Minnesota
How to buy Minnesota Vikings vs. Arizona Cardinals tickets
The Minnesota Vikings (9-2) take on the Arizona Cardinals (6-5) at U.S. Bank Stadium on Sunday, Dec. 1, 2024.
If you are in the market for Vikings vs. Cardinals tickets, information is available below.
Minnesota Vikings vs. Arizona Cardinals game info
- Location: Minneapolis
- Date: Dec. 1
- Time: 1 p.m. ET
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How to buy Vikings vs. Cardinals tickets for NFL Week 13
You can buy tickets to see the Vikings take on the Cardinals from multiple providers.
Minnesota Vikings vs. Arizona Cardinals betting odds, lines, spreads
- Spread favorite: Vikings (-3.5)
- Moneyline favorite: Vikings (-190)
- Total: 45.5 (O: -110, U: -110)
Odds courtesy of BetMGM
Minnesota Vikings schedule
- Week 1: Sept. 8 at New York Giants, 28-6 win
- Week 2: Sept. 15 vs. San Francisco 49ers, 23-17 win
- Week 3: Sept. 22 vs. Houston Texans, 34-7 win
- Week 4: Sept. 29 at Green Bay Packers, 31-29 win
- Week 5: Oct. 6 vs. New York Jets, 23-17 win
- Week 7: Oct. 20 vs. Detroit Lions, 31-29 loss
- Week 8: Oct. 24 at Los Angeles Rams, 30-20 loss
- Week 9: Nov. 3 vs. Indianapolis Colts, 21-13 win
- Week 10: Nov. 10 at Jacksonville Jaguars, 12-7 win
- Week 11: Nov. 17 at Tennessee Titans, 23-13 win
- Week 12: Nov. 24 at Chicago Bears, 30-27 win
- Week 13: Dec. 1 at 1 p.m. ET vs. Arizona Cardinals
- Week 14: Dec. 8 at 1 p.m. ET vs. Atlanta Falcons
- Week 15: Dec. 16 at 8 p.m. ET vs. Chicago Bears
- Week 16: Dec. 22 at 4:05 p.m. ET at Seattle Seahawks
- Week 17: Dec. 29 at 1 p.m. ET vs. Green Bay Packers
- Week 18: TBD at Detroit Lions
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Minnesota Vikings stats
- Total offense: 351.1 yards per game, 10th in NFL
- Passing offense: 234.0 yards per game, 10th in NFL
- Rushing offense: 117.1 yards per game, 15th in NFL
- Total defense: 317.3 yards per game, 10th in NFL
- Passing defense: 242.5 yards per game, 28th in NFL
- Rushing defense: 74.7 yards per game, first in NFL
Arizona Cardinals schedule
- Week 1: Sept. 8 at Buffalo Bills, 34-28 loss
- Week 2: Sept. 15 vs. Los Angeles Rams, 41-10 win
- Week 3: Sept. 22 vs. Detroit Lions, 20-13 loss
- Week 4: Sept. 29 vs. Washington Commanders, 42-14 loss
- Week 5: Oct. 6 at San Francisco 49ers, 24-23 win
- Week 6: Oct. 13 at Green Bay Packers, 34-13 loss
- Week 7: Oct. 21 vs. Los Angeles Chargers, 17-15 win
- Week 8: Oct. 27 at Miami Dolphins, 28-27 win
- Week 9: Nov. 3 vs. Chicago Bears, 29-9 win
- Week 10: Nov. 10 vs. New York Jets, 31-6 win
- Week 12: Nov. 24 at Seattle Seahawks, 16-6 loss
- Week 13: Dec. 1 at 1 p.m. ET at Minnesota Vikings
- Week 14: Dec. 8 at 4:05 p.m. ET vs. Seattle Seahawks
- Week 15: Dec. 15 at 4:25 p.m. ET vs. New England Patriots
- Week 16: Dec. 22 at 1 p.m. ET at Carolina Panthers
- Week 17: TBD at Los Angeles Rams
- Week 18: TBD vs. San Francisco 49ers
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Arizona Cardinals stats
- Total offense: 342.0 yards per game, 15th in NFL
- Passing offense: 201.7 yards per game, 23rd in NFL
- Rushing offense: 140.3 yards per game, sixth in NFL
- Total defense: 340.5 yards per game, 18th in NFL
- Passing defense: 218.6 yards per game, 20th in NFL
- Rushing defense: 121.8 yards per game, 17th in NFL
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This content was created for Gannett using technology provided by Data Skrive.
