St. Paul rape charge: Woman found unconscious at man’s house had been given date rape drug

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When a 22-year-old woman’s family was concerned they couldn’t reach her, they used the GPS location of her phone and police found her unconscious in a St. Paul man’s house.

She was hospitalized as “critically ill” and found to have GHB, more commonly known as the “date rape drug,” in her system, according to a criminal charge announced Friday by the Ramsey County attorney’s office.

Kyle Arthur Kamp (Courtesy of the Ramsey County Sheriff’s Office)

The woman’s condition improved and she reported she hung out with a man, identified as 38-year-old Kyle Arthur Kamp, a few times in January and February 2023. She said they didn’t talk again until October and he picked her up the night of Nov. 14.

After drinking at various locations, she ended up back at Kamp’s house. She said she didn’t see him pour the last shot, but remembered taking it shortly after 2 a.m. and sending a text message to her sister.

“But that’s it, she has no further recall until waking in the hospital,” the criminal complaint said.

There has been another report of a GHB-involved sexual assault case involving Kamp, which remains under investigation, said Dennis Gerhardstein, Ramsey County attorney’s office spokesman.

“This case is a prime example of the greater collaboration and implementation of our improvement plan on sexual assault investigations in 2019, where we envisioned being able to uncover more cases like this where we would connect the dots with other victims across our region,” Gerhardstein said in a statement.

Neither Kamp nor an attorney could be reached for comment Friday.

Put on ventilator at hospital

In the recently charged case, the woman’s mother contacted police on Nov. 15 to report her daughter hadn’t returned home and wasn’t answering her phone.

The woman’s younger sister reported that Kamp picked up her sister from their house the night before. The woman’s phone’s location was pinging to Kamp’s address in St. Paul’s Highwood neighborhood.

As police were gathering information from the woman’s family, other officers went to Kamp’s residence on Hadley Street off Winthrop Street. Kamp let officers inside and the woman was in the living room, unconscious but breathing.

Kamp told paramedics the woman had been unconscious from drinking since 2 a.m., the complaint said. Paramedics took her to a hospital, where she arrived just before 4 p.m. She had respiratory failure and was put on a ventilator. Tests were conducted out of concern she’d “ingested a substance which was causing a toxic reaction,” the complaint continued.

She was found to have a low level of alcohol in her system, while GHB was discovered in her system. The drug can cause blackouts, memory loss and respiratory arrest.

‘Felt uneasy’ at man’s house

The woman’s condition improved and she was able to talk to a physician on Nov. 16. She told an investigator she had seven to eight shots of liquor during the course of the night, which she said wouldn’t make her lose consciousness.

“Kamp wanted to go to his house and she was OK with it,” the complaint said of what she reported, “When they arrived, she felt uneasy,” so she contacted “her sister and told her to watch her location.” Her sister couldn’t reach her.

The woman reported she asked Kamp for a ride home and he said, “You want to leave me already?” according to the complaint. She said she tried to use Lyft to schedule a ride home but couldn’t find any drivers.

Text messages showed the woman wrote to her sister that she thought the man wanted sex, but “it ain’t happening” with a thumbs down emoji. She said she never agreed to any sexual relations with Kamp that night, the complaint said.

A nurse examiner conducted a sexual assault exam, found an area of redness and pain and collected sperm for testing.

He says they drank, had sex, passed out

Kamp told the officers who were at his house to check on the woman that they each had about 30 shots of tequila, had sex and passed out, the complaint said. He woke up about 7 a.m. and went to his bed.

When he woke again in the afternoon, he assumed the woman had taken a Lyft or Uber home, but then found her vomiting in the bathroom. He said he found her passed out again when he got out of the shower.

An investigator contacted him and he “initially agreed to be interviewed. He then obtained an attorney and his interview was canceled,” the complaint said.

The Ramsey County attorney’s office charged Kamp with first-degree criminal sexual conduct. After Kamp’s arrest Wednesday, he made his first court appearance Thursday and a judge set bail at $80,000.

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Biden calls out ‘shrinkflation’ as part of a broader strategy to reframe how voters view the economy

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WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden is going all-in on calling out “shrinkflation.”

