St. Cloud mother sentenced to 22 years in prison for killing infant son in 2021

posted in: Society | 0

ST. CLOUD, Minn. — A St. Cloud woman who stabbed her infant son to death in 2021 was sentenced Thursday to nearly 22 years in prison.

Fardoussa Omar Abdillahi (Forum News Service)

Fardoussa Omar Abdillahi, 29, was sentenced to 261 months by Stearns County District Judge Sarah Hennesy, according to a Stearns County Attorney’s Office news release. Abdillahi received jail credit for the 859 days she has spent in custody since her offense date, according to the release.

Last August, Abdillahi pleaded guilty to second-degree murder in the death of her 3-month-old boy.

On Sunday, Nov. 28, 2021, St. Cloud police officers went to an apartment building in the 2000 block of Maine Prairie Road after receiving a call reporting that a male baby was missing and that the mother said she had thrown the baby in a dumpster. The mother, Abdillahi, lived alone with her child.

Officers searched the dumpster and found the infant’s body, and Abdillahi was arrested.

Abdillahi told police that after giving birth to her child, she experienced headaches and feelings of worry and fear. She said she was upset that the child’s father was denying the child was his.

Abdillahi admitted to stabbing her child with a knife from the kitchen and demonstrated that she cut the child across the throat. Abdillahi said that she put her child into a black bag with baby clothes and put the bag into a trash bin in her apartment before bringing the child out to the dumpster about five minutes later.

Abdillahi called her mother about 20 minutes later and told her what she had done, according to the complaint. A search by law enforcement of Abdillahi’s cellphone corroborated the timeline of her calls to her mother, and consensual searches of witness phones corroborated the timeline of the reported concern for the baby. Investigators observed multiple knives and bedding in the dumpster.

A postmortem examination was performed by Midwest Medical Examiner’s Office, which identified circumferential sharp-force injuries to the infant’s neck. The manner of death was ruled homicide.

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America’s energy boom has helped with global security. Biden should leave well alone

posted in: Politics | 0

North America’s amazing energy boom has been a huge plus for U.S. domestic security over the past decade. Thanks to the rise of shale fracking and other game-changing technologies, the U.S. and Canada have produced more oil and gas than ever before, reducing the need for imports while breathing life into export markets.

This oil-and-gas bonanza came just in time to help American allies in Europe support sanctions against Russian fossil fuels imposed after the 2022 attack on Ukraine. America has become the world’s No. 1 exporter of liquified natural gas, or LNG, and export demand for this important fuel is projected to double by the end of the decade.

The immediate benefits go beyond creating jobs and expanding the economy. Given how the LNG export market serves U.S. interests by helping American allies keep the lights on while punishing Russia for its aggression, you’d think President Joe Biden would be content to take the win and leave well enough alone. No such luck.

At the end of January, the Biden administration hit the brakes on LNG exports, announcing a “temporary pause” on federal authorizations for shipping gas to Europe and other strategically important destinations. The main effect is to halt construction of new export facilities that were in various stages of planning. No company can proceed with these multiyear projects now that the Feds have pledged to withhold the licenses for them until further notice.

In its announcement, the administration claimed that it needs time to assess the health impact of new export facilities on people living in their vicinity. It also cited the potential for increased costs to American consumers if more gas is shipped offshore, and it bemoaned the “perilous” environmental impacts of methane, which is the No. 1 ingredient in the natural gas used in furnaces, stoves and power plants.

There’s no mystery about any of those questions, however. Living near petroleum facilities does indeed expose people to the risk of pollution. The price of gas has been driven down by the current glut and probably would increase over time if more were shipped abroad. As for methane, it is well known to be a potent greenhouse gas that contributes to global warming and climate change.

So, if all the administration wanted was answers, well, those are the facts and it’s hardly a revelation that the petroleum industry is dirty but necessary, at least for now. Unsurprisingly, given today’s politics, there is an unstated agenda.

It’s no coincidence that Biden’s LNG decision comes at the start of an election year, and the only good reason for it is to shore up Biden’s support among hard-core environmentalists. Predictably, the greenest Democrats applauded the move against LNG exports, attacking natural gas as a planet killer while conveniently ignoring its essential role in replacing coal, which is dirtier to produce and far worse for the environment when burned.

