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‘Is Minneapolis good?’ How a Russian transgender refugee found hope in Minnesota — and a friend at the airport

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‘Is Minneapolis good?’ How a Russian transgender refugee found hope in Minnesota — and a friend at the airport


Erik Georgievich Beda arrived at Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport last month on a United flight from Chicago with nothing but a small plastic bag containing his Russian passport and other paperwork.

Beda, who knows only a few words of English, had no money. He hadn’t eaten for almost 24 hours. He arrived in snowy Minnesota wearing all the clothes he had: a button-down long-sleeve shirt, green hiking pants and hiking boots without shoelaces.

Erik Beda receives a bag of essentials from Travelers Assistance shortly after his arrival with just the clothes on his back March 22, 2024, at Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport. The Johnston & Murphy store at the airport provided shoelaces to match his boots. (Courtesy of John Pundsack)

“When the plane landed in Minneapolis, I saw that there was a snowstorm outside,” Beda said through a translator. “It was very snowy and frosty. I had no warm clothes, no shoelaces, no food and no money. I decided that the airport police might be able to help me.”

Beda, 36, stopped the first airline employee he saw, and, using Google Translate, asked to be taken to “airport police.” He was instead brought to the Travelers Assistance station on Level D, where volunteers immediately began to help.

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“At first, I tried to explain as best I could in English, but my pronunciation is very bad, and no one understood me,” Beda said.

Through a Russian interpreter, the Travelers Assistance staff learned that Beda, a transgender male, had fled Russia with his partner, Ivan Beda, because of the country’s widespread crackdown on LGBTQ+ people and outlawing of gender changes in identity and gender-affirming medical care.

“They are considered a terrorist and an enemy of the state,” said John Pundsack, a Travelers Assistance volunteer who befriended Beda at the airport. “Erik and Ivan were truly running for their lives.”

The couple left Russia on Dec. 23, flying to Istanbul and then on to Mexico City. After two months in Mexico, they crossed the border into Arizona and were detained there.

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement would not keep Erik Beda in detention due to an inability to house a trans person, medical needs (hormones) and liability, Pundsack said.

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Only Erik Beda was provided travel from Phoenix to Chicago to MSP. Ivan Beda is still being detained; he is now at the Folkston, Ga., ICE Processing Center.

Retired teacher, travelers’ assistant

When Beda arrived at MSP on March 22, Travelers Assistance staff called Pundsack to help. Pundsack, 57, worked past his normal “Go Guide” shift to make sure Beda got the help he needed, including food and water, said Travelers Assistance operations manager John Hewitt.

Pundsack, a retired teacher who lives in Woodbury, went to his car and got his blue Minnesota Twins sweatshirt for Beda to wear. He found a backpack in Lost and Found for Beda to use, found a shelter in Minneapolis that could take Beda for the night and organized an Uber to transport Beda to Christ Family Kingdom Center shelter at 6 p.m.

Volunteers and staff also provided a coat, sweatpants, cash, bathroom supplies and a SIM card for his phone.

“They renewed my hope in humanity,” Beda said. “They give me trust in people.”

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Pundsack has been in daily contact with Beda since their first meeting.

“Saturday night I got a chance to chat with our young man and he is safe in a shelter,” Pundsack wrote in an email to Travelers Assistance staff on March 24. “He said he got a shower today and they even did his laundry. Such things we take for granted. He was so happy.”

Beda, Pundsack wrote, had been in contact with an immigration lawyer and an LGBTQ+ support group.

“I asked him if he has enough to eat, and his response was ‘Yes, and it’s tasty. I got fruit for dessert today,’” Pundsack wrote in his email. “It has been weeks since he has had fruit. Tonight we ended our conversation by him saying, ‘I think that nothing in life is accidental. Everything that happens is the necessary part of the plan. Some bad events turn out to be something good in the end.’ So now, hopefully, he can find his husband, and they can reunite and start life over.”

Pundsack and his husband, Joe Briol, and their neighbor, Katie Rust, have been helping Beda since his arrival. They contacted the Advocates for Human Rights on his behalf, and attorneys there are helping with his asylum case. They also helped schedule medical appointments, including an appointment with an endocrinologist. The dental clinic Pundsack uses, Grand Avenue Dental, donated the time and materials to fix Beda’s cracked molar.

