Shoreview bus driver awarded for rescue of 4-year-old in Lake Owasso

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As a school bus driver, Mebal Kaanyi has to pay attention.

So when she was driving her afternoon bus route last week for Roseville Area Schools, she noticed a four-year-old boy running down the street crying. He didn’t appear to have parents with him and was barefoot with no sweatshirt, she said.

“He crossed that Owasso Boulevard, as busy as it was, and went to the other side of the road and on that side, it’s a lake – Lake Owasso,” Kaanyi, of Shoreview, said.

Despite fencing by the lake, Kaanyi said the gate must not have been latched and the boy was able to make it to the water where he fell in.

“Of course, even me, I was terrified on entering the water because I do not know how to swim,” she said. “I’ve never done that in my whole life so I was afraid to follow him, but still, something kept on pushing me – ‘You need to save that kid because if you don’t save him, nobody’s going to know he’s in there.”

Kaanyi, a Shoreview resident, got into the water and though the boy was struggling, he pushed himself toward her, allowing her to then grab his hand and pull him from the lake, she said.

People driving by who saw the rescue offered to bring Kaanyi towels for the boy, who was soaking wet and shaking. Kaanyi, who had called her work dispatch to request police, waited with the boy until first responders arrived.

The Ramsey County Sheriff’s Office contacted Kaanyi the next day to thank her and let her know that the boy had been reunited with his parents, she said. A spokesperson with the sheriff’s office confirmed on Tuesday the boy’s reunion with his parents.

On Tuesday, Kaanyi was recognized for her actions with a $1,000 check from Sheletta Brundidge, through Brundidge’s company ShelettaMakesMeLaugh.com, a podcast network and promotions company based in Cottage Grove.

Brundidge for about the last two years has traveled to different parts of the country providing free interior keyless door locks to parents to help keep their children from wandering, like the child Kaanyi rescued. She travels to cities where children have wandered away and drowned and estimates she’s spent around $30,000 to $40,000 on locks for parents that can’t afford them, she said. When she heard about Kaanyi’s rescue of the boy, she wanted to surprise her.

“Here we are, just letting her know what a hero she is and how amazing it is that she saved this child,” Brundidge said.

Children with autism are more prone to wander, something Brundidge has experienced with her own son, who is autistic.

“I like to say I’m just a mama with a mouth on a mission to help other parents because I don’t want any mother to have to bury her child,” Brundidge said. “And so it’s my job to make sure that the awareness is made, that the awards are handed out, that the locks are given away.”

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Kaanyi, who is a single mother, said she plans to save the money she received on Tuesday to support her 9-year-old daughter.

“It’s just telling people out there to always do you — be you, and do you. Never look at color, race, something like that. Just do what your heart tells you,” Kaanyi said. “Do good things and people should treat each other, one another with kindness. That day it will be that kid, next time it will be me, my daughter. You know, you don’t need to help somebody with you expecting to get something in return. Just do you.”

FACT FOCUS: Trump gets it wrong claiming no murders in DC for the last six months

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By MELISSA GOLDIN

In addition to pardoning two North Carolina turkeys at the annual White House ceremony Tuesday, President Donald Trump discussed his crime-fighting efforts in Washington, D.C., claiming that it’s been months since the city has seen a murder.

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But Metropolitan Police Department statistics say otherwise.

Trump deployed National Guard troops to Washington in August in an effort to curb violent crime even though it had already reached its lowest levels in decades.

Here’s a closer look at the facts.

TRUMP: “We haven’t had a murder in six months.”

THE FACTS: That’s false. There have been 62 homicides in Washington since May 25, including one last week, according to the MPD. The city has seen 123 homicides so far in 2025. Since National Guard troops were deployed to Washington on Aug. 11, there have been 24. In some data, only 61 homicides were reported in the last six months, and only 23 since Aug. 11, because of a technical error, the MPD said.

Asked for comment on Trump’s claim, the department said that the statistics speak for themselves.

White House spokeswoman Taylor Rogers stressed Trump’s transformation of Washington “from a crime-ridden mess into a beautiful, clean, safe city” when asked about the discrepancy between his claim and city data. She did not address the discrepancy directly.

A federal judge on Thursday ordered the Trump administration to end its monthslong deployment of National Guard troops in the nation’s capital. U.S. District Judge Jia Cobb found that Trump’s military takeover illegally intrudes on local officials’ authority to direct law enforcement in the district. The order is on hold for 21 days to allow for appeal.

District of Columbia Attorney General Brian Schwalb in September sued to challenge the Guard deployments. He asked the judge to bar the White House from deploying Guard troops without the mayor’s consent while the lawsuit plays out.

During the turkey pardoning, Trump said Washington “is now considered a safe zone,” making the erroneous claim that “we haven’t seen a murder in six months.”

