Half of Skyline Tower residents return to homes five days after evacuation

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About half the residents of a St. Paul high-rise forced from their homes by a fire earlier this week have returned to their apartments, city officials said Friday.

More than 770 people were displaced early Sunday morning when a small fire broke out on the 12th floor of the Skyline Tower complex at Griggs Street and St. Anthony Avenue, according to a news release. No one was injured, but the blaze caused outages of the water, heating and electrical systems, rendering the building uninhabitable.

As of Friday afternoon, all 141 households of the complex’s east tower were back in their apartments, the news release said. The units in the west tower suffered significant water damage from the building’s sprinkler system and require repairs before they can be occupied.

The city’s Department of Safety and Inspections conducted “a comprehensive safety review Thursday, certifying the entire building structurally sound,” the news release said.

Skyline Tower, which overlooks Interstate 94, is the largest affordable housing community in St. Paul, according to CommonBond, the nonprofit that manages the complex.

About 150 city workers — including firefighters, police officers, Department of Safety and Inspections personnel, and the mayor and his staff — pitched in to help residents evacuate on Sunday.

CommonBond arranged hotel rooms for many of those who were displaced, while some chose to stay with family or friends.

The fire remains under investigation, but Deputy Fire Chief Jamie Smith said there were not signs it was suspicious.

Donations for residents are being accepted at commonbond.org/skylinetower.

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Boys soccer: Como Park comes up short; Blake wins Class 2A title

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MINNEAPOLIS — The mood in the Como Park High School locker room Saturday at U.S. Bank Stadium after its Class 2A boys soccer championship game with top-seeded Blake mirrored the weather outside — cold, gray and damp.

The unseeded Cougars, whose run to the title clash energized their campus and sparked pride throughout the St. Paul City Conference, ended with a 3-0 loss to the Bears, who were simply too good to be beat and finished the season 19-1-2.

“They were just a good team and good teams create good chances,” said Como Park standout Blessed Htoo, who found himself tightly marked and often jostled. “Their ball movement, they’re very quick with it. And after they pass, they move right away.”

Said Cougars defender Henry Simmons: “I was nervous. I knew they were a good team and it was kind of what I expected from them.”

Como Park coach Brendan Doyle noted that Blake was the division’s top team in the coaches poll and the computer rankings throughout the season.

“They came out with intent to win a state title,” Doyle said. “They were very well-prepared and our guys were trying to hang on.”

Blake opened the scoring during the 13th minute. Oliver Brown redirected in a Landon Bell shot after two earlier Bears missiles bounced off the post during a frenzied, goalmouth scramble.

Como Park’s deficit doubled nine minutes after intermission when Blake was awarded a free kick in the center of the field and just outside the penalty area. The Cougars struggled to structure their defense and Moises Huerta casually rolled the ball wide to a wide-open Max Vezmer, who pounded home a 25-yard shot past a charging foe.

Blake closed the scoring with 29 minutes to play. Bell received a pass from along the end line and to the right of the goal before using a nifty, back-heel feed to send the ball on to Brown. The junior midfielder received the offering with his right foot before shooting inside the left post with his left boot.

Como Park’s best scoring chance might have come with 14 minutes remaining when it was awarded an indirect kick in the center of the penalty area. A teammate’s quick touch set Htoo up for a shot, but the Bears charged off the goal line en masse and smothered the attempt.

“For a high school team, (Blake) has a very well-defined style of play,” Doyle said. “And despite that, they’re not at all predictable. They attack with eight and every player is able to find a bunch of solutions, which means our defenders have three things in their head at any time.

“They’re probably, top to bottom and player to player, the most talented team in our class, too. Everyone’s fighting them uphill from the start.”

The Cougars’ coach said his 15-6-1 team was fortunate to be down only a goal at halftime and made tactical changes to try and get attackers high and wide.

“I think we did a better job in the second half but they have super-talented players and they won their (individual battles) and scored anyway.”

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Class 2A girls soccer: Berger, Aflakpi ‘steal’ championship for Mahtomedi

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The Blake School girls soccer team felt it was robbed during Friday’s 1-0 loss to Mahtomedi in the Class 2A title game at U.S. Bank Stadium. Zephyrs coach Dave Wald didn’t offer much disagreement.

“I feel like we stole one, in a way,” said the Zephyrs’ 20th-year bench boss after his claimed its second consecutive state crown. “But we get better and better and play harder and harder. The pride I feel in these guys is amazing.”

