Brian Dinkelman named manager of St. Paul Saints

posted in: All news | 0

The St. Paul Saints have a new manager.

With Toby Gardenhire joining manager Derek Shelton’s staff as the Twins’ major league field coordinator, Brian Dinkelman was officially named St. Paul’s manager on Wednesday. Dinkelman is the second manager of the Saints since they became affiliated with the Twins in 2021.

Dinkelman, 42, has had a long journey in the Twins organization since being drafted by the team in 2006. He played in 23 major league games during the 11 seasons for the team.

This season will be his sixth as a manager in the organization’s minor league system and 12th overall. He holds a career 443-348 (.560) record as a minor league manager. Before becoming a manager, he worked as a hitting coach in the Twins’ system. He earned the promotion after managing the Double-A Wichita Wind Surge last season.

He will be joined on the Saints’ coaching staff by pitching coaches Carlos Hernandez and Ryan Ricci, hitting coach Shawn Schlecter — a Burnsville native — and hitting and development coach CJ Baker.

Twins make waiver claim

The Twins made a minor move on Wednesday, claiming utlityman Vidal Bruján off waivers from the Atlanta Braves and designating Mickey Gasper for assignment.

Bruján, 27, has played in parts of five major league seasons, debuting in 2021 with the Tampa Bay Rays before going on to play for the Miami Marlins, Chicago Cubs, Baltimore Orioles and Atlanta Braves. He played in 60 games last year for three different teams, hitting .253 with a .616 OPS.

Atlanta Braves’ Vidal Brujan celebrates in the dugout after scoring off a single hit by Ronald Acuna Jr. during the third inning of a baseball game against the Detroit Tigers, Sunday, Sept. 21, 2025, in Detroit. (AP Photo/Ryan Sun)

In his five seasons, he’s moved around the field, playing all three outfield positions, as well as second base, third base and shortstop.

Gasper, 30, spent last season up and down between Triple-A and the major leagues, though he did not hit much in limited opportunities with the Twins.

Related Articles


Twins’ Byron Buxton named to USA’s World Baseball Classic roster


Former Twins outfielder Max Kepler suspended after positive PED test


Twins agree to terms with all arb-eligible players but Joe Ryan


New Twin Josh Bell finds fit in Minnesota: “It felt comfortable”


Twins acquire Eric Wagaman in swap with Marlins

MN Attorney General charges Minneapolis man with $3M in Medicaid fraud

posted in: All news | 0

A Minneapolis man has been charged with attempt to defraud Minnesota Medicaid programs of more than $3 million, Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison announced Wednesday.

Mohamed Abdirashid Omarxeyd, 57, is accused of using his business, Guardian Home Health Services, to bill for home care services that were never provided, according to charges filed Tuesday in Hennepin County by the attorney general’s Medicaid Fraud Control Unit.

The criminal complaint alleges Omarxeyd billed the state for personal care assistant services for clients who were in jail or the hospital.

In one case, Omarxeyd submitted claims reporting three hours of services for more than a month while a client was in the hospital, according to the complaint. Medicaid paid out more than $2,100 for services that could not be provided.

That type of billing was not an “isolated incident,” the attorney general’s office said in court documents. The complaint details several other similar incidents, including one where the company claimed reimbursement for a client who was in jail for a little more than a week in 2022.

The alleged fraud, which took place between 2020 and 2024, involved personal care assistant services, companion care services, homemaking services, respite care services, individualized home supports, and comprehensive community support services, the attorney general’s office said.

Former workers told investigators that they did not provide services to beneficiaries and worked with Omarxeyd to make claims anyway, according to the complaint. Through witnesses and financial records, investigators found that Omarxeyd and his company paid kickbacks to recipients of services.

In all, Omarxeyd, his wife and other companies he owned received a total of more than $2 million from Guardian Home Health Services of the $3 million fraudulently charged, the attorney general alleges.

Related Articles


Minnesota officials recommend weapons screening at state Capitol


Minnesota to appeal $2B Medicaid funding pause for programs at risk for fraud


State, MSP mayors allege ‘federal invasion’ in lawsuit against Trump administration


MN Legislature: East metro cities seek funds for fight against forever chemicals


3 takeaways from Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent’s Minnesota visit

“Defrauding programs that provide healthcare to low-income Minnesotans is a truly despicable act,” Ellison said in a news release announcing the charges. “This action is the latest in our ongoing work to root out fraudsters and hold accountable those who steal from Medicaid.”

