Minneapolis, MN
A violence interrupter working in Minneapolis is in jail days after he was shot

Watch CBS News
Be the first to know
Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.

Minneapolis, MN
Minneapolis police arrest man after Blaisdell Avenue shooting severely injures another

Minneapolis police investigate a shooting. (FOX 9)
MINNEAPOLIS (FOX 9) – A man is recovering from what police say are “potentially life-threatening gunshot wounds” after the man suspected of shooting him was arrested in Minneapolis on Friday night.
Minneapolis shooting injures man
What we know:
The Minneapolis Police Department says its officers responded to reports of a shooting in the 2600 block of Blaisdell Avenue just before 10:30 p.m. on Friday.
Police say they then found a man suffering from “potentially life-threatening gunshot wounds” in an alley. He was then taken to the hospital.
Officers then arrested a man after finding evidence of gunfire inside an apartment.
What we don’t know:
Investigators say they are still working to determine what led to the shooting.
Details on the suspect have not yet been released.
The Source: This story uses information shared by the Minneapolis Police Department and images taken by a FOX 9 photographer at the scene.
Minneapolis, MN
Minneapolis landlord opens homeless camps on his parking lots in defiance of city

At the risk of angering the city and his neighbors, Minneapolis developer and landlord Hamoudi Sabri has this week opened a private homeless encampment in the parking lot of a long-vacant building he owns on E. Lake Street. About 20 people have moved in.
Sabri says he plans to open a second encampment in the North Loop, at the same site where he had tried to operate a large encampment four years ago. At the time, overdoses, propane tank fires and heaping garbage led to its mid-winter closure by police.
He’s going to try again, Sabri said, because he’d fed up with the city’s homeless dispersal tactics, which have driven people struggling with mental illness and addiction from one hideaway to another. Homeless people end up breaking into his properties anyway, he said, so he would rather invite them to live in a contained place with portable toilets, garbage pickup and some form of management, where health and housing outreach workers could easily find them.
“I told the police, these guys, they’re exhausted,” Sabri said. “These guys are spilling around. So they need a place to stay, so I’d rather have them be in here, in one place, than have them every place.”
Hamoudi Sabri’s North Loop property currently does not have any tents, but the landlord says he will invite homeless people to live there again, as they had four years ago. (Susan Du)
On Friday morning, police officers attempted to clear the parking lot at 2716 E. Lake St. Most occupants broke down their tents and fled into the surrounding neighborhood.
Then Sabri arrived to intervene. In an interaction he recorded and showed to the Minnesota Star Tribune, he demanded officers leave the campers alone. They eventually left without forcing everyone to pack up.
Minneapolis’ Regulatory Services Director Enrique Velazquez told the landlord on Friday that by ordinance, no tent may be used as a dwelling “anywhere in the city of Minneapolis.”
“It’s a tough situation for sure,” Velazquez said in an interview. “The [city’s] Homeless Response Team has been to that site a few times already. They have provided some referrals with individuals that are interested in moving into shelter. We’ve made the county and their providers aware. But for all intents purposes, it’s not allowed. And even if a property owner does want people to go to a specific site so that they do not target or do damage, if you will, at any other locations, it’s still not something that as a city or as an enterprise, we’re in a position to allow.”
Minneapolis, MN
Minneapolis police searching for 38-year-old woman last seen in Loring Park

Minneapolis police are asking for the public’s help in locating a 38-year-old woman who went missing from the Loring Park neighborhood.
LaRohnda Danielle Latimer was last seen near her home on the 1300 block of Willow Street, according to the Minneapolis Police Department.
Minneapolis Police Department
She is described as 5 feet 7 inches tall and 175 pounds with brown eyes and long black hair. She has a butterfly tattoo on her chest, a tattoo that says “Leo” on her back and a tribal sleeve tattoo on her right arm, authorities say.
Police added that Latimer previously lived in Bloomington and St. Paul.
Anyone who sees Latimer or knows her whereabouts is asked to call 911. Anonymous tips can also be submitted online through Crime Stoppers of Minnesota.
-
Business1 week ago
See How Trump’s Big Bill Could Affect Your Taxes, Health Care and Other Finances
-
Politics1 week ago
Video: Trump Signs the ‘One Big Beautiful Bill’ Into Law
-
News1 week ago
Video: Who Loses in the Republican Policy Bill?
-
Culture1 week ago
16 Mayors on What It’s Like to Run a U.S. City Now Under Trump
-
Technology1 week ago
Meet Soham Parekh, the engineer burning through tech by working at three to four startups simultaneously
-
Science1 week ago
Federal contractors improperly dumped wildfire-related asbestos waste at L.A. area landfills
-
World1 week ago
Russia-Ukraine war: List of key events, day 1,227
-
Politics1 week ago
Congressman's last day in office revealed after vote on Trump's 'Big, Beautiful Bill'