Minneapolis, MN
Annunciation Catholic Church holds first Mass since deadly Minneapolis school shooting
MINNEAPOLIS — Mass was underway Wednesday morning to mark the beginning of the academic year at Annunciation Catholic School when bullets started to come through the glass.
That the shooting, which killed two students and wounded more than a dozen other people, occurred as Mass was being celebrated is something the Rev. Dennis Zehren is still reflecting on.
“I will be reflecting on that for the rest of my life,” Zehren said in remarks before Saturday’s Mass, the first for the parish since the shooting. “It’s something I will never be able to unsee.”
Zehren, who was at Annunciation Catholic Church during Wednesday’s shooting, recalled rushing toward the sound of the bullets, hopeful that he could help in some way.
“If I could have got between those bullets and the kids,” Zehren said, “that’s what I was hoping to do.”
Students Fletcher Merkel, 8, and Harper Moyski, 10, were killed. Fifteen other children, ages 6 to 15, were injured alongside three adult parishioners.
Six people remained hospitalized Friday, including a child in critical condition and an adult in serious condition, according to Hennepin Healthcare. Police have said all of the wounded victims are expected to survive.
The suspect died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound, police have said. Authorities have not identified a clear motive. Joseph Thompson, acting U.S. attorney for the District of Minnesota, said the suspect was full of hate and was obsessed with the idea of killing children.
During Saturday’s Mass, which was held at a separate campus building from where the shooting occurred, Zehren wept as he recalled the congregation being told to stay down as rounds rang out from what police have described as a semiautomatic rifle.
“The voices cried out, down, down, get low. Stay down. Stay down. Don’t get up,” he said. “When we were down there, in that low place, Jesus showed us something. He showed us, I am the Lord, even here.”
The congregation, Zehren hoped, put evil in its place.
“Together in that low place, we looked with Jesus into the eyes of the forces of darkness and death and evil,” he said. “And Jesus pointed, and he said, ‘See, can’t you see how weak it is? Can’t you see how desperate it is? Can’t you see that this can never last?’”
Zehren urged parishioners in their darkest hour to welcome the “light of a new day.”
“One little moment of darkness has brought forth a light that is far beyond anything we’ve experienced before,” he said. “I’ve never in all my years experienced such an outpouring of love and light and hope.”
Archbishop Bernard Hebda hoped that returning to Mass after the shooting would help the church’s parishioners and children reclaim a sense of normality.
“It’s that return to those things that are so familiar to us that I think is important,” he said before Saturday’s Mass.
Charlie Lyman, a parishioner whose three children attended Annunciation, said after Mass that the church has been a source of strength for family and the Southwest Minneapolis community for decades and will remain so.
“This place instills in us a sense of great faith to be good to one another, to help each other, to be kind to one another,” said Lyman, whose family helped build the church.
Tess Rada attended the Mass with her 8-year-old daughter, Lila Hostetler, a student at Annunciation, and said it was reassuring to hear Zehren share his feelings.
“Just hearing the emotion in his voice was very — it was nice,” she said. “It was like, you know these emotions aren’t escaping anyone. We all feel it, but we can feel it together.”
Dennis Romero reported from San Diego and Selina Guevara from Minneapolis.
Minneapolis, MN
Minneapolis City Council votes to extend eviction notice period
The Minneapolis City Council on Thursday voted to temporarily extend the eviction notice period for renters in an effort to help support residents impacted by Operation Metro Surge.
Under the ordinance, which was approved 7-5, landlords would need to wait 60 days — not the typical 30 — before bringing an eviction notice to a renter. If approved by Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey, the 60-day requirement would stay in effect until Aug. 31.
Supporters of the ordinance said Operation Metro Surge left residents out of work and relying on mutual aid networks to pay rent.
“Preventing eviction is always more cost-effective than trying to re-house someone who has been evicted,” said Council Member Robin Wonsley, who represents Ward 2.
Wonsley, alongside members Elliott Payne, Jamal Osman, Aisha Chughtai, Soren Stevenson, Jason Chavez and Aurin Chowdhury voted in favor of the resolution. Council member Jamison Whiting abstained from voting.
The city estimates Operation Metro Surge led to an additional $15.7 million in monthly need for rental support. Last month, council members approved $1 million in rental assistance for Hennepin County to help families impacted by the surge.
Minneapolis, MN
Minneapolis man arrested in Manchester after allegedly trying to meet minor for sex
MANCHESTER, Iowa — A Minnesota man has been arrested in Manchester after police say he attempted to meet someone he believed was a minor for sexual activity.
The Manchester Police Department said Robert Fenn Eselby III, 23, of Minneapolis was arrested Feb. 27 following an undercover investigation.
According to police, Eselby contacted an undercover officer posing as a juvenile through several social media platforms. Authorities said he was informed multiple times that the person he was communicating with was underage.
Investigators say Eselby sent explicit photos and videos and later arranged to travel to Manchester to meet the supposed minor for sexual activity.
Police said Eselby was taken into custody immediately after arriving in Manchester and was transported to the Delaware County Jail.
Authorities also said Eselby allegedly attempted to ask an arresting officer out on a date during the booking process.
Eselby faces one count of grooming, a Class D felony, and one count of disseminating obscene material to a minor, a serious misdemeanor.
Court records show he remains presumed innocent unless proven guilty in court.
Minneapolis, MN
What is a data center?
What exactly is a data center and why are so many being proposed across Minnesota? Professor Manjeet Rege, chair of Software Engineering and Data Science and director of the Center for Applied Artificial Intelligence at the University of St. Thomas, joins us to explain how these massive facilities store and process the world’s data and what the economic, environmental, and infrastructure questions are as Minnesota considers hosting more of them.
-
World1 week agoExclusive: DeepSeek withholds latest AI model from US chipmakers including Nvidia, sources say
-
Wisconsin4 days agoSetting sail on iceboats across a frozen lake in Wisconsin
-
Massachusetts1 week agoMother and daughter injured in Taunton house explosion
-
Maryland5 days agoAM showers Sunday in Maryland
-
Massachusetts3 days agoMassachusetts man awaits word from family in Iran after attacks
-
Florida5 days agoFlorida man rescued after being stuck in shoulder-deep mud for days
-
Denver, CO1 week ago10 acres charred, 5 injured in Thornton grass fire, evacuation orders lifted
-
Oregon6 days ago2026 OSAA Oregon Wrestling State Championship Results And Brackets – FloWrestling