mass shooting at a homeless encampment near E. Lake St. and 28th Ave. S. in Minneapolis died Sept. 18; police identified her as 30-year-old Jacinda Oakgrove, while several others were wounded and tents caught fire during the gunfight. Investigators say the violence stemmed from a drug-territory dispute; Hennepin County prosecutors have charged Trivon D. Leonard Jr., 31, of Illinois, with first-degree riot resulting in death and illegal gun possession after he admitted firing before his gun jammed. The city has increased patrols and erected fencing along the corridor, and MPD is examining whether this shooting is connected to another Lake Street shooting earlier that day.
Legal Local Government Housing
Minnetonka ex-CBP agent pleads to child porn
A former U.S. Customs and Border Protection agent from Minnetonka admitted in court to possessing child pornography, according to the Star Tribune. The plea resolves the guilt phase of the case, with sentencing to be scheduled by the court.
Legal Public Safety
Man arrested in Missouri after Waite Park Elementary threat; MPD used license plate reader
A man who allegedly called in a threat to “shoot anything that moves” with an AR-15 at Minneapolis’ Waite Park Elementary just before 11 a.m. on Sept. 25—prompting a lockdown—was tracked using a license plate reader and arrested in Missouri with assistance from the ATF and local police. Investigators say he lived about two miles from the school and had ties to two people there; he was booked into the Jackson County Jail and could face a terroristic threats charge as the investigation continues.
Legal Public Safety Education
Minneapolis gang member pleads to federal fraud
A member of the Minneapolis 'Lows' gang pleaded guilty in federal court to a fraud scheme that used money mules to steal about $220,000, according to federal prosecutors and court filings. The plea resolves part of a case tied to organized criminal activity in Minneapolis and details how proceeds were moved through recruited intermediaries.
Legal Public Safety
Second Twin Cities work-zone death in two days
A second highway construction-zone worker has been killed in the Twin Cities on successive days, the Star Tribune reports, one day after a worker died on I-35W in Burnsville. Authorities are investigating both crashes amid renewed concerns about driver behavior and safety in active work zones across the metro.
Public Safety Transit & Infrastructure
St. Paul opens $250M McCarrons water plant
St. Paul Regional Water Services opened its new $250 million McCarrons water treatment plant on Friday, Sept. 26, 2025, upgrading core drinking water infrastructure for St. Paul and nearby suburbs. The facility’s commissioning marks a major capital project for the utility intended to enhance service reliability and capacity for metro customers.
Utilities Transit & Infrastructure
Wild owner vows team will stay in St. Paul
Minnesota Wild owner Craig Leipold said Thursday, Sept. 25, 2025, that the NHL franchise will remain in St. Paul, affirming the team’s long‑term home at Xcel Energy Center. The pledge, reported by the Pioneer Press, addresses questions about the club’s future location and signals continued commitment to downtown St. Paul.
Business & Economy Local Government
Westbound I-94 closed I-35E to John Ireland Sept. 26–29; MnDOT detours set
Westbound I-94 will be closed in downtown St. Paul between southbound I-35E and John Ireland Blvd. from 10 p.m. Friday, Sept. 26, through Monday, Sept. 29, as part of a MnDOT project to repair nine bridges on I-94 and I-35E. Detours include routing northbound I-35E traffic to westbound Hwy 36 and southbound Hwy 280, and sending southbound I-35E drivers via eastbound I-94 to southbound Hwy 52 to I-494; additional weekend closures and John Ireland Blvd. bridge work in October mean drivers should expect delays.
Traffic Transit & Infrastructure Local Government
Inver Grove Heights man sentenced to 20 years
An Inver Grove Heights man was sentenced to 20 years in prison for coercing and manipulating girls to send nude photos, the Pioneer Press reported Thursday, Sept. 25, 2025. The case stems from conduct involving minors and concludes with a lengthy prison term for the Twin Cities resident.
Legal Public Safety
Trump imposes tariffs on cabinets, furniture, trucks
President Donald Trump announced new import taxes on kitchen cabinets, furniture, and heavy trucks that will take effect starting next week. The nationwide tariffs, announced Sept. 25, 2025, are poised to impact Twin Cities consumers, retailers, home contractors, and trucking-related businesses as prices and sourcing adjust.
Business & Economy Government/Regulatory
Judge rules DJ stalker not guilty by mental illness
A Twin Cities judge found that a person who stalked a DJ at The Current violated a restraining order but entered a verdict of not guilty due to mental illness on Thursday, Sept. 25, 2025. The ruling acknowledges the conduct occurred while concluding the defendant is not criminally responsible because of mental illness.
Legal Public Safety
1.2M Oster French-door ovens recalled nationwide
The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission announced a recall of more than 1.2 million Oster French‑door countertop ovens on Sept. 25, 2025, due to a safety hazard. The recall applies nationwide, including the Twin Cities; consumers are advised to stop using the product and follow recall instructions for a remedy from Oster/Sunbeam.
