After trading places, Daemon Hunt finds chemistry on Wild blue line

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There was no “player to be named later” in the trade, roughly a year ago, that sent defenseman Daemon Hunt to Columbus as part of the package that brought defenseman David Jiricek to Minnesota. Yet here we are, fifty weeks later or so, with Hunt and Jiricek skating as defensive partners on the Wild’s blue line, in the latest example of the wacky things that can happen on the NHL’s transaction wire.

Hunt, who is 23 and lives in Calgary in the summers, played his fifth game for the Wild on Saturday versus Anaheim after spending all but one game last season in the AHL – most of that time with the Columbus minor league team, the Cleveland Monsters. He had one assist in four games coming into the matchup with the Ducks, and had made a favorable impression since cracking the Wild lineup following an October injury that has kept veteran defenseman Zach Bogosian on the shelf for the time being.

“He’s a player. He always has been. And I don’t think anyone here is surprised that he stepped in and has been doing what he’s doing,” Wild defenseman Brock Faber said after a recent practice. “He’s always so solid. He’s physically strong. He skates well, and he just makes right decision after right decision after right decision.”

Drafted by the Wild in the third round in 2020, Hunt had played 13 games at the NHL level for Minnesota when he was shipped to Columbus last year, along with three draft picks, to get Jiricek. He played 48 games for Cleveland last season, and went to training camp with the Blue Jackets looking to crack their lineup this season.

But on Oct. 3, after Columbus placed Hunt on waivers with the intent of sending him back to Cleveland, Wild general manager Bill Guerin stepped in and grabbed Hunt back, reuniting him with the only organization that had given Hunt an NHL opportunity. After spending much of October in the press box as a healthy scratch, Hunt has hit the ice with a determination to stick this time.

“It’s kind of rewarding. It feels like I’m more part of the team. And it feels really good to play in front of all the fans again,” Hunt said. “I’m happy with my performance. Just trying to get better every game.”

Part of that improvement has come from a growing chemistry that he and Jiricek have together on the ice when they have been paired. A month ago, the only thing they had in common was that they shared a line on a transaction sheet. Now there’s a relationship that works, once they get past the strangeness of having been traded for each other not too long ago.

“It’s actually fine. We got a good laugh about it,” Hunt said. “When I met (Jiricek’s) girlfriend, I was like, ‘I’m the guy he got traded for, and now we’re teammates.’ It’s quite the story.”

Briefly

The Wild did some shuffling between Des Moines and St. Paul on Saturday before facing the Ducks. Defenseman David Spacek, who had been called up to Minnesota on Nov. 10, was sent back to Iowa, while forwards Tyler Pitlick and Liam Ohgren were recalled to the NHL team. Spacek has yet to make his NHL debut. Pitlick has played nine games for the Wild this season without registering a point. Pitlick was ejected from his most recent NHL game — a 4-3 road loss to the Hurricanes on Nov. 6 — for an illegal hit to the head of a Carolina player. Ohgren was with the Wild for the first five games of the season and had been playing in Iowa since then. Ohgren is also looking for his first NHL point of the season.

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North Oaks’ Frankie Capan III in hunt at PGA Tour event in Bermuda

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Frankie Capan III continues to play well this fall.

The North Oaks’ native — Minnesota’s lone PGA Tour member — birdied the final three holes of his third round Saturday in the Butterfield Bermuda Championship to get to 9-under for the tournament.

That has the recently-turned 26 years old in a tie for eighth, just three shots back of leaders Adam Schenk and Braden Thornberry heading into the final round.

Capan will tee off at 6:54 a.m. Sunday. Television coverage on the Golf Channel begins at 10 a.m.

This is the second-to-last event of the fall season that determines who keeps their PGA Tour cards for the 2026 campaign. The top 100 in the season-long standings at the end of next week’s RSM Classic will have full-time status on the golf’s top tour, while the golfers in spots 101-125 will have conditional status.

Capan entered the week in the 142nd spot. His current eighth-place standing in the event would move him up to 134th. The better he plays Sunday, the higher he’ll climb up the ladder.

Capan has made a major move this fall via his strong play. He finished in a tie for sixth at the Sanderson Farms Championship in early October, and this weekend marks his third made cut over his past four events.

Pedestrian killed by hit-and-run driver identified as 30-year-old St. Paul woman

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Authorities say a woman who was struck and killed by a hit-and-run driver in St. Paul is a 30-year-old St. Paul woman.

The Ramsey County Medical Examiner’s Office identified the woman in Thursday’s fatal pedestrian crash as Amber O. Deneen, 30, of St. Paul.

