Man pleads guilty to St. Paul sober house killings

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A man pleaded guilty Friday to a double-murder at a St. Paul sober-living home that he just moved into after being provisionally discharged under a civil commitment for being mentally ill and chemically dependent.

Joseph Francis Sandoval II, 34, entered a Norgaard plea to two counts of second-degree intentional murder in the October 2022 stabbing deaths of Jason Timothy Murphy, a 40-year-old handyman, and 56-year-old Jon Ross Wentz, a resident of the sober home in the city’s Payne-Phalen neighborhood.

Joseph Francis Sandoval II (Courtesy of the Ramsey County Sheriff’s Office)

Under a Norgaard plea, a defendant says they are unable to remember what happened due to drug use or mental health impairment at the time, but acknowledges there is enough evidence for a jury to convict beyond a reasonable doubt.

At the time of the killings, Sandoval had five felony charges pending in Hennepin County in connection with three violent Minneapolis cases, all filed in March 2021, according to court documents. He was conditionally released from jail on the charges and found to be mentally incompetent to stand trial in June 2021.

About a month later, he was civilly committed to the state Commissioner of Human Services as mentally ill and chemically dependent. He was sent to the Anoka Metro Regional Treatment Center, then five months later provisionally discharged to an Evergreen Treatment Recovery Center sober home in St. Paul.

Nearly a year later, on the afternoon of Oct. 20, 2022, Evergreen transferred Sandoval to its East Side sober home in the 1100 block of Lawson Avenue. Evergreen’s housing specialist drove him there, helped bring his belongings to the living room and handed him a TV remote, Assistant Ramsey County Attorney Daniel Rait said Friday in court.

Sandoval sat down on the couch and began hearing voices from the TV telling him to kill or be killed, he told police after his arrest.

“This tragic case is a heartbreaking reminder of the limits our mental health system faces when addressing the needs of those with profound mental illness in the justice system who are found incompetent to stand trial but do not receive adequate treatment or supervision,” Ramsey County Attorney John Choi said in a Friday statement.

Choi added, “Continuing to improve the connection between these two systems demands further legislative effort and funding. Our hearts go out to the Wentz and Murphy families who have suffered so profoundly due to these shortcomings.”

‘They’re going to kill me’

Officers responded to the house around 4:30 p.m. on a report of a man screaming that a person killed someone inside the home.

Officers saw a man, later identified as Sandoval, leaving the house and walking toward an alley. He had blood on his clothes, cuts to his face and hands and appeared to be under the influence of an unknown substance. He told officers he had ingested fentanyl.

Sandoval said he had just moved into the house and did not know anybody living there. He said “two big guys” caused his injuries, but could not describe them. He then said somebody tried to kill him and that the person “got those other guys, too,” according to the charges.

Sandoval said when he got to the sober house, he sat down on the couch. He said, “I was hearing noises. The TV kept saying ‘take your opportunity,’ so I took my opportunity,” the charges say. When an investigator asked Sandoval what he meant, he said, “The TV said they’re going to kill me. When I was watching ‘Dragon Ball Z’ (a Japanese anime television series).”

Officers saw drops of blood in the kitchen and on stairs leading to the basement, where Murphy was found dead. Wentz was dead in an upstairs bedroom, a bloody knife and bloody hammer next to him. Both men had multiple cuts and stab wounds, many to the neck and head. Autopsies would later find they died of blood loss.

Officers spoke to a “distressed” witness who was screaming outside the sober home, where he lives. He said he tried to enter through the front door, but a man he didn’t know, later identified as Sandoval, blocked his entry, saying it was “too messy.”

The witness walked to a side door, entered the home and saw drops of blood in the kitchen and down the stairs. He found the handyman in the basement. When he tried to leave, Sandoval said he could not and would need his help “disposing of some things,” the charges say.

He told police Sandoval then put him in a chokehold and they fought. He said he was able to break free, run to a neighboring house and tell the residents to call 911.

After hospital staff released Sandoval, police transported him to the Ramsey County jail. There, Sandoval told an officer, “When you can’t protect someone you care about most in the world, it eats at you, it eats at you, it eats at you until it boils over,” the charges say. He added, “I just wanted a quiet room.”

Found competent in June

Sandoval has been jailed since his arrest in lieu of $2 million bail. His public defender, Baylea Kannmacher, said in court Friday that he’s been meeting with the jail’s mental health workers and taking his prescribed medications.

Last June, a Ramsey County judge found him competent to stand trial on the charges.

During Friday’s plea hearing, Sandoval, who was wearing a blue jail uniform with his hair in a topknot, replied to questions from Kannmacher in the affirmative.

“You do not recall the circumstances of this offense … is that accurate?” Kannmacher asked.

“That is accurate,” said Sandoval, as his mother looked on from the courtroom gallery.

Sandoval made a straight plea to the charges, meaning no agreement is in place, although his attorney can argue for concurrent prison sentences on each count, which carry up to 40 years. Judge Joy Bartscher set sentencing for July 19.

