Jury finds Apple Valley man guilty in fatal hit-and-run during Bloomington pot deal

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A jury has found an Apple Valley man guilty of unintentional murder after prosecutors said he set up a Bloomington marijuana deal and then hit and dragged the seller with his SUV while speeding off with the drug.

Lamont Eugene Williams Jr., 22, was convicted Friday in Hennepin County District Court of second-degree unintentional murder in connection with the hit-and-run killing of 21-year-old Alexif Loeza Galvan near his home on Bloomington’s east side on March 6.

Alexif Loeza Galvan (Courtesy of GoFundMe)

Williams, who posted bond five days later and was released from custody, is jailed ahead of his sentencing, which is scheduled for Feb. 24.

Galvan died of blunt force trauma at Hennepin County Medical Center. His injuries included a brain bleed, skull fracture, broken collarbone, rib fractures and cuts and bruising on the lower back and elsewhere consistent with road rash, according to the criminal complaint.

Police were called to the 8300 block of 11th Avenue about 8:45 p.m. on a report of the man lying in the street with broken bones and difficulty breathing. Officers found Galvan on the ground near a snowbank, gasping for breath. He was pronounced dead at Hennepin County Medical Center in Minneapolis.

Lamont Eugene Williams Jr. (Courtesy of the Hennepin County Sheriff’s Office)

One of Galvan’s family members told officers that Galvan had told him that “Monty,” who was later identified as Williams, had contacted him and that he agreed to sell marijuana to Williams, the complaint said.

Galvan’s mother reported she was sitting on the couch when he told her he was going outside to sell something. About two minutes later, she heard yelling. She looked outside and saw him leaning into the passenger side of a small, dark-colored SUV. He appeared to be halfway in the vehicle.

She said she could see Galvan and someone inside the SUV pulling a backpack back and forth. As this was happening, the SUV accelerated and she shouted to her other children. They went outside and found Galvan lying in the street a few houses from their house.

Williams was arrested the next day near his home; he’d been driving a grey Jeep Renegade registered to his mother, the complaint said. Officers found in the SUV a 9mm handgun on the front passenger seat and a black Coach backpack with plastic bags of marijuana that totaled about 264 grams, or more than 9 ounces.

A search of Williams’ phone showed the two men exchanged messages through Facebook about Galvan selling him “smoke.” Galvan sent Williams his home address.

Williams wrote to Galvan at 8:31 p.m., “Here.” Four minutes later, Williams wrote, “I’m in this Jeep.” Location data of Williams’ cellphone showed it moved east from the area of Galvan’s home at 8:37 p.m. Six minutes later, Williams messaged him: “My fault gang I had to.”

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MN prisons say many fed ‘arrests’ are routine transfers to ICE

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The Minnesota Department of Corrections said Monday they’ve identified 68 cases when they’ve transferred people from prison to federal custody and federal officials “falsely claim these same individuals were ‘arrested’ by waves of federal agents deployed into Minnesota communities.”

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security has a “Worst of the Worst” website where DOC said they identified people who were subject to routine custody transfers to Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

“DHS is justifying an unprecedented federal deployment into Minnesota communities based on the demonstrably false narrative that Minnesota refuses to honor ICE detainers,” DOC said in its latest comments pushing back against DHS. “… What is troubling is DHS taking credit for ‘arrests’ which are, in reality, state-to-federal handoffs occurring at prison facilities after individuals complete their state terms of imprisonment, as has been the long-standing practice.”

The Corrections Department gave examples, including a case from Thursday. DOC said they transferred Jose Eliborio Ocampo-Leon from the Moose Lake prison to ICE custody.

The next day, DHS highlighted him in a press release with Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin stating, “DHS law enforcement continues to remove violent criminal illegal aliens from the streets of Minnesota. Just yesterday they arrested pedophiles, sexual predators, and drug traffickers in Minnesota.”

County jails are a separate matter from the state’s prisons. State law says local law enforcement cannot hold people in custody in county jails solely based on civil immigration detainer requests from ICE, according to a legal opinion last year from Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison.

County boards can enter into agreements with ICE, and seven of Minnesota’s 87 counties have agreements with ICE. They are Cass, Crow Wing, Freeborn, Itasca, Kandiyohi, Mille Lacs and Sherburne counties, according to ICE.

DHS said last Monday they arrested 3,000 “criminal illegal aliens” in the last six weeks.

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Lionel Richie and Earth, Wind and Fire will return to St. Paul in June

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After a successful joint outing in 2023, Lionel Richie and Earth, Wind and Fire will kick off another tour together in St. Paul on June 24 at Grand Casino Arena.

Tickets go on sale at 10 a.m. Friday through Ticketmaster. Citi cardholders have access to a presale that runs from 10 a.m. Tuesday through 10 p.m. Sunday.

The two acts drew a crowd of about 13,000 to the former Xcel Energy Center in August 2023.

An Alabama native, Richie considered becoming a priest but chose to pursue music instead. In 1968, he joined the Commodores as a singer and saxophonist. The band signed to Motown and scored a series of hits including “Easy,” “Brick House,” “Three Times a Lady” and “Lady (You Bring Me Up).”

In 1980, Richie wrote the No. 1 hit “Lady” for Kenny Rogers. The following year, he sang the theme song for the film “Endless Love” with Diana Ross, which became one of Motown’s biggest hits. Richie then went solo and released a string of successful singles including “Truly,” “All Night Long (All Night),” “Hello,” “Say You, Say Me” and “Dancing on the Ceiling.”

In the late ’80s, Richie took a break from his career to care for his father, who died in 1990. In the time since, he has taken a more casual approach to music, occasionally releasing new music and touring sporadically. In 2018, he joined Katy Perry and Luke Bryan as a judge on “American Idol,” a gig he has continued annually including the currently airing 24th season.

Founded in Chicago in 1969 by the late Maurice White, Earth, Wind and Fire has earned 17 Grammy nominations, including a lifetime achievement award in 2016, and a spot in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.

While the band’s time spent ruling the pop charts is now in the past, EWF did release a series of classic singles still heard on radio, including “Shining Star,” “September,” “Boogie Wonderland” and “After the Love Has Gone.”

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Venezuela releases dozens of prisoners in 2 days, hundreds more still detained

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CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) — Venezuela’s leading prisoner rights organization said Monday that dozens of prisoners were released over the weekend, as the United States continues to pressure the acting government to free hundreds of dissidents jailed during the administration of ousted leader Nicolás Maduro.

Alfredo Romero, president of Foro Penal, said in a post on X that 266 “political prisoners” had been freed since Jan. 8, when Venezuela’s acting government promised to release a “significant number” of prisoners in what it described as an effort to promote national reconciliation.

Maduro was captured by the United States in a raid on Jan. 3, and was replaced by Vice President Delcy Rodríguez, a longtime ruling party insider, who is now the nation’s acting president.

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According to human rights groups, prisoners released this weekend included an opposition activist, a human rights lawyer and a journalism student who was imprisoned in March after he published complaints about his hometown’s sewage system, and was charged with “inciting hatred.”

However, at least 600 dissidents remain detained in Venezuela, according to Foro Penal, including several members of the Vente Venezuela party, led by opposition leader and Nobel Peace Prize winner María Corina Machado.

On Friday acting President Rodríguez said that her administration had freed more than 620 prisoners adding that she would ask the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights to verify the release lists.

Human rights groups in Venezuela have accused the government of inflating the number of prisoners that have been freed.

Outside Venezuela’s prisons, relatives of detainees have held regular vigils to demand the release of those still behind bars.