Police were called to the crash scene about 5:15 p.m. at St. Anthony Avenue and Aldine Street, authorities said. When they arrived they found Deneen with head trauma.

Officers rendered first aid until St. Paul Fire Department medics took over, said Nikki Muehlhausen, a St. Paul police spokesperson. Medics took the woman to Regions Hospital, where she was pronounced dead a short time later.

Witnesses reported the vehicle that struck the woman was a dark-colored sport-utility vehicle.

Police are asking anyone with information to call them at 651-266-5650. Tipsters can remain anonymous.

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St. Paul PD’s first AI policy: How is it being used and what’s next?

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As some patrol officers in the Twin Cities are starting to use artificial intelligence for composing their reports, the St. Paul Police Department isn’t yet taking the leap to the cutting-edge Axon Draft One.

The department recently implemented its first policy on the use of AI. St. Paul police major crime investigators have already been using AI technology to transcribe interviews with victims, witnesses and suspects.

The policy came about because “as a department, we realized that technology is rapidly advancing, and we need to go with the times,” said St. Paul Police Cmdr. Michele Giampolo, who’s in charge of the technology unit. “We needed to have a policy in place to safeguard … private data.”

Erin Hayes, a St. Paul Police Civilian Internal Affairs Review Commission member, said the community and commission should have had the opportunity to weigh in before the department implemented its AI policy.

“I don’t want to say that AI shouldn’t be used in criminal justice work, because there could be some benefit, but we have to have really good guardrails laid down, and we have to know where the data is going and who is using our data,” Hayes said.

Police leaders say AI technology like Axon Draft One saves time, allowing officers to more quickly get back to patrolling. It uses audio from officers’ Axon body cameras and drafts a police report, to which officers are then prompted to add details and check for accuracy.

Draft One does not generate information about what the surroundings look like or what is happening in the body camera video, said Eagan Police Lt. Nate Tennessen. Eagan police are using Draft One for non-felony offenses.

“This sticks to the facts within the transcript of the audio only, so it’s objective AI,” he said. “It’s making no assumptions of the video.”

With the key role that police reports have in investigations and prosecutions, some people raise concerns about the implications of law enforcement using Draft One and say there should be opportunities for public input.

“When we’re potentially sending people to prison based on police reports, obviously we want to have an accurate, clear and unbiased portrayal of what happened,” said Alicia Granse, staff attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union of Minnesota.

The Dakota and Hennepin county attorney’s offices, which primarily handle felonies, don’t accept Draft One reports. A Ramsey County Attorney’s Office policy issued in August says law enforcement have to notify them if they’re using AI tools for investigative purposes.

The Eagan City Attorney’s Office, which prosecutes misdemeanors and gross misdemeanors, accepts the Eagan Police Department’s Draft One reports for prosecutions, Tennessen said.

St. Paul police: No short-term plan to use Draft One

Until a couple of years ago, St. Paul major crime investigators who interviewed victims, witnesses or suspects were tasked with typing transcripts of exactly who said what.

The hours-long process entailed investigators listening back to audio from video cameras in interview rooms.

Since the department upgraded the cameras, investigators can now use an automated transcription process. The police department says that’s the only way they’re using AI in reports at this time.

Police Civilian Internal Affairs Review Commission member Dan Featherstone, speaking at the commission’s November meeting, asked if the St. Paul Police Department intends to use Axon Draft One.

“We have no plan, at least in the short term,” replied St. Paul Police Cmdr. John Cajacob, who oversees the internal affairs unit. “I don’t know long term. There’s no current plan.”

If the use of Draft One comes up, PCIARC chairperson Sarah Florman said she “would highly recommend” that it’s “discussed well in advance of implementation with the commission and ideally with the community. There’s a lot of bright red flags with that particular technology that concerns me.”

Cajacob said, based on his conversations with department leadership, “there’s no question” they’d seek community feedback if they expand AI use to Draft One.

The PCIARC, comprised of St. Paul residents, reviews civilian-initiated complaints of police misconduct, and makes disciplinary and policy recommendations to the police chief.

How Twin Cities police are using Draft One

Bloomington and Brooklyn Park police each have 15 officers using Draft One in a pilot program for misdemeanor-level offenses. Woodbury police have seen a demonstration and are considering a limited trial.

“This produces a report very quickly and what we’re experiencing is highly detailed reports,” said Brooklyn Park Police Inspector Matt Rabe.

Officers are required to review and add to the report. As a safeguard, the Eagan department automatically has a function that adds what Lt. Tennessen calls “unicorn and wizard sentences” in Draft One reports.