A Department of Justice report from January showed that total violent crime in 2024 was at the lowest it had been in more than 30 years, including a 32% drop in homicides from 2023, when it experienced a post-pandemic peak.

Homicides in the past six months are down 46% from the same period last year, while homicides since the August deployment are down 38% from the previous period, MPD data shows. There has been a 29% decrease in homicides in 2025 to date compared to 2024.

Violent crime during the National Guard’s initial one-month surge in Washington was down 39% from the same period last year, including a 53% drop in homicides, with seven during the surge, compared to 15 during the same timespan in 2024.

Arson is the only type of crime that has not seen a decrease, with a 0% change from last year to this year.

The city’s statistics came into question, however, after federal authorities opened an investigation into allegations that officials altered some of the data to make it look better. The investigation is ongoing.

Associated Press writers Gary Fields and Lindsay Whitehurst contributed to this report.

Find AP Fact Checks here: https://apnews.com/APFactCheck.

Washington County emergency alert system is victim of cyberattack

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The Washington County Sheriff’s Office says it is moving away from its CodeRED emergency system following recent cyberattacks and data breaches nationwide.

CodeRED is a critical notification system used to deliver time-sensitive alerts during severe weather events, public safety threats and other emergencies. CodeRED has reported that information such as names, addresses, email addresses, phone numbers and possibly passwords for profiles may have been compromised.

“If the same password is used by system users for any other personal or business accounts, those passwords should be changed immediately,” county officials said.

During this transition, partner agencies with emergency alerting capabilities will issue public alerts on Washington County’s behalf.

The county is encouraging residents who use the system to do the following:

• Change any usernames or passwords to other personal or business accounts similar to those used for CodeRED profiles.

• Ensure Emergency Alerts are turned on in phone settings.

• Follow Washington County Sheriff’s Office and local public safety agencies on social media.

• Maintain multiple ways to receive alerts, such as NOAA Weather Radio and local news outlets.

The county said CodeRED has reported there is no evidence that any user information has been used to carry out identity theft or fraud.

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Judge gives Justice Department a day to detail Ghislaine Maxwell trial materials to be released

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By MICHAEL R. SISAK and LARRY NEUMEISTER

NEW YORK (AP) — A federal judge in Manhattan is demanding more information from the Justice Department as he weighs its request to unseal records from the sex trafficking case against Jeffrey Epstein’s longtime confidante Ghislaine Maxwell.

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Judge Paul A. Engelmayer on Tuesday ordered the Justice Department to tell him what materials it plans to publicly release that were subject to secrecy orders in the British socialite’s case.

The deadline: Noon on Wednesday.

Engelmayer’s order came after the Justice Department on Monday asked for his permission to release grand jury records, exhibits and discovery materials in the Maxwell case.

Engelmayer said government lawyers must file a letter on the case docket describing materials it wants to release “in sufficient detail to meaningfully inform victims” what it plans to make public.

Maxwell was convicted in 2021 by a federal jury of sex trafficking for helping recruit some of Epstein’s underage victims. She is serving a 20-year prison sentence.

Epstein, a millionaire money manager known for socializing with celebrities, politicians, billionaires and the academic elite, killed himself in jail a month after his 2019 arrest.

Engelmayer had already notified victims and Maxwell that they can respond next month to Justice Department’s request to release materials before he decides whether to grant it.

The Justice Department said it was seeking the court’s approval to release materials to comply with the Epstein Files Transparency Act, passed by Congress and signed into law last week by President Donald Trump. It calls for the release of grand jury and discovery materials in the case.

The request, along with an identical one for grand jury transcripts from Epstein’s case, was among the first public indications that the Justice Department was trying to comply with the transparency act, which requires it to release Epstein-related files in a searchable format by Dec. 19.

Engelmayer did not preside over the trial, but was assigned to the case after the trial judge, Alison J. Nathan, was elevated to the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

Discovery materials subject to secrecy orders are likely to include victim interviews and other materials that previously would have been only viewed by lawyers or Maxwell prior to her trial.

Engelmayer said in an order Monday that Maxwell and victims of Maxwell and Epstein can respond by Dec. 3 to the government’s request to make materials public. The government must respond to their filings by Dec. 10. The judge said he will rule “promptly thereafter.”

Lawyers for victims did not immediately respond to messages seeking comment. A spokesperson for federal prosecutors declined to comment.

Judge Richard M. Berman, who presided over the Epstein case before his death, issued an order on Tuesday allowing victims and Epstein’s estate to respond to the Justice Department’s unsealing request by Dec. 3. He said the government can respond to any submissions by Dec. 8.

Berman said he would make his “best efforts to resolve this motion promptly.”