An ex-Oakdale police officer was placed on probation for one year Friday after a jury found him guilty of misconduct stemming from repeated telephone calls he made to a man who had known mental health issues and was being surveilled because of a felony arrest warrant.
Charles Anthony Nelson, 44, was convicted of misconduct of a public officer by making false documents, a gross misdemeanor, for intentionally omitting the calls in his report of the 2022 incident. Jurors acquitted Nelson, of Minneapolis, of misdemeanor harassing phone calls.
Prosecutors contended at trial that Nelson acted with intent to harass the man through the more than 30 calls — noting how the officer didn’t say anything when the man answered — and that they caused him to exit his home with a shotgun, potentially putting himself and others at risk.
Nelson’s attorneys argued that he called the man, who had a history of mental health issues and was armed, to get him out of the house.
Judge Gregory Galler denied a request from Nelson’s attorneys to sentence the conviction as a misdemeanor, staying a 364-day jail sentence for one year. Galler ordered Nelson to serve 15 days of community work service, complete booking at the county jail and undergo a cognitive skills evaluation and follow any recommendations.
Nelson was placed on paid leave after the Sept. 22, 2022, incident and resigned the following March, according to the city. He’d been an Oakdale officer since Dec. 20, 2006.
Disguised phone number
According to the criminal complaint, Nelson and his partner Andrew Dickman were dispatched to Greystone Avenue to look for the man, who had a felony arrest warrant for allegedly making threats.
The officers were told by command staff “not to engage with the individual, specifically due to his reported mental health issues and potential diagnosis of schizophrenia,” the complaint stated. “His recent actions were escalating, and it was known that he possessed firearms and had recently made threats of violence.”
Shortly after arriving at the home just after midnight, Nelson downloaded a phone app that disguises the phone number of incoming calls. He began making calls over the next three hours.
The man answered several of the calls, but Nelson did not say anything. When the man called Nelson back at 1:25 a.m., the officer denied making the calls.
The man reported the calls to Washington County dispatch, and also called the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension and asked who was calling him.
At one point, he came out with a shotgun, before retreating back into the house. Washington County SWAT was called and eventually arrested him.
Nelson worked the remainder of the weekend and, “despite knowing that his phone calls and actions exacerbated the situation” with the man, he did not disclose that he made them, the complaint said.
He omitted the calls in his incident report related to the man’s arrest, “despite the knowledge that the Oakdale Police Department was attempting to determine the veracity of the claims by Victim that he had been getting repeated calls,” the complaint continued.
Related Articles
Colin Gray testifies in trial after his son was accused of Georgia high school shooting
A nearly blind refugee is found dead after Border Patrol agents drop him at Buffalo doughnut shop
Park Rapids man accused of threats against lawmaker, state Capitol
Lakeville teen charged with robbery at school allegedly had gun, though no weapon found
Convicted stowaway arrested again after a new alleged ticketless flight from US to Italy
Five days after the incident, Dickman reported to a sergeant that Nelson was the source of the calls.
Oakdale Police Chief Nick Newton contacted the BCA, who began an investigation. The surveillance subject’s wife told the BCA that he called her that night and told her about the calls, which she said made him “paranoid,” the complaint said.
In an interview with BCA agents, Nelson admitted to making the calls and “claimed it was to ‘build rapport’ and incredulously stated he did not identify himself because he did not want to scare [the man],” the complaint read.
Judge: ‘He knew full well’
On Friday, Nelson told Galler before hearing his sentence that he did not intend for his report to be false or misleading. He said, “I believe everybody knew I made the calls. I also believe that if anybody was aware and had an issue, they would come and talk to me and they would address that, because that was how things happened at Oakdale Police Department. We were able to amend our reports.”
Galler said he believed Nelson was “still minimizing” what he did.
“There’s no doubt in my mind that this is information that should have been included initially in the report, not waiting to see if somebody might catch it and ask later to amend a report,” he said. “It seems pretty clear to me that that’s what happened here, and I think he knew full well that he should have included this initially. That’s what I conclude, based on what I heard and based upon the jury’s finding.”



