Iron Range Hells Angels president charged with kidnapping, assault

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VIRGINIA, Minn. — The president of the Iron Range Hells Angels motorcycle club has now been charged with kidnapping and beating a man, whom he reportedly planned to hold at the group’s clubhouse for a “few months.”

Jerand Paul French, 38, of Eveleth, was arraigned Wednesday in St. Louis County District Court on charges of kidnapping, false imprisonment and fifth-degree assault in the late November incident that also allegedly involved the rape of a woman by other members.

Court documents allege that French initiated the attack after the male victim refused his command to stop associating with the female victim.

A prospective member of the group, Paul Anthony Debelak, 37, of Eveleth, was charged Tuesday with the rape and other related crimes. A third man was released from jail without immediate charges, but the investigation remains ongoing.

The male victim was found limping and shaking in apparent fear near the Eveleth Police Department by Chief Jesse Linde on the evening of Nov. 28. A criminal complaint says he broke down crying but denied medical attention. He indicated he lived out of town, and Linde dropped him off with another person.

Police went on to view city cameras in the area, finding that the victim apparently left the Hells Angels clubhouse, 413 Grant Ave., on crutches around 6 p.m. Two men gave chase before he was able to make it to the area of the police station, about two blocks away.

Paul Anthony Debelak, 37, of Eveleth

Both victims went on to meet with investigators on Dec. 1. The complaint says the man, who still had bruising on his leg, expressed fear that the Hells Angels could find them and disclosed that the president had been upset about his association with the woman.

Investigators said both victims were visiting a residence on Summit Street in Eveleth on Nov. 27 when French, Debelak and two other men arrived. The president allegedly dragged the man downstairs, repeatedly punching and kicking him, while Debelak forced the woman into a bathroom. She told investigators that both Debelak and another man raped her.

The complaint says the man was then brought to the clubhouse, where French continued to assault him as other members recorded video. He reportedly informed the victim he would remain there “for the next few months and could not leave.”

The man, however, escaped to the police department the next day when a prospect escorted him to a gas station. He told police he “decided to make a run for it,” ditching the crutches as he hurried toward the safety of the police chief.

The Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension executed a search warrant at the Summit Street residence last Friday, finding the home “extremely filthy” with the exception of the “spotless” bathroom, which had a bleach jug sitting near the sink.

Two men at the house acknowledged that the Hells Angels president and others had showed up on Nov. 27, assaulting the male victim and taking him out to a van, according to the complaint. Asked about the rape, one reportedly started crying and denied that it had occurred.

Police said street cameras near the Grant Avenue clubhouse also confirmed the group arriving with the kidnap victim around 12:55 p.m. that day.

French has prior convictions, including first-degree burglary, third-degree assault and several disorderly conduct offenses in Minnesota, along with misdemeanor battery in Florida. His leadership of the local Hells Angels chapter was openly discussed as he unsuccessfully sought the restoration of his firearm rights last year.

His attorney argued the group has been involved in charitable causes such as holiday toy drives, maintaining a working relationship with police without “one criminal incident or act of violence.” But prosecutors warned of the notorious club’s “history and reputation for violence.”

“Disagreements and confrontations with members of other local motorcycle clubs, law enforcement and even the general public often lead to heated and emotionally charged situations,” Assistant St. Louis County Attorney Bonnie Norlander wrote at the time.

Debelak, meanwhile, is charged with first-degree criminal sexual conduct, kidnapping, false imprisonment and fifth-degree assault. He also has prior convictions, including domestic assault, reckless handling of a dangerous weapon, theft, and several alcohol-related driving offenses.

Judge Robert Friday set bail at $500,000 with conditions or $750,000 without for Debelak, and $300,000 conditional or $500,000 unconditional for French.

Both could face significant prison time if convicted, with St. Louis County prosecutor Chris Florey indicating he will seek aggravated sentences.

The BCA said the investigation is “active and ongoing,” and additional charges could still be filed.

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GOP presidential hopefuls grapple with Texas abortion case

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As a Texas woman’s case has tested the state’s abortion laws and thrust the issue back into the national spotlight, it has raised eyebrows even among presidential hopefuls in the GOP, the party that has pushed for restrictive abortion laws and even outright bans.

Texas was one of several states that adopted an abortion ban after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in June 2022. Kate Cox, a 31-year-old mother of two, sought a court order that would allow her to receive an abortion after learning that her fetus was developing with a fatal abnormality likely to result in stillbirth or the death of the baby shortly after birth. However, the Texas Supreme Court blocked a lower court ruling granting her permission to undergo the procedure, shortly after Cox traveled out of state to seek care.