Public Safety Health
I-94 eastbound closed at Hwy 610 in Maple Grove
MnDOT says eastbound I-94 at Minnesota 610 in Maple Grove is closed Thursday afternoon due to a traffic incident, with reopening estimated around 6 p.m. A separate crash on westbound MN 610 between Fernbrook Lane N and Maple Grove Parkway is contributing to major backups amid ongoing construction lane closures.
Transit & Infrastructure Public Safety
89-year-old dies in Oak Park Heights crash
An 89-year-old man from New Richmond, Wisconsin died in a vehicle crash in Oak Park Heights in Washington County, according to authorities. The fatal collision occurred in the east Twin Cities metro and remains under investigation; officials did not immediately release additional details on circumstances or other injuries.
Public Safety
Minneapolis Fed orders full-time office return
The Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, one of downtown Minneapolis’ largest employers, has mandated a full-time return to the office, reversing hybrid or remote arrangements. The policy goes further than other large organizations that have recently tightened remote-work rules, signaling a notable shift for the downtown workforce.
Business & Economy Local Government Technology
Texas brothers hit with federal kidnapping charges in Grant crypto case; feds value theft at $8M
The U.S. Attorney’s Office has filed federal kidnapping charges against Texas brothers Raymond Christian Garcia, 23, and Isiah Angelo Garcia, 24, in a Sept. 19 Grant, Minnesota, home invasion, valuing the stolen cryptocurrency at $8 million—far above the $72,000 cited in county filings. Authorities say the men bound a family with zip ties, used an AR-15-style rifle and a shotgun, and forced transfers at the Grant home and a Jacobson cabin before their arrests in Texas; they face the federal counts in addition to state charges of kidnapping, first-degree burglary, and first-degree aggravated robbery, with a first federal court appearance set for Thursday.
Legal Public Safety
Amazon settles FTC Prime case for $2.5B, averting jury trial
Amazon agreed to pay $2.5 billion to settle the Federal Trade Commission’s lawsuit alleging it used deceptive tactics to enroll customers in Prime and made cancellation onerous. The deal resolves a case that a judge had ruled would go before a jury, averting a federal jury trial.
Legal Business & Economy Technology
Fateh campaign reports vandalism, hate message
Omar Fateh’s Minneapolis mayoral campaign says it found a message outside its office reading 'Somali Muslim — this is no joke' and filed a police report on Wednesday. The campaign called it the latest hate incident and said it will not be deterred, as Fateh challenges incumbent Mayor Jacob Frey in November.
Elections Public Safety
Xcel settles Marshall Fire suits for $640M
Minneapolis-based Xcel Energy agreed to a $640 million settlement on Sept. 25, 2025, resolving litigation alleging the utility sparked the Denver-area’s devastating Marshall Fire, reached on the eve of a jury trial. The settlement is a significant financial development for the primary electric utility serving the Twin Cities and could influence regulatory and rate considerations.
Utilities Legal
St. Paul rejects 28.5% Ashland rent hikes
The St. Paul City Council voted 4-3 on Thursday, Sept. 25, 2025, to reject proposed 28.5% rent increases for properties on Ashland Avenue under the city’s rent stabilization framework. The decision directly affects tenants at the Ashland Avenue addresses and reflects the council’s oversight of large rent-hike requests.
Housing Local Government
Minnesota Supreme Court expands eviction protections
On Sept. 24, 2025, the Minnesota Supreme Court issued a ruling that expands eviction protections for renters who use housing vouchers or other rental subsidies, setting binding precedent for courts statewide, including Hennepin and Ramsey counties. The decision clarifies how judges must treat third‑party rental assistance in nonpayment and related eviction proceedings, directly affecting landlords and tenants across the Twin Cities.
Housing Legal
Legislative auditor urges stronger anti-fraud controls
Minnesota Legislative Auditor Judy Randall said her office is coordinating with the BCA’s new financial crimes unit and stressed the state must tighten and enforce existing internal controls to stop fraud, in an interview following new federal charges in state-funded programs. DHS said it designated the autism program “high risk” in May, enhanced provider screening, imposed stricter billing, and is moving faster to halt payments when fraud is suspected, with expanded data analytics outlined to lawmakers this month.
Local Government Legal Health
Edina’s Mark Erjavec indicted in $975K COVID-relief fraud
Mark Erjavec, 49, of Edina, has been indicted in Minnesota on five counts of wire fraud for an alleged $975,000 scheme targeting COVID-19 relief programs, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office. Prosecutors say he reactivated dormant business entities dissolved between 2008 and 2013, opened new bank accounts, and submitted false EIDL and PPP applications with nonexistent employees and inflated revenues; he has appeared in federal court.