Court records did not list an attorney for Omarxeyd on Wednesday. He is scheduled to make his first court appearance on Feb. 3.

Students protest ICE enforcement, walk out of classes, rally at the Capitol

posted in: All news | 0

Hundreds of St. Paul students walked out of classes and gathered at the state Capitol Wednesday to demand that ICE leave Minnesota.

Organizers said their fellow students are afraid and attendance in schools has dropped with the heavy presence of Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers in the Twin Cities.

Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison speaks to students at the state Capitol building in St. Paul on Wednesday, Jan. 14, 2026. (Imani Cruzen / Pioneer Press)

“We’re out here because students are in fear of ICE coming to our schools,” said Naavi Noir, a sophomore at Central Senior High School. “They’re terrorizing our neighborhoods and they’re putting our safety on the line.”

As of Monday, no ICE or other federal agents have come to district buildings, according to St. Paul Public Schools Superintendent Stacie Stanley. However, there has been suspected ICE activity near schools, she said in a video address to families Monday. That presence has created a sense of fear, students said.

“We all see the absences in our classes of our peers. We all feel the stress,” said Sofía Gonzalez, a senior at Como Park High School. “Teachers, too. They’re figuring out what to do and how to go on with lessons. But none of this is normal, so it’s hard to act like it is.”

Minneapolis public schools were closed for two day last week and activities canceled after a report of armed U.S. Border Patrol officers at Roosevelt High School in Minneapolis. Minneapolis students returned to in-person classes Monday, with the option to choose remote learning through Feb. 12.

St. Paul public school students who feel unsafe attending class in person due to the immigration enforcement action in the Twin Cities can enroll in the district’s SPPS Online School, according to district officials. The online school enrolls students K-12.

Keith Ellison: ‘We sued them because they are breaking the law’

Attorney General Keith Ellison spoke to the students at Wednesday’s gathering about joint legal action against the U.S. Department of Homeland Security and related agencies brought by Ellison and the mayors of Minneapolis and St. Paul. The lawsuit, announced on Monday, alleges violations of the First and Tenth Amendments, the Equal Sovereignty Principle, and the federal Administrative Procedure Act.

“We sued them. We sued them because they are breaking the law,” Ellison said. “They are breaking the law. Now let me tell you, this escalation, this surge which is resulting in not only people being beat up, not only people being thrown to the ground, not only people not going to school, not only people not going to work, but it’s resulted in the death of one of our neighbors, Renee Good. I want you to remember her name. She’s a martyr, she sacrificed.”

Good died trying to help vulnerable members of the community, Ellison said.

‘Fear in our community’

Students who rallied at the Capitol said the immigration enforcement is causing a lot of fear among their fellow students.

“There’s a lot of fear being built in our community and like you’re not able to go to school in the normal environment that you would right now,” said Tesfaamlak Sturm, a senior at Central Senior High School. “So, students of color, students who are members of vulnerable communities are really at risk right now. So, we feel the need to advocate for those students.”

Walking with the students were parents and community members, acting as “marshals” to keep the students safe.

Related Articles


Kickoff to rebuild Ramsey Stone House on Wednesday


Some St. Paul-area restaurants closing, limiting hours over ICE presence


Coon Rapids man killed in North St. Paul; St. Paul man in custody


Vote now for canine royalty of the St. Paul Winter Carnival and Doggie Depot


4-year prison term for Minneapolis man who shot at vehicles during separate St. Paul road rage incidents

Some volunteers have similarly stood outside schools while students have left during dismissal time, such as at Central Senior High School or Highland Park Middle School and Highland Park High School, watching in case ICE shows up.

“I don’t think it’s right. I think they’re inflicting a lot of fear and trauma. All they’re causing is harm,” Gonzalez said. “They’re not here to enforce laws. They’re quite literally just enforcing fear. And we want them out.”

Trump administration slashes funding for substance abuse and mental health programs nationwide

posted in: All news | 0

By ALI SWENSON, Associated Press

NEW YORK (AP) — The Trump administration has made abrupt and sweeping cuts to substance abuse and mental health programs across the country in a move that advocates said will jeopardize the lives of some of the country’s most vulnerable.

