Walser Automotive and Orono man charged with tax evasion

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Walser Automotive Group and an Orono man are accused of using a Montana shell company to avoid paying Minnesota sales taxes on dozens of vehicles, according to criminal charges filed in Hennepin County.

Prosecutors say that from March 2020 through August 2023, the Twin Cities-based Walser Automotive Group worked with William Fredrick Ward, 58, to improperly title at least 34 vehicles in Montana — a state with no vehicle sales tax — even though the vehicles were ultimately sold in Minnesota.

The Minnesota Department of Revenue estimates the unpaid tax totals at least $350,745, not including interest and penalties.

Neither Ward nor Walser Automotive could not be reached for comment.

Ward began working under contract with Walser around 2017 buying and selling high-end vehicles. According to criminal complaint, Walser provided the money, paperwork and warehouse space for the vehicles.

The complaint says that the business and Ward used a shell Montana limited liability company to buy the cars. Prosecutors say the non-existent business was under Walser’s control and was used to avoid sales tax on the purchase of the cars, which included Mercedes-Benz, Porsche, Land Rover and Chevrolet vehicles. The complaint says that Ward and Walser split the profits evenly.

The complaint said that when Ward would buy vehicles, he would ask the seller to issue the title to him in the name of the shell Montana business, which would avoid the sales tax. Prosecutors say he often already had a buyer waiting to purchase the car.

After the COVID-19 pandemic, when the price of used cars skyrocketed, the automotive group allegedly took advantage of the shortage of used cars. Because used cars are not subject to the same pricing restrictions as new vehicles, prosecutors say Walser and Ward gave new cars a Montana title and said they were used.

One Walser employee told investigators the company had leased vehicles to employees to drive around for a while so they could sell them as used.

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Minnesota’s 2025 domestic abuse homicide victims honored

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Minnesotans killed last year during domestic violence incidents were honored during an annual event to highlight the grim accounting and offer solutions to save lives in the future.

On Friday, Violence Free Minnesota, the statewide coalition of programs working to end relationship abuse, held the Intimate Partner Homicide Memorial, which included singing, speeches and a reading of the victims’ names.

Katie Kramer, co-executive director of Violence Free Minnesota, said 31 Minnesotans were killed last year in intimate partner homicides and two others died suspicious deaths that were possible cases of intimate partner homicide.

The people killed were “mothers, daughters, sisters, brothers, sons, cousins, friends and beloved members of our communities; and they all possessed and shared so many gifts and love with those around them,” Kramer said at the St. Paul College Club on Summit Avenue. “We ask that the victims we honor today be seen as more than the sum of their abuse or the moments of their deaths. While the impact of their loss is unfathomable, so too is the immense and infinite joy that every person we honor today brought to our world.”

Several of the victims were from the St. Paul area.

Shaniya D. Thompson (Courtesy of GoFundMe)

Kramer mentioned a few by name, including Shaniya Thompson, 29, of St. Paul, who was “a devoted mother of five beautiful children, and a beloved daughter and sister,” Kramer said.

The father of her children is charged with shooting her in her apartment on Broadway Street after coming to a party for one of the children’s birthday.

“Loved ones shared that she was ‘the glue that held their family together’ and that her love was ‘real, selfless, and unconditional,’” Kramer said.

A 55-year-old Maplewood woman, Amy Doverspike, was described as “a talented chef who loved her two dogs. She had degrees in culinary arts and criminal justice, and previously worked as a correctional officer,” Kramer said.

Investigators say Doverspike’s ex shot and killed her, then shot himself and went live on social media to apologize, according to charges.

Christine “Chrissy” Morris of St. Paul was described as “’a beautiful soul who touched many lives with her love, strength, and smile.” She ran her own catering business for Jamaican food, and also worked as a Realtor. Multiple people described her as their best friend. She leaves behind a 2-year-old daughter, Kramer said.

The man accused in her slaying is the father of her child.

A list of the victims can be found at vfmn.org/we-remember-2025.

Sam Nordquist ‘wasn’t a headline’

Sam Nordquist was a 2020 graduate of Face to Face Academy, a charter school on St. Paul’s East Side. School officials, in conjunction with Nordquist’s family, announced Thursday, Feb. 20, 2025, the establishment of the “Stand with Sam Scholarship Fund” at the school and the creation of a memorial garden. (Courtesy of Face to Face Academy)

Kayla Nordquist spoke to honor her brother Sam Nordquist, who was killed in New York in February 2025. Seven people have been charged in connection with the transgender man’s death. Nordquist was a former student at Red Wing High School and previously lived in Oakdale. He was a 2020 graduate of Face to Face Academy in St. Paul.

“Sam wasn’t a statistic. He wasn’t a headline. He wasn’t a cautionary tale. He was a human being. He was love, laughter and a heart that trusted deeply in a world that doesn’t always deserve that kind of softness,” she said. “Sam wanted connection. He wanted safety. He wanted to belong. And that was used against him.”