Business & Economy Legal
First charge in MN autism program fraud
Federal prosecutors charged Asha Farhan Hassan, 28, with wire fraud, alleging she used Smart Therapy LLC/Smart Therapy Centers to obtain more than $14 million from Minnesota’s EIDBI program via DHS and UCare by paying parents $300–$1,500 a month and hiring unqualified teen relatives, while also claiming to feed up to 1,200 children a day under Feeding Our Future and seeking nearly $500,000 in reimbursements. Authorities say funds were moved overseas, including for property in Kenya; the FBI previously raided autism centers in Minneapolis and St. Cloud, and Hassan is the 76th defendant tied to the broader Feeding Our Future case but the first charged in the autism-center probe. Her attorney says she plans to plead guilty within weeks and is cooperating to some degree, as investigators estimate related fraud totals approaching $300 million; the defense called it a “perfect storm” amid recent state funding changes.
Legal Health
MyPillow to sell Chaska HQ, shift offices
MyPillow has put its Chaska headquarters up for sale and will relocate office functions to Shakopee, according to a Star Tribune report. The move consolidates operations within the Twin Cities metro across Carver and Scott counties; details on timing and employment impacts were not immediately disclosed.
Business & Economy Housing
Lake Street restaurant owner gets 8-month sentence
The owner of a Lake Street restaurant in Minneapolis was sentenced to eight months in an immigration-related case, following an earlier federal raid at the business. The federal sentencing closes a local investigation tied to immigration violations at the establishment, according to the Star Tribune.
Legal Public Safety
Charges filed in U of M Rapson Hall gunfire
Hennepin County prosecutors charged 18-year-old Anas Mursal Mohamed after two shots were fired outside the University of Minnesota’s Rapson Hall around 8:45 p.m. on Sept. 18, causing panic and the evacuation of hundreds with no injuries. A criminal complaint cites surveillance video showing Mohamed firing twice, 10mm casings at the scene, recovery of a discarded hoodie and a 10mm Glock near the area, and his arrest the next day during a traffic stop where a loaded 9mm was found under the driver’s seat.
Public Safety Legal
Minnesota Supreme Court censures, suspends Anoka County judge for misconduct
The Minnesota Supreme Court on Sept. 23, 2025, publicly censured and suspended an Anoka County District Court judge for nine months following a misconduct case brought by the Board on Judicial Standards. The high court’s order cites key findings from the board’s investigation, according to the Star Tribune.
Local Government Legal
Oppidan sells Pillars of Prospect Park for $140M
Oppidan sold the Pillars of Prospect Park senior living community near the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis to Ventas for $140 million, the Minneapolis/St. Paul Business Journal reports on Sept. 23, 2025. The deal is described as one of the Twin Cities’ largest real estate transactions of the year, with the property’s unique features and partnerships cited as drivers of the price.
Business & Economy Housing
Construction worker killed on I-35W in Burnsville
A construction worker was fatally struck by a vehicle on Interstate 35W in Burnsville on Sept. 24, 2025, authorities said. The incident occurred within a work zone on the core Twin Cities freeway and remains under investigation.
Public Safety Transit & Infrastructure
Mahtomedi homecoming canceled amid manhunt for Grant kidnapping suspects
Mahtomedi High School canceled its homecoming football game on the advice of the Washington County Sheriff’s Office due to ongoing law enforcement activity near campus, with electronic ticket purchases to be refunded. The cancellation coincided with a shelter-in-place as authorities searched for Texas brothers Raymond and Isiah Garcia, who are charged in Washington County in a Grant home-invasion kidnapping and robbery involving armed suspects, a hostage, and the forced transfer of more than $72,000 in cryptocurrency.
Public Safety Education
I-94 St. Croix bridge work starts Monday
Bridge work on Interstate 94 over the St. Croix River at the Minnesota–Wisconsin border will begin Monday, affecting traffic between Washington County and Hudson. The project is slated to create travel impacts at the busy Twin Cities–to–Wisconsin crossing; drivers should plan for delays and possible changes to traffic patterns.
Transit & Infrastructure
Robbinsdale schools weigh mergers, closures amid $21M deficit
Robbinsdale Area Schools said at a Tuesday night board meeting it faces a $21 million budget shortfall and is considering merging Cooper and Armstrong high schools, closing several middle and elementary schools, and seeking a voter-approved bond to build a new high school. The district, now in statutory operating debt, must submit a board‑approved plan to the Minnesota Department of Education by Jan. 31, 2026. Leaders cited declining enrollment, rising costs, and a $20 million compensatory funding double‑count as drivers of the crisis, with closures projected to save $500,000 to over $1 million per building.