In a perfectly green world, there would be no need for fossil fuels of any kind. In real life, it will take decades to make the transition to cleaner energy, and LNG is widely viewed as the best practical bridge to a future less dependent on the dirtiest fuels.

It’s beyond frustrating to hear far-left nature lovers who oppose nuclear power and demonize natural gas then going on to applaud policies that put extreme new demands on the electrical grid. Where will the juice come from to power the electric vehicles that environmentalists want so badly? Or to support the build-out of data centers and other technologies that require huge amounts of electricity?

More than 80% of the world’s energy today comes from hydrocarbons. While Biden’s Inflation Reduction Act will help to reduce that dependence, its impact will be felt only over a period of years. Meantime, demand for energy keeps increasing, and the preferred forms of “green” power, namely wind and solar, can’t be scaled up fast enough to meet the need.

For Biden’s political opponents, the LNG policy is a good example of why a change at the top is needed. Speaking at the recent Futures Industry Association conference in Florida, Mike Sommers, head of the American Petroleum Institute, put it bluntly: “I cannot think of a worse policy decision. It needs to be reversed as soon as possible. Natural gas is the transition.”

At the same conference, Citadel founder Ken Griffin was even more emphatic about the Biden LNG policy: “What did we say to the world? Keep burning coal. It’s absolutely mind-blowing to me.”

We think Sommers and Griffin are correct on this issue.

Biden’s sop to the far-left not only is self-defeating from an environmental standpoint, but it’s a convenient gift to Vladimir Putin’s Russia on the diplomatic front.

This roadblock to progress, this impediment to a thoughtful global transition, needs to be dropped today.

— The Chicago Tribune

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Monte Morris finding his offensive aggression with Timberwolves

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Timberwolves coach Chris Finch saw a clear silver lining in Mike Conley sitting out Wednesday’s win over Toronto, beyond the 36-year-old getting some well-deserved rest.

Conley’s absence meant more run for Monte Morris.

Conley is obviously the floor general for the Timberwolves. And Jordan McLaughlin’s emergence has created a few lineup combinations Finch simply has to get to on a nightly basis.

That’s meant fewer minutes for Morris, who has been very good since his trade deadline acquisition.

“He’s been playing great, but just the opportunity hasn’t been there,” Finch said. “So just getting him out there with different guys, it was good to see.”

And Morris took full advantage. In 25 minutes, Morris finished with 13 points — on the strength of three triples — five assists, four rebounds, two blocks and a steal. The Wolves outscored Toronto by 30 points when the veteran point guard was in the game.

It was exactly the type of performance the Wolves wanted to see from a guard they know they’ll need at the end of the regular season and beyond.

Finch has noted on countless occasions that the Timberwolves need “low-usage, high-impact guys” to fill out their talented roster. Players who don’t need the ball in their hands, but when they get it, they’ll make something happen.

If anything, Finch would like to see Morris be more aggressive with his offense early in possessions. Morris is still finding the necessary comfort to call his own number.

“We’ve got a lot of talented guys, so I’ve got to keep finding ways, little play calls to stay into the flow of the game,” Morris said. “(Wednesday) I called a few. Even if I wasn’t shooting it, it just gave me a feel for the game. Early on, I was deferring a lot and trying to find my way but getting lost in the sauce, just because I wasn’t being aggressive. I’ve got to implement myself more into the game, whether that’s defense, rebounding, things like that. It’s been tough trying to find that flow. But I think I’ve found it a little bit.”

It’s not easy to join any team in the middle of a season, let alone one that’s rolling. Morris is used to playing on championship-caliber teams dating back to his days in Denver, but finding ways to insert yourself into something that’s already so good is a challenge. The last thing you want to be is a disruption.

“You’re No. 1 (in the West) and you’re coming in to try and find your niche,” Morris said. “It takes time. I just gotta keep trusting everything, keep trusting my work, getting in there every day and just keep working.”

Morris said the final six games of the regular season will be “big” for him getting ready for the playoffs.

“I know I’ve played in big playoff games, so I know the rhythm you need to be in going into that,” Morris said. “So I have to be more aggressive on that (offensive) end just so when the playoffs do come I’m in good rhythm and ready to go.”

His teammates are all for it.