Police said Sam arrived in New York in late September and was expected to return home about two weeks later, but he never boarded his return flight and later lost contact with loved ones.

Police began investigating his disappearance on Feb. 9 after receiving a request for a welfare check from his family, who told the authorities that they had lost contact with him at the end of January, the New York Times reported.

His body was found in a New York upstate field not long after.

Maj. Kevin Sucher, commander of the New York State Police troop that includes the Finger Lakes region, said the facts and circumstances of the case were “beyond depraved” and “by far the worst” homicide investigation the office has ever been part of.

Seven people indicted on first-degree murder charges in his death subjected him to weeks of torture that included sexual assault, forcing him to eat feces and pouring bleach on him, prosecutors said.

His sister, Kayla Nordquist, said that violence rarely “starts with fists.”

“It starts quietly. It starts with control disguised as care. With isolation that looks like protection. With fear slowly replacing love,” she said.

People need to know that emotional and psychological abuse are often the doorways to physical violence and should not be considered “less serious.”

“We don’t talk enough about how vulnerable people — especially those who love openly, trust deeply, or fear being alone — are targeted,” she said. “Sam deserved safety. He deserved protection. He deserved to come home.”

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While Nordquist will never stop demanding justice for Sam, she said she spoke Friday because she wanted people to know that prevention matters.

“Because education saves lives. Because if someone had named the danger sooner — if someone had intervened earlier — my brother might still be alive,” she said. “Violence Free Minnesota exists because silence kills. Because believing people matters. Because noticing patterns matters.”

Nordquist told the audience that if they take anything from her brother’s story, it should be to “take your gut seriously. Pay attention to sudden isolation. Don’t ignore controlling behavior just because it doesn’t leave bruises. And when someone tells you they’re scared, believe them. Silence protects abusers. Not victims.”

Woodbury man with rare skin condition recovering from ICE detention, still ‘scared to go out’

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Brothers Mohamed Duklef, 36, and Hani Duglof, 32, came to the U.S. from their home country, Libya, in 2014, looking for a solution to a health issue the two have lived with since birth. Their skin is as fragile as a ripe peach, Duklef said. One light scratch and it peels and blisters instantly.

“It impacts my life from when I wake up in the morning until I sleep,” Duglof said. “It’s hard for me to live my daily life.”

For Duglof, not only is the skin on the outside of his body fragile, but so is the skin inside. This means that eating is no simple task, and doctor’s visits are frequent.

Duglof said he was arrested by ICE agents on Jan. 10 in New Richmond, Wis., while working for a grocery pickup service. He was detained and taken to Minneapolis, where he stayed in a cell for one day before being transferred to a hospital due to his rare health condition. Duglof was then taken back to the detention center, where he stayed for four days in a cell with no access to care for his condition and little food before being released, he said.

He said he was detained after two vehicles parked in front of and behind his car, boxing him in. ICE agents exited the vehicles and asked what Duglof’s immigration status was. When he shared that his asylum case was pending, the agents arrested him and, with handcuffs on his arms and legs, brought him to the Whipple Federal Building at Fort Snelling.

“What’s happening now is the government is just unplugging pending asylum cases by grabbing people, haphazardly, without thinking whether it makes sense,” Duglof’s attorney, David L. Wilson of Wilson Law Group, said.

Wilson, who’s worked with Duglof and his brother since 2014, said the way the government is currently handling immigration and asylum cases is haphazard and often lacks a clear purpose, which he said was evident during Duglof’s detainment.

“In 2026, nothing surprises me anymore,” Wilson said.

Immigration and Customs Enforcement did not immediately respond to the Pioneer Press for comment. A federal judge in Minneapolis granted a temporary restraining order Wednesday intended to prevent federal officers from arresting and detaining lawful refugees in Minnesota who have yet to receive their proof of permanent residency.

Extremely sensitive skin

Hani Duglof speaks Thursday at his brother’s home in Blaine. (John Autey / Pioneer Press)

Duglof’s skin condition, epidermolysis bullosa, affects about one in 20,000 births, according to Stanford Medicine. It makes him prone to significant blistering from ordinary friction. For example, Duglof said, if he wears shoes and stands on his feet for a day, the skin on his feet will peel raw.

The genetic condition is uncomfortable, and the wounds can range from minor to severe enough to require a visit to a hospital. If the wounds are at their worst, they can become infected, which takes months to heal and requires medical attention, Duglof said.

The condition also impacts Duglof’s ability to eat. He can only tolerate soft foods like pasta, mashed potatoes and soup; harder foods can puncture his esophagus and irritate his digestion, he said.

Managing the condition requires a consistent routine, Duglof said. He visits doctors regularly for treatment, and he and his brother came to America because of the health care opportunities.