Mahtomedi defender Eloise Taylor, 4, takes control of the ball past Blake forward Lauren Breyer, 2, during the second half of the Class 2A girls soccer championship game at U.S. Bank Stadium in Minneapolis on Friday, Oct. 31, 2025. (Craig Lassig / Special to the Pioneer Press)

Crucial to the larceny was Mahtomedi goalkeeper Harlow Berger, who made a dozen saves, several of them spectacular. Blake held a 19-6 shot advantage and took 10 of the contest’s 12 corner kicks but couldn’t solve No. 43 in the yellow jersey.

Blake’s Livi Abboud-Young entered with 34 goals scored, the last being Wednesday’s winner during a semifinal victory over Holy Angels. She and her teammates forced Berger to make seven saves before intermission, with virtually every Bears touch being purposeful and attack-oriented.

“I was really hoping we’d play Holy Angels because I didn’t think we matched up well with Blake,” said Wald, who lost his four-player back line to graduation after last season but saw the Zephyrs close this year’s campaign with shutouts in 11 of its last 13 games.

“If you’d asked me at the beginning of the season if we’d be here, I’d have said no way.”

Berger was expected to split time for a second consecutive campaign with senior classmate Jacque Worden, who’s headed to play for the University of North Dakota. Worden got hurt playing flag football, however, and Berger, a former basketball player, took over full time.

Friday, the 6-foot-3 keeper charged off her line to make sliding stops on loose balls at the edge of the penalty area. She leaped to tip line-drive shots over the crossbar, and jumped to pluck corner-kick offerings from the air. Berger crushed punts and kicks, some of the latter taken near midfield after fouls on her teammates, which allowed Mahtomedi to threaten her Blake counterpart, Reese Aafedt, from more than 50 yards away.

“It just seemed like she was everywhere in the net,” said Aafedt, who made four saves but couldn’t prevent her team from falling to 16-1-4. “She had such good footwork to get to any ball, and she used her height as a strength, which was good for their defense overall.”

Audrey Aflakpi cheers as she watches her sister, Mahtomedi’s Elise Aflakpi, defeat Blake 1-0 to win the Class 2A girls soccer championship at U.S. Bank Stadium in Minneapolis on Friday, Oct. 31, 2025. (Craig Lassig / Special to the Pioneer Press)

Mahtomedi (17-2-2) was being outshot, 19-4, when it scored 15 minutes after intermission. Rose Prescott passed from the center of the field to Kennedee Cummins on the right side. From there, Cummins found striker Elise Aflakpi, who was facing away from the goal and had a defender on her hip atop the penalty area.

Aflakpi spun 180 degrees to her right and dribbled into a small patch of open space. Without time to reposition, the junior chose to shoot with her toe, knocking the ball off the left post, then off the right post and, according to the officials, across the line at some point during its journey.

“I saw it release from her foot and I … thought it was going completely wide,” Aafedt said. “Then it hit the post and hit the other post and I didn’t personally think it went in, but it was called otherwise.”

Said Blake coach Jocelyn Keller: “Soccer’s an unfortunate game where you can outplay and outshoot and out-defend a team and then that happens.”

With 7 minutes remaining, Berger slid to stop a cross and felt her shoulder pop out of joint. An agonized roll to one side pushed the wing back into place, but the goalkeeper wore a sling postgame and said she was glad she only had to make two more saves the rest of the way.

“I’m not sure how it happened and it was really painful, but I knew I could move it,” said Berger, a University of St. Thomas commit who described the title clash as her busiest game of the season. “Every time I screamed, the pain kind of went away, so I did that every time the ball came to me.”

Wald said he pondered retirement from coaching about five years ago, but then the Zephyrs began what he called “a run of amazing people” that continued with the current team’s energy and enthusiasm. Berger was in the midst of that culture, the coach noted.

“Harlow is an amazing person and a game-changer,” Wald said. “With that many young kids on the field, we don’t do this without them knowing they have Harlow behind them.”

Mahtomedi poses with the trophy after winning the Class 2A girls soccer championship at U.S. Bank Stadium in Minneapolis on Friday, Oct. 31, 2025. (Craig Lassig / Special to the Pioneer Press)

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‘You wanted to kill me,’ White Bear Lake man wrote to knife attacker, who received 7½-year prison sentence

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Mason Fike chose not to attend Friday’s sentencing of the man who repeatedly stabbed him on their White Bear Lake street just over a year ago.

Fike, now 22 and a senior at St. John’s University in Collegeville, said in his victim impact statement — read in a Ramsey County courtroom by his brother — that his decision was not because he was afraid of his attacker, Jeffrey Thomas Rice.

Mason Fike, center, of White Bear Lake, suffered serious injuries after being stabbed near his home on July 27, 2024. (Courtesy of GoFundMe)

“I am simply done wasting my life and time being in the same room with someone as worthless as you,” the statement read. “I have never been afraid of you, and I never will be.”

