Twins, Guardians game suspended; to be resumed on Tuesday, weather permitting

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The Twins and Cleveland Guardians did what they could to get a game in on Monday night at Target Field. But in the end, the weather wouldn’t cooperate for long enough.

The two teams made it through three innings on Monday before the game was officially suspended around 9:10 p.m.

The game is scheduled to resume on Tuesday at 5:10 p.m. with the regularly-scheduled game starting 30 minutes later. But with more rain in the forecast on Tuesday, it seems unlikely that nearly two full games will be played.

The Twins had just taken a 2-1 lead in the second inning when the rain, which had been coming down for most of the game, intensified.

At 7:13 p.m., the two teams left the field for the first rain delay of the night. As the rain slowed, managers Rocco Baldelli and Stephen Vogt conferred with the umpires, eventually moving their conversation from the third base side to the middle of the field.

Shortly after their meeting broke up, players re-emerged on the field.

That rain delay lasted 61 minutes, after which the two teams returned for 14 minutes before the tarp went right back on the field at 8:28 p.m.

At around 9:10 p.m., the game was officially suspended. Fans who were in attendance on Monday will receive a voucher for a future game.

After the Guardians struck first off Bailey Ober to begin the game, the Twins used an RBI hit from Ty France to even the score in the bottom of the first.

An inning later, Willi Castro drove in Harrison Bader, giving the Twins the lead.

That was where things stood when the first delay was called. After they returned, Ryan Jeffers struck out, leaving Castro on second base.

They played one more inning after that before heading back inside for good.

Charge: DNA links St. Paul man to 2013 rape at Maplewood motel

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A 59-year-old man charged in January with raping a 71-year-old St. Paul woman he met on Facebook is now accused of committing a 2013 sexual assault at a Maplewood motel.

Thao Xiong’s DNA came back as a match through an initiative to analyze a backlog of untested sexual assault kits, according to a Ramsey County District Court criminal complaint charging him Friday by warrant with felony first-degree criminal sexual conduct.

Thao Xiong, shown in January 2025 (Courtesy of the Ramsey County Sheriff’s Office)

Xiong remained out of custody on Monday. He was released from jail on March 21 after posting a $50,000 bond in the January case that also charges him with first-degree criminal sexual conduct.

Xiong allegedly committed that offense while on probation for a 2020 first-degree criminal sexual conduct conviction involving a 41-year-old woman during a night of drinking at his St. Paul apartment in July 2019.

According to the Friday’s criminal complaint:

A woman reported to police on July 15, 2013, that she had just been forcibly sexually assaulted at a motel off U.S. 61 in Maplewood by a man she knew as “Chue Lee,” identified in November 2020 through a DNA match as Xiong.

The woman said she had been talking with “Chue” for two days over the phone, that she did not know him previously and had assumed he got her number from someone she knew.

She said he called her on July 15 and said he was coming to Minnesota from Wisconsin and wanted her to show him around. They also planned to go for a walk by a lake.

She met Xiong in the parking lot of a St. Paul grocery store, where he suggested they take one car and offered to drive. She agreed and got into his car. He drove past the lake, telling her they were going to get something to eat first. Rather than going to a restaurant, he brought her to the motel, saying he wanted to get some rest before eating.

Xiong rented the room and once inside began “ripping her clothes apart,” the complaint says. She said he “overpowered” her and raped her.

She went to a hospital for a sexual assault examination the same day. A nurse examiner noted bruising to the woman’s body and she complained about areas where she said Xiong had bitten her.

She told the nurse the assault began immediately after they got into the motel room and Xiong locked the door. After the assault, she said, Xiong appeared scared, so she got in his car. Xiong dropped her off and about 15 minutes later he called her and left a “cruel message,” which she later provided to police.

The complaint says motel video shows Xiong arriving with the woman in a gray Toyota Prius just after 5 p.m. He went into the motel office and then moved the car in front of a room. The two entered the room at 5:15 p.m. and left 45 minutes later.

An investigator in late July 2020 discovered the sexual assault kit, which had not been tested. It was brought to the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension and four months later an unidentified male DNA profile taken from swabs of the woman was entered into the state’s DNA databases and the National DNA Index System.

The BCA notified St. Paul police on Nov. 4, 2020, that Xiong’s DNA, obtained from his 2019 sexual assault case, matched the DNA in the 2013 assault. Police tried to contact the woman but were unsuccessful, the complaint says.