“Even though I know people still complain here, there are rights for people with disabilities,” Duklef said.

For Duklef, the difference between living in Libya and Minnesota as someone with a chronic condition is like night and day. Duklef said there was little access to research or understanding of the condition in Libya, and people often had negative associations of people with chronic health conditions.

Duklef said that since living in the U.S., he and his brother have been part of many clinical trials to help find a solution to their condition. One treatment recently received FDA approval, he said.

“Maybe people say, ‘Who pays for this?’ We actually paid from our bodies to researchers to try these therapies,” Duklef said.

Pending asylum

Mohamed Duklef talks about his brother, Hani Duglof. (John Autey / Pioneer Press)

The brothers initially came to the U.S. on visitor visas, Duklef said. Around 2014, a civil war was ongoing in Libya, and the country became less safe for them to return to, he said. Duklef said he consulted a lawyer to find out what his options were for living in the U.S., and he was told that the two could apply for asylum.

The brothers’ last names are spelled differently as a result of different interpretations of the pronunciation by separate customs agents back in Libya, they said.

Duklef is now a naturalized U.S. citizen through marriage, but his brother’s asylum case is still pending. Duglof has a work permit and an ID, all of which he said he gave to the agents when he was stopped.

“When your asylum is not decided yet, you are authorized to stay, work, live, and they give you a work permit that’s renewable,” Duklef said. “That wasn’t new to us, but they said he’s out of status and they just took him out.”

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When the ICE agents put handcuffs on Duglof, he said his skin immediately reacted.

When Duglof was detained, he tried to explain his condition to the agents, he said, but few seemed to care. Duglof said he was in a cell with close to 20 others. The space was crowded, Duglof’s skin was wounded and he needed medical attention.

“I kind of sacrificed my privacy, showing them my knees in hopes that they’ll understand my condition.”

Duglof described the experience as extremely vulnerable. He said he never shows people his wounds, and instead tries to cover them, but he knew that in order to try to get the agents to understand his situation, he had to.

To the hospital and back

Eventually, near 11 p.m. on Jan. 10, one agent saw the severity of Duglof’s wounds and had him transferred to a hospital. Duglof stayed in the hospital until 2 p.m. on Jan. 13. A few agents were with Duglof while he was in the hospital, and his brother Duklef was called. Duklef tried explaining to the agents that Duglof can only eat specific kinds of foods; otherwise, his health is at risk.

Duglof said he remembers seeing a nurse with tears in her eyes when hospital staff told him they couldn’t keep him and that he would have to be taken back into ICE custody. The nurses gave agents a bag of food safe for Duglof to consume, including protein milk and pudding.

Hani Duglof shows bandages on his knees from wounds following his detention. (John Autey / Pioneer Press)

Duglof was returned to ICE custody, but did not receive the care needed for his condition, he said. Agents who started new shifts did not understand that Duglof could not eat the same kinds of food that others could, he said.

One agent who gave Duglof a sandwich said, “This isn’t a five-star hotel.”

While Duglof was in ICE custody, Duklef was working to get his brother released on bond. Duklef said the situation was dire, and he knew that his brother would not be cared for if he wasn’t released.

“After reading stories of people dying in detention centers, especially with medical conditions, now I understand why,” Duklef said. “If people try to advocate for themselves, but nobody listens to them, then this is what happens.”

Duglof said that over the course of four days after he was transferred from the hospital, he ate very little, as most agents would not feed him the food he brought back from the hospital.

“Imagine having one meal a day, not even a meal a day. Sometimes it was 8 ounces of chocolate shake, sometimes it was 4 ounces of rice pudding, that’s it.”

Still living in fear

Duklef’s call for his brother to be released was successful, and Duglof was released on Jan. 15.

“If he wasn’t released quickly … I don’t know what would have happened to him,” Duklef said. “They were about to send him to El Paso.”

The worst part of the entire experience was knowing that Duglof is not a criminal, he said.

“It pains me to see on the news and everywhere that they say they’re arresting criminals and rapists and all these lies,” Duklef said.

Minnesota Judicial Court records show that Duglof had a speeding ticket in 2019, but the case has been dismissed as the fine was paid.

“When I came here, I tried to follow every single rule,” Duglof said. “I did everything step by step with the lawyers to make sure that I do everything right, and even then, I was treated like an illegal immigrant. I was treated like a criminal.”

Duklef said he believes the Trump administration is targeting immigrants with pending asylum cases because it’s easier to find them than someone who’s undocumented and has “no traces in the systems,” he said.

“I find it very unfair to go after those people who try so hard and have paid thousands of dollars to lawyers to make sure what they do is the right and correct way,” Duklef said.

Wilson said in years past, and even so little as one year ago, the government would typically see someone like Duglof, who has a pending asylum application, and “no criminal history that would bring him to the government’s attention,” and that person would be left alone.

