Minneapolis, MN
Exclusive | Ex-Minnesota bar owner whose family-run business was torched in 2020 riots rips ‘criminal’ Gov. Tim Walz: ‘Complete loss of leadership’
MINNEAPOLIS — A bar owner whose nearly century-old watering hole was torched by rioters during the 2020 George Floyd riots slammed Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz as a “criminal” who let the city descend into a lawless hellscape by refusing to immediately call in the National Guard.
Bill Hupp, who owned the Hexagon Bar in the Seward neighborhood, roared that the fiery destruction of his family-run business rested on Walz’s shoulders.
“It’s just complete neglect of the people you are supposed to represent,” the 74-year-old father of six said of Walz’s actions at the time.
“He could have called [the guardsmen] in [but] he didn’t,” Hupp added. “I didn’t have a drop of water put on my place. Not a drop of water for those three and a half days! Crazy. It’s [a] complete loss of leadership, totally.”
As mayhem coursed through the state’s largest capital, with rioters looting businesses and setting storefronts aflame, Walz, a 24-year National Guard veteran who took office the year before, waited an astonishing 18 hours after Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey pleaded for at least 600 guardsmen before finally sending in the troops.
The frightening chaos had ripped through the Twin Cities after local police officer Derek Chauvin killed George Floyd on May 25, 2020.
When Walz finally acted, on May 28, 2020, he sent just 100 guardsmen, according to a damning post-mortem from the state’s Senate and Minneapolis residents.
Here is the latest on VP pick Tim Walz’s time in the military
Those that did arrive did little to control the damage ripping through the city — including the destruction of the Hexagon Bar.
On May 28, 2020, Hupp said he, along with his son and a few of his son’s friends, had been boarding up the bar’s windows around 6:30 p.m. when roughly 300 people surrounded the venue.
The rioters began throwing frozen water bottles and shoes at them, while refusing to let the group leave, and calling them “white privilege.”
“We thought they were going to kill us. They pretty much kidnapped us,” he said, adding, “We didn’t know if we were going to get out of there.”
The group eventually managed to make their way home, but in the early morning hours of May 29, 2020, the 92-year-old venue erupted in flames after an arsonist and his two accomplices chucked Molotov cocktails at the back of the building.
“All of a sudden everything went bright white,” said Hupp, who saw the devastation on his surveillance camera.
All that remained were the charred brick walls.
“It completely burned my place exactly to the ground.”
Follow The Post’s coverage on Kamala Harris’ running mate Tim Walz:
Walz’s leadership during one of the worst crises to roil Minneapolis in modern history has come under renewed scrutiny since Vice President Kamala Harris tapped him as her running mate on the Democratic ticket this week.
Beyond dragging his heels on sending in the National Guard, Walz also has been accused of sharing confidential information with his then-teenage daughter, including law enforcements’ plans and the troops’ response times.
Hupp, who demanded an apology from Walz for the community, called Harris’ decision to pick him as her Vice Presidential candidate “absolute insanity,” and decried the state’s governor as “a criminal.”
“It’s crazy,” he said. “Why? Because of [his] total ineptness of leadership…[his] absolute ignorance of safety for people and the way of handling it properly.”
“He should have never been in the position he was in.”
Walz’s office did not respond to a request for comment.
Minneapolis, MN
Mayor Frey outlines timeline for selecting next Minneapolis police chief
MINNEAPOLIS (FOX 9) – Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey has released his timeline for selecting the city’s next police chief following the sudden resignation of former chief Brian O’Hara last month.
Timeline announced
What we know:
Mayor Frey announced a 16-week timeline on Tuesday for a national search for the next chief that will take place in six phases.
The mayor says the search will begin immediately and will start by gathering feedback from community stakeholders.
Phase 1
- Gather feedback from police department employees and hold council focus group.
- Develop police chief position profile and recruit materials.
- Community engagement
- Finalize recruitment strategy
Phase 2
- Launch recruitment campaign
- Post listings
- Accept and review applications
Phase 3: Screening interviews
- Conduct candidate evaluations
- Complete initial screening interviews
- Prepare search report and presentation of candidates
Phase 4: First-round interviews
- First-round interviews held
- The interview panel may include: Officer of Community Safety leaders, Minneapolis Police Department leadership, and police labor leadership.
Phase 5: Second-round interviews
- Second-round interviews held
- The interview panel may include: Officer of Community Safety leadership and city council members.
Phase 6: Final interviews and selection
- Final interviews with Mayor Frey, Office of Community Safety Commissioner Todd Barnette, and other city leaders held.
- Finalist selected
Nomination process
What’s next:
The mayor anticipates submitting his nominee to the council sometime in October or November. From there, the council will review the nominee and vote on the selection.
What they’re saying:
“Selecting a police chief is one of the most important decisions a mayor can make,” said Frey. “We’ve made significant progress to make Minneapolis safer over the last several years, but we still have work to do. This position demands someone who can lead a complex department, support officers, build trust with residents, and continue delivering results – both fighting crime and making reforms. Filling this role is a priority, so we’re going to conduct a thorough search and get this right.”
The backstory:
Former Chief O’Hara resigned last month after an investigation into allegations of him carrying on relationships with department employees. While the investigation never substantiated any of the allegations against O’Hara, investigations found O’Hara deleted a contact of one of the employees from his work phone. Investigators also say O’Hara violated requested confidentiality during the investigation process.
Bill Peterson was named interim police chief earlier this month. Peterson told media members that he isn’t interested in seeking the full-time gig.
Minneapolis, MN
3 injured in north Minneapolis shooting, no arrests made
Three people are injured after a shooting in north Minneapolis on Monday night.
The Minneapolis Police Department says that just before 8:20 p.m., officers responded to the report of a shooting on the 1600 block of Girard Avenue North.
Authorities found a man with non-life-threatening gunshot wounds outside a vehicle and a woman in the vehicle with at least one non-life-threatening gunshot wound. Both were brought to the hospital for their injuries.
Police were notified that a third person was injured and found a man hiding in a shed on the 1500 block of Girard Avenue North, who was also brought to the hospital with non-life-threatening gunshot wounds.
MPD is working to determine what led up to the shooting and how the three people are connected to each other.
No arrests have been made at this time.
Minneapolis, MN
Federal judge blocks DOJ investigation into Minnesota state, city leaders
A federal judge has quashed a set of grand jury subpoenas targeting Minnesota officials including Governor Tim Walz, Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey, and Attorney General Keith Ellison, ruling that the Department of Justice was attempting to “harass” Minnesota leaders into enforcing immigration policy. FOX 9’s Rob Olson has the story.
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