What Cameron Knowles showed Loons to be club’s next head coach

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When new Minnesota United head coach Cameron Knowles finished up his introductory news conference Tuesday, it was time for one-on-one interviews with individual media outlets.

One TV spot was going to be done in the outdoor path toward Allianz Field’s snow-covered playing surface. Knowles couldn’t locate his coat but quickly soldiered on.

“I’ll survive; I’m Minnesotan,” the New Zealand native said almost under his breath and to no one in particular.

After a move from Portland, Knowles has been in various roles with MNUFC since 2021, and the Twin Cities have become a home to him, his wife and his three young daughters. After starting off as a video analyst for United and then head coach of the Loons’ developmental team, Knowles has been promoted to lead the first team with a multi-year contract starting this season.

Knowles served as interim head coach for three games before his predecessor, Eric Ramsay, arrived a month into the 2024 season. He then was an assistant to Ramsay for two years before Ramsay left for West Bromwich Albion in England’s second division last week.

During that interim stint, Loons chief soccer officer Khaled El-Ahmad was impressed with Knowles’s charisma with players and staff, and his leadership presence — being patient when some situations called for it and more direct at other times.

“Over the last two years, I’ve seen nothing but growth in both his leadership (and) how he connects with the players, how the players respond to him,” El-Ahmad said. “Then, when you know the whole situation with Eric moving on, (our) philosophy was very simple. We already knew what we wanted to do, and that’s why we acted very swiftly.”

Knowles was hired in a matter of days and started preseason training sessions in Blaine on Monday.

“The good thing is, we have the benefit of that experience (in 2024) to go through it and to lead this group, and to continue to evolve what we did,” Knowles said. “We built a really good foundation over the last two years, and to continue to evolve that and take the next step forward. To be the person to help drive that, I’m really proud of that.”

El-Ahmad reached out to other potential candidates, including some prominent ones, but also has set a club goal to build internal succession planning. That is panning out with Knowles and Fanendo Adi, who will take over for Jeremy Hall as head coach of the Loons’ developmental team, MNUFC2.

Under Ramsay, the Loons were a stout, defensive-centric team that struck offensively on set pieces and counter attacks. But that group set an MLS-low in possession in 2025.

“What we have to do is take the best of that and then we evolve the line of confrontation when we are defending, a little bit higher,” Knowles said. “A few different moments when we can press the ball, a little more aggressive. Gain a little bit more control of the game with the ball. All these things that are just small steps in moving it forward and adding new dimensions to the team.”

Knowles will have an experienced deputy by his side. On Tuesday, MNUFC hired former Austin FC head coach Josh Wolff to be a first-team assistant coach.

Wolff led Austin as an MLS expansion franchise in 2021 and reached Western Conference final in 2022 but was let go after two down seasons. He has been an assistant with the U.S. men’s national team, Columbus, D.C. and most recently with Houston Dynamo last season.

“For me, it’s somebody who can support (Knowles) and take some things off his plate,” Wolff told the Pioneer Press. “Add some value on the field from an attacking standpoint in coaching.”

The Loons will hire another assistant coach, but that won’t happen immediately. The club is retaining fellow assistant in Zarek Valentin and head of goalkeeping Thomas Fawdry.

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Burnsville man charged with attacking 74-year-old woman on park trail faces new Lakeville indecent exposure charge

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A man jailed and accused in a New Year’s Day attack on a 74-year-old woman on a Burnsville park trail has been charged in three earlier indecent exposure incidents and is a suspect in a fourth.

Dashawn Jawaun Newton (Courtesy of the Dakota County Sheriff’s Office)

Law enforcement had been investigating the four incidents before the Jan. 1 attack, in which 23-year-old Dashawn Jawaun Newton of Burnsville allegedly grabbed the woman from behind on a trail near Crystal Lake, put his gloved hand over her mouth and told her that he had a knife and not to scream.

The woman fought Newton, who had thrown her to the ground and at one point kneeled on her, according to the Jan. 7 criminal complaint charging him with false imprisonment, threats of violence and fifth-degree assault. Newton eventually fled after asking about her husband.

The latest charges against Newton, filed Monday by the Dakota County Attorney’s Office, allege he followed a Lakeville woman home from a Walmart just after 11 p.m. Dec. 16, then entered her attached garage, exposed himself and masturbated in front of her.

“Victim told the male to leave before she entered her residence and called 911,” said the complaint charging Newton with first-degree burglary and indecent exposure.