The term applies to a seemingly covert way for companies to raise prices by ever so slightly reducing the size of their products. There’s suddenly fewer pretzels in the bag, less toothpaste in the tube and shorter candy bars.

“It’s called shrinkflation,” Biden said in his State of the Union speech on Thursday night. “You get charged the same amount and you got about, I don’t know, 10% fewer Snickers in it.”

The president’s focus on shrinkflation is part of a broader strategy to reframe how voters think about the economy before the November election. Biden is trying to deflect criticism about high prices and instead pin the blame on big business.

He also is attempting to show everyday people that he’s fighting for them as he struggles to convince the public that the economy has strengthened under his leadership.

He talked about the shrinkflation issue in a video released on Super Bowl Sunday and highlighted a social media post by the “Sesame Street” character Cookie Monster that complained about smaller cookies.

The country’s low 3.7% unemployment rate and record 16 million applications to start new businesses have largely been overlooked by voters, who are dwelling on higher grocery and housing prices after inflation struck a four-decade high in June 2022 at 9.1%. Even as inflation has drifted down to 3.1% annually, shoppers are still worried about paying a premium at supermarkets.

“Joe Biden recognizes that high grocery prices are an ‘Achilles Heel’ politically,” said Ryan Bourne, an economist at the Cato Institute, a libertarian think tank. “When consumers are going into the grocery store, they remember that they’re paying more than they did in 2019.”

But Bourne cautioned that, in the alternative, companies might have simply raised their list prices without shrinkflation, possibly upsetting consumers more and hurting the president’s approval on the issue. Just 34% of U.S. adults say they agree with how Biden has handled the economy, according to polling by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research.

“A number of companies did that because they thought that their customers would prefer it to paying higher headline prices,” Bourne said. “So I think the president should be very careful what he wishes for when he says he thinks shrinkflation is unfair.”

Sen. Katie Britt, R-Alabama, delivered the GOP response to the State of the Union and put the blame for inflation solely on Biden.

“His reckless spending dug our economy into a hole and sent the cost-of-living through the roof — the worst inflation in 40 years,” Britt said.

Republicans have claimed that prices jumped because of Biden’s $1.9 trillion pandemic relief package, even though the price increases were also global in nature. That’s a sign that broken supply chains and higher energy and food prices after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine played a role.

In a report published Wednesday, the liberal economic advocacy group Groundwork Collaborative dug into the inflation numbers published by the Bureau of Labor Statistics and documented the evidence of shrinkflation, finding it played a meaningful but modest role in higher prices since 2019.

More than 7% of the increase in coffee prices came from reduced packaging. About 10% of the higher prices for snacks and household paper products came from shrinkflation. And for a president who loves ice cream, about 7% of the inflation for that product came from shrinkflation.

Companies might have been masking the higher prices from customers, but they were straightforward with investors on earnings calls, the report said. Some companies such as General Mills have also portrayed the reduced package sizes as a way to manage their own costs and address the challenge of climate change.

The snack company Utz shaved its potato chip bags by half an ounce to 9 ounces, the report said. It trimmed two ounces worth of pretzels out of its pretzel jars, with the CEO heralding to stock analysts its ability to manage what the industry calls “price pack architecture.” PepsiCo reduced the size of its Frito Scoops bags, Gatorade bottles and Doritos bags.

“Why we’re seeing it now is because shrinkflation is late-stage ‘greedflation’ — when you’ve gone as far as you can go in increasing prices and consumers can’t take another increase,” said Linsday Owens, executive director of the Groundwork Collaborative. “It’s much more deceptive than a list price hike.”

Sen. Bob Casey, D-Pennsylvania, has introduced a bill that would ban shrinkflation by ordering the Federal Trade Commission to treat it as an unfair or deceptive practice, enabling the government to pursue civil penalties in court against companies that do so.

Biden gave the measure a full endorsement in his speech.

“Pass Bobby Casey’s bill and stop this,” he said.

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Biden in a hot mic moment shows his growing frustration with Netanyahu over Gaza humanitarian crisis

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By AAMER MADHANI (Associated Press)

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Joe Biden ‘s growing frustration with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu continues to mount, with the Democrat captured on a hot mic saying that he and the Israeli leader will need to have a “come to Jesus meeting.”