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Knee feeling better, Byron Buxton’s return to Twins imminent

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CLEVELAND — When Byron Buxton landed on the injured list earlier this month with right knee inflammation, he had played in nearly every game to that point, appearing in 28 of the team’s 30 contests.

Most of that had come in center field.

When Buxton comes back from the injured list — he met the team in Cleveland on Friday morning after playing in two rehab games with the Triple-A Saints and is likely to be activated ahead of Saturday’s game — his usage is expected to be more or less similar to what it had been.

“That’s what I’m hopeful for,” manager Rocco Baldelli said. “Something similar to what we’ve been doing.”

And that’s music to Buxton’s ears.

After pulling back for the last couple weeks and allowing the knee to calm down — it’s the same knee he’s had surgery on twice — Buxton said his knee is in a better position to come back and be able to do what he wants to do.

That means playing center field on a regular basis.

“I was like, ‘I don’t want to have to do anything different than what I was doing,’” Buxton said. “I know that with what I was doing, this happened, but I went through spring training, then I went through the month I did before this happened. Just trying to figure out better ways to manage it.”

Buxton felt his knee flare up when he took off for second base three times during one at-bat in a game against the White Sox.

But he said he didn’t plan on pulling back on the bases or letting the flare-up prevent him from doing something that would help the team. Instead, he suggested he would just “pick and choose a little better.”

“It’s back to the point where I feel like I can go again. Just trial and error. We don’t know when or if that’ll happen again,” Buxton said. “It’s just one of those things where you’ve got to put it on the backburner and just keep trusting what we’re doing and just go play.”

Nelson Cruz lands new role

Former Twins designated hitter Nelson Cruz has a new title: the slugger was named a Special Advisor for Baseball Operations on Friday, a consultant role with Major League Baseball.

In his role, he will serve as a liaison on topics concerning Latin America and in particular in his native Dominican Republic.

Cruz, who played for the Twins from 2019-21, was frequently cited as a leader among his teammates and a mentor to younger players.

“I’m extremely happy to join Major League Baseball,” Cruz said in a release. “Since I signed out of the Dominican Republic as a teenager, I’ve cared deeply about the issues affecting that country and the game as a whole. I’m excited to work with the Commissioner’s Office and the opportunity to work with young players by sharing what I have learned since I signed in 1998.”

Briefly

Bailey Ober will take the mound on Saturday against the Guardians. … The Guardians debuted their City Connect uniforms on Friday night against the Twins. The Twins, one of the last teams to get the new jerseys, will debut their own City Connects on June 14.

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City Starts Assessing ‘Extenuating Circumstances’ for Migrants Seeking More Shelter Time

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Adult migrants without children seeking to extend their shelter stays will now need to prove they meet one of several “extenuating circumstances” to qualify for a bed beyond initial 30- or 60-day stints.

Emma Whitford

The former St. Brigid School building near Tompkins Square Park has been operating since last year as a “Reticketing Center,” run by New York City’s Office of Emergency Management.

The city has begun issuing tentative decisions to adult migrants without children seeking to extend their shelter stays beyond an initial 30 or 60 days, who need to prove they meet one of several “extenuating circumstances” to qualify for another bed.

The new terms are part of a legal settlement reached in March, following months of negotiations between the Adams administration and homeless advocates over New York’s decades-old right to shelter policy, which the mayor sought to amend, citing the arrival of nearly 200,000 new immigrants over the last two years, with about 65,000 currently in the city’s shelter system.

Under the settlement, adult migrants whose shelter deadlines expire can’t extend their stays unless they meet certain criteria, like if they have a disability, are recovering from or preparing for a medical procedure, or “have made significant efforts to leave the shelter system and/or leave New York City but need additional time to exit shelter.” Migrant families with children are not subject to the new rules.

Since Wednesday, May 15, the first group of migrants who’ve received the new term notices and whose stays are ending soon have been able to bring their documents to the city’s Reticketing Center in the East Village for review before they are given a final assessment.

City officials said 29 have done so so far, 15 of whom were told they didn’t meet the criteria for an extension, while 14 others were approved for more time. Those turned down were still in their shelters as of Friday because their exit deadline had not yet arrived, according to City Hall Spokesperson Kayla Mamelak. They can still reapply with additional information before they are expelled, she added.

During a press conference on Friday, Mayor Eric Adams’ Chief of Staff Camille Joseph Varlack explained that migrants can qualify in one of two ways. They can likely get an automatic extension if they meet one of the following: they’ve signed a lease that starts within a month, have an immigration proceeding, a serious medical procedure or plans to leave the city scheduled within a month, are recovering from a medical procedure that impacts their ability to leave shelter, or are 18 to 20 years old and enrolled full time in high school.  