Police obtained a warrant to search the historical data on Newton’s cellphone, which was seized when he was arrested Jan. 5 in the New Year’s Day attack. Location data showed his cellphone was in the area of the Lakeville Walmart and the victim’s home.

Walmart video surveillance showed Newton park his black Mercedes SUV next to the victim’s SUV and later walk by her at a self-checkout line. He left the store before her, then drove out of the parking lot after she did.

According to a Monday bail request filing in the case, Newton is also a suspect in a separate indecent exposure incident that occurred the next day, pending testing of evidence found outside of a home.

Meanwhile, city of Burnsville prosecutors filed two cases Thursday alleging indecent exposure for late-night incidents outside the same Burnsville home near Crystal Lake on Oct. 31 and Nov. 17. In both incidents, Newton was caught on Ring video doorbell recordings masturbating, the complaints said.

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Surveillance recordings at nearby apartment buildings the day of the park trail attack helped lead police to Newton. He told investigators the woman approached him after seeing him urinating in the snow and that he then pushed her, causing her to fall to the ground.

Confronted by investigators about the earlier indecent exposure incidents, Newton said they were a prank and then said “he knew what he was doing was wrong and he prayed to God to take away these desires he was having, of wanting to see people’s reactions to him exposing himself,” the complaints read.

Newton remained jailed Tuesday in lieu of $120,000 bail ahead of a Feb. 5 court appearance. Newton’s attorney Marcus Almon declined to comment on the charges when reached by phone Tuesday.

Possible Woodbury ICE detention center draws Washington County Board crowd, condemnation

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May Township resident Patricia Isaacs was among dozens of residents of Washington County who gathered Tuesday morning to implore the county board to do all they can to stop any possible plans for an Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention center in the county.

“My father was raised in an Orthodox Jewish home,” Isaacs said. “There’s an entire branch of my family that didn’t survive World War II. It was drummed into my head since childhood that we must never forget. Well, I’ve never forgotten. And we can’t forget. If we allow ICE to build a facility here that is essentially a concentration camp, we are complicit.”

More than 20 people spoke expressing concerns about a possible ICE detention facility on Hudson Road in Woodbury. Another 10 people submitted written comments.

Washington County Board Chair Karla Bigham said no one on the five-member county board is in favor of an ICE detention center. County and city officials previously have said they have not been notified of plans for a detention center and the property owner in question says they have not been contacted either.

“We can’t afford it financially,” Bigham said. “We can’t afford it from a public health perspective. We can’t afford it from a safety perspective. We cannot afford it from a Constitutional perspective. We cannot afford it from a due process perspective, and we darn well cannot afford it from a humanitarian perspective.”

Commissioner Karla Bigham (Courtesy of Washington County)

Bigham told audience members that the board members would be “discussing and deliberating” the best response. “What I can guarantee you is that we will not be quiet,” she said. “We will not be complacent. This is about protecting our freedoms and having ICE in our communities violating the Constitution and due process does not make our communities any more safe.”

Bigham said the board plans to send a letter to the county’s federal delegation expressing concerns about the possible detention center. The letter, which is expected to be finalized next week, asks federal officials to consider the public health and safety risks and community impact.

“Beyond the local safety and compatibility concerns, such a facility would place substantial additional strain on county services, including law enforcement, public health, transportation, and other departments, at a time when resources are already stretched to meet state and federal mandates,” a draft of the letter states.

Community comments

Carol Iwata, of Afton, a third-generation Japanese-American, told the county board that she now carries a photograph of her passport with her everywhere she goes, “just like St. Paul Mayor Kaohly Her.”

Iwata’s mother’s family was incarcerated in a concentration camp during World War II, she said.

“My mother and her siblings were (U.S.) citizens, as were many of the people who were incarcerated,” Iwata said. “My family has experienced race-based unlawful detentions before, although we have seen from the awful tragedy of Renee Good that race doesn’t protect you from ICE.”

Janet Carlson, of Lake Elmo, said her family was forcibly removed by the Army in Seattle, Wash., in April of 1942 and incarcerated in Hunt, Idaho, in the Minidoka concentration camp.

“Today’s ICE actions bring all kinds of memories for me, even though I was not alive at the time,” she said. “These people were incarcerated without due process for two years, so this seems very similar.”

Carlson expressed concerns about the safety of the students at schools in the area of the possible detention center and said immigrants are key to the county’s economic development.