Here’s what the Republican presidential field has said so far:

“I don’t know the exact details of the Texas law, but what I do know is my heart breaks for her,” Nikki Haley, former ambassador to the U.N. and South Carolina governor, said in an interview with CNN on Wednesday, referring to Cox.

“When I say we need to have compassion, this is exactly what I’m talking about. When you look at someone’s experience, we should never want to see someone with a rare condition who has to deliver a baby any more than we should want to see a mom have an abortion at 37, 38, 39 weeks,” continued Haley, who describes herself as “pro-life.” These comments closely mirrored her statement to NBC News on Tuesday.

Haley has staked out a more moderate position on abortion than several of her rivals, saying she doesn’t “judge anyone for being pro-choice” and that regulating abortion should be left up to the states. She has also noted that Republicans pushing for a federal abortion ban are not being forthright about the feasibility of passing such legislation, which would require 60 Senate votes.

Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie was the only candidate to express outright opposition to the Texas Supreme Court’s decision.

“I think the Texas Supreme Court was wrong,” Christie told The Associated Press on Wednesday. And I think that, in a situation like this, you’re not protecting any life because the child clearly has been diagnosed with having a fatal illness. So all you’re doing is putting the life of the mother at risk by making her carry it to term.”

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, during a CNN town hall on Tuesday night, declined to address Cox’s case directly. Instead, he called for a compassionate approach to the issue in general and shifted to speaking about a six-week abortion ban he signed in Florida, which has carveouts for rape, incest, the life of the patient and fatal fetal abnormalities.

“I understand they’re very difficult and these things get a lot of press attention,” DeSantis said. “But that’s a very small percentage that those exceptions cover. You know, there’s a lot of other situations where we have an opportunity to realize really good human potential, and we’ve worked to protect as many lives as we could in Florida.”

Biotech entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy also avoided commenting directly on Cox’s situation, instead telling NBC News on Monday that he believed the issue of abortion was reserved for the states.

Former President Donald Trump has not spoken of the Texas case, and his campaign did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Wednesday.

Will Bunch: Liz Magill’s ouster at Penn will help the worst people take down free speech, higher ed

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A band of raiders never stops at just one scalp. Just minutes after the University of Pennsylvania’s president Liz Magill pulled the plug on her stormy 17-month tenure, under intense pressure for her handling of antisemitism questions on Capitol Hill, her chief inquisitor — GOP Rep. Elise Stefanik of New York — was back on the battlefield calling for more.

“One down. Two to go,” a clearly ebullient Stefanik posted on X/Twitter, urging on her dream of an academic Saturday Night Massacre that would also take down the two college leaders who testified last week along with Magill — MIT’s Sally Kornbluth and Claudine Gay of Harvard, which, in a controversy with more ironies than a Jane Austen novel, happens to be Stefanik’s alma mater.

But what Stefanik promised on Saturday night, and what her allies are cheering on, goes well beyond a few high-profile resignations. She promised the current crisis — over what constitutes antisemitism on college campuses, and how administrators like Magill have been handling it — will lead to more congressional hearings on “all facets of their institutions’ negligent perpetration of antisemitism including administrative, faculty, and overall leadership and governance.”

Last weekend, Magill’s resignation — urged on by some of Penn’s billionaire donors withholding massive donations, amid intense criticism from both political parties including the Biden White House– has been the lead national story everywhere. It’s bumped back coverage of Israel’s intensifying strikes on Gaza that have killed hundreds every day while taking out top Palestinian scholars and journalists, as well as holy sites. And it’s drowned out the Biden administration’s international pariah move of vetoing a UN ceasefire resolution backed by 13 out of 15 Security Council members. No wonder some folks prefer to keep the focus on a college campus 11,000 miles west of this carnage.

The price of ceding the high ground

Magill’s legalistic, bloodless, deer-in-the-headlights response to incessant probing by Stefanik and other lawmakers was not good — not just because she blew a chance to condemn the never-ending horror of antisemitism but also because it was a weak defense of free speech on campus. I’m not writing to express any regret over her departure. It seemed to me she governed Penn like a candle in the wind, wanting to defend academic freedom but then betraying those values, as when the university tried to ban a film presenting legitimate criticisms of Israel’s policies and then threatened to punish students for showing it anyway.

By ceding the high ground to demagogues like Stefanik, the fallout from this affair is more likely in the long run to hamper the fight against antisemitism than to bolster it, which is beyond unfortunate. Because no one can deny the scourge of antisemitism — especially not here in Pennsylvania, where a right-wing fanatic ginned up by immigration lies entered a Pittsburgh synagogue and murdered 11 Jews with the kind of AR-15 killing machine that Stefanik and her Republican colleagues have no interest in holding hearings about, let alone outlawing.