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Pundsack, Briol and Rust also have organized a GoFundMe fundraising page to raise money for the Bedas to pay for Ivan Beda’s legal fees. They are looking for an attorney in Georgia to take Ivan Beda’s case, so a bond can be set for his release.

Erik Beda has an asylum hearing set for April 2025. Rep. Ilhan Omar’s office reached out to him last week to offer assistance.

‘Is Minneapolis good?’

“As members of the LGBTQ community, Ivan and Erik faced persecution their whole lives together in Russia from family and neighbors,” according to the GoFundMe site. “They experienced physical attacks and eventually they were threatened with arrest by authorities who found out that Erik was trans. Both men are educated biologists who specialized in zoology. They owned a home in the country and raised cattle.”

A young man crouches next to a sheep on a leash.
Ivan Beda at the Durov Animal Theater in Moscow in October 2018. Ivan Beda worked at the circus/theater as a zookeeper. (Courtesy of Erik Beda)

The Bedas had to flee when authorities found out about the couple and issued an order for Erik Beda’s arrest, Erik said. They abandoned their farmstead and gave Manny, their beloved Australian cattle dog, back to the breeder.

“We were able to leave because the order for my arrest was issued in my former female name,” Erik Beda said. “But my documents, including my Russian passport, had already been changed, and we went unnoticed. A lot depends on luck.”

Beda said he barely got through customs in Moscow because he had masculinizing hormone therapy drugs with him.

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“In Russia, testosterone preparations are equated to hard drugs,” he said. “You can go to prison for 10 years for them. Luckily, my endocrinologist did good paperwork for my medication — although she could pay for this with her position and freedom, so I was able to pass.”

The couple spent two months in Mexico City attempting to apply for asylum in the U.S. “We went every single day to request this appointment to seek asylum, and we were never granted an appointment,” Beda said. “We didn’t plan to stay in Mexico. Our goal was to get to the United States and receive protection. Only the United States could help in our situation.”

Out of desperation, he said, they flew to Tijuana, Mexico, and then took a bus to Mexicali, Mexico. From there, they took a taxi to the border near the city of Yuma, Ariz., he said.

Near the border, while still in Mexico, the men were assaulted and robbed of all their money and possessions, Erik Beda said.

Both men were taken to a detention center in Yuma, but because they didn’t have any transgender beds, Erik Beda was put on a bus to Phoenix.

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“He didn’t know anybody, but the volunteers at the tent city in Phoenix pooled their money to buy him a plane ticket to MSP,” Pundsack said. “Before they started their whole journey in Russia, they were looking at cities in the U.S. that were trans-friendly, and they learned about Minneapolis. So when they asked where he wanted to go, he said, ‘Is Minneapolis good?’”

Transition in Russia

Erik Beda grew up in Balakovo, Russia, and attended the Russian State Agrarian University-Moscow Agricultural Academy. He studied in the Faculty of Animal Engineering and met Ivan Beda in 2005 during a student activity day. They married in 2006.

They divorced six years later so that Erik Beda could begin his transgender transition. “In Russia, two men cannot be married, so we had to get divorced,” he said.

The next year, he went to St. Petersburg in order “to confirm a diagnosis of transsexualism,” he wrote in a seven-page document explaining his need for asylum.

The couple lived and worked in different cities in Russia, often working with animals at veterinary clinics and other places. The couple were physically attacked on numerous occasions and faced death threats and discrimination. “When my mother found out about my transition, she tried to kill me,” he said. “She hired people to ‘fix’ me.”

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Erik Beda said he almost died one night in August 2013 when he was attacked, kidnapped and beaten by three masked men. The men kept Beda handcuffed in an abandoned factory without food, water or access to a toilet for a day and then let him go, he said. When he reported the crime to police, they refused to investigate, he said.

The couple moved to a small village and went into hiding for five years to escape the persecution, and Erik Beda said he stopped his official transition.

“It was a very difficult five years,” he said. “The general population and the government both have very negative views of the LGBTQ community. Since the war in Ukraine started, the negative interactions have intensified because the government is looking for, like, inside, you know, traitors, basically, and so that community has been targeted.”

