Minneapolis, MN
Roper: To save Nicollet Mall, we need more doors
This empty storefront at IDS Center on Nicollet Mall previously housed Nordstrom Rack. (Eric Roper/The Minnesota Star Tribune)
Look at the fledgling Dayton’s Project, for example, where they can’t find tenants to occupy a gargantuan former department store. City Center’s sizable spaces are now boarded up. The glassy mall-facing retail spaces of IDS Center are all empty. I can count five restaurants that have cycled through a multistory space near 9th Street and Nicollet in the last decade.
I am told that retrofitting storefronts will be expensive and a tricky sell, partly since many of the building owners aren’t based here. It would also require a significant public-private partnership. Additional work would then be needed to entice small businesses. A 2023 report from the Minneapolis Foundation, “Downtown Next,” offers some strategies to address these hurdles.
And there are some potential sources of funding to incentivize the changes.
The city is redirecting about $6 million a year in taxes from certain buildings to a special “value capture” district that was supposed to pay for a streetcar on Nicollet and Central avenues. (The streetcar project is now dead, and a slight change in state law would loosen up that money.) City leaders also recently voted to impose a new 2% tax on hotel stays, which would generate about $6 million a year toward things that help boost tourism.
The empty storefronts of the Dayton’s Project, built into the former Macy’s department store on Nicollet Mall. (Eric Roper)
While we’re talking about storefronts, the city should get serious about another more basic problem that hurts the vitality of the mall: Windows.
The city has long had special rules for Nicollet Mall buildings, saying that their ground-level facades must have a lot of transparency. After all, seeing inside businesses makes cities more enjoyable to walk around. These rules have since been extended to much to downtown.
Minneapolis, MN
Judge denies third trial for man convicted in Minneapolis realtor’s murder
MINNEAPOLIS (FOX 9) – A judge has denied a motion by the defense for Lyndon Wiggins, the man who was seeking a third trial in the murder of Minneapolis real estate agent Monique Baugh.
Lyndon Wiggins files for another trial
What we know:
In November, Wiggins’ attorney Sarah Gad filed a motion for another trial, arguing the previous trial proceedings amounted to “a cumulative due-process violation,” which can only be remedied with a new trial. Gad listed several issues during the trial, including emotional outbursts from Baugh’s mother in the jury’s presence.
However, Judge Mark Kappelhoff denied the motions. In his ruling, the judge found that there weren’t any repeated emotional outbursts by Baugh’s mother, only a single instance when Baugh’s mother gasped upon seeing an image of her daughter’s body in court. After that gasp, the court directed the state to take steps to prevent further disruptions and the judge could not recall any other issues while jurors were present.
Fake quotes in motion
What they’re saying:
The judge also points out ten purported quotes from cited legal opinions that, in reality, do not appear to exist in the actual texts.
“Whatever the underlying genesis of these quotations, the submission of a brief with such an extraordinary number of nonexistent quotations undermines the weight of Wiggins’ brief and actual legal support for Wiggins’ arguments seeking a new trial,” the judge writes.
What’s next:
Wiggins is set to be sentenced on Monday for the murder. Wiggins faces a mandatory sentence of life in prison without the possibility of parole.
Monique Baugh murder
Big picture view:
Prosecutors accused Wiggins of being the mastermind behind the plot to kidnap and murder real estate agent Monique Baugh on New Year’s Eve 2019. Wiggins, working with his romantic partner Elsa Segura, co-defendant Berry Davis, and Cedric Berry.
Segura pleaded guilty to kidnapping in 2024 and was sentenced to 20 years in prison. Berry and Davis were both convicted by a jury of aiding and abetting first-degree premeditated murder, aiding and abetting first-degree premeditated attempted murder, aiding and abetting kidnapping, and aiding and abetting first-degree murder while committing kidnapping. They were both sentenced to life in prison with no possibility of parole.
The backstory:
Police say the group lured Baugh to her death under the guise of a house showing in Maple Grove. She was then forced into the back of a U-Haul truck, shot and dumped in an alley in Minneapolis.
Police say Wiggins targeted Baugh because she was supposedly dating a rival drug dealer.
Minneapolis, MN
GOP responds to MN fraud developments
Rep. Patti Anderson (R- Dellwood), who serves as Vice Chair on the House oversight committee, spoke on the recent developments about fraud in Minnesota, including accusations that GOP members were not sharing whistleblower tips with the Department of Human Services.
Minneapolis, MN
Minnesota State Patrol squad car hit on I-94 in Minneapolis, driver arrested for DWI
MINNEAPOLIS (FOX 9) – A 24-year-old driver was arrested late Friday night after crashing into a Minnesota State Patrol squad car on Interstate 94 in Minneapolis.
State Patrol squad car hit
The backstory:
The Minnesota State Patrol said just before 10 p.m., a state trooper was responding to a two-vehicle crash on I-94 near Franklin Avenue. While on the scene, a Toyota Camry driver struck the unoccupied squad car from behind. The squad car had its emergency lights on at the time.
MnDOT traffic cameras captured the moment the Camry driver slammed into the back of the squad car. The impact pushed the squad car into what appeared to be a tow truck. The Camry came to rest in a neighboring lane, causing approaching traffic to veer to avoid the vehicles.
The State Patrol said a passenger in the Camry sustained non-life-threatening injuries in the crash. The driver, a 24-year-old man, was arrested on suspicion of DWI.
The crash remains under investigation.
The Source: This story uses information from the Minnesota State Patrol and MnDOT traffic cameras.
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