Last March, police were told DNA collected from Xiong in the January case matched the DNA found on the swabs taken from the 2013 victim, the complaint says.

Police tried to locate the woman and reached her on April 10 after her son called to ask why they were trying to contact his mother who does not speak English, the complaint says. She told police through an interpreter she “had been waiting for a very long time for an update on her case and wants him prosecuted for sexually assaulting her,” the complaint says.

Police sent the case to the attorney’s office for charging consideration last month.

Kate Courtney, Xiong’s attorney in the January case, said Monday she could not comment on Friday’s charge because she has been out of town and has not read the complaint.

Previous charges

According to January’s complaint, St. Paul police were dispatched to the 71-year-old woman’s apartment in the Summit-University neighborhood about 6:30 p.m. Jan. 28 after she reported she had just been forcefully sexually assaulted by a man, who was later identified as Xiong.

She told police someone must have given Xiong her phone number because he called, asking to meet. She agreed, and invited him over. When he entered the apartment, she told police, he pushed her into her bedroom, took off her clothes and raped her.

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She gave police a Facebook profile that Xiong used to contact her. As an officer pulled up the profile, she immediately said, “that’s him,” the complaint states. He was arrested Jan. 28 after police obtained a search warrant for his apartment in St. Paul’s Payne-Phalen neighborhood and found him hiding under his bed.

Court records show that Xiong reached a plea deal with prosecutors in the 2019 case and admitted to fourth-degree criminal sexual conduct in exchange for a first-degree charge being dismissed. He was sentenced to 231 days in jail, which was time that he had already served after his arrest, and put on supervised probation for 10 years.

Xiong has no other convictions, besides two petty misdemeanor traffic violations.

 

Most of MN budget unfinished as Legislature slows in final hours of session

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With just hours remaining in the regular 2025 legislative session on Monday, Minnesota lawmakers still hadn’t granted final passage to major pieces of the upcoming two-year state budget, including bills on taxes, education and health care spending.

A special session will be required to enact last week’s $66 billion or so budget framework agreement reached by Gov. Tim Walz, the Democratic-Farmer-Labor majority Senate and DFL and Republican leadership the 67-67 tied House.

As of Monday afternoon, only a handful of the 20 or so spending bills that comprise the budget had made it through both the Senate and House and were headed to Walz’s desk to be signed into law.

Around two-thirds of the general fund budget — human health and human services and K-12 education — remain up in the air, and there are still unresolved questions about support for the budget deal.

Walz told reporters Monday afternoon that he wasn’t worried about getting the budget done before the June 30 deadline, and that the biggest pieces often come last. He added he’d call lawmakers back to the Capitol for a special session “when the work’s done” on final bills and that he hopes it will only be for one day.

Gov. Tim Walz.

If the Legislature doesn’t pass a budget by the end of the two-year fiscal period, the state government will shut down. Layoff notices start going out to state workers on June 1. If there is no deal by then. Lawmakers and the governor said they hope to wrap up the budget before the end of May.

What’s the holdup?

Despite leaders calling it a “deal,” it’s only an agreement between top lawmakers and the governor and some of it is still up for intense debate.

Walz, Senate Majority Leader Erin Murphy, House DFL Leader Melissa Hortman, and Republican House Speaker Lisa Demuth, signed off on the deal, but many DFLers are not on board with an proposal to end state-funded MinnesotaCare insurance coverage for adults in the U.S. illegally.

That was a GOP priority in negotiations, and DFL leaders say they agreed to it because they wanted to avert a government shutdown on July 1 — which would interrupt a significant range of services in the state.

Many DFLers say they won’t support the proposal. And they’ve also accused Republicans of trying to make late changes to the deal, like creating more rollbacks for the state paid family and medical leave program.

“Republicans keep moving the goal posts. None of the GOP demands are necessary to pass the state budget bill,” said House Floor Leader Jaime Long, DFL-Minneapolis.

Demuth blamed the late budget bills on a weekslong House DFL boycott at the beginning of session that delayed business as the tied chamber’s power struggle worked its way through court.

“As I’ve talked about from the very start that I believed that we could have gotten this done on time,” she said. “Our Democrat colleagues didn’t show up for work and we ended up doing that. 23 days in a row.”

Special sessions become the norm for passing a budget under divided government.  The last time a divided government passed a budget without going into overtime was 2007.

What has passed?