And there’s no doubt that antisemitic incidents are on the rise — such reports increased 35% from 2021 to 2022 and then have spiked exponentially this year, as tensions over the war in the Middle East have boiled over during contentious protests here at home. Since the Hamas terror attack on Oct. 7 triggered the fighting, Islamophobia has also risen dramatically. College administrators have a responsibility to come down on anyone committing acts of violence, threatening actual violence, or undertaking vandalism, but that’s not really what the Stefanik-Magill showdown was about.

Stefanik’s relentless questioning didn’t focus on actions at Penn — like October’s antisemitic graffiti on campus — but on words, and especially protesters’ use of the term ” intifada,” which marchers see as a call for liberation but Israel’s staunchest defenders claim is an invitation to pogrom. No doubt the term is controversial and offensive to some, but Magill was actually right to insist there’s a line between speech and action.

I agree with the tiny handful of commentators not joining the anti-Magill pile-on. That includes the New York Times’ Michelle Goldberg, who wrote that Magill and her colleagues walked into a trap by allowing Stefanik to define common pro-Palestinian rhetoric as “antisemitism” and then demanding what Goldberg called “egregious violations of free speech.” And also New York Magazine’s Jonathan Chait, who wrote after Magill’s resignation that the college presidents were right to insist that schools regulate conduct but not words, stating that “what Stefanik was demanding was the wholesale ban on rhetoric and ideas that Jews find threatening, regardless of context.”

Shortly before Magill’s resignation, Jeremy C. Young, who directs the Freedom to Learn program at PEN America (full disclosure; I’m a member), told me that the literary-free-expression group is deeply concerned that the outcry over antisemitism is already driving a bevy of legislative proposals with alarming implications for free speech. He cited proposed laws that would require universities to be “neutral” on controversial issues, proposals to force schools to embrace the strictest definition of antisemitism that includes opposing the idea of Zionism, and bans on the most aggressive pro-Palestinian groups like the one recently laid down in Florida by Gov. Ron DeSantis.

Young stressed he isn’t disagreeing that campus antisemitism is a problem or that college presidents have made a mess of things, but he noted those driving the controversy are attacking other topics — diversity initiatives, tenure for professors, and what universities are teaching students. He said antisemitism is “being used as a pretext to take power over college decisions from neutral arbiters and hand it to politicians who want to enforce ideological control on campus. Silencing and chilling speech on campus cannot be the solution.”

Echoes of no decency

But that’s exactly the hoped-for solution from the avatars of America’s new McCarthyism, who are seizing on young people’s pro-Palestinian activism, and a handful of the most despicable acts, to foment a new kind of ” Red Scare” that has both the nation’s extreme right and the billionaire winners of our class wars in sight of their real goal. That would be to cripple our colleges and universities as incubators of critical thinking that might cause the next generation to question their authority.

Indeed, Stefanik makes for an ideal 21st-century Joe McCarthy, since she has no sense of decency. It’s not just that her passion as an anti-antisemitism crusader was nowhere to be seen recently when her conservative allies were out in the schools banning books like The Diary of Anne Frank. Far worse, Stefanik, in 2022 campaign ads, seemed to be endorsing the racist “great replacement theory” that mass immigration is a liberal plot, using inflammatory rhetoric about a scheme to “overthrow our current electorate and create a permanent liberal majority in Washington.” It’s exactly that idea that animated the madman who shot up Pittsburgh’s Tree of Life synagogue.

How much of this is about antisemitism, and how much of this is about something else? — such as the fact that the college presidents who testified on Capitol Hill don’t look like the 300 years of school leaders who came before them. Bill Ackman, billionaire hedge fund manager and deeply disgruntled Harvard alum and donor, said the quiet part out loud last week when he made the repulsive allegation in a tweet that his alma mater’s first Black president– a child of Haitian immigrants, an award-winning scholar — was only hired to satisfy diversity goals.

And the likes of Ackman, Stefanik and their allies won’t stop at reversing a half-century of diversity on campus — not when their bigger strategic goal of weakening the already tottering American way of higher education suddenly seems within reach. Last week, Sen. J.D. Vance, the billionaire-backed Ohioan, tweeted that “if universities keep pushing racial hatred, euphemistically called DEI, we need to look at their funding.” In the swirling vortex that led to Magill’s resignation, these calls for financial retribution will accelerate — and students will suffer.

It’s happened before

We know this because it’s happened before. Today’s campus unrest is a distinct echo of the Vietnam era, when students at many of the same universities now under attack also led massive protests against U.S. militarism, making their parents’ generation uneasy. In 1966, Ronald Reagan was elected governor of California by running against campus unrest, and he promised to impose tuition on its virtually free public universities, stating taxpayers ” should not subsidize intellectual curiosity.” His philosophy inspired a generation of conservative lawmakers to privatize and devalue higher education, as tuition soared and student debt climbed to $1.75 trillion. Now, with public faith in universities at an all-time low, Reagan’s political heirs might finish the job.