Education Local Government
Minneapolis to nominate three Black heritage sites
The City of Minneapolis says it will nominate the Minnesota Spokesman-Recorder building, the Phyllis Wheatley Community Center in North Minneapolis, and the former home of Harry Davis Sr. in South Minneapolis to the National Register of Historic Places. The effort, part of a city initiative begun in 2019 to document Black history, could open access to preservation grants and tax credits, with decisions expected in late 2026 or early 2027.
Local Government Housing
Arrest made in Aug. 26 Minneapolis mass shooting
Minneapolis Police Chief Brian O’Hara said Tuesday that officers arrested 24-year-old Trayveion Alvin Green on a murder warrant in the Aug. 26 mass shooting near Cristo Rey Jesuit High School and a nearby encampment. Green is the third suspect charged, following Ryan Timothy Quinn and Tiffany Lynn Marie Martindale; the shooting involved a .223 rifle and left seven people shot, including one man who died.
Public Safety Legal
Ramsey County sets 9.75% preliminary levy
The Ramsey County Board of Commissioners on Sept. 23 set a preliminary 2026 property tax levy increase of up to 9.75%, signaling the maximum that can be reduced before final adoption later this year. Commissioners indicated they may try to lower the levy in coming weeks during budget deliberations and public input.
Local Government Business & Economy
Washington County sets 2026 levy cap at 6.95%
The Washington County Board on Sept. 23, 2025, approved a preliminary 2026 property tax levy allowing an increase of up to 6.95%. The preliminary action sets the maximum levy that can be reduced before final adoption later this year, affecting homeowners and businesses countywide in the east Twin Cities metro.
Local Government Business & Economy
Nicole Mitchell sentencing set Tuesday; defense seeks misdemeanor downgrade and Ramsey County confinement
Sentencing is set for 9 a.m. Tuesday in Becker County (Detroit Lakes) for Nicole Mitchell, a Minnesota state senator representing Woodbury, following her July 2025 jury convictions for first-degree burglary and possession of burglary tools. Her defense is asking the court to reduce the felony convictions to misdemeanors, to allow any sentence—minimum six months in jail or workhouse—to be served in Ramsey County rather than Becker County, and is disputing $23,585 in restitution sought by prosecutors.
Elections Local Government Legal
Dense fog advisory for Twin Cities
A dense fog advisory remains in effect until 10 a.m. Tuesday, Sept. 23, for eastern Minnesota, including the Twin Cities, with conditions expected to brighten by late morning. Highs around 70°F are forecast in the metro with light northeast winds; more morning fog is possible Wednesday, followed by a warm-up into the upper 70s and low 80s later this week.
Weather
Tad Jude announces secretary of state bid
Tad Jude announced he is running for Minnesota secretary of state, emphasizing a platform of transparency in election administration. The statewide office oversees elections that include Minneapolis–Saint Paul, making the campaign relevant to metro voters as the 2026 race takes shape.
Elections Local Government
St. Paul driver gets workhouse in fatal crash
A driver who was traveling 77 mph on a St. Paul city street when he fatally struck a pedestrian was sentenced to serve time in a workhouse on Sept. 22, 2025. The case concludes with a non‑prison sentence following the deadly collision on a St. Paul roadway.
Legal Public Safety
Arden Hills considers allowing backyard ducks
The Arden Hills City Council will take public comment Monday on proposed changes to its backyard poultry ordinance that would allow residents to keep ducks and loosen chicken rules. The proposal would raise the chicken limit from three to seven, permit larger coops, allow fenced-yard roaming, and enable coops in detached garages; a staff memo notes six metro cities already allow ducks and the Planning Commission recommended approval 7–0.
Local Government Environment
Blue Line shuts 10 p.m. Sept. 22–Oct. 4; buses replace trains
Metro Transit will shut the Blue Line light rail for 12 days starting at 10 p.m. Monday, Sept. 22, 2025, through Saturday, Oct. 4, with replacement buses running and trips expected to take longer. The closure launches phase one of the agency’s multi-year Renew the Blue project, replacing track along the entire corridor and several switches near Cedar-Riverside; trains resume at 7 a.m. Oct. 4, running every 12 minutes. A second phase is planned for June 2026 with a 45-day full-line closure; the Blue Line carries more than 17,000 rides per day.
Transit & Infrastructure Local Government
St. Paul restores library, rec center internet
St. Paul has restored public internet access at its libraries and recreation centers after a cyberattack disrupted services, officials announced Sept. 18, 2025. Mayor Melvin Carter said the city did not pay a ransom in the summer ransomware attack and that response and cybersecurity upgrades have cost well over $1 million, with teams working around the clock to back up data and restore services.
Local Government Technology
St. Paul cyberattack cost tops $1M; no ransom
St. Paul Mayor Melvin Carter said in a Sept. 22 FOX 9 interview that the city did not pay a ransom after this summer’s ransomware attack and that response and cybersecurity upgrades have cost 'well over $1 million.' He added teams worked around the clock to back up data and restore services as systems came back online.
