Starter David Festa continues to progress, but Twins fall to Rays

posted in: News | 0

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — The Twins’ chances to get where they want to go rest largely on a rotation now filled with three rookies.

So if there’s something positive to take from Tuesday night’s 2-1 loss to the Tampa Bay Rays at Tropicana Field, it’s the fact that rookie David Festa has started looking every bit the top pitching prospect that the Twins thought he would be.

Festa went five innings on Tuesday, struck out seven and gave up just two earned runs. Since returning to the big leagues in early July, he now has a 3.13 earned run average and has struck out 50 in 37 1/3 innings.

The two runs he gave up both came in the fourth inning, the first scoring on a slicing hit towards Austin Martin in left field that he seemed to get a late jump on. The second run scored a couple batters later when a ball deflected by first baseman Carlos Santana wound up in the outfield.

On some nights, that kind of performance might have been enough.

Not on Tuesday.

On Tuesday, Festa had limited run support as the Twins’ offense mustered just four hits through the first eight innings off starter Jeffrey Springs and reliever Drew Rasmussen. They finished with six hits total.

Two were from Santana, who hit his 19th home run of the season in the second inning and led off the ninth with a single.

That single was the Twins’ first hit since the fifth inning and began a ninth-inning rally that saw them put two runners on base with no outs. But they were unable to advance either runner with Brooks Lee and Willi Castro striking out and Christian Vázquez grounding out to end the game.

Austin Martin #82 of the Minnesota Twins can’t make the catch on a ball hit by Jonathan Aranda (not pictured) of the Tampa Bay Rays in the fourth inning at Tropicana Field on Sept. 03, 2024 in St Petersburg, Florida. (Photo by Julio Aguilar/Getty Images)
Tampa Bay Rays’ Christopher Morel dives back safely to first base ahead of the tag by Minnesota Twins’ Carlos Santana (30) on a pickoff attempt during the first inning of a baseball game Tuesday, Sept. 3, 2024, in St. Petersburg, Fla. (AP Photo/Chris O’Meara)
Minnesota Twins starting pitcher David Festa delivers to the Tampa Bay Rays during the first inning of a baseball game Tuesday, Sept. 3, 2024, in St. Petersburg, Fla. (AP Photo/Chris O’Meara)

Charges: Extremely intoxicated motorist crashed into St. Louis Park restaurant patio, killing 2 and injuring 9

posted in: Society | 0

A motorist who authorities say had a blood-alcohol level more than four times the legal limit was charged Tuesday in the fatal crash that killed two people and injured nine others on the outdoor patio of a popular St. Louis Park restaurant over the Labor Day weekend.

Hennepin County Attorney Mary Moriarty said that Steven Frane Bailey, 56, of St. Louis Park, was charged with two counts of criminal vehicle homicide for intoxication and negligence and nine counts of criminal vehicle injury. The nine counts will have varying levels of severity, depending on the injuries of each victim, she said at a Minneapolis news conference. In addition, authorities are asking any other victims to come forward.

Surveillance footage captured a man driving a gray BMW sport utility vehicle into the patio of the Park Tavern, 3401 Louisiana Ave. S. The footage shows the man initially entering the restaurant parking lot shortly after 8 p.m. Sunday and attempting to park. He is shown driving past an open parking spot and hitting a parked car when he tried to back into that spot, the criminal complaint said. He then pulled out and accelerated toward the patio, barreling through a metal fence onto the crowded patio. His SUV, which was going an estimated 30 to 45 mph, was stopped by several landscaping boulders.

The two fatally injured victims were a Park Tavern server and a patron. The customer was a staff member at nearby Methodist Hospital, who was gathered on the patio with colleagues after work.

Children were also on the patio at the time of the crash, Moriarty said, noting that some children had left the patio just before the SUV plowed through the fence. Partly because of that, Moriarty said, she has told the court she will possibly seek a greater sentence if Bailey is convicted.

When police arrived, Bailey was still in his SUV. As officers approached him they allegedly heard him on the phone saying, “I hit the gas instead of the brake and went right through a thing” and “I’m probably going to jail.”

According to the criminal complaint, Bailey “appeared calm but was slow to respond to officers’ directions … (his) speech was slurred, and his eyes were bloodshot and watery. As he exited the vehicle, (Bailey) was unsteady on his feet and fell to his knees.”

In addition, he made several “spontaneous” statements such as saying when he was told they were going to perform a field sobriety test he said, “You don’t need to do fields. I know what I did.”

A preliminary breath test showed his blood-alcohol content was 0.325, more than four times the 0.08 legal standard in Minnesota.