The Bedas married again in 2019. Last year, they moved to Moscow, where Erik Beda passed a psychiatric commission and received a certificate in May 2023 with a diagnosis of transsexualism, he said.

“I immediately went to have my birth certificate changed, but I was told that I did not have the right to do this as long as Ivan and I were married,” he said. “They demanded that we dissolve our marriage because after changing the documents, the marriage would officially become same-sex, and this is prohibited. But it was about saving my life, so we had no choice. We believed that the opportunity to make a transgender transition and be myself was more important to me than a marriage stamp in our passports.”

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In June 2023, he underwent a double mastectomy. A month later, Russia passed a law banning gender reassignment. The law prohibits individuals from changing their gender on official documents, including passports and identity cards.

Activists hold a rainbow colored banner.
Gay rights activists hold a banner reading “Homophobia – the religion of bullies” during a protest on Red Square in Moscow, Russia, on July 14, 2013. Russian lawmakers on June 14, 2023 approved in first reading a bill outlawing gender-affirming medical care and changing gender in official documents in a blow to Russia’s already beleaguered LGBTQ+ community. (AP Photo/Evgeny Feldman, File)

“If they find out that you’re transgender, they will do conversion therapy and then consider you as someone that’s spreading propaganda, and for that, you would be put in jail,” he said. “If you are part of an LGBTQ community, you are now being listed as part of an extremist group.”

Fortunately, he said, a few days before the new law went into effect, he was able to change all of his documents to “Erik Beda.”

Beda said the couple’s landlord knew he was transgender and reported him to the authorities. “We knew that I was on a list and could possibly be arrested,” he said.

Police left an envelope at the couple’s house at the beginning of October 2023 with a summons for Erik Beda to appear before the Investigative Committee on Nov. 11.

“Then I realized that there was nothing to wait for, and if I didn’t leave Russia now, I would be illegally convicted and I would serve a prison sentence on a fabricated case,” he wrote. “I was in a panic and didn’t know what to do. Ivan and I realized that the only way to escape persecution was to leave Russia.”

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Because the arrest warrant was in his “dead” name and his passport was in his new name, “they didn’t put two and two together at customs as I was leaving,” he said. “They didn’t have time to get the updated documents on the arrest warrant. I was very lucky.”

Divorce adds peril

Because the couple isn’t married, Erik Beda is terrified Ivan Beda will be sent back to Russia. He is praying that someone will step up and agree to be Ivan’s sponsor.

“His interview about the validity of his fears of persecution may not be approved due to the fact that our marriage has been dissolved,” Erik Beda said. “If this happens, he will be deported back to Russia. But if a sponsor is found, Ivan will be immediately released without an interview, and we can get married again. Then our application for asylum will become common to both of us, and our trial will be in Minneapolis.”

The couple had hoped to remarry in Mexico, but they didn’t have the proper documentation, he said.

“We hoped to get married here legally as quickly as possible,” he said. “The divorce was not part of what we wanted. It was not part of our wishes.”

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The couple talk every day by phone. The LGBTQ Freedom Fund provided money so that Ivan Beda can call each day from the detention center and talk for his allotted 5 minutes; Erik Beda, who is staying in a shelter in downtown Minneapolis, has found that the best cellphone reception for the calls is on Nicollet Island. Each call costs $3.95.

“I walk there every day,” he said. “We give each other updates on each other’s day and where we are headed. We don’t have a lot of time for much more. He can’t eat and can’t sleep. He’s very depressed. He is sad that we are not together.”

Kindness in Minnesota — and in immigration

Two people look up, one taking a photo with a cell phone.
Russian refugee Erik Beda, right, takes a photo of the Minnesota State Capitol dome as he and his friend John Pundsack, from Woodbury, tour the building on Wednesday. Beda said he can’t believe how kind the people of Minnesota are. (John Autey / Pioneer Press)

Erik Beda meets with Pundsack once or twice a week. They generally meet at the airport or the Capitol – places Beda can reach easily via light rail.

Pundsack, who taught fourth grade at Starr Elementary School in New Richmond, Wis., has worked to raise money for Erik Beda through friends and family.