Technology Local Government
St. Paul man sentenced in White Bear shootout
A St. Paul man was sentenced on Sept. 22, 2025, for his role in a 2023 shootout at Doc's Landing bar in White Bear Lake. The case stems from gunfire inside or near the bar that year and concludes with a district court sentence handed down in the Twin Cities metro.
Legal Public Safety
Court: Bus stop arms must be fully extended
The Minnesota Court of Appeals overturned a driver’s school‑bus stop‑arm conviction and ruled that motorists are required to stop only when the bus’s stop sign/arm is fully extended. Issued this week, the decision clarifies statewide enforcement and applies to drivers, police, and school transportation across the Twin Cities metro.
Legal Public Safety
Man killed in shooting near Peavey Field Park
Minneapolis police say a man was shot just before midnight Saturday near Chicago Avenue and E. Franklin Avenue by Peavey Field Park in the Ventura Village neighborhood and later died at the hospital. MPD says an altercation preceded the gunfire, a possible suspect ran from the scene, and no arrests have been made; Chief Brian O’Hara is asking anyone with information to contact police or CrimeStoppers.
Public Safety
Maplewood rollover kills baby; driver arrested
A black Chevy Tahoe rolled off the eastbound Hwy 36 to southbound Hwy 61 exit ramp in Maplewood around 6:25 p.m., landing upside down in 1–2 feet of water, the Minnesota State Patrol said. One-year-old Revon Melvin Anthony Todd was extricated and later died; two boys, ages 5 and 6, and a 32-year-old man were hospitalized with non-life-threatening injuries. Driver Rachale Francine Peloquin, 28, of St. Paul, was arrested after medical clearance, suspected of alcohol use, and booked into Ramsey County Jail on criminal vehicular homicide.
Public Safety Legal
Minneapolis opens shooting assistance center
The City of Minneapolis has opened an assistance center to support people affected by recent shootings in the city, providing a centralized place to access victim services and other resources. The move follows multiple high-profile shootings and is intended to streamline help for victims, families, and impacted community members.
Public Safety Local Government
Man dies after Lake Street transit station shooting; victim identified as Adam Peterson
Five people were shot near the Midtown Greenway by Lake Street and Stevens Avenue, steps from the transit station, shortly after 11 a.m. on Sept. 15; one victim, 46-year-old Adam John Peterson, died at the hospital Saturday. Investigators say shots were fired near the Greenway and on a walkway by the I-35W exit ramp, with victims found at multiple nearby locations; no arrests have been made as the investigation continues. Police Chief Brian O’Hara has linked the violence to nearby encampment activity and signaled increased enforcement.
Public Safety Transit & Infrastructure
Minnesota OKs campaign funds for candidate security
The Minnesota Campaign Finance and Public Disclosure Board has ruled that campaign funds may be used for candidate security, including threat assessments and on‑site event protection, following a request from the Minnesota DFL Party. The decision applies statewide to candidates of any party, enabling security expenses during the 2025–2026 campaign cycle across the Twin Cities and Minnesota.
Elections Local Government
St. Paul's West 7th Street reopens after sinkhole
The City of St. Paul reopened West 7th Street on Friday, Sept. 19, 2025, after a sinkhole forced a four-month closure. The restoration of the major corridor resumes normal traffic flow along a key route connecting downtown and surrounding neighborhoods.
Transit & Infrastructure Local Government
Hennepin County halts charges from minor stops
Hennepin County Attorney Mary Moriarty announced her office will no longer charge cases arising from low-level traffic stops — such as equipment or registration violations — across Minneapolis and its suburbs. The policy, which effectively limits felony prosecutions stemming from these stops, drew swift criticism from multiple police officials, who warned it could hinder prosecutions and harm public safety.
Legal Public Safety Local Government
Metro Transit boosts service for Farm Aid 40
Metro Transit says it will increase service to accommodate the all-day Farm Aid 40 concert at Huntington Bank Stadium in Minneapolis, adding capacity and extra trips to handle large crowds before and after the event. The agency is directing concertgoers to use transit for access to the stadium area given expected heavy traffic and limited parking.
Transit & Infrastructure
Trump seeks Supreme Court rollback of Venezuelan protections
The Trump administration on Sept. 19, 2025, asked the U.S. Supreme Court to remove legal protections from Venezuelan migrants, a nationwide change that would affect those living and working in the Twin Cities. The filing seeks high‑court intervention to alter current immigration protections for Venezuelan nationals.
Legal Government
BB guns found at St. Paul school
St. Paul police say preteen boys brought BB guns to Creative Arts Secondary School in St. Paul on Friday, Sept. 19, 2025. Police responded and the BB guns were found on campus; the incident involves juveniles and is under investigation.