The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration on Tuesday night canceled some 2,000 grants representing nearly $2 billion in funding, according to an administration official with knowledge of the cuts who was not authorized to discuss them publicly.

The move pulls back funding for a wide swath of discretionary grants and represents about a quarter of SAMHSA’s overall budget. It immediately jeopardizes programs that give direct mental health services, opioid treatment, drug prevention resources, peer support and more to communities affected by addiction, mental illness and homelessness.

“Without that funding, people are going to lose access to lifesaving services,” said Yngvild Olsen, former director of SAMHSA’s Center for Substance Abuse Treatment and a national adviser at Manatt Health. “Providers are going to really need to look at potentially laying off staff and not being able to continue.”

Related Articles


Official says law Trump is using to seek legal fees in Georgia election case likely unconstitutional


Trump signs a law returning whole milk to school lunches


Grand jury indicts suspect in vandalism of Vice President JD Vance’s Ohio home


Trump claims killing of Iran protesters ‘has stopped’ even as Tehran signals executions ahead


Trump administration restores federal funding for family planning after ACLU lawsuit

Funding tied to agency’s priorities

SAMHSA, a sub-agency of the Department of Health and Human Services, notified grant recipients that their funding would be canceled effective immediately in emailed letters on Tuesday evening, according to several copies received by organizations and reviewed by The Associated Press.

The letters, signed by SAMHSA Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary Christopher Carroll, justified the terminations using a regulation that says the agency may terminate any federal award that “no longer effectuates the program goals or agency priorities.”

Grant recipients who were notified of the cancellations said they were confused by that explanation and didn’t get any further detail about why the agency felt their work didn’t match up with SAMHSA’s priorities.

“The goal of our grants is entirely in line with the priorities listed in that letter,” said Jamie Ross, CEO of the Las Vegas-based PACT Coalition, a community organization focused on substance use issues that lost funding from three grants totaling $560,000.

HHS didn’t respond to a request for comment on the funding cancellations, which were first reported by NPR. Two sources within SAMHSA who were not authorized to speak to media said staff weren’t widely notified of the agency’s action.

Programs at risk after funding is slashed

Organizations reeling from the news on Wednesday told the AP they had already been forced to cut staff and cancel trainings. In the long term, many were considering whether they could keep programs alive by shuffling them to different funding sources or whether they’d need to stop the services altogether.

Robert Franks, president and CEO of the Boston-based mental health provider the Baker Center for Children and Families whose organization lost two federal grants totaling $1 million, said the loss of funding will force his organization to lay off staff and put care in jeopardy for some 600 families receiving it. One of the canceled grants was awarded through the National Child Traumatic Stress Initiative, a more than 20-year-old program supporting specialized care for children who have been through traumatic events ranging from sexual abuse to school violence.

Franks said his organization’s work directly advances SAMHSA’s goals to address mental illness. He said trauma care provided to children through his organization helps people from all walks of life and reduces burdens on other parts of society.

“The reality is these programs are probably our most effective tool in addressing the issues that they identify as being critical to them,” he said. “Honestly, I don’t understand it.”

The National Association of County Behavioral Health and Developmental Disability Directors, a group that represents local organizations that deliver safety net services, sent a letter to its members on Wednesday noting that many of its partners estimated the funding pullbacks were focused on grants classified as Programs of Regional and National Significance. They also said the grants totaled around 2,000 and likely amounted to some $2 billion.

The group said it believed certain block grants, 988 suicide and crisis lifeline funding and Certified Community Behavioral Health Clinics were spared from the cuts.

For Honesty Liller, CEO of the peer support organization the McShin Foundation in Richmond, Virginia, the loss of about $1.4 million in funding is personal. She said the foundation she leads saved her life 18 years ago when she was struggling with a heroin addiction.

The terminated grant has already forced Liller to lay off five staff members. It will mean fewer peers are available to go into local jails and visit incarcerated people who are recovering from substance abuse disorder.

“They need hope dealers like us, they need people that have lived experience in recovery and they need this funding,” Liller said. “I’ve just never felt so gut punched.”