Jury convicts Fridley 19-year-old of fatally shooting ex-girlfriend after breakup

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A jury has found a Fridley man guilty of shooting his ex-girlfriend over what the prosecution said was his “jealousy and wanting something he couldn’t have.”

Jayden Lee Kline (Courtesy of Curt Gray)

Anoka County jurors deliberated for about 17 hours over three days before convicting Fenan Abdurezak Uso on Thursday of first-degree murder for shooting 18-year-old Jayden Lee Kline outside her Fridley home after they returned from a Rosedale shopping trip the afternoon of Dec. 21, 2023.

Nearly two dozen of Kline’s family and friends were present in the courtroom. After the verdict, prosecutor Brenda Sund turned around and gave Kline’s mother, Jennifer Kline, a big hug.

Kline was a 2023 graduate of Columbia Heights High School, where she competed on the swim and synchronized swimming teams. Her family described her as “beautiful, brilliant and big-hearted.”

“Our collective feeling is that although no one really ‘won’ here, and it doesn’t bring our dear Jayden back, others in our community will be safer with Fenan Uso locked up in prison for many years,” her uncle Curt Gray said.

Uso, now 19, faces life in prison at sentencing, which Judge Jenny Walker Jasper set for Nov. 12.

On Tuesday, during the state’s closing argument, Sund said that Uso, then 17, planned the killing after Kline ended their relationship. He bought a stolen handgun the night before, told her he’d take her shopping and concealed the gun in the center console of his minivan.

“The plan was always to spend one more time with Jayden before he killed her,” Sund said.

Uso testified this week that he had been distraught after their breakup. He said Kline was shot accidentally when she grabbed the gun to try to stop him from killing himself.

“He wasn’t thinking about killing anyone else,” Uso’s attorney Thomas Beito said during the defense’s closing argument. “He was thinking about ending his own life.”

Uso was charged by juvenile petition with second-degree murder five days after the killing. A jury indicted him on a charge of first-degree murder in July 2024, four months after he turned 18.

The jury also convicted Oso of additional charges filed this week: second-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter.

A gunshot rang out

According to charging documents:

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Police and emergency workers were sent to the 4500 block of Third Street Northeast just before 4 p.m. Dec. 21, 2023, on a report of a hit-and-run crash that injured a pedestrian. Kline was found lying unresponsive in the street near her home’s driveway with a head wound. She was pronounced dead at North Memorial Hospital in Robbinsdale.

Kline’s mother told police her daughter had been at the Roseville mall that afternoon.

Brandon Kline, Jayden’s older brother, told police he heard a loud noise, looked out a window and saw his sister on the ground. He said he was told by a neighbor that a gold minivan sped away from the scene and that he assumed she had been struck.

He said his sister and Uso had dated on and off for about a year and that she had recently broken up with him because he lied to his family about the relationship.

A neighbor’s doorbell camera showed a gold minivan slowly approaching the home and stopping. A gunshot rang out, the front passenger door opened and Kline fell out and was not moving. Her brother confirmed to police that it was Uso’s minivan.

Investigators later determined she had been shot in the back of the head at close range.

Police tracked the location of Uso’s phone, learned he was in the Burnsville area and notified city police, who located the minivan at a gas station about 6:30 p.m. Officers saw a .40-caliber semi-automatic handgun in the minivan’s center console, and Uso was detained.

Fenan Abdurezak Uso (Courtesy of the Anoka County Sheriff’s Office)

In an interview with investigators, Uso said he and Kline had broken up two weeks prior. He said they got into an argument at the mall. He said “he thought he pulled out the gun” when dropping her off at her house, “pointed it at her, pulled the trigger once and drove off fast,” the charges read.

Uso said he drove away quickly because “he realized he did something dumb” and “was shaking as he drove away and dropped the gun in the van.”

Uso went on to say he had obtained the handgun from “unknown persons” the day before. Police said the serial number matched a gun stolen in Marshalltown, Iowa.

‘He wasn’t going to let her move on’

Prosecutor Sund told jurors Tuesday that Uso was “jealous, controlling and ultimately not who Jayden Kline wanted to be in a relationship with.”

And after Kline went back to seeing someone else, Sund said, Uso “made the decision to kill her, because he wasn’t going to let her move on.”

Uso reached out to “anyone he could get who could get him a gun fast,” Sund said, and bought the murder weapon from someone at a gas station in Brooklyn Park on Dec. 20.

After failing to meet up with Kline that night, he arranged to pick her up the next day to go shopping, Sund said.

“Same plan … one last time together,” Sund said.