Public Safety Education
Hennepin County charges Mora man for email threats
Hennepin County charged John Allen Sandeen Jr., 64, of Mora with four counts of terroristic threats for emails sent Sept. 13–16 that threatened a Maple Grove church music director and another person, referencing retaliation for the killing of Charlie Kirk. Maple Grove police took the report on Sept. 15; Sandeen is in Ramsey County custody on a related matter, and a Hennepin County arrest warrant is active. County Attorney Mary Moriarty called the threats “chilling” and vowed to pursue accountability.
Public Safety Legal
Columbia Heights man Abdullahe Nur Jesow pleads guilty in Feeding Our Future scheme tied to S&S Catering
Abdullahe Nur Jesow, 65, of Columbia Heights, pleaded guilty in federal court in Minnesota to money laundering in the Feeding Our Future fraud case, becoming the 56th defendant to do so. Prosecutors say he was linked to the S&S Catering group that stole and laundered $17.4 million, operating the Academy For Youth Excellence site that claimed more than 1.7 million meals from Dec. 2020 to Sept. 2021, resulting in $4,286,088 in inflated reimbursements, of which he kept about 5% and returned most via cash or checks to launder proceeds. He had been set for trial Oct. 14; sentencing will be scheduled later.
Legal Public Safety
Second defendant gets 12½ years in South St. Paul killing
On Sept. 18, 2025, a second defendant was sentenced to 12½ years in prison for his role in the fatal shooting of a South St. Paul father during a marijuana robbery. The accomplice received nearly the same prison term as the shooter, indicating little disparity between the codefendants.
Legal Public Safety
Minnesota free school meals hit 302M total
Gov. Tim Walz said Minnesota’s Universal Free School Meals program served 151 million meals in its second year, bringing the total to more than 302 million since the program launched in 2023. The statewide program provides free breakfast and lunch to all K–12 students regardless of income, with the governor’s office estimating about $1,000 in annual savings per student; a State Fair House poll found most respondents opposed an income cap. Parents interviewed praised access while noting some portion-size concerns requiring paid seconds.
Education Local Government
Minneapolis hires firm for neighbor shooting audit
The City of Minneapolis says it has contracted an independent law firm to assist with an audit related to the shooting of Davis Moturi by his neighbor, John Sawchak, and anticipates releasing findings in February 2026. Moturi, who was shot in the neck while trimming a tree and says MPD took five days to arrest Sawchak, continues to seek accountability as Chief Brian O’Hara has previously said the department failed him.
Public Safety Local Government
Minnesota adds 5,900 jobs in August
Minnesota’s August 2025 jobs report shows a net gain of 5,900 jobs while the statewide unemployment rate ticked up to 3.6%, according to data released Sept. 18. The update, from the state’s employment agency, reflects current labor-market conditions that directly affect Twin Cities workers and employers.
Business & Economy
Toyota, Hyundai recall 1.1M vehicles for defects
On September 18, 2025, Toyota and Hyundai announced nationwide vehicle recalls totaling more than 1.1 million vehicles to address seat belt and panel display problems. The recalls affect owners in the Minneapolis–Saint Paul metro due to their national scope and will require affected vehicles to be serviced to remedy the defects.
Public Safety Business & Economy
FTC sues Ticketmaster over pricing practices
The Federal Trade Commission filed a lawsuit on Sept. 18, 2025, against Ticketmaster/Live Nation, alleging practices that force fans to pay more for concerts and events. The case seeks to curb alleged anticompetitive or unfair methods that raise ticket costs nationwide, which could affect Twin Cities consumers who buy tickets for metro venues.
Legal Business & Economy
Duluth man charged in Mariucci upskirt case; 144 victims, CSAM alleged
A Duluth man, Benjamin Thomas Goldsmith, 32, has been charged in Hennepin County via warrant with three counts of possessing pornographic work and three counts of interfering with privacy after prosecutors say he filmed under the skirts of high school graduates at Minneapolis’ Mariucci Arena on June 1–2, 2024. Authorities say there are 144 alleged victims; witnesses reported Goldsmith for avoiding metal detectors, leading to his arrest and the discovery of a concealed camera, and a vehicle search turned up a hard drive with 151 child sexual abuse material images and videos. Investigators also found programs from other graduations and are examining whether additional victims or locations are involved; the criminal complaint was filed Sept. 16, 2025.
Legal Education Public Safety
Bluestem to close Eden Prairie HQ; 103 layoffs
Eden Prairie–based Bluestem Brands is closing its headquarters and laying off 103 employees, including its CEO, the Minneapolis/St. Paul Business Journal reports on Sept. 18, 2025. The move follows prior layoffs and two bankruptcy filings; the company’s online shops reportedly have only a few items remaining.
Business & Economy Employment
Carver man indicted on 16 animal-crushing counts
Federal prosecutors charged Bryan Wesley Edison, 32, of Carver, with 16 counts of animal crushing for allegedly creating nearly 350 pay-per-view YouTube videos showing animals being tortured and killed since 2022. The DOJ says YouTube has removed the accounts; Edison made his initial appearance Wednesday and remains jailed in Sherburne County. Prosecutors cited the 2019 federal PACT Act expansion in announcing the case.