As of 7 p.m. Monday, lawmakers had passed a number of smaller pieces of the budget. One big part of the budget deal that got some pushback was the closure of the aging state prison in Stillwater, though the House and Senate approved that change in a judiciary and public safety budget bill over the weekend.

Besides that, bills on agriculture, veterans affairs, housing and Legacy Amendment funds for outdoors, parks and the arts are also on the way to Walz.

Changes to public employee pensions headed to becoming law as part of a bill passed by the Senate Monday will help insulate state State Patrol and other state public safety pensions against inflation with cost of living adjustments.

What remains?

Most of what makes up the budget hasn’t made it to the finish line. A health bill that carries they deal cut MinnesotaCare benefits for adults in the U.S. illegally has not made it to a vote in either chamber.

A tax bill has not yet materialized, though as part of the budget deal the state plans to raise the tax on cannabis products. Republicans got DFLers to agree to cut the maximum rate for a payroll tax for the new paid family and medical leave program from 1.2% to 1.1%.

Walz’s proposed reduction of the overall state sales tax rate and the creation of a new tax on services like accounting and legal advice did not make it to the final deal. Nor did a Senate DFL proposed first-in-the-nation tax on social media platforms.

A pre-K-12 education budget bill that holds state spending level to inflation for the next two-years still hasn’t made it through. A GOP push to eliminate unemployment for hourly school workers is also headed for the dustbin as a result of the budget deal, DFLers said.

The education budget makes up around one-third of the current $71 billion two-year state budget. Under the deal, education spending will remain level for the next two years other than the required inflation-tied increases.

Higher education, transportation and human services also remain unfinished.

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US sends 68 migrants back to Honduras and Colombia in first voluntary deportation

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By CLAUDIO ESCALÓN and MARLON GONZÁLEZ

SAN PEDRO SULA, Honduras (AP) — The United States on Monday sent 68 immigrants from Honduras and Colombia back to their countries, the first government-funded flight of what the Trump administration is calling voluntary deportations.

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In the northern Honduran city of San Pedro Sula, 38 Hondurans, including 19 children, disembarked from the charter flight carrying $1,000 debit cards from the U.S. government and the offer to one day be allowed to apply for legal entry into the U.S.

U.S. President Donald Trump has promised to increase deportations substantially. Experts believe the self-deportation offer will only appeal to a small portion of migrants already considering return, but unlikely to spur high demand. The offer has been paired with highly-publicized migrant detentions in the U.S. and flying a couple hundred Venezuelan migrants to a maximum-security prison in El Salvador.

Kevin Antonio Posadas, from Tegucigalpa, had lived in Houston for three years, but had already been considering a return to Honduras when the Trump administration announced its offer.

“I wanted to see my family and my mom,” said Posadas, who added that the process was easy.

“You just apply (through the CBP Home app ) and in three days you’ve got it,” he said. The flight left Houston early Monday. “It’s good because you save the cost of the flight if you have the intention of leaving.”

Posadas said he hadn’t feared deportation and liked living in the U.S., but had been thinking for some time about going home. He said eventually he would consider taking up the U.S. government’s offer of allowing those who self-deport to apply to enter the United States legally.

In a statement about the flight Monday, U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said, “If you are here illegally, use the CBP Home App to take control of your departure and receive financial support to return home. If you don’t, you will be subjected to fines, arrest, deportation and will never be allowed to return.”

Twenty-six more migrants aboard the flight were headed home to Colombia, according to a U.S. Department of Homeland Security statement.

Honduras Deputy Foreign Minister Antonio García said the Honduran government would also support the returning migrants with $100 cash and another $200 credit at a government-run store that sells basic necessities.

Among the migrants arriving voluntarily Monday were four children who were born in the United States, García said.

García, who met the arriving migrants at the airport, said they told him that being in the U.S. without documents required for legal immigration or residence had been increasingly difficult, that things were growing more hostile and they feared going to work.

Still, the number of Hondurans deported from the U.S. so far this year is below last year’s pace, said Honduras immigration director Wilson Paz.

While about 13,500 Hondurans have been deported from the U.S. this year, the figure stood at more than 15,000 by this time in 2024, Paz said.

He didn’t expect the number to accelerate much, despite the Trump administration’s intentions.

Some would continue applying to self-deport, because they feel like their time in the U.S. is up or because it’s getting harder to work, he said.

“I don’t think it will be thousands of people who apply for the program,” Paz said. “Our responsibility is that they come in an orderly fashion and we support them.”

González reported from Tegucigalpa, Honduras.