Minnesota
Minnesota Twins announce plans for 2024 Minnesota State Fair
MINNEAPOLIS-ST. PAUL, Minn. (KTTC) – The Minnesota State Fair will, no doubt, feature all things Minnesota, and the state’s MLB franchise will be no exception.
The Minnesota Twins have announced how they will be present at the fair in 2024 and will be offering interactive games, giveaways and even special appearances by players, as well as the team mascot.
T.C. Bear, the Twins’ mascot, will visit the Minnesota Twins Experience Thursday, Aug. 22 to Saturday, Aug. 24, as well as Friday, Aug. 30 and Saturday, Aug. 31. T.C. will be available on these days for photographs from 12:00 p.m. to 12:30 p.m.
Twins players will also be part of the festivities, with reliever Griffin Jax and outfielder Matt Wallner visiting the Experience Monday, Aug. 26 from 12:00 p.m. to 1:00 p.m. Autographs, however, are not allowed.
Twins legend Tony Oliva will also be one of the players on hand at the Experience, visiting Friday, Aug. 23 and Monday, Aug. 26. Oliva will be present from 10:15 to 11:00 a.m. both days but is also unavailable for autographs.
Wiffle ball and lawn games will also be part of the fun at the Minnesota Twins Experience, along with much more.
The Minnesota Twins Experience can be found on the south end of Cooper Street at Judson Avenue, next to the International Bazaar.
It will be open from 9:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. each day the fair is in operation, regardless of weather.
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Minnesota
Crow Wing County sheriff addresses 2 agreements made with ICE
Federal officials are calling on counties to work with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
Several sheriff’s offices in Minnesota have what’s called a 287(g) agreement with the agency. The agreement can be controversial. Different models allow departments to help enforce ICE operations and to serve warrants on people inside their jails. Crow Wing County has both.
The county also houses detainees for ICE. Sheriff Eric Klang agreed to allow WCCO into the jail to talk about the agreements.
“We have the 287(g), the warrant model,” Klang said.
Klang signed two agreements with ICE last year.
“When I signed that thing back in March, that was really about operational efficiency, meaning that if we had arrested somebody, or we had a detainee here, we couldn’t serve them the detainee paperwork. So I said, ‘Hey, why can’t we serve it? What’s the big deal?’” Klang said.
So far, it hasn’t been used. The other agreement is a task force model allowing deputies to help enforce ICE operations. Seven deputies went through online training.
“I’ve been in law enforcement for 30 years, and I’ve always supported our local, state and federal partners. And I wasn’t going to change because of political winds or because of the emotionally charged, you know, commotion going on around the country. I mean, that’s just not me. I’m gonna, I’m staying steady on that,” Klang said.
Mayerle asked what the task force model looks like.
“If you have a felony warrant against you and you’re a target of an ICE operation, you can bet that we’re going to be a part of that. But if you are just here simply because you cross the border, we are not going out with ICE going after people like that,” Klang said.
He says they were called in to assist on what he calls a targeted arrest for the first time last week.
It was at El Potro restaurant in Brainerd, Minnesota.
“Was basically just standing by and taking a perimeter and transporting of individuals to our, to the jail, which they immediately took and they brought them to Duluth, to the federal detention facility,” Klang said.
He said the people ICE was targeting had a criminal record.
“They had criminal records, and there just happened to be a couple of them that ended up, as far as I know, have just crossed the border, so civil penalty, and they got scooped up in that arrest that we did as well,” Klang said.
The restaurant is now closed, with signs of support on the outside.
Klang says that only more recently has he started getting hate mail over the ICE agreements.
“I would say the majority of the population supports what we’re doing here in Brainerd. There are a few that are, you know, aren’t happy with me cooperating, collaborating with our federal partners,” Klang said.
Klang told us he thinks more departments should cooperate with the feds. He says he doesn’t like to see how the agents are being treated in the Twin Cities. And feels if locals were standing alongside them, some of the treatment of community members could also have been avoided.
“Who knows the community better than the local law enforcement? A lot of these guys just got deployed here. They didn’t get a chance to finish their field training. I mean, they got 40 hours in the classroom. They don’t know anything about the mobile field force. And then you compound that by people yelling, screaming, throwing stuff at them. I mean, you know, it’s no wonder they don’t know that they’re acting out. Not typical that we would act out or respond by somebody doing that. So if we were standing alongside him, we could say, ‘Hey, no, no, we don’t do that here. We can’t do that. No, you don’t. You don’t. You don’t, you know, flip them back off because they’re flipping you off.’ You know, we can’t just randomly stop a car, you know, we could. We could be helping them and we wouldn’t be in this situation, this crisis that we’re in now,” Klang said.
The Department of Homeland Security responded to WCCO’s request about the January arrests:
“On Jan. 26, ICE agents in Brainerd, Minn., executed judicial criminal arrest warrants for Jose Baraja Farias and Javier Francisco Montoya-Barboza, both illegal aliens wanted on federal immigration charges. Montoya is a criminal illegal alien with a conviction for driving under the influence. Illegal aliens have killed and maimed far too many Americans while doing just that. Baraja is an illegal Mexican national who was previously removed from the United States in 2007 and subsequently reentered the country without authorization, a felony, in 2010. Two additional illegal aliens, Alberto Core Vidal Neri from Mexico and Nilo Fernando Piruch Tsenkus from Ecuador, were also arrested for unlawful presence in the United States. Both Baraja and Montoya were transported to Douglas County for judicial proceedings, while the others are pending removal proceedings. ICE will continue its efforts to uphold immigration laws and ensure community safety. Those who are in our country illegally have a choice—they can leave the country voluntarily or be arrested and deported. The United States taxpayer is generously offering free flights and a $2,600 to illegal aliens who self-deport using the CBP Home app. If they leave now, they preserve the potential opportunity to come back the legal, right way. The choice is theirs.”