Beda said he can’t believe how kind the people of Minnesota are. “All of this happening is very unusual,” he said. “I’m very grateful for it because in Russia, people don’t give you this kind of help. The people here are very nice and kind. I’ve been told they are that way because of the harsh winters.”

Beda said he was struck by the kindness shown at the immigration center in Yuma, too. The room had “transparent walls,” he said, and he was able to observe the officers working with newly arrived migrants.

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“I saw wonderful things,” he said. “One migrant woman was extremely tired and could barely stand on her feet. She had a tiny baby in her arms. She couldn’t sign documents, couldn’t get anything out of her bags because she was holding her baby. She almost cried from powerlessness and fatigue.

“And then an officer approached her – a very tall, bearded man. He very carefully took the child from her arms and cradled him as if he were his own, staying next to this woman the entire time she underwent the necessary procedures. When she finished, the officer took her to the seating area, gave her the baby, and brought her food. This was an amazing example of humanity for me. I can’t imagine a Russian police officer treating a migrant’s child like that.”

He was shocked to discover that officials didn’t shave the heads of migrants who had lice. Instead, he said, the women’s hair was washed with a special shampoo and combed out with tiny combs.

“One woman had luxurious hair down to her lower back,” he said. “They found lice on her, and three medical staff combed and washed her hair for about two hours. This was the second incident that struck me to the core. Everyone was very patient, kind and professional. I say ‘thank you’ to them for their humanity.”

Beda credits Grand Avenue Dental with giving him the “the most wonderful experience I’ve ever had with a doctor,” he said. “In Russia, it’s not like that at all. There is very little pain medicine. They yank out rather than fix them. It looks like a brand-new tooth. It is amazing to see the difference.”

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Pundsack said spending time with Beda has made him appreciate the little things in life.

“The two things he asked for the first day: ‘Do you think you could bring me dental floss and a nail clipper?’” he said. “I brought him an orange, and he called it a dessert. This whole experience has just taught me to appreciate everything that I have. It’s just, like, ‘Wow, look at this.’”

Hoping to settle here

Beda is hoping that he and Ivan Beda will eventually be able to live together in an apartment or house in Minneapolis. “It would be nice to have a place to live – that would be a dream,” he said.

Ivan Beda will need to work with an attorney in Georgia and prove his case at a credible-fear hearing and a bond hearing, Pundsack said. No court date has been set.

“If you had asked me about this three weeks ago, I would not have had a clue about any of this,” Pundsack said. “Normally, when you’re a travel assistant, you’re helping people with things like, ‘Oh, you’re at Gate G, you go down this way.’”

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He said his late mother, Irene Pundsack, who died in February 2021 at the age of 94, would be proud.

“It’s what my mom would do,” he said. “She helped a lot of homeless people. Her house in St. Cloud was donated to a group that helps people who are unhoused. That’s why I think I’m having all this success. She’s looking down and saying, ‘You help him. You help him.’”

Erik Beda wants people to know that the situation in Russia for the LGBTQ+ community is “catastrophic,” Pundsack said.

“He knows – and people in Russia know – that Minnesota is one of the best places to be transgender or gay,” he said. “That is why he came here. He knows if he goes back to Russia, he’ll be dead. We’re doing all we can to keep him safe.”

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BCA identifies armed suspect, Minneapolis officer who fired shots at him

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BCA identifies armed suspect, Minneapolis officer who fired shots at him


The armed man and an officer who fired shots at him in Minneapolis last week have been identified by the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension (BCA).

The BCA identified the suspect as 26-year-old Hanun Mohamed Awow and the Minneapolis police officer who fired his gun as Ariel Luna Sanchez.

Sanchez has three years of law enforcement experience and has been placed on critical incident leave, the BCA said.

Minneapolis police officer shoots at armed man, BCA investigating: MPD

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According to the BCA, officers responded around 12:30 a.m. on Thursday to a 911 call from a resident on the 3000 block of Fifth Avenue South, who said a neighbor had pointed a gun at their mom.

The caller told Minneapolis police that the neighbor, later identified as Awow, had a handgun and went back into his apartment. Officers went to Awow’s apartment and he opened the door and stepped out with a gun in his hand.

Police shouted for him to drop the gun and that’s when Sanchez fired shots, the BCA says.

