What’s behind the push for MN to take over Hennepin County trooper murder case?

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Law enforcement groups and others are calling for the state to take over a murder prosecution against a state trooper amid questions about whether the Hennepin County attorney is handling the case fairly.

Attorneys for Minnesota State Trooper Ryan Londregan last week claimed Hennepin County Attorney Mary Moriarty excluded evidence that would have cleared Londregan of wrongdoing. Moriarty denies mishandling the case.

Now the Minnesota Police and Peace Officers Association is calling for Gov. Tim Walz to appoint Attorney General Keith Ellison as prosecutor in the case. Walz has not said what he will do, but on Monday questioned Moriarty’s handling of the case and didn’t rule out taking action.

“As a layman on this, why would you not listen to a use-of-force expert?” said Walz. “I do trust juries, I do trust justice system, that’s at the end of the day what needs to happen here. But a case needs to be put in front of them that’s fair to get justice.”

Ryan Patrick Londregan, 27. (Courtesy of the Hennepin County Sheriff’s Office)

Moriarty, former head of the Hennepin County Public Defender’s Office, was elected Hennepin County attorney in 2022 on a platform of addressing racial disparities in the criminal justice system and holding police officers accountable. Her approach to prosecution has at times attracted criticism from law enforcement groups who say she is overly lenient on criminals or too harsh on police.

The shooting

Londregan, 27, is being prosecuted for murder in the shooting death of Ricky Cobb II during a July traffic stop on Interstate 94 in Minneapolis. Officers pulled over Cobb, 33, in relation to a violation of a protective order.

Londregan shot Cobb after Cobb shifted his vehicle into drive and let his foot off the brake when Londregan and another trooper tried to arrest him, according to a criminal complaint.

The defense in the case says Londregan was trying to protect himself and his partner. But Hennepin County prosecutors say the shooting was unjustified and charged Londregan in January with second-degree unintentional murder, first-degree assault and second-degree manslaughter.

Use-of-force expert

Last week, attorneys for Londregan alleged Moriarty had ignored and suppressed advice from Hennepin County’s independent police use-of-force expert Jeffrey Noble before she decided to pursue charges. Noble said Londregan was justified in using deadly force as lives were in danger, defense attorneys claimed.

Moriarty’s office has denied allegations by the defense, and says their conclusions were “cherry-picked” from a lengthy document tied to a meeting from the early stages of the investigation.

“It is simply false that the expert engaged by the State came to any legal conclusion related to Mr. Londregan’s conduct,” Hennepin County Attorney’s Office spokesperson Nick Kimball said in a statement. “In fact, the expert characterized the meeting as a preliminary discussion with the State. Once again the defense is abusing the legal process to initiate inaccurate pretrial publicity in this case.”

News of the Hennepin County attorney allegedly ignoring the force expert’s opinion last week led the Minnesota Police and Peace Officers Association to send a letter to the governor requesting he appoint Ellison as prosecutor in the case. MPPOA argued Moriarty could not be trusted to handle the case as she had allegedly ignored exculpatory evidence.

“Rather than fairly and honestly evaluating all the evidence, including the analysis of their ‘critical’ expert, the (Hennepin County Attorney’s Office) decided to manufacture a basis, no matter how flimsy, to bring charges they intended to bring from the very start,” the MPPOA said in a letter to Walz last Friday.

In response to the allegations, Republican state lawmakers last week called for Moriarty’s resignation. Members of Minnesota’s congressional delegation have weighed in as well. U.S. Rep. Pete Stauber, a Republican who represents a northeast Minnesota district that includes Duluth, joined fellow GOP officials in calling for her resignation.

Congresswoman Angie Craig, a south metro Democrat who has received endorsement from the MPPOA in the past, says Walz should appoint the attorney general to take over the case and issued a statement on the matter Wednesday.

Gov. Tim Walz. (Ben Hovland / MPR News)

Has this happened before?

If Walz appoints Ellison prosecutor in the Londregan case, it won’t be the first time he’s done so in Moriarty’s tenure.

In 2023, Walz handed a murder case to Ellison after Moriarty offered two juveniles a plea deal to avoid adult sentences in the shooting death of a 23-year-old mother of an infant. The move came after backlash from the public and family of the victim.

The Hennepin County Attorney’s Office said it offered the deal as a way to get more information about an ex-boyfriend who had allegedly directed the 15- and 17-year-olds to kill the woman. Moriarty said offering the deal gave the juveniles a better chance of reform.

It’s not common for the governor to intervene in a case without the local prosecutor’s request.

In Minnesota, the governor can designate the attorney general as the prosecutor in a county case, but oftentimes this happens in smaller jurisdictions where the county attorney may need assistance with prosecuting a complex, high-profile case.

Typically, the attorney general will get the governor’s office to request the designation after a county attorney seeks state help. What sets the Londregan case apart is outside groups dissatisfied with Moriarty’s handling of the prosecution are asking the governor to direct the attorney general to intervene.

Ellison’s office has not said whether it wants to take the case, and said it continues to review the letter from the MPPOA.

Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison. (John Autey / Pioneer Press)

It’s also unclear how the attorney general’s office would approach the case. Typically, the attorney general represents state government agencies. Londregan is a State Patrol trooper, meaning the attorney general’s office is prosecuting a state employee.