The second is by showing they’ve made “significant efforts” to leave the shelter system, criteria that’s considered on a case-by-case basis: it will count in an applicant’s favor, for example, if they’ve applied for Temporary Protected Status, are attending college or English classes, can document their job or housing searches, among other potential documentation laid out in a city notice letter

Josh Goldfein, an attorney at the Legal Aid Society who negotiated the right to shelter settlement alongside Coalition for the Homeless, said the city used a 20-point system to evaluate the cases of the less than 30 migrants who’ve sought assessments so far, where applicants can earn points for each effort to leave shelter that they demonstrate. But the system is still being fine-tuned and negotiated, he added, and could change. 

“Our designated teams will be reviewing information provided by guests, indicating why they need to remain in shelter for longer and to assist them with exit planning,” City Hall Spokesperson Mamelak told City Limits via email. 

“While these new changes will require some adaptation, we are confident that they will help migrants progress to the next stage of their journeys, reduce the significant strain on our shelter system, and enable us to continue providing essential services to all New Yorkers,” she added.

Under the right to shelter settlement terms, the city should have also cleared a waitlist for recently arrived immigrants seeking a shelter bed, securing them a new placement the same day they apply. But since April 8, when that change was supposed to go into effect, the city has been scrambling to cut those wait times to under 24 hours, according to Goldfein.

“On some days, they are in full compliance, and on some days, there have been people who did not get a placement,” he explained.

Still, it’s an improvement on where things were before the deal was reached, when migrants waited days or weeks for another placement, spending their nights at one of five crowded “waiting rooms” then in operation. 

“In the past, they were giving no people a placement on the same day,” Goldfein said.

Under the new settlement terms, some migrant drop-in centers can remain in operation, intended to serve those who reject other offers of shelter, arrive late at night, or just need a temporary space to stay indoors. But such facilities, which don’t have beds, can’t be used as longer term placements.

City Limits tracked the time it took several migrants to find a new bed after a visit to the Reticketing Center on May 7. Several of them were placed within 24 hours.

It took slightly longer for Mary, 42,  who arrived at the East Village site at 9 a.m. on May 7 to reapply after her 30-day stint in at the city’s congregate shelter on Randall’s Island expired, and was relocated to the same site around 3 p.m. on May 8. 

However, it took three days for a couple from Venezuela. Mirla and Lirio, who asked to be identified by first names only, said they spent the nights of May 7, 8 and 9 at a drop-in center based at the Church of God of East Flatbush, Brooklyn. Like other drop-in centers City Limits has reported on, migrants are asked not to sleep on the floor.

“We put chairs together to create something that resembles a bed,” said Mirla, 52, in Spanish. 

During the day, they returned to the Reticketing Center to wait. Late in the afternoon of May 7, Lirio stepped outside the entrance for some fresh air, wearing a t-shirt with the words “Never stop the hustle.” His wife was still in line inside.

“She’s making friends there,” the 55-year-old said in Spanish. “Let’s see where they’re sending us today,” he added, before going back inside to wait. The couple was eventually given a placement on Randall’s Island around 9 a.m. on Friday, May 10.

The city referred to these cases, where wait times exceed more than a day, as “very rare,” and explained that this could have happened “because people leave the building before cots become available,” New York City Emergency Management (NYCEM) spokesperson Aries Dela Cruz wrote via email. However, the couple disputed this, saying they did not leave the building while reapplying.

None of the people reapplying for shelter at the Reticketing Center who City Limits spoke with earlier this month had received information about the new settlement terms, and the limited circumstances under which they may be able to extend shelter stays going forward.

Joseph Varlack said Friday that 6,500 migrants have received these new notices so far.

“If migrants upon discharge feel they have an extenuating circumstance that requires an extension of stay in shelter, they will be encouraged to speak with their exit planner and the site managers at their HERRC or Respite site,” a NYCEM spokesperson said.

One of the big questions that remains to be resolved is how those who meet the criteria for an extension will be reevaluated if they seek another one once that time is up.

“They don’t have an answer for that yet,” said Goldfein.

“The city says they don’t want to see people on the streets. Their goal is to encourage people and work with them to do what they think they need to do to try to move out,” he said. “But we’re going to be monitoring very closely to make sure that people get appropriate consideration of all the efforts that they’re making.”

Below is a copy of the notification letter detailing the city’s “extenuating circumstances”:

To reach the reporter behind this story, contact Daniel@citylimits.org. To reach the editor, contact Jeanmarie@citylimits.org

Want to republish this story? Find City Limits’ reprint policy here.

Pedestrian in ‘very critical condition’ after being hit by pickup truck in West St. Paul

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A 36-year-old Brooklyn Park woman is hospitalized in “very critical condition” after she was hit by a pickup truck at the intersection of South Robert Street and Wentworth Avenue in West St. Paul on Friday morning.

At 9:55 a.m. on Friday, emergency workers responded to reports that a woman was injured after being struck by a GMC pickup driven by a 23-year-old Forest Lake man, according to a Facebook post by the West St. Paul Police.

The driver was not injured and cooperated with investigators, police said. Alcohol and drugs were not a factor, authorities noted.

The Minnesota State Patrol is assisting West St. Paul with the investigation.

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