When he was booked into Hennepin County jail and told he was being held on criminal vehicular homicide charges, Bailey allegedly said, “You got to be kidding me” and “My life’s pretty much (expletive) now, isn’t it?”

Moriarty asked any other victims to come forward, saying the charges against Bailey will be amended if they discover that more people were injured.

Bailey is being held on $1 million bail. His first court appearance is set for at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday.

Sunday’s tragedy was made even worse, Moriarty said, because it could have been prevented. She noted that there are always numerous options to choose instead of driving intoxicated.

“This did not have to happen,” she said.

Suspect’s DWI record

Minnesota court records show that Bailey has previous drunken driving convictions: a fourth-degree misdemeanor DWI in Waseca County in 2014 and a third-degree gross misdemeanor DWI in Hennepin County in 2015.

Commenting on Bailey’s prior DWI convictions, Moriarty said that for most people, getting just one drunken driving conviction is all they ever get because it’s a wakeup call and they don’t do it again.

The victims

Several GoFundMe accounts have been created to support the victims and their families.

A server at Park Tavern, Kristina Folkerts, was killed, along with patron Gabe Harvey, who was at the restaurant celebrating a Methodist Hospital colleague’s last nursing shift. That nurse is now hospitalized with serious injuries.

Folkerts, 30, had a longtime connection to Park Tavern, the restaurant said. Before Folkerts’ mother died, she was also a server at Park Tavern. She died when Folkerts was 14, and restaurant employees came to the teenager’s aid and would occasionally baby-sit her.

Park Tavern established her GoFundMe page and wrote that “Kristina was a loving mother of 3 young girls and friend to many in the community. We are at a deep loss and thank you for your support during this challenging time.”

Methodist Hospital colleagues also established GoFundMe pages for their injured colleagues and Harvey, 30, who is survived by his partner. The colleagues wrote that Harvey worked as a health unit coordinator at the hospital while attending nursing school.

“There was not a soul that Gabe met that he didn’t leave an impression on. He always had a smile and a kind word for everyone,” they wrote on his GoFundMe page.

Laura Knutsen was celebrating her last shift as a nurse in the Methodist ICU, her colleagues wrote on her GoFundMe page. On Tuesday, she was going to begin training at St. Mary’s University to become a certified registered nurse anesthetist. She was said to have suffered extensive fractures and numerous traumatic injuries and has a long recovery ahead.

A GoFundMe page for nurse Tegan D’Albani said she was celebrating with Knutsen, her best friend. Tegan also suffered extensive fractures and numerous traumatic injuries.

Nurse Theo Larson suffered “multiple skull fractures, facial fractures, and orbital fractures,” according to his GoFundMe page.

The other six victims, including one other Methodist Hospital nurse, suffered lesser injuries, including bruises and abrasions, authorities said.

Park Tavern and Methodist have supported each other for years. The restaurant sent meals to the hospital during the COVID-19 pandemic as medical workers were overwhelmed. And those same workers would frequent the restaurant after shifts.

The St. Louis Park Police Department is asking anyone who was injured or witnessed the crash or has video or photographic evidence of it to contact them at 952-924-2165.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Related Articles

Crime & Public Safety |


At sentencing for random St. Paul sexual assault, woman says she’s grateful she survived, angry it happened

Crime & Public Safety |


3 teens shot, wounded near Fairgrounds after leaving Minnesota State Fair

Crime & Public Safety |


2 killed in St. Louis Park restaurant patio crash were server, patron

Crime & Public Safety |


Five people shot at Red Oak Park in Burnsville on Friday night police say

Crime & Public Safety |


A teen’s murder, mold in the walls: Unfulfilled promises haunt public housing

Harris to propose tenfold startup tax incentive increase she says will spur small business creation

posted in: Politics | 0

By WILL WEISSERT, Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — Vice President Kamala Harris plans to propose on Wednesday a tenfold increase in federal tax incentives for small business startup expenses, from $5,000 to $50,000, hoping to help spur a record 25 million new small business applications over her four-year term should she win the presidency in November.

She’s set to unveil the plan during a campaign stop in the Portsmouth area of New Hampshire — marking a rare deviation from the Midwestern and Sunbelt battlegrounds the Democrat has focused on in her race against former Republican President Donald Trump.

A Harris campaign official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss a policy plan that hadn’t been released publicly, said Tuesday the change would cover the $40,000 it costs on average to start a business. The proposal would let new businesses wait to claim that deduction until they first turn a profit, to better maximize its impact lowering their taxes.

Such changes would likely require congressional approval. But a series of tax cuts approved during the Trump administration are set to expire at the end of next year, setting up a scenario where lawmakers may be ready to consider new tax policies. The proposal can help Harris show her support for entrepreneurs even as she’s called for higher corporate tax rates.

