Mounds View teacher charged with sexual conduct of 16-year-old student

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A longtime Mounds View High School teacher was charged Wednesday with criminal sexual conduct of a 16-year-old female student.

Ted Matthew Bennett (Courtesy of the Ramsey County Sheriff’s Office)

Ted Matthew Bennett, 58, of Minneapolis, has been a teacher at Mounds View High in Arden Hills for 27 years, according to the criminal complaint charging him with one count each of third- and fourth-degree criminal sexual conduct. Bennett was arrested Tuesday and remains jailed ahead of a first appearance on the charges scheduled for Thursday.

An attorney for Bennett is not listed in the court file.

Bennett was put on administrative leave Monday. In a Wednesday email to parents, principal Rob Reetz said, “We are deeply disturbed by this news, and our foremost concern is for all who may be affected by this distressing situation. We stand with all survivors of sexual assault and abuse, and our school unequivocally condemns any actions that harms or exploits students.”

The complaint said authorities believe there may be other victims and that the Ramsey County Sheriff’s Office would be opening a tip line for others to come forward.

According to the criminal complaint, law enforcement responded to the high school Monday on a report of an “inappropriate relationship” between Bennett and the student.

An investigation showed Bennett was involved in a sexual relationship with the girl, and that he provided her with alcohol and narcotics, the charges say.

The teen told law enforcement that they communicated through their personal phones and email since the end of 2024-2025 school year. She described having a “light” conversation with Bennett over the summer and that it continued into the current school year.

The teen said she had been going through some hard times and had no one else to talk to, and that Bennett listened and understood her problems. She initially denied that they engaged in sexual activity and said she didn’t want to get him in trouble and blamed herself.

A forensic search of her phone revealed a “significant amount” of evidence that Bennett had sexual contact with the teen on multiple occasions, the complaint said.

The phone exam also revealed evidence of Bennett providing the teen with alcohol and narcotics. On Nov. 2, she asked Bennett in a text if he would give her Adderall and he replied back, “Maybe…Add on some more illegal behaviors to the list,” the complaint reads.

Four days later, Bennett gave her Adderall and alcohol in the school parking lot. Afterward, he messaged her, “I’m a little high, a little juiced up from add (Adderall), as (sic) maybe a bit tipsy from Jungle Juice and still a bit high from car activities,” the complaint reads.

Bennett again gave the teen alcohol two days later, and they discussed using cocaine, the complaint alleges.

In a follow-up interview Nov. 11, the teen told law enforcement that Bennett had been her English teacher throughout the 2024-2025 school year and that they began communicating through phone and email in spring 2025.

She said throughout her 10th-grade year, Bennett commented on her looks, telling her she was “hot” and commenting on her body. She said texts between them became more sexual as time went on and sexual contact began last month, the complaint said.

She said she and Bennett met in each other’s vehicles to engage in sexual acts. Another incident occurred during the school day in a back room of the theater, she told law enforcement.

She said Bennett also sent her “porn clips” electronically and talked about them recreating what was in the video.

Cellphone evidence showed that on Nov. 10, during a conversation, Bennett told the teen he had just been put on administrative leave and said, “I was fired, lie to them and delete everything,” according to the complaint.

Reetz, the high school’s principal, provided law enforcement with an initial report he received on Nov. 7 from the teen’s friend and her boyfriend who reported concerns to school staff about Bennett’s relationship with the teen.

School officials located a video of Bennett and the teen walking together in school hallways and going into a storage closet together, the complaint said. Officials also located email contact between Bennett and the teen using their school e-mail addresses.

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Mounds View High School teacher arrested on suspicion of criminal sexual conduct

Law enforcement arrested Bennett at his home, where they executed a search warrant of the residence. Electronic devices were seized along with other items, including handwritten notes to Bennett from the teen. Police are still analyzing all the evidence seized.

Bennett declined an interview with law enforcement.

Ramsey County Attorney John Choi called the case “a parent’s worst nightmare.”

“A teacher using drugs, alcohol and authority to exploit a vulnerable student is abhorrent,” he said in a statement. “Schools must be a safe place for students, and we will not tolerate abuse of power or the sexual exploitation of our youth.”