“He can really shoot the ball, and we need that,” star guard Anthony Edwards said. “Especially him and J-Mac, they shoot the ball really well. So I just tell him, ‘Trust it. If you open, let it fly. Don’t think about it.’ ”

It’s still a work in progress, but Morris is getting there.

“I feel like I’m handling it the best way possible. (On Wednesday), Mike didn’t play, so it was an opportunity. I didn’t want the opportunity to slip. I wanted to leave this arena, whether I made or missed shots, just in a better feel and more confident with myself,” Morris said. “I just know being around the league, opportunities don’t come like that a lot. I just wanted to show I’m able to play, when my number is called, a lot more minutes.”

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Solid second half has Wild’s Marc-Andre Fleury thinking hard about 2023-24

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Marc-Andre Fleury still isn’t sure he will play again next season, but the Wild goaltender acknowledged Thursday he is more open to the idea than he was during fall camp.

It’s not difficult to see why.

“He’s still pretty good, isn’t he?” Wild general manager Bill Guerin told reporters on March 8, the NHL’s trade deadline this season.

Although he turned 39 last November, Fleury is still flashing the passion, raw athleticism and lightning reflexes that have moved him into second place in career wins for an NHL goalie, and made him one of only four to play 1,000 games — milestones cemented in this, his 20th, season.

“I always said that I would decide at the end of the season, but I felt like earlier, we were starting camp and all that, and I thought ‘This might be it,’ ” Fleury said. “Then I started feeling a little better, started having more fun.”

On Tuesday, Fleury stopped 30 shots in a 3-2 victory over Ottawa, improving to 11-4-3 since Jan. 6. And if you take out 26 minutes in a 6-0 loss at Los Angeles on March 20, Fleury is 11-3-3 with a 2.33 goals-against average and .912 save percentage in 19 appearances.

Certainly Fleury has nothing left to prove. He has been part of three Stanley Cup-winning teams in Pittsburgh, and helped expansion franchise Vegas win two Western Conference titles in four seasons. On Jan. 15, he passed Patrick Roy for second all time in wins by a goaltender with No. 552, shortly after joining wins leader Martin Brodeur, Roy and Roberto Luongo as the only goaltenders to play in 1,000 NHL games.

Playing in the final season of a two-year, $7 million contract extension, Fleury has been the Wild’s best goaltender. And after 20 years, he still approaches every game, and just about every practice, with visible enthusiasm.

“I do. I do,” he said. “But I don’t want to be the old guy that plays one too many. You know what I mean? That’s scary, too, I feel like. I don’t want to be a nuisance to the team, I want to help — and that’s when it feels better, too.”

It was generally assumed that Fleury, having reached his milestones and perhaps played in his 18th postseason, would retire after this season. Then the Wild would promote prospect Jesper Wallstedt to back up Filip Gustavsson, who earned a three-year, $11.25 million extension after being the NHL’s second-best goaltender in 2022-23.

If Fleury decides to continue playing, and Guerin decides he wants him for another year, it complicates what was once a simple plan for next season’s goaltending — although another season in the American Hockey League isn’t unreasonable for Wallstedt, who turns 22 on Nov. 14.

Asked last month how he would navigate trying to re-sign Fleury, Guerin said, “Very carefully.”

Fleury has a young family and is loath to move them for the fourth time since 2021. They like it here, he said. But he also stopped short of saying that it’s Minnesota or bust. Assuming he would only play for the Wild next season is “maybe a little overstated,” he said.

“But ideally, yeah,” he quickly added. “Not moving schools, not moving houses again and all that (would be) nice.”

While Fleury remains one of the NHL’s most athletic goaltenders, gloving slap shots and stacking pads the way he did for 14 years in Pittsburgh, he acknowledged after Thursday’s morning skate that it took a little longer for him to get up to speed in the fall.

He also said that wouldn’t necessarily convince him to retire, adding, “I know what to expect, right? So, maybe.”

The Wild’s game against Colorado on Thursday at Xcel Energy Center is the first of nine remaining regular-season games, with Minnesota eight points out of a wild-card spot. But the Wild are 31-18-6 since John Hynes became the coach on Nov. 28, and he’s been riding Fleury down the stretch.

“It’s still fun,” Fleury said. “I love winning, that feeling you get from winning and contributing. It’s good. It feels good inside.”

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