Awow, who was not injured, was taken into custody by police. Minneapolis Police Chief Brian O’Hara said last week that he believed Awow was intoxicated at the time of the incident.

BCA crime scene personnel recovered a handgun from the scene and body cameras worn by officers.

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Minneapolis man is third convicted in Coon Rapids triple murder

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Minneapolis man is third convicted in Coon Rapids triple murder


An Anoka County jury has found guilty the last of three defendants in last year’s fatal shootings of a woman, her son and husband after he and two accomplices posed as UPS delivery drivers and went into the family’s Coon Rapids home looking for money.

Omari Malik Shumpert (Courtesy of the Anoka County Sheriff’s Office)

Omari Malik Shumpert, 20, of Minneapolis, was convicted Friday in Anoka County District Court of three counts of aiding and abetting first-degree murder in the Jan. 26, 2024, killings of Shannon Patricia Jungwirth, 42, her son Jorge Alexander Reyes-Jungwirth, 20, and her husband, Mario Alberto Trejo Estrada, 39.

Shumpert fatally shot Estrada after he fought back, prosecutors said.

He’s scheduled to be sentenced Jan. 9, a day after his older brother Demetrius Trenton Shumpert will go before a judge for sentencing.

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Jurors previously convicted Demetrius Shumpert, 33, of Minneapolis, and Alonzo Pierre Mingo, who prosecutors said orchestrated the robbery plan and pulled the trigger in the killings of Jungwirth and Reyes-Jungwirth.

Mingo, 39, of Fridley, was sentenced to life in prison in September.

Mingo, a former UPS seasonal employee, wore his old uniform while carrying a box to convince Jungwirth that he was delivering a package, prosecutors said.

Several surveillance cameras were mounted throughout the house in the 200 block of 94th Avenue Northwest. Video showed Demetrius Shumpert and Mingo forcing Jungwirth to open credenza drawers while demanding money.

All three victims were shot in the head, and two of the killings were on video. Two small children, both under the age of 5, were also in the home at the time of the killings but not injured.

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Court records said Estrada was suspected of drug trafficking and that law enforcement was on his trail in the days leading up to the killings. Afterward, investigators searched a Golden Valley storage unit that Estrada had rented under a false name and seized three bags of white powder, seven bags of psilocybin mushrooms, three bags of marijuana and a bag of meth, according to a search warrant affidavit.



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Minneapolis College teams up with Toys for Tots to provide holiday gifts for student parents

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Minneapolis College teams up with Toys for Tots to provide holiday gifts for student parents


For many student parents at Minneapolis College, the holiday season arrives during one of the busiest and most stressful times of the year.

Final exams, work schedules and family responsibilities often collide in December. This week, a Toys for Tots giveaway on campus offered some relief.

The college partnered with the U.S. Marine Corps Toys for Tots program to provide gifts exclusively for student parents. School officials say more than 145 student parents signed up for the event, representing nearly 270 children.

Veronica Krawiec is a nursing student at Minneapolis College and the mother of a young son, Christopher. She said balancing school, work and parenting can be overwhelming, especially around the holidays.

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Krawiec said she was able to find a Lego set her son specifically asked for this Christmas, something she was not sure she would be able to afford on her own.

She said the support she receives on campus has made a significant difference, pointing to resources like the Student Support Center and food pantry. Krawiec said those services help her focus on school without feeling ashamed for asking for help.

“As a mom most of the time I feel like I’m failing but like this this helps me a lot to not feel as bad,” she said.

Sharita Jackson, a first semester addiction counseling student and single mother of two, also attended the giveaway. She said resources like the Toys for Tots event help ease some of the pressure that comes with being a student parent.

Minneapolis College staff say the need among student parents has grown this year, in some cases doubling. The college estimates nearly 20% of its students are parents, and more than 70% of students identify as Indigenous or people of color, international, low income or first generation.

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In addition to holiday giveaways, the college offers a Student Parent Center, a food pantry, basic needs support and access to housing, financial and veterans resources. Staff say those services are designed to help students stay enrolled and succeed while raising families.

College officials say events like the Toys for Tots giveaway help reduce stress during the holidays and allow student parents to focus on finishing the semester strong.



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