Sund asked jurors to recall how Kline had visited Kermone Thompson at Augsburg College in Minneapolis on Dec. 16, 17 and 19. Thompson and Uso previously had been classmates at Fridley High School, where they also were members of the football team.

Uso’s phone records showed that he “started his search for a firearm to murder Jayden Kline” at about 4 a.m. Dec. 17, Sund said.

Three days later, Uso “lured her out of her house” and took her to the mall, where they went to one store before leaving, Sund said.

“His jealousy is the driving force of his choices in this case,” she said.

‘There was no struggle over this gun’

Beito, Uso’s attorney, told jurors the gun was the “heart of the case.”

He said a retest on the gun for Kline’s DNA was recommended by an analyst, but it was not done.

“It’s right here,” Beito said, then read the lab’s DNA report. “‘Additional comparisons can be made to known DNA samples from Jayden Lee Kline, or any other pertinent individual.’ But they didn’t do it.”

Beito said it was the defense, not the prosecution, that introduced the report at trial.

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“Why? Because they didn’t want you to see it,” he said.

Uso didn’t tell investigators that Kline was shot while stopping him from shooting himself, Beito said, “because sometimes shame can be heavier than guilt.”

In the state’s rebuttal, Sund said the DNA analyst testified that Uso was a major male profile on the gun.

“There was no struggle over this gun,” Sund said.

She reminded jurors that Kline’s mother testified she saw Jayden fall to the ground holding a Stanley beverage container in one hand and the “phone next to her in the other.”

“This is not a tragic love story,” Sund said. “This is a crime, and the crime is murder.”

Billionaire Illinois Gov. Pritzker wins blackjack pot of $1.4M in Las Vegas

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By JOHN O’CONNOR

SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (AP) — It figures that a billionaire would win big in Las Vegas.

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Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker reported a gambling windfall of $1.4 million on his federal tax return this week.

The two-term Democrat, often mentioned as a 2028 presidential candidate, told reporters in Chicago on Thursday that he drew charmed hands in blackjack during a vacation with first lady MK Pritzker and friends in Sin City.

“I was incredibly lucky,” he said. “You have to be to end up ahead, frankly, going to a casino anywhere.”

Pritzker, an heir to the Hyatt hotel chain, has a net worth of $3.9 billion, tied for No. 382 on the Forbes 400 list of the nation’s richest people. A campaign spokesperson said via email that Pritzker planned to donate the money to charity but did not respond when asked why he hadn’t already done so.

Pritzker, who intends to seek a third term in 2026, was under consideration as a vice presidential running mate to Kamala Harris last year. He has deflected questions about any ambition beyond the Illinois governor’s mansion. But he has used his personal wealth to fund other Democrats and related efforts, including a campaign to protect access to abortion.

His profile has gotten an additional bump this fall as he condemns President Donald Trump’s immigration enforcement in the Chicago area and the president’s attempt to deploy National Guard troops there.

The Pritzkers reported income of $10.66 million in 2024, mostly from dividends and capital gains. They paid $1.6 million in taxes on taxable income of $5.87 million.

Pritzker is an avid card player whose charitable Chicago Poker Challenge has raised millions of dollars for the Holocaust Museum and Education Center. The Vegas windfall was a “net number” given wins and losses on one trip, he said. He declined to say what his winning hand was.

“Anybody who’s played cards in a casino, you often play for too long and lose whatever it is you won,” Pritzker said. “I was fortunate enough to have to leave before that happened.”

Associated Press writer Sophia Tareen contributed from Chicago.

Trump plans to leave his mark on Washington by building a Paris-like arch near the Lincoln Memorial

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By DARLENE SUPERVILLE

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump wants to leave his mark on the nation’s capital by building a Paris-style arch just west of the Lincoln Memorial.

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Trump unveiled the plan at a White House dinner on Wednesday for the wealthy businesspeople who have pledged money toward the $250 million cost of adding a massive ballroom to the Executive Mansion. Trump did not put a price tag on the cost of the arch.

“It’s going to be really beautiful,” the Republican president said. “I think it’s going to be fantastic.”

Many presidents and first families try to leave their imprint on the White House, and Trump is already doing that with many of the design and construction changes he’s made to the property, perhaps most notably by converting the Rose Garden into a stone-covered patio.

But the arch goes far beyond the White House, giving Trump a chance to leave another lasting monument in a city known for them. It would expand on his earlier talk of sprucing up the city by replacing its “tired” grasses, and broken signage and street medians.

Trump seems to draw inspiration from the French.

The proposed arch bears a striking resemblance to the Arc de Triomphe in Paris, the famous monument at the end of the Champs-Élysées honoring those who fought for France during the French Revolution and Napoleonic wars.