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“It’ll be an outlandish sentence” that shows up in a report and officers need to find it in their review and delete it before signing off on the report, he said.

Using Draft One has led to officers providing more narration about what they’re seeing when they’re on a scene, so their audio comments are captured on body camera and then reflected in the report, said Tennessen and Rabe.

For example, officers will say, as their body camera is recording, “I’m responding to a report of damage to a vehicle at this address. The caller identified themselves as such and such with this phone number,” Rabe said. “I see a scratch on the driver’s side, front bumper of the vehicle.”

There’s a disclosure in the reports that they were generated with Axon Draft One, Rabe and Tennessen added.

Axon contracts for body cameras, more

The Ramsey County Attorney’s Office issued its own policy about AI use in August. It says their prosecutors are required to know if any law enforcement agency’s case “includes evidence developed or arrests made based on the use of AI.”

They notified law enforcement agencies across the county, said spokesman Dennis Gerhardstein. The county attorney’s office is “aware of only a handful of cases from SPPD that include AI assistance,” he said. “We have not heard back from other … agencies per their intent to use AI in the investigative process.”

St. Paul homicide, robbery and sex crimes investigators are among those using Axon Auto-Transcribe when they conduct interviews in the department’s conference rooms that are equipped with video cameras, said Giampolo, the technology commander. They’re required to listen to the video, and check and fix the transcript for accuracy before including it in their reports, she said.

The St. Paul police contract with Axon for this year is nearly $2 million, which includes body cameras, squad cameras, tasers, Auto-Transcribe, data storage and more. The Eagan police contract is $6 million for 10 years and includes similar elements.

When it comes to facial recognition, St. Paul police say they do not have technology that uses it. The department asked the Hennepin County Sheriff’s Office analysis unit, which has facial-recognition technology, for assistance in identifying suspects 23 times this year as of Nov. 5, according to Alyssa Arcand, a St. Paul police spokeswoman.

The requests are to help solve serious crimes and represent a small percent of the 8,000 to 10,000 major crime investigations St. Paul police conduct each year, Arcand said.

St. Paul review commissioners wanted to weigh in

At the St. Paul Police Civilian Internal Affairs Review Commission’s Nov. 5 meeting, Commissioner Hayes said she appreciated receiving the police department’s AI policy, but added, “What I don’t appreciate is that this policy was put into place prior to this meeting. To me, I thought we had been on a really good path of collaborating and looking at policy.”

Cajacob, the internal affairs commander, said he sent the policy to the PCIARC coordinator on Oct. 13. It was implemented Oct. 17.

He said he knows it was “a short period of time,” and added, “Our policies are not set in stone. It’s important that we always have … feedback and we’re able to adapt things … so certainly, it’s an ongoing discussion.”

PCIARC Coordinator Sierra Cumberland said she believed it was the department’s draft policy on AI when she sent information to the commissioners on Oct. 21 and requested feedback by their Nov. 5 meeting. She said she hadn’t been told what date the policy would take effect and didn’t know the department had already implemented it.

How prosecutors are handling AI

The Dakota County and Hennepin County attorney’s offices, usually prosecuting felonies, do not accept law enforcement reports that utilized Draft One.

The Dakota County Attorney’s Office “is examining and considering” whether to accept them, according to County Attorney Kathy Keena.

Law enforcement interviews that were transcribed using AI are accepted, said Morgan Kunz, Hennepin County Attorney’s Office criminal division director.

The difference is, with the body camera audio used in Draft One, “they’re usually out in the field, there’s often lots of things going on. The audio can be of less quality than you would get in an interview room with an interview being conducted,” Kunz said.

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When an officer is making a decision to arrest someone, to search or to use force, for example, “they need to write a report explaining why they made that decision,” Kunz said. “An AI tool, listening to the audio, is essentially going back after the fact and creating a justification for something based on the audio. It’s not an articulation of why the police made that decision in the first place.”

The American Civil Liberties Union said last year that police departments should not allow officers to use AI, like Draft One, for reports.

If AI is being used for reports, ACLU of MN staff attorney Granse said there should be questions about what safeguards are in place to ensure officers are truly reviewing them before signing off on them.

Utah and California have implemented laws requiring police to disclose in a report if it was written using AI. Would the Minnesota ACLU want the Legislature to take that up?

“Certainly, it’s something that we’re interested in,” Granse said.

“Transparency is important, not only just the fact that AI was used, but what is the AI? How is it trained? How is it being coded?” she said.