Rice, 20, stabbed Fike in the chest, kidney, bladder, spleen, back and stomach after he stormed outside and confronted Fike, who was on a walk with his girlfriend in the early morning hours of July 27, 2024.

“That night, I know what you wanted and attempted to do, and so do you, Jeffrey. You wanted to kill me,” Fike said in his statement. “And I do not need a trial to know that.”

Jeffrey Thomas Rice (Courtesy of the Ramsey County Sheriff’s Office)

Rice already knew his own fate before the hearing: a 7½-year prison sentence, which was set by an agreement he reached with the prosecution in August for pleading guilty to first-degree assault. An attempted murder charge was dismissed as part of the plea deal.

Fike’s mom, Gail Fike, told the court that Rice was “given what I consider a gift … only having to serve 90 months in prison for the pain, fear and lasting trauma that you have caused. That feels like a minimal consequence.”

Rice and Fike didn’t know each other, despite living on the same block, said Fike’s father, Jeff Fike. He said a jail mugshot of Rice included in a newspaper report on the stabbing showed them what he looked like: “The face of the person who almost took my son’s life.”

‘Selfish, violent actions’

Fike was home on summer break from college. He and his girlfriend wanted to have a date night, so they decided to go for a walk to look at the stars, his mother said.

“The kind of evening when families should be able to take a walk and enjoy their neighborhood without fear,” she said.

Fike’s girlfriend would later tell police that he yelled at kids riding bikes, telling them it was past their bedtimes, the charges said. It was just before 2 a.m.

She said a man, who police later identified as Rice, then came outside from a house and began yelling at them. Fike walked back toward the street in front of the house and met Rice at the street. She said Rice threw the first punch at Fike before stabbing him.

When officers arrived in the 2100 block of Southwood Drive, Fike was on his back in grass near a curb. His girlfriend was applying pressure to a large wound to his lower abdomen.

He was rushed to Regions Hospital, where he was “lying on that operating table, fighting for his life because of your selfish, violent actions,” Jeff Fike said in court Friday.

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Rice’s sister told police she heard yelling and screaming from outside and that her brother “stormed outside” and confronted people about the noise, the charges said. She said her brother and Fike argued and then fought and that her brother stabbed him with a pocketknife.

She said she told her brother to “stop, stop” and that Fike was lying on the ground bleeding.

Rice drove off but was stopped by police in White Bear Lake. He had blood on his skin and clothing, but no injuries.

Police later found a pocketknife in a yard near the scene of the stabbing.

After being booked into jail, Rice was recorded asking someone during a call, “Is that dude all right?” The person on the other end said, “I don’t think so.”

New charges

Rice soon posted bond and was released from custody.

That same day, Jeff Fike went home to gather extra clothing for the family’s stay at the hospital, where his son was still in the intensive care unit and on a ventilator. As he drove by Rice’s house, he saw him sitting on a lawn chair in his front yard.

“I couldn’t believe you had the audacity to sit in the front yard after what you did,” he told the court.

Fike said he slowed down and looked at Rice, who looked back and “started laughing. You thought it was funny. You actually laughed. You found humor in what you did, showing no remorse.”

Rice would go on to pick up three new criminal cases.

He was charged with receiving stolen property in August 2024 after a White Bear Lake officer tracked a surveillance camera that was stolen from a movie theater in Elk River.

He was charged with contempt of court in December after police said a Ring doorbell camera showed him drive past the Fike family home, despite a no-contact order that prohibited him from doing so. The case was dismissed last month, according to court records, which do not make clear why that decision was made.

He was charged with felony threats of violence. The criminal complaint said in February an intoxicated Rice told his parents and sister that he was going to “go outside and hurt people” after they wouldn’t give him his keys to drive. He also threatened to kill his neighbor and his parents by “cutting their jugulars while they slept,” the complaint said.

Rice was arrested that night after police saw him walking with a bottle of whiskey. He remained in jail ever since after not posting bond.

Rice pleaded guilty to the receiving stolen property charge on Aug. 21 and was sentenced to three months in jail, which he had already served.

The threats charge was dismissed Friday as part of his plea deal in the stabbing case.

‘Mason was a fighter’

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Rice, when given the chance to address the court, apologized for stabbing Fike, adding: “I hope there’s change for me. I wish the best for Mason. I don’t know why I did what I did.”

Judge Andrew Gordon addressed him before handing down the sentence.

“I think it is clear, especially clear in this case, that whatever thought or intent went into the interaction that happened on that day, that it was, frankly, senseless,” he said. “It didn’t need to happen.”

Gordon acknowledged how Fike’s family and friends spoke in court about the surgeons and other medical staff who saved his life.

“If you didn’t know Mason was a fighter before, you certainly know that now,” the judge said. “And I am sincerely heartened to hear that he is recovering.”