What to know about two holiday tree lightings in downtown St. Paul

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When the Colorado blue spruce that Bill and Deanna Ellingson planted almost 30 years ago in their front yard in Roseville stretched too tall for them to easily string holiday lights around it, they came up with a clever solution:

The future 2025 Union Depot Holiday Tree is currently in the front yard of Bill and Deanna Ellingson of Roseville. (Courtesy of Deanna Ellingson)

“I got a couple of projectors and projected lights up on the tree and the neighbors seemed to really like that,” Bill says.

The neighbors are in for a bigger light show this year for the approximately 40- to 45-foot evergreen: The tree has been chosen as the 2025 Union Depot Holiday Tree.

The neighbors — and everyone else — are invited to attend the annual Holiday Tree Lighting and Movie Night at Union Depot in Lowertown on Saturday, Dec. 6. For those who can’t wait for their holiday cheer, the annual Salvation Army “Tree of Lights” — a digital tree — is being installed in Rice Park in downtown St. Paul ahead of a tree-lighting ceremony on Saturday.

A star is born

The Ellingsons first answered Union Depot’s call for trees in 2024 after reading about it in the Pioneer Press.

That year, their tree was a finalist for the chance to sparkle with thousands of energy-efficient LED lights.

“We didn’t know until they came to look at the tree,” Bill said. “We came in second place.”

This year, they didn’t submit their tree for consideration, but that didn’t matter.

“We came home one day in October and there were a couple of gals walking around the tree again,” Bill said.

The tree fit the required qualifications: It’s an evergreen tree located in Ramsey County, it looks good, it’s tall enough, it’s not going to be too difficult to remove and there is a reason for its removal (besides looking good).

Bill and Deanna Ellingson pose with their daughter, Kelli, and their dog, Cinnamon (Cinny), in 2005 by the Colorado blue spruce in their front yard in Roseville that they are now donating to become the 2025 Union Depot Holiday Tree. (Courtesy of Bill Ellingson)

“They asked us if we still wanted to donate it and we said, ‘Sure, we’re ready,’” Bill said.

While the tree is considered a donation, the Ellingsons will not have to pay for the associated costs of removing it and grinding its stump down (a $5,000+ value).

The tree is scheduled to be cut down on Saturday morning, after which it will be taken directly to the North Plaza of the Union Depot to be installed. Watch for updates on the Union Depot’s social media, including Facebook and Instagram.

Rice Park and red kettles

The installation of the Salvation Army “Tree of Lights” is a much different process, since it’s a digital tree.

After the finishing touches are put in place on Thursday, the 40-foot artificial tree that resembles a Fraser fir will be ready to switch on its thousands of lights for its fourth annual appearance in Rice Park at 109 W. Fourth St. in downtown St. Paul. This year’s tree installation, the Salvation Army says, will again feature a dynamic light program that is synchronized with holiday music and will be updated weekly.

The tree lighting celebration, which will also mark the Salvation Army’s Red Kettle Kick-off, is set for 5:30 p.m. on Saturday with St. Paul Mayor Melvin Carter, NFL Hall of Famer Cris Carter and the award-winning vocal group VocalEssence.

Before the tree lighting, popular local DJ Ray Mills, the official DJ of the Minnesota Vikings, will provide music starting at 3:30 p.m. There will also be visits from the St. Paul Police Band drumline and Santa and Mrs. Claus. Free cookies and hot chocolate will be served by The Salvation Army’s disaster services canteens during the event.

If you can’t make it to this free event, there’s plenty of time to catch the sparkle: The tree will remain standing through Jan. 7, which includes the full run of the World Junior Hockey tournament in St. Paul (scheduled from Dec. 26-Jan. 5).

More info at salvationarmyusa.org/usa-central-territory/northern.

This Red Kettle season

The red kettles, part of a familiar fundraising drive at store entrances and street corners around the metro during the holidays, are especially in need of donations this year.

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The need goes beyond the climbing prices for food, gas, utilities and other essentials.

“The annual Red Kettle season is critically important this year,” said Lt. Colonel Randall Polsley, Salvation Army Northern Division commander, in a statement. “Recent reductions in Minnesota assistance programs have flooded our centers with new requests for help. More families are seeking food, rent and utility assistance as a result.”