Legal Public Safety
Mahtomedi crash driver sentenced for killing two classmates
A driver who killed two Mahtomedi classmates in a crash was sentenced on Thursday, Sept. 18, 2025, in the Twin Cities metro. Families addressed the court during sentencing and expressed grace toward the driver, according to the report.
Legal Public Safety
Pentair acquires Hydra-Stop from Madison Industries
Twin Cities–based Pentair announced on Sept. 18, 2025, that it acquired Illinois-based Hydra-Stop from Madison Industries. Pentair says the acquired business is expected to generate about $50 million in 2025 revenue with roughly a 30% return on sales, signaling strategic expansion of its water-related offerings.
Business & Economy Utilities
Man pleads guilty in Twin Cities mosque arsons
Jackie Rahm Little pleaded guilty in U.S. District Court on Sept. 17, 2025, to federal charges for setting fires at two Minneapolis mosques in April 2023, which prosecutors said were driven by anger toward Muslims. The incidents at Masjid Al Rahma (Mercy Islamic Center) and Masjid Omar Islamic Center forced evacuations but caused no reported injuries; sentencing will be scheduled.
Legal Public Safety
DPS, State Patrol join MPD patrols after shootings
The Minnesota Department of Public Safety will partner with the Minneapolis Police Department under a Joint Powers Agreement to boost patrols, with Minnesota State Patrol troopers assigned to the Lake Street corridor following two mass shootings on Monday. MPD has further increased its own presence, and the city has erected fencing and barriers along parts of Lake Street to control access, measures officials say aim to deter further violence and stabilize the area. DPS Commissioner Bob Jacobson announced the deployment, while MPD Chief Brian O’Hara said the Hennepin County Sheriff’s Office and the BCA are assisting and the National Guard is not currently needed.
Public Safety Local Government
St. Paul budget leaves 16 police vacancies
The Pioneer Press reports that under Mayor Melvin Carter’s proposed city budget, 16 vacant St. Paul Police Department positions would remain unfilled as part of the spending plan outlined Wednesday in St. Paul. The move affects police staffing levels and is part of the administration’s budgeting decisions for the upcoming year.
Local Government Public Safety
East Ridge High placed on lockdown
East Ridge High School in Woodbury was placed on lockdown Wednesday following a report of a weapon. Authorities responded to the campus as the situation was assessed; the school and district communicated the lockdown to families.
Public Safety Education
Amazon invests $1B to raise pay, cut health costs
Amazon announced on Sept. 17, 2025, that it will spend $1 billion to increase pay and lower health care costs for U.S. employees, a change that applies to workers nationwide, including those in the Twin Cities metro. The company said the investment is aimed at boosting compensation and reducing out-of-pocket medical expenses.
Business & Economy Health
Illume Candles closing Maple Grove HQ, cutting 132 jobs
Illume Candles will close its Maple Grove headquarters and manufacturing operations and lay off 132 workers, according to a Star Tribune report. The move affects employees at the Hennepin County facility and removes a local manufacturing and office footprint in the Twin Cities suburb.
Business & Economy
UMN ends ICE contract, closes range access
The University of Minnesota has ended its contract allowing U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement to use the campus shooting range and will no longer permit outside law enforcement agencies to train there, the university said. The change affects metro-area agencies that previously used the facility and limits access to university purposes.
Education Public Safety
DFL Sen. Ann Rest to retire after 40 years
DFL state Sen. Ann Rest, a longtime legislator representing a northwest Hennepin County district in the Twin Cities metro, announced her retirement after 40 years in office, according to the Star Tribune on Sept. 17, 2025. Her departure will open a metro Senate seat and marks the end of one of the longest tenures in the Minnesota Legislature.
Elections Local Government
Falcon Heights debates Les Bolstad redevelopment
Falcon Heights and University of Minnesota officials drew a large crowd Tuesday night to discuss the future of the 141-acre Les Bolstad Golf Course, which the university plans to close for financial reasons. The city presented mixed-use concepts including affordable housing, green space, and small-scale retail, citing a study that the site could support 1,500–2,000 homes; the Planning Commission is set to vote next Tuesday on a community feedback report to guide next steps with the university and developers.
Housing Local Government
Xp Lee wins Minnesota House District 34B special election
On Tuesday, September 16, 2025, voters in Minnesota House District 34B—which includes parts of Brooklyn Park, Coon Rapids, and Champlin in Anoka and Hennepin counties—held a special election to fill the seat vacated after Rep. Melissa Hortman’s killing in June, for which a suspect has been indicted. DFL nominee Xp Lee defeated Republican Ruth Bittner with 60.82% (4,331 votes) to 39.11% (2,785), according to the Minnesota Secretary of State’s unofficial results; the district had 26,596 registered voters at 7 a.m. on Election Day, and results will be certified later. Lee thanked supporters and pledged to honor Hortman’s legacy, as party leaders praised the win.