Minnesota
4 Minnesota natives, over dozen ex-Vikings competing in Super Bowl 60
The Minnesota Vikings, again, won’t be competing in the biggest game of the NFL season when the Seattle Seahawks and New England Patriots compete in Super Bowl 60 on Sunday. However, the teams feature more than a dozen former Vikings players and coaches, plus a few Minnesota natives.
Altogether, there are nearly two dozen Minnesota connections to this year’s Super Bowl contenders. Here is the breakdown by the numbers:
- 4 Minnesota natives
- 3 Seahawks: Nick Kallerup – Wayzata, Boye Mafe – Golden Valley, Ty Okada – Woodbury
- 1 Patriot: Wide receivers coach Todd Downing – Eden Prairie
- 3 Gophers alums
- 2 Seahawks: Kallerup and Mafe
- 1 Patriot: Jack Gibbens
- 7 former Vikings coaches
- 5 for Seattle: Offensive coordinator Klint Kubiak, assistant head coach Leslie Frazier, run game coordinator Rick Dennison, quarterbacks coach Andrew Janocko and safeties coach Jeff Howard
- 2 for New England: Downing and outside linebackers coach Mike Smith
- 11 ex-Vikings players
- 4 Seahawks: Starting QB Sam Darnold, linebacker Chazz Surratt, running back Cam Akers (practice squad) and cornerback Shaquill Griffin (practice squad)
- 7 Patriots: Starting center Garrett Bradbury, starting wide receiver Stefon Diggs, starting nose tackle Khyiris Tonga, offensive lineman Vederian Lowe, quarterback Joshua Dobbs, wide receiver Trent Sherfield Sr., and defensive tackle Jaquelin Roy (injured reserve)
- 22 total Minnesota connections
- 12 Seahawks: Kallerup, Mafe, Okada, Darnold, Surratt, Akers, Griffin, Kubiak, Frazier, Dennison, Janocko and Howard
- 10 Patriots: Downing, Gibbens, Bradbury, Diggs, Tonga, Lowe, Dobbs, Sherfield, Roy and Smith
Watch: Eden Prairie native Todd Downing pumped to coach in Super Bowl with New England Patriots
Watch: Boye Mafe’s family happy for him reaching Super Bowl with Seattle Seahawks
Kickoff is set for 5:30 p.m. on NBC.
Next year will mark 50 years since the Vikings last played in the Super Bowl.
Minnesota
Pardoned Jan. 6 rioter Jake Lang arrested in Minnesota after ice sculpture stunt
Why is ICE in Minnesota? What to know amid immigration crackdown
A federal surge of 2,000 agents, a $9B fraud probe and rising tensions after a fatal shooting have made the state the center of a nationwide immigration crackdown.
Pardoned Jan. 6 rioter Jake Lang is back in Minnesota, and this time he got arrested.
In a video Lang posted to X Thursday, Feb. 5, he is seen kicking over the letters of an ice sculpture reading “Prosecute ICE,” to make it read “Pro ICE.” In the accompanying text, Lang wrote he was arrested. The incident took place around 2:30 p.m. that day.
Minnesota State Patrol spokesperson Mike Lee confirmed with the St. Cloud Times Lang was arrested near the intersection of Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard and University Avenue in St. Paul, as Lang tried to leave the area in a vehicle.
“Mr. Lang was arrested without incident and brought to the Ramsey County Jail to be booked for suspicion of criminal damage to property,” Lee wrote in an email.
The ice sculpture was a permitted display, according to Lee.
Lang, whose full name is Edward Jacob Lang, was booked at the Ramsey County Jail, according to the online roster. As of 5 p.m. Feb. 5, no charges have been filed. The investigation remains open and active, according to Lee.
The Minnesota State Patrol states Lang is a resident of Lake Worth, Florida, which is consistent with paperwork Lang filed with the Federal Election Commission to run for a U.S. Senate seat in Florida.
Why is Lang in Minnesota?
Lang came to Minnesota to host another rally at noon this Saturday, Feb. 7, outside the Minnesota statehouse in St. Paul, according to the video. As of 5 p.m. Feb. 5, CBS News reports a permit has not been issued for the rally.
“President Trump we support you, we support ICE,” Lang said in the video. “Our country was made for Americans, not for Somalis.”
Lang, who has about 75,000 followers on Facebook, was in Minneapolis on Jan. 17, when he held his “March Against Minnesota Fraud.” Fewer than 20 supporters attended his march. Meanwhile, a counter-protest on the other side of the street rallied about 150 people.
The January protest came after former First Assistant U.S. Attorney Joe Thompson said that since 2018 at least half of the $18 billion paid through Minnesota’s Medicaid waiver programs could be fraudulent.
A small group of counter-protesters were on the same side of the street as Lang and threw water balloons and silly string at him. Lang left his Jan. 17 rally about 30 minutes after it was scheduled to begin. Counter-protesters followed him through downtown Minneapolis.
Corey Schmidt covers politics and public safety for the St. Cloud Times. He can be reached at cschmidt@gannett.com.
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