Funds raised during the Christmas season support food and housing programs throughout the year, the Salvation Army says.

Bell ringers are still needed. Sign up at RegisterToRing.com.

Hub for the Holidays

Deanna and Bill Ellingson, bottom and top right, pose with their daughter and son-in-law, Kelli and Chad Hofmeister, and their grandson, Wesley Hofmeister, in 2022. (Courtesy of Bill Ellingson)

While the mayor will lead the dignitaries at Saturday’s tree lighting, the Ellingsons have a different wish for the Dec. 6 celebration at Union Depot.

“We have a 9-year-old grandson, Wesley, and if it’s at all possible, he would like to turn the tree lights on at Union Depot,” Bill says.

Wesley, we heard this might happen.

The whole family will be in attendance for the tree lighting, including Wesley’s mom and dad, Kelli and Chad. Kelli was in the sixth grade when she and her parents moved into their townhome and planted the tree that grew up right along with her.

Unlike Kelli though, the tree has been starting to cause issues, such as encroaching on the sidewalk.

“It’s a good time to see it go,” Bill says, “but we will miss it. We’ve watched it grow since it was about 5½ feet tall.”

Still, Deanna is looking forward to what’s next.

“It’ll be kind of exciting, watching them cut it down,” she says. Also: “I love fireworks,” she adds.

Yes, the tree-lighting ceremony will include a flourish of fireworks — and more things to do during the Hub for the Holidays at Union Depot, including the return of the European Christmas Market, the North Pole Express, the CPKC Holiday Train and a holiday bake sale.

On Dec. 6, the fun begins inside the Waiting Room at Union Depot, located at 214 E. Fourth St., at 5 p.m. with the reveal of the 2026 St. Paul Winter Carnival Button. There will also be a holiday musical performance by The Mistletones, free hot chocolate, photo ops, craft stations and a lightup giveaway for kids.

At 7 p.m., guests will move outside for the tree lighting ceremony, which includes a sing-a-long and fireworks.

After the tree is lit, the movie night, featuring “Elf,” begins indoors at 7:30 p.m.

Get details on seasonal events at uniondepot.org/holiday.

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While the Union Depot tree will sparkle through the new year, the search for the next and future Union Depot holiday trees is ongoing. This year, the tree was chosen from between 25 and 50 submissions, but Union Depot officials would like more contenders.

“If people have a tree in mind that they think could qualify,” says Amy Struve, Union Depot’s marketing manager, “we would love to hear from them.”

To be considered, email your address and a photo of the tree to info@uniondepot.org or call 651-202-2700. A tree can also be submitted for consideration through Union Depot’s website at uniondepot.org/holiday/holiday-tree/.

Stillwater schools consider boundary changes

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To prepare for the opening of the new Lake Elmo and Bayport elementary schools next fall, Stillwater Area Public Schools officials say they plan to change attendance boundaries “to balance enrollment across the district’s southern schools and make room for future growth.”

The district is considering three scenarios. One would affect 135 students, and the other two would affect 39 students each, said Carissa Keister, the district’s chief of staff and director of communications.

To the extent possible, each elementary school will have a minimum enrollment of 400 students, Keister said. “It’s just better programmatically when we have at least 400,” she said. “We can have full-time staff for our specialists, and three sections of each grade level. It’s just more efficient.”

Much of the district’s growth will be in Lake Elmo, so district officials are purposely building the new 150,000-square-foot elementary school at 10928 10th St. N., “intentionally large,” Keister said.

“We’re actually trying to keep room there knowing that we don’t have growth for next year, but we will have growth in five, six, seven years from now,” she said. “We don’t want to overcrowd it now when we know that the growth is coming.”

An open house on the plan will be held at 6 p.m. Thursday at Oak-Land Middle School. Families are invited to come learn about the options and share feedback. District leaders and members of the boundary committee will be in attendance.

Parents and family members also can provide feedback online prior to Dec. 2 at: https://my.thoughtexchange.com/scroll/132099563/welcome.

The school board plans to hold a study session on the proposed changes at 5:30 p.m. Dec. 2 at the Oak Park Learning Center, 6355 Osman Ave. N., in Stillwater.  A final decision is expected Dec. 16.