“Lake Elmo and Oakdale are on the list for the fastest-growing cities in Washington County, and that means we need construction workers,” she said. “People of color are heavily represented in the construction industry, and if we want to continue growing our community, we have to make sure that those people feel welcome and safe to work in Woodbury.”

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Stillwater resident Nick Gorski said his father, a World War II veteran who fought in Northern Italy with the 10th Mountain Brigade, would be horrified by what is happening today.

“I’m glad he’s not alive to see what’s going on right now,” Gorski said. “The people he fought against are calling the shots, and it’s up to us to stand up.”

Jennifer Vitale currently lives in Woodbury, but she was born and raised in Stillwater. She said she wanted to give the board “the parents’ perspective of what’s going on.”

Vitale said she has to tell her daughter and son-in-law that if they see ICE agents when they are at a store with their child they need to “turn around and come home — and that’s happened.”

“Parents are now thinking about where they can go and when they can go there,” she said. “They’re on the lookout for what’s around them. If there are ICE around, they turn around and go home. … Families in Woodbury are changing how we live in our community, and I think you guys should know that.”

Nicole Sauer, of Woodbury, said she has been impressed with the level of trust that the Woodbury Police Department has built with the city. “I don’t want that to be ruined,” she said.

‘Get out ahead on this thing’

Commissioner Bethany Cox, who has two young children, became emotional talking about how she, too, is “changing the way she moves around her community.”

Washington County Commissioner Bethany Cox (Courtesy of Cox)

“I’m sorry,” Cox said. “The trauma that this is causing in our communities is the part that I’m struggling with the most. Federal laws need to be followed, but there can be a way that it can be done that doesn’t hurt us as a community.”

Many of those in the audience on Tuesday were members of St. Croix Valley Indivisible, Afton Indivisible and Indivisible Twin Cities, groups working to “stand up for our democracy and the rights of our immigrant neighbors,” said Martha Winslow, a St. Mary’s Point resident who is the leader of St. Croix Valley Indivisible.

“Honestly, to call these facilities detention centers is a euphemism,” Winslow told the board. “I ask you to get out ahead on this thing. Call and write letters to anyone you can think that may have the power to stop this. Determine what powers you have to stop this before a specific proposal comes before you.”

Members of the Indivisible groups, along with officials from Woodbury and Washington County and members of the county’s immigrant communities, will hold a press conference at 6 p.m. Wednesday at Woodbury Central Park just prior to the 7 p.m. Woodbury City Council meeting at Woodbury City Hall, Winslow said.

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On Monday, U.S. Rep. Betty McCollum sent a letter to Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem demanding that DHS and ICE immediately cease all operations in Minnesota. McCollum also wrote that she has been contacted by constituents and public officials concerned about reports that ICE is “actively soliciting warehouse space to hold as many as 1,500 detainees in Woodbury.”

McCollum’s letter asks Noem if ICE is in fact seeking to acquire a warehouse in Woodbury and, if so, what the address is and the estimated cost of developing the facility. She also seeks documentation about public health and sanitation standards.

“According to comments by ICE acting director Todd M. Lyons at a border conference in April, the Trump administration’s goal is to deport immigrants like Amazon moves packages: ‘Like Prime, but with human beings,” McCollum wrote. “Not only is this plan dehumanizing, it fails to account for the fact that structures designed for storage and shipping are not fit for human habitation, because they lack adequate ventilation and temperature controls.”

Grammy-nominated musician John Forté found dead at 50 in Massachusetts home

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NEW YORK (AP) — John Forté, the Grammy-nominated musician known for his work with the Fugees and the Refugee Camp All-Stars among others, has died at age 50. He was found dead Monday afternoon in his home in Chilmark, Massachusetts, according to police.

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Chilmark Police Chief Sean Slavin said in a statement that there were no signs of foul play or “readily apparent cause of death.” The case is being investigated by the state medical examiner’s office, according to Slavin.

A native of New York City, Forté was a musical prodigy who broke through in his early 20s as a contributor to the Fugees’ Grammy-winning “The Score” and to Wyclef Jean’s Grammy-nominated “The Carnival.” A multi-instrumentalist and rapper, he also released such solo albums as “Poly Sci” and “I John,” with contributors including Carly Simon, whose son, Ben Taylor, was a close friend of Forté’s.

In 2000, he was arrested at Newark International Airport and charged with possession of liquid cocaine and drug trafficking. Forté was sentenced to 14 years in prison, but the sentence was commuted after seven years by President George W. Bush. Simon was among many public figures who advocated for his release.

Survivors include his wife, the photographer Lara Fuller, and two children.