A military parade held in Washington earlier this year to mark the Army’s 250th birthday was inspired after Trump witnessed a similar event down the famous Parisian boulevard eight years ago as a guest of France’s president, Emmanuel Macron.

The White House did not immediately respond Thursday to an emailed request for more information on the arch, including the timeline for completing it.

Harrison Design, a local firm, is working on the project, according to a weekend social media post from Trump. A representative for the firm did not respond to an emailed request seeking comment Thursday.

It was unclear if the White House has presented the proposal to the National Capital Planning Commission, which has responsibility over planning and siting monuments, memorials and statues in the city. The commission’s offices have been closed during the government shutdown.

L. Preston Bryant Jr., a former chairman of the commission, said in an email that federal law requires that the proposed arch be put through the commission’s review and approval process.

The arch would stand at the Washington end of Memorial Bridge, which spans the Potomac River from Arlington, Virginia. At the dinner, Trump showed off three different sized models of the arch, which will feature a statue of Lady Liberty on top, and acknowledged that the largest one was his favorite.

President Donald Trump addresses a dinner for donors who have contributed to build the new ballroom at the White House, Wednesday, Oct. 15, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/John McDonnell)

Trump thanked his dinner guests for being “so generous in your contributions” to pay for the ballroom and said there might be enough money left over to cover the cost of building the arch.

“It’s fully taken care of now and, in fact, we’ll have money left over and we’ll use that for something,” he said. “We’ll use that probably maybe for the arch or something else that will come. But we love to fix up Washington.”

The White House has said it will disclose information on who has contributed money to build the ballroom, but has yet to do so. That project was announced in late July.

Associated Press video journalist Mike Pesoli contributed to this report.

US prosecutors charge Smartmatic in alleged $1M Philippines bribery case

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By JOSHUA GOODMAN

MIAMI (AP) — Federal prosecutors have charged voting technology firm Smartmatic with money laundering and other crimes arising from more than $1 million in bribes that several executives allegedly paid to election officials in the Philippines.

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The payments, between 2015 and 2018, were made to obtain a contract with the Philippines government to help run that country’s 2016 presidential election and secure the timely payment for its work, according to a superseding indictment filed Thursday in a Florida federal court.

Three former executives of Smartmatic, including co-founder Roger Pinate, were previously charged in 2024 but at the time South Florida-based Smartmatic was not named as a defendant. Pinate, who no longer works for Smartmatic but remains a shareholder, has pleaded not guilty.

The criminal case is unfolding as Smartmatic is pursuing a $2.7 billion lawsuit accusing Fox News of defamation for airing false claims that the company helped rig the 2020 U.S. presidential election in which Joe Biden defeated Donald Trump.

Smartmatic in a statement denied the allegations and said it believed the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Miami had been misled and politically influenced by unnamed powerful interests.

“This is again, targeted, political, and unjust,” the company said. “Smartmatic will continue to stand by its people and principles. We will not be intimidated by those pulling the strings of power.”

As part of the criminal case, prosecutors in August sought the court’s permission to introduce evidence they argue shows that revenue from a $300 million contract with Los Angeles County to help modernize its voting systems was diverted to a “ slush fund” controlled by Pinate through the use of overseas shell companies, fake invoices and other means.

They also accused Pinate of secretly bribing Venezuela’s longtime election chief by giving her a luxury home with a pool in Caracas. Prosecutors say the home was transferred to the election chief in an attempt to repair relations following Smartmatic’s abrupt exit from Venezuela in 2017 when it accused President Nicolas Maduro ’s government of manipulating tallied results in elections for a rubber-stamping constituent assembly.

A hearing on the purported evidence tied to Los Angeles and Venezuela will be held next month however none of the accusations are mentioned in the superseding indictment signed by Jason Reding Quinones, the new Trump-appointed U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Florida.

Smartmatic was founded more than two decades ago by a group of Venezuelans who found early success running elections while the late Hugo Chavez, a devotee of electronic voting, was in power. The company later expanded globally, providing voting machines and other technology to help carry out elections in 25 countries, from Argentina to Zambia.

But Smartmatic has said its business tanked after Fox News gave Trump’s lawyers a platform to paint the company as part of a conspiracy to steal the 2020 election.

Fox said it was legitimately reporting on newsworthy events but eventually aired a piece refuting the allegations after Smartmatic’s lawyers complained. Nonetheless, it has aggressively defended itself against the defamation lawsuit in New York — arguing that the company was facing imminent collapse over its own internal misconduct, not due to any negative coverage.