Walz said he’s confident in the attorney general’s ability to create firewalls to prevent conflicts within his office.

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Alex Rodriguez, Marc Lore submit financial documents to buy Timberwolves and Lynx, report says

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Prospective owners Marc Lore and Alex Rodriguez submitted signed financial paperwork to the NBA to acquire majority ownership of the Timberwolves and Lynx, The Athletic reported Wednesday.

That step comes as Dyal Capital Partners joined the investor group, according to The Athletic, which gave Rodriguez and Lore the necessary capital to complete the majority purchase.

Lore and Rodriguez own 40 percent of the organization and are now apparently set to make their final 40 percent purchase from majority owner Glen Taylor. The duo had until March 27 to submit the papers.

Dyal Capital Partners entered the equation after the Carlyle Group reportedly pulled its potential investment. Dyal Capital Partners is a new player in sports ownership. The company bought the Phoenix Suns in 2021 at a $1.55 billion evaluation, then flipped it at a $4 billion valuation in 2023, a 158 percent appreciation according to Sportico.

Lore and Rodriguez first reached a $1.5 billion sale agreement with Taylor for the Wolves and Lynx in 2021. Taylor has given the two major influence on organizational decisions since then. They headed the search process that ended in the hiring of Tim Connelly as Timberwolves president of basketball operations.

The new ownership structure still needs to be approved by the NBA’s Board of Governors, which will have another meeting in April.

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Charges: Timberwolves employee stole high-ranking team official’s hard drive containing personal and work information

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A former Timberwolves employee has been charged with third-degree burglary after allegedly stealing a hard drive from a high-ranking team official’s office.

According to court documents, Somak Sarkar — who served as a coaching analyst for Minnesota — entered the office of Sachin Gupta, the Timberwolves’ executive vice president of basketball operations, on Feb. 3 and took a hard drive that was hooked into Gupta’s computer.

Somak Sarkar (Courtesy of the Hennepin County sheriff’s office)

The hard drive contained personal information such as tax and bank account information belonging to Gupta and his family and his social security number, as well as Timberwolves business information and “strategic NBA information.”

According to court documents, once Gupta discovered the hard drive was missing, security reviewed surveillance and discovered Sarkar had entered Gupta’s office. Sarkar was immediately fired.

Sarkar originally worked under Gupta’s watch until he was transferred to the coaching staff due to job performance.

Court documents say another team employee retrieved the hard drive from Sarkar, and the team then sent the hard drive and Gupta’s laptop to a computer forensic company. The Wolves found “over 5,000 files” were accessed and downloaded onto another device.

Sarkar was arrested on Monday, and the complaint says a search of his home found a device containing the information from Gupta’s hard drive.

According to court documents, Sarkar said he had the hard drive to “put some stuff on it” and forgot to return it.

Sarkar is being held in Hennepin County Jail on $40,000 bail with a court appearance set for Thursday.

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Prosecutors: St. Paul officer’s fatal shooting of man, 65, was legally justified

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The St. Paul police officer who fatally shot a 65-year-old man armed with a knife last year will not be charged, the Ramsey County Attorney’s and Minnesota Attorney General’s Office announced Wednesday.

They determined that Officer Abdirahmin Dahir’s use of deadly force against Yia Xiong was legal under Minnesota law.

Now, the Coalition for Justice for Yia Xiong said they’ll be seeking changes to police procedures and training.

Dahir shot Xiong after responding to 911 calls on Feb. 11, 2023, at the apartment building where Xiong lived in the 100 block of South Western Avenue near West Seventh Street.

Yia Xiong in his Vietnam War uniform (Courtesy photo)

Body-worn camera showed “Mr. Xiong holding the knife in an aggressive manner as he assumes a slightly crouched position and begins to quickly emerge through his apartment door toward the officers, despite their continued orders for him to stop,” county and state prosecutors wrote in a 39-page memo about their review.

“Officer Dahir, and his SPPD colleagues had no objective reason to believe that Mr. Xiong did not understand the multiple orders given to him by officers to ‘stop’ and ‘drop the knife,” the memo continued. “To the contrary, when ordered three times in the lobby by Officer Dahir and his colleagues to ‘Drop the knife!’ Mr. Xiong briefly stopped and displayed his hands as if to show the officers that he understood their orders and was not in possession of the knife.”

Xiong’s family and the Justice for Yia Xiong Coalition has said Xiong was a disabled Hmong veteran “who saved American lives” during the Vietnam War. He was deaf in one ear from the war and didn’t speak English, they’ve said.

“The county attorney’s decision to not prosecute these officers goes against community expectations of police accountability and public safety,” said Snowdon Her, the coalition’s leader, in a Wednesday statement. “This injustice is just one layer of a deeper issue because their legal determinations are bound to a policing system that requires reform, and that system is shaped by violent police training and policies that are too broad in their use of deadly force.”

The coalition and Xiong’s family has urged prosecutors to file charges against the officers involved since Xiong died.

“Anytime deadly force is used by the government, it is a tragedy for all those involved, and it requires prosecutors to seek the truth without bias, fear, or favor and do the right thing,” Ramsey County Attorney John Choi said in a Wednesday statement. “… I am deeply saddened that this legal decision may deepen the pain for Mr. Yia Xiong’s family and community members who wanted something different.”

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