Since President Joe Biden dropped his reelection bid and endorsed Harris in July, the vice president has focused on campaigning in the “ blue wall ” states of Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania that have been the centerpiece of Democratic campaigns that have won the White House in recent decades.

She’s also frequently visited Arizona, Nevada and Georgia, all of which Biden narrowly won in 2020, and North Carolina, which last voted Democratic in a presidential race in 2008 but which she’s still hoping to flip from Trump. Biden won New Hampshire by 7 percentage points in 2020, though Trump came far closer to winning it against Hillary Clinton in 2016.

“The cost of living in New Hampshire is through the roof, their energy bills are some of highest in the country, and their housing market is the most unaffordable in history,” Trump posted last week on his social media platform.

Harris’ team says securing 25 million new business applications in four years if she wins the White House would exceed the roughly 19 million such applications filed since Biden took office. And those were millions more than the previous four years under Trump. The vice president’s goal would be a record for new small business applications — but records only go back about 20 years.

Applications to start a business don’t always translate to small businesses actually being formed. Still, Harris’ plan could keep new small businesses that do come to fruition from otherwise incurring more debt which, at a time of high interest rates, might help them better succeed.

In the weeks since Harris took over the top of the Democratic ticket, she has offered relatively few major policy proposals — attempting to strike a political balance between injecting new energy into the race and continuing to support many of the Biden administration proposals she helped champion as vice president.

Harris’ small business plan follows her announcing last month proposed steps to fight inflation by working to lower grocery prices, and to use tax cuts and other incentives to encourage homeownership. The vice president has also proposed ending federal taxes on tips to service industry workers, an idea Trump proposed first.

The plan she’s introducing Wednesday further calls for developing a standard deduction for small businesses meant to save their owners time when doing their taxes, and making it easier to get occupational licenses — letting people work across state lines and businesses expand into new states. Harris also wants to offer federal incentives so state and local government will ease their regulations.

In an effort to spur business investment outside urban and suburban hubs, Harris is pledging to launch a small business expansion fund to enable community banks and federal entities to cover interest costs while small businesses are expanding or otherwise creating jobs. Her team says those efforts will focus especially on areas that traditionally receive less investment.

Twins’ Trevor Larnach staying the course and thriving

posted in: News | 0

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — Trevor Larnach has spent extended parts of the past couple of seasons either injured or at Triple-A. He was even optioned there this spring, though he began the season injured and then returned directly to the majors.

So the fact that he is in the middle of a playoff push as one of the most stable, productive members of the lineup is not something he wants to take for granted.

“I definitely don’t want that thought to sink in and think, ‘I’ve made it. I’m good,’” Larnach said. “I always want to keep pushing and finding something to keep going. This game will humble you so quick. Any time you think you’ve got it or you’re good, you get punched in the face somehow, and it’s your job to battle back.”

Larnach has done just that, taking his fair share of punches and battling back.

He’s in the midst of the best offensive season of his career, entering Tuesday hitting .354 with a .784 OPS and 118 OPS+, a number that is 18 percent better than the league-average hitter. His 15 home runs are a career high, and his15th, which came on Monday, was an important three-run home run that helped propel the Twins to a victory over Tampa Bay.

“He has been very consistently just going out there and producing,” manager Rocco Baldelli said. “We’ve watched him mature in so many different, positive ways right before our eyes. … We’re not sitting here where we’re at without Trevor Larnach.”

It hasn’t all been smooth for Larnach this season. There’s been plenty of hard contact that has gone for naught — lineouts that haven’t fallen — enough so that he turned to different people, like teammate Carlos Santana and his agent, to ask if there was anything he should change.

“You hit two balls hard in a game, you kind of expect them to be hits, let alone extra-base hits. And when you’ve got nothing to show for it, it can drive you kind of nuts,” Larnach said.

He was told to stay the course. His process was good. The results would follow.

And they have.

“When he lines out two times a game for a week, which he has done probably more than most, he hasn’t changed,” Baldelli said. “He has been very, very consistent, and those hard-hit balls are turning into what we’re looking for right now.”

Briefly

Byron Buxton and the Triple-A Saints had Tuesday off, but the outfielder will continue his rehab assignment on Wednesday. He is expected to play nine innings in center field. … The Twins did not name a starting pitcher for Wednesday’s game, which has been listed as TBA, but Louie Varland joined the team in Florida. The Twins could have Varland start or opt to have a reliever begin the game and Varland pitch bulk innings after that, as he did in his last Triple-A outing. … Reliever Caleb Boushley cleared waivers and has accepted the assignment to Triple-A. Trevor Richards, acquired at the trade deadline, did the same, meaning both are now Saints.