The first step would be painfully familiar to anyone familiar with the anti-communist hysteria of the 1950s when McCarthyism reigned: a climate of fear and silence on college campuses. Here at Penn, the Wharton School’s board of advisors — the hedge fund-flavored panel that played an instrumental role in driving out Magill — has also proposed a new code that critics say goes too far in curbing campus free speech. Jonathan Friedman, PEN America’s director of free expression, blasted it as vague and “patently wrongheaded and could chill an ocean of speech on campus.”

In the current climate of fear and loathing, it won’t be the last such proposal.

Praise the courage of those defending free speech

With Magill’s departure, those who want to fight back for free speech face an increasingly uphill struggle. It’s easy for folks like the Biden White House to follow the path of least resistance and pretend that by slam-dunking Penn’s ex-president they are claiming the moral high ground, even as they sell Israel more tank shells like the one that was used to deliberately target and kill a Reuters journalist. It’s a lot harder to defend free expression knowing that the worst people will even try to brand you as an antisemite, just as those who once called out McCarthyism were stigmatized as “fellow travelers.”

Instead of jumping on the Magill scrum, let’s praise the courage of those defending our First Amendment rights. In a saga packed with irony, nothing would be more ironic than allowing a manipulated definition of “antisemitism” to shut down learning and inquiry, which are so central to the great Jewish traditions.

Will Bunch is national columnist for the Philadelphia Inquirer.

Cuban boxer David Morrell Jr. adopted the Twin Cities as home. He’s returning with a newfound purpose.

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David Morrell Jr. defected from his native Cuba in June 2018. He left his family behind and escaped to Mexico via speedboat under the cover of darkness. He spent more than a year there waiting for a work visa to legally enter the United States with hopes of starting a professional boxing career.

Then he settled in the Twin Cities, of all places.

Now a rising star at 168 pounds, Morrell got his start fighting out of The Armory in Minneapolis, and he will forever be grateful for that. He proudly reps the Twin Cities as home, and while he much prefers the summers to the winters, he still has vivid memories of running around the frozen lakes to stay in shape.

Not only has Morrell gone undefeated since making his professional debut, he has flashed his generational skill set, demolishing anybody who dares to stand across from him.

Everything will come full circle on Saturday night when Morrell (9-0-0, 8 KOs) returns to The Armory to defend his WBA Super Middleweight title against challenger Sena Agbeko (28-2-0, 22 KOs). Though the fight itself should be nothing more than a stepping stone for Morrell on his continued path to greatness, it will be symbolic of how much his life has changed since the last time he fought in his adopted hometown more than a year ago.

Nowadays, Morrell has a newfound purpose, as he and his girlfriend Isis Rodriguez are proud parents to their 3-month-old son Gabriel David.

“I feel like fatherhood has really changed my life,” Morrell said. “Everything I do is for my family.”

That includes his parents, Rafael and Betty, who have emigrated from Cuba to the United States. They hadn’t seen their son since he left in June 2018, and thus, this will be the first time in his professional boxing career that they get to watch him fight in person.

“I have everybody together for the first time,” Morrell said “This moment is going to be so special.”

If everything goes according to plan this weekend, Morrell might not be back at The Armory anytime soon. His trajectory in the 168-pound division has him on the precipice of main events usually reserved for Las Vegas. Fittingly, Morrell got a taste of the glitz and glam earlier this year, stopping Yamaguchi Falcao (24-2-1, 10 KOs) in emphatic fashion at a sold-out T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas.

“I’m feeling great right now,” Morrell said. “I’m in the prime of my career, and I’m hitting my stride.”

As of right now, Morrell has his eyes set on David Benavidez (28-0-0, 24 KOs) and the No. 1 contender in the weight class headlined by the legendary Canelo Alvarez (60-2-2, 39 KOs). The only issue for Morrell is he’s such a big threat that many of the top names in his weight class won’t take the fight.

How is he navigating that?

“It’s actually pretty simple,” Morrell said. “I’ve got to stay focused and the good things will come. I know if I keep working, eventually I’ll become a legend. That’s the bottom line.”

Though that might take him away away from the Twin Cities along the way, Morrell vows to never forget his roots.

“To me, fighting in Minneapolis at The Armory is the same as fighting in Las Vegas,” he said. “It’s my hometown. It’s always going to be special for me. I love it there.”

He can’t wait to show off the Twin Cities to his family this weekend. He’s hoping to put on a show in the process.

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