Local Government Elections
Gov. Tim Walz launches third-term campaign
Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz announced Tuesday morning, Sept. 16, 2025, that he will seek a third term, releasing a campaign video stating he’s "always tried to do what's right for Minnesota." The bid sets up a 2026 race in which Republicans including Dr. Scott Jensen, Rep. Kristin Robbins, and Kendall Qualls are competing for their party’s nomination; no Minnesota governor has won three consecutive four-year terms since the state adopted four-year terms in 1958.
Elections Local Government
First metro recreational cannabis shops open
Recreational cannabis sales began Tuesday at Green Goods locations statewide, including five shops in the Twin Cities, while RISE is opening five recreational dispensaries with 8 a.m. ribbon cuttings, three of them in the metro. Legacy Cannabis in Duluth is set to open at 4:20 p.m. Tuesday with flower grown by the White Earth Nation, after a tribal compact and new state licenses eased supply constraints that had delayed non-tribal openings.
Business & Economy Legal
GOP seeks Annunciation shooter toxicology
Minnesota Republican lawmakers led by Sen. Steve Drazkowski sent a letter to the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension requesting the Annunciation Church shooter's complete autopsy and toxicology reports and asking for an expanded screen for antidepressants, antipsychotics, mood stabilizers, stimulants, cannabinoids, psychoactive substances, and gender‑transition medications. The request follows the Aug. 27 Minneapolis mass shooting during morning Mass that killed two children and injured 21 before the gunman died by suicide.
Public Safety Local Government
Urban farm group misses Roof Depot deadline
Urban farm activists seeking to buy Minneapolis’ Roof Depot industrial site in the East Phillips neighborhood missed a city-imposed deadline to complete the purchase. The lapse puts the future of the long-disputed site back in the City of Minneapolis’ hands as officials determine next steps for the property.
Local Government Housing Environment
Minneapolis man sues Met Council over LRT access
A Minneapolis resident filed a discrimination lawsuit against the Metropolitan Council, alleging Metro Transit light-rail stations have accessibility barriers that impede access for people with disabilities. The case targets station conditions on the Twin Cities LRT system; details on the specific stations and court venue were not immediately available.
Legal Transit & Infrastructure
Appeals court lets dentist’s defamation suit proceed
The Minnesota Court of Appeals ruled that a Twin Cities dentist’s defamation lawsuit over a negative Google review may move forward, allowing the case to continue in district court. The decision clarifies that claims tied to allegedly false online statements can proceed past initial challenges in Minnesota.
Legal Technology
Shakopee crash kills 83; driver suspected drunk
Shakopee police say an 83-year-old motorist died after a suspected drunk driver caused a collision at a city intersection in the Twin Cities metro. Police reported the fatality and indicated alcohol was a factor as they investigate; additional details on any arrest or charges were not immediately released.
Public Safety Legal
PUC holds hearing on Xcel rate hikes
The Minnesota Public Utilities Commission is holding a public meeting from 6:30–8:30 p.m. on Monday, Sept. 15, at the Washington County Heritage Center Education Center in Stillwater on Xcel Energy’s proposed two-year electric rate increases. Xcel seeks 9.6% in 2025 ($353.3M; about $9.89/month for the average residential customer) and 3.6% in 2026 ($137.5M; about $3.90/month), totaling 13.2% ($490.7M). Public comments are open through Dec. 30, evidentiary hearings are Dec. 17–19, and the PUC’s order deadline is July 31, 2026.
Utilities Energy
Blaine child-solicitation sting nets 22 arrests
The Blaine Police Department led a child-solicitation operation in Blaine, resulting in 22 arrests, according to police and local reporting. The enforcement action targeted adults attempting to solicit minors in the north metro suburb; authorities said the investigation continues and announced the results publicly.
Public Safety Legal
Falcon Heights nets $49K from State Fair parking
The City of Falcon Heights reports earning a $49,000 profit from on-street parking fees charged during the Minnesota State Fair in areas near the fairgrounds. The fees were enforced on city streets in Falcon Heights during the event, generating revenue beyond program costs.
Local Government Transit & Infrastructure Business & Economy
Man killed, another hurt in Lake Street shooting
Minneapolis police say a shooting on the 1500 block of East Lake Street just before 1:50 a.m. Sunday left one man dead and another with non-life-threatening injuries. Officers responded to a ShotSpotter activation; the fatally wounded man died at the hospital, and a second victim arrived separately. No arrests have been announced, and Chief Brian O’Hara urged anyone with information to come forward.
Public Safety Legal

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