Though Duglof’s followed the legal procedures correctly in seeking asylum, what he cannot control is the pace at which his immigration status is decided, Wilson said, which puts Duglof at risk of losing the opportunity to have his case reviewed.

“The government gets impatient with its own failings,” Wilson said. “Maybe the government should improve its own process.”

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Duglof said he still has wounds in his esophagus and on his legs where he was handcuffed. He said swallowing is very painful and that some of the wounds have become infected.

According to Wilson, Duglof is expecting a court hearing soon, when Duglof may be required to refile his asylum application, which would restart the entire process. Wilson expects it to be an ongoing process.

Duglof said that though he should not have to fear detainment again, he can’t fully trust the system.

“I hopefully won’t go through this again,” Duglof said. “Even though I’ve been released, I’m still scared to go out. I can’t live my normal life anymore.”

Johnson says no quick House vote to end partial shutdown and blames Democrats for their ICE demands

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By LISA MASCARO, Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — House Speaker Mike Johnson said Sunday it will be a few days before a government funding package comes up for a vote, all but ensuring the partial federal shutdown will drag into the week as Democrats and Republicans debate reining in the Trump administration’s sweeping immigration enforcement operations.

Johnson signaled he is relying on help from President Donald Trump to ensure passage. Trump struck a deal with senators to separate out funding for the Department of Homeland Security from a broader package after public outrage over two shooting deaths during protests in Minneapolis against Immigration and Customs Enforcement. The measure approved Friday by the Senate would fund DHS temporarily, for two weeks, setting up a deadline for Congress to debate and vote on new restrictions on ICE operations.

“The president is leading this,” Johnson, R-La., told “Fox News Sunday.”

“It’s his play call to do it this way,” the speaker said, adding that the Republican president has “already conceded that he wants to turn down the volume” on federal immigration operations.

Johnson faces a daunting challenge ahead, trying to muscle the funding legislation through the House while Democrats are refusing to provide the votes for speedy passage. They are demanding restraints on ICE that go beyond $20 million for body cameras that already is in the bill. They want to require that federal immigration agents unmask and identify themselves and are pressing for an end to roving patrols, amid other changes.

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Democrats dig in on ICE changes

“What is clear is that the Department of Homeland Security needs to be dramatically reformed,” said House Democratic leader Hakeem Jeffries of New York said on ABC’s “This Week.”

Jeffries said the administration needs to begin negotiations now, not over the next two weeks, on changes to immigration enforcement operations.

“Masks should come off,” he said. “Judicial warrants should absolutely be required consistent with the Constitution, in our view, before DHS agents or ICE agents are breaking into the homes of the American people or ripping people out of their cars.”

It’s all forcing Johnson to rely on his slim House GOP majority in a series of procedural votes, starting in committee on Monday and pushing a potential House floor vote on the package until at least Tuesday, he said.

House Democrats planned a private caucus call Sunday evening to assess the next steps.

Partial government shutdown drags on

Meanwhile, a number of other federal agencies are snared in the funding standoff as the government went into a partial shutdown over the weekend.

Defense, health, transportation and housing are among those that were given shutdown guidance by the administration, though many operations are deemed essential and services are not necessarily interrupted. Workers could go without pay if the impasse drags on. Some could be furloughed.

This is the second time in a matter of months that federal operations have been disrupted as Congress digs in, using the annual funding process as leverage to extract policy changes. Last fall, Democrats sparked what became the longest federal shutdown in history, 43 days, as they protested the expiration of health insurance tax breaks.

That shutdown ended with a promise to vote on proposals to extend the Affordable Care Act tax credits. But the legislation did not advance and Democrats were unable to achieve their goal of keeping the subsidies in place. Insurance premiums spiked in the new year for millions of people.

Trump wants quick end to shutdown

This time, the administration has signaled its interest in more quickly resolving the shutdown.

Johnson said he was in the Oval Office last week when Trump, along with border czar Tom Homan, spoke with Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer of New York to work out the deal.

“I think we’re on the path to get agreement,” Johnson said on NBC’s “Meet the Press.”

Body cameras, which are already provided for in the package, and an end to the roving patrols by immigration agents are areas of potential agreement, Johnson said.

But he said taking the masks off and putting names on agents’ uniforms could lead to problems for law enforcement officers as they are being targeted by the protesters and their personal information is posted online.

“I don’t think the president would approve it — and he shouldn’t,” Johnson said on Fox.

Democrats, however, said the immigration operations are out of control, and it is an emergency situation that must end in Minneapolis and other cities.

Growing numbers of lawmakers are calling for Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem to be fired or impeached.

“What is happening in Minnesota right now is a dystopia,” said Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., who led efforts to hold the line for more changes.

“ICE is making this country less safe, not more safe today,” Murphy said on “Fox News Sunday.”