District officials have put the current Lake Elmo Elementary School up for sale; the asking price is $5 million.

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District officials plan to move into the current Andersen Elementary School building in downtown Bayport next year when the new 98,000-square-foot school – which will be called Bayport Elementary – opens at 1003 Fifth Ave. N., in Bayport.

District officials are currently split between the Oak Park Learning Center and the Central Services Building on Greeley Street; the Central Services Building will be put up for sale, Keister said.

“That would allow all of our central services staff to be together,” she said. “We’re kind of divided up between two buildings right now.”

The Oak Park Learning Center will continue to be used for the district’s Alternative Learning Center, the district’s Transition program, professional development and other meetings. In the future, it could be used for some daytime community-education programming, Keister said.

Judge signals hundreds of people detained in Chicago immigration crackdown could be released on bond

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By SOPHIA TAREEN

CHICAGO (AP) — Hundreds of people who have been arrested and detained in the Chicago area during the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown could soon be released on bond while they await immigration hearings, a federal judge signaled Wednesday.

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During a hearing in Chicago, U.S. District Judge Jeffrey Cummings said he would order the full release of 13 detained individuals based on a 2022 consent decree outlining how U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement can make so-called warrantless arrests.

He also gave government attorneys a Friday deadline to comb through a list of 615 people detained at county jails and federal facilities nationwide to see if they qualify for alternatives to detention under the decree, such as using an ankle monitor, while their immigration cases proceed. The judge said he’d issue an order for their release next week, and in the meantime would temporarily pause any deportation proceedings for people who might qualify for bond under the decree.

Attorneys for the detainees hailed Cummings’ move as a win and said they plan to bring more cases.

“All of the tactics of ICE have been unlawful in the vast majority of arrests,” said Mark Fleming, a lawyer with the Chicago-based National Immigrant Justice Center.

Attorneys said they were racing against the clock, as many of the more than 3,300 people suspected of immigration violations who have been arrested in Chicago and its suburbs since “Operation Midway Blitz” began in September have already been deported or left of their own accord.

“We’re concerned they have no access to counsel and no understanding of what their situation is,” Fleming told the judge.

Will Weiland, a Justice Department attorney, told Cummings that at least 12 people on the list of 615 were “high risk” and shouldn’t be released into communities.

“Nothing has been easy with this case your honor,” he said.

Protesters gather outside an ICE processing facility in Broadview, Ill. a suburb of Chicago, Friday, Oct. 24, 2025. (AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh)

Cummings previously determined that ICE had violated the consent decree which, among other things, requires the agency to show documentation for each arrest it makes for people besides those being specifically targeted in an operation.

During Wednesday’s hearing, Cummings listed instances since the crackdown started in which immigration agents have arrested people while they were at work, out walking or pulling through the drive-thru lane at a fast-food restaurant.

“It also seems highly unlikely to me that any of these foreign nationals … fall into the category of what ICE has called the ‘worst of the worst,’” he said.

The Trump administration has touted its federal intervention efforts as effective at fighting crime and applauded agents’ aggressive tactics that have been challenged in court. But leaders in Illinois say violent crime had already been trending downward in the Chicago area and that federal agents only inflamed tensions.

While the consent decree covers arrests by ICE, it doesn’t include U.S. Customs and Border Protection, which has been behind the most controversial tactics used during the immigration operation, including the liberal use of chemical agents.

A police guards the designated protest area as protesters gather outside an ICE processing facility in the Chicago suburb of Broadview, Ill., Friday, Oct. 31, 2025. (AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh)

The Department of Homeland Security, which oversees both agencies, hasn’t offered details about its arrests, only highlighting a handful of people living in the country without legal permission who also had criminal histories.

DHS Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin deemed Cummings an “activist judge,” a common Trump administration label for judges who’ve down struck parts of the Republican’s agenda.

In a Wednesday statement, McLaughlin claimed that an order to release the detainees put “the lives of Americans directly at risk.”

The consent decree, which expired earlier this year, was extended until February. Although its policy on ICE’s warrantless arrests applies nationwide, remedies for individual cases have been focused in six states covered by the ICE field office in Chicago, where the original lawsuit over immigration sweeps was filed. Those states are Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Missouri, Kentucky and Wisconsin.