Detroit, MI
Detroit family demands justice in murder of 11-year-old
DETROIT – It’s been one month since an 11-year-old was shot and killed while playing outside in a Detroit neighborhood.
Background: Drive-by shooting on Detroit’s east side kills roller skating 11-year-old
For the first time, we’re hearing from his mother and grandmother.
The drive by shooting happened in the area of Beaconsfield and Courville streets on Detroit’s East side.
Latresa Mines describes her 11-year-old son Latrelle Mines as happy, bright and someone who loved to play outside.
His grandmother, Evette Mines said, “It’s real bad when a kid can’t be outside playing without being killed or hurt and nobody is saying anything.”
Latrelle’s family is more than just frustrated. It’s been a month since he was shot while outside roller skating with cousins and still there’s no arrest and no description of the vehicle involved.
“The kids that were out there they were so in shock that they didn’t remember or know exactly what type of vehicle it was,” said Latresa Mines. “All they knew was it was a small type of car; they don’t know the color or what type of car it is.”
What this mother knows for sure is heartbreak. Life has not been the same without her son.
“All he wanted to do is have fun and enjoy his time, that’s all he wanted to do,” said Latresa Mines. “He was out there skating, he didn’t do anything to nobody, he was being a kid.”
Crime Stoppers is offering up to $2,500 reward for information leading to arrest. You will remain anonymous. This family is asking the shooter to do the right thing.
“They should come forward, speak up, turn themselves in Latrelle was only an 11-year-old kid. No matter what anybody had going on he was not in the middle of it and he did not deserve this so they need to come forward,” Latresa Miles said.
Any little bit of information will help. If you know something, call 1-800-SPEAK-UP.
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Detroit, MI
PWHL players bond with women’s hockey pioneers at Detroit clinic | NHL.com
Both generations on the ice Friday are intent on growing the game for today’s kids. Hartje and the Polar Bears believe an important step for women’s hockey in Michigan would be starting a Division I college team.
“I think if the PWHL establishes a team in Detroit, it will put a lot of pressure on the colleges to make sure there’s a D-I team in the state,” Hartje said. “Michigan has the second-highest number of players in the league, and it would have been a dream for us to be able to stay in the state to play.”
It’s been a problem for decades. Pierson had to turn down the offer from Boston University, because her family couldn’t afford to send her to New England for college. Hartje ended up at Yale University, and Megan Keller, who scored the gold medal winning goal for the U.S. in the 2026 Winter Olympics and plays for the PWHL’s Boston Fleet, went from suburban Detroit to Boston College.
Meanwhile, 2026 U.S. men’s Olympic team members and Michigan natives Dylan Larkin of the Red Wings and Zach Werenski of the Columbus Blue Jackets were able to stay in the state to play with the USA Hockey National Team Development Program, then based in Ann Arbor, before moving on to the University of Michigan in the same town.
“Megan’s brother played at Michigan State, and I’m sure she also would have stayed here to play for a Michigan school,” Skarupa said. “It’s imperative that Michigan gets a college program.”
Skarupa is serious about growing the game. She is working with Keller and the NHL Foundation U.S. to identify recipients for its $100,000 Empowerment Grant Program for Girls Hockey.
“Every time I go back to a city, there are new teams, new girls and new faces,” she said. “It’s a testament to growth all over the world, but it is tremendous inside the U.S.”
Detroit, MI
Retired Detroit sergeant faces new sexual assault charge involving 14-year-old victim from 2002
An additional case, this one involving a victim who was then 14 years old, has been added to the sexual assault investigation against a former Detroit Police Department sergeant.
Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy announced the latest charges on Friday against Benjamin Martin Wagner, 68, who now lives in Greenville, N.C. He had retired from the Detroit Police Department in 2017.
The victim in the additional charges was 14 years old when the assault happened in October 2002 in Detroit, Worthy said. The prosecutor alleges that Wagner approached the victim, pointed a handgun at her, ordered her away from the location and then sexually assaulted her.
In this case, he faces charges of kidnapping, two counts of first-degree criminal sexual conduct and two counts of third-degree criminal sexual conduct. An arraignment hearing took place Friday in the 36th District Court in Detroit. A probable cause conference is scheduled for April 7.
The woman is now 37 years old.
“She has lived with what happened to her for 23 years and has now bravely decided that she wants to be a part of holding him accountable,” Worthy said.
Wagner participated in a court hearing Thursday and was remanded to jail, one week after he was charged with 15 counts of kidnapping and rape in five separate sexual assault cases. All of those incidents happened between 1999 and 2003 in the northwest side of Detroit, with the victims being young women between the ages of 15 and 23.
The court dates for the earlier list of charges are April 7 for a probable cause hearing and April 14 for a preliminary exam.
Wagner joined the Detroit Police Department in 1989 as a police officer and was eventually promoted to sergeant. He retired in 2017 and moved to North Carolina.
Detroit, MI
Metro Detroit weather forecast, March 26, 2026 — 11 p.m. Update
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