The comments by Biden came as he spoke with Sen. Michael Bennet, D-Colo., on the floor of the House chamber following Thursday night’s State of the Union address.

In the exchange, Bennet congratulates Biden on his speech and urges the president to keep pressing Netanyahu on growing humanitarian concerns in Gaza. Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg were also part of the brief conversation.

Biden then responds using Netanyahu’s nickname, saying, “I told him, Bibi, and don’t repeat this, but you and I are going to have a ‘come to Jesus’ meeting.”

An aide to the president standing nearby then speaks quietly into the president’s ear, appearing to alert Biden that microphones remained on as he worked the room.

“I’m on a hot mic here,” Biden says after being alerted. “Good. That’s good.”

The president on Friday acknowledged the comments, lightheartedly poking at reporters that they were “eavesdropping” on his conversation. Asked if he thought Netanyahu should be doing more to alleviate the humanitarian suffering, Biden responded, “Yes, he does.”

A widening humanitarian crisis across Gaza and tight Israeli control of aid trucks have left virtually the entire population desperately short of food, according to the United Nations. Officials have been warning for months that Israel’s siege and offensive were pushing the Palestinian territory into famine.

Biden has become increasingly public about his frustration with the Netanyahu government’s unwillingness to open more land crossings for critically needed aid to make its way into Gaza.

In his address on Thursday, he called on the Israelis to do more to alleviate the suffering even as they try to eliminate Hamas.

“To Israel, I say this humanitarian assistance cannot be a secondary consideration or a bargaining chip,” Biden said.

The president announced in his speech Thursday that the U.S. military would help establish a temporary pier aimed at boosting the amount of aid getting into the territory. Last week, the U.S. military began air dropping aid into Gaza.

Biden said the temporary pier, ”will enable a massive increase in humanitarian assistance getting into Gaza.”

Associated Press writer Josh Boak contributed reporting.

What happened to Gophers forward Josh Ola-Joseph?

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Josh Ola-Joseph started 42 consecutive games for the Gophers men’s basketball team to finish last season and start this season.

But over the past 10 games this year, the sophomore forward has barely seen the court.

Head coach Ben Johnson said Ola-Joseph had a headache at halftime of the 70-58 loss to Indiana on Wednesday, putting him back in concussion protocol.

“That’s why we couldn’t go to him,” Johnson explained.

The Gophers had only six players take the court for extensive minutes in the lethargic loss to the Hoosiers. Four starters — Elijah Hawkins, Mike Mitchell Jr., Cam Christie and Dawson Garcia — each played at least 38 minutes midweek and will be counted on again in the regular-season finale at Northwestern at 8 p.m. Saturday.

Ola-Joseph has played less than 10 minutes over the past 10 games.

“It’s more of, (we) only got so many minutes and I think Parker (Fox) has been playing really well,” Johnson said. “It’s hard when Parker (and) Dawson at that (power forward) spot are playing well. We’ve looked at (Ola-Joseph) as playing (there), so when those guys are rolling, you have to make a decision as a coach on what you want to do. It’s a numbers game. That’s it more than anything.”

Guard Braeden Carrington (concussion) missed a second consecutive game Wednesday, but he might be able to return Saturday. If he comes back, that would help ease the minute load for the starting trio of guards.

Expanding NCAA field?

The Athletic reported this week that the NCAA tournament might expand from 68 to possibly 72 or 76 teams in the near future. Johnson would be on board with that.

“I like it,” he said Tuesday. “I just think we expanded everything else. You look at conference realignment now. We are going to have a monster league (in the Big Ten next season). When you are eliminating a conference (the Pac-12) that is a Power 5 conference, I don’t know how you don’t expand it.

“It is entertainment,” he added. “And I don’t see how adding more games and causing more entertainment is a bad thing.”

While some playoff formats in other sports have watered down the product with more than 50 percent of teams in the postseason, the NCAA tournament currently allows only 18.7 percent of Division I teams into the field.

Quick homecoming

The Gophers weren’t able to practice at Williams Arena before their trip to Northwestern, so they planned to get in a session Friday afternoon at Christie’s former high school in Arlington Heights, Ill.

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