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Minnesota
Federal lawsuit challenges Minnesota’s abortion laws, alleging current rules are unconstitutional
MINNEAPOLIS — A lawsuit filed in federal court last Friday seeks to nullify Minnesota’s laws protecting access to abortion, arguing they violate the 14th Amendment of the U.S. Constitution.
Plaintiffs argue that the laws terminate parental rights without due process.
Women are not being informed about their rights when it comes to the procedure, the lawsuit alleges, resulting in thousands of “involuntary” abortions a year.
The lawsuit, filed by the Women’s Life Care Center, National Institute of Family and Life Advocates and several women who have had abortions, comes after Minnesota Democrats passed a law to protect abortion in the wake of Roe v. Wade being overturned and a 2022 court ruling overturned the state’s restrictions on abortion services, eliminating a mandatory 24-hour waiting period. In April 2023, the Minnesota Court of Appeals rejected an attempt to appeal the decision.
The filing says Minnesota’s current abortion laws do not provide any due process protections or equal protection in the termination of the mother and child’s relationship.
Among those being sued are Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison; Gov. Tim Walz; Department of Human Services Commissioner Jodi Harpstead; Planned Parenthood Minnesota, North Dakota, South Dakota; Planned Parenthood North Central States; Red River Women’s Clinic and several other doctors and health officials.
“Minnesota has a legal and regulatory scheme implemented, administered, and enforced by various state officials, which delegates the state function of terminating a pregnant mother’s rights and interests in her relationship with her child to defendants…all of which have interests in direct conflict with those of the pregnant mother and the child she wants,” the lawsuit states.
The Minnesota Attorney General’s Office said it will respond to the lawsuit in court.
The Department of Human Services said it does not comment on pending litigation.
WCCO has contacted the National Institute of Family and Life Advocates, Walz’s office and Planned Parenthood North Central States for comment but has not heard back.
“It’s about the women’s rights and what it comes down to, in short, is that some of the greatest rights mothers have in all of life are being destroyed. The complaint sets forth some of that,” Harold Cassidy, one of the attorneys for the plaintiffs, said in a statement provided to WCCO.
Women are terminating their pregnancies due to coercion or pressure, the lawsuit claims, and there needs to be more safeguards to ensure women are voluntarily getting the procedure, including a full court hearing and counseling beforehand that provides information on their rights and other available resources.
Three women who all say they are victims of abortions they did not want are also plaintiffs in the lawsuit. According to court documents, all women were pressured by the father of the child to have the procedure and allegedly did not receive counseling or assistance from their abortion providers.
The lawsuit demands abortion providers stop operating under “current post-repeal” abortion laws until there are laws in place that do not violate the 14th Amendment and ensure the patient completely understands the process.
“The basic argument in this suit is that they want to characterize an abortion as a termination of parental rights under constitutional law,” University of Minnesota law professor Jill Hasday said.
Pregnancy help centers
A big piece of the lawsuit includes the role of pregnancy help centers such as Dakota Hope Clinic and Women’s Life Care Center, two of the plaintiffs. The lawsuit claims these centers are “the protectors of the 14th Amendment rights of pregnant mothers,” and that the state is working with abortion providers to defeat “efforts to protect them.”
In August 2022, Ellison issued a consumer alert against crisis pregnancy centers, saying they “may pose as reproductive healthcare clinics despite not providing comprehensive reproductive healthcare to consumers,” and that pregnant women should instead consult with a licensed reproductive health care provider.
The consumer alert cited a study that found that more than 90% of pregnancy help centers do not have a licensed physician on staff and more than 95% do not provide prenatal or wellness care to pregnant women.
The lawsuit claims much of the alert contains inaccurate information and is harmful to the mothers’ rights and interests.
The lawsuit alleges that abortion providers have “waged war” against pregnancy help centers because the centers result in a loss of so-called abortion sales. It goes on to say that Minnesota’s abortion laws harm pregnancy resource centers’ financial, reputational and professional interests.
Abortion in Minnesota today
Abortion access is protected by a 1995 Minnesota Supreme Court decision and a state law guaranteeing a “fundamental right” to the procedure.
Minnesota officials have touted the state as a haven for abortion seekers and providers — having a “shield” law designed to protect people who come to the state for access and the doctors who provide the procedure. Additionally, the number of out-of-state abortion patients jumped from 9% in 2020 to 30% in 2023, according to the Guttmacher Institute, a research group that supports abortion rights.
In May, the Minnesota House passed the Equal Rights Amendment that protects “making and effectuating decisions about all matters relating to one’s own pregnancy or decision whether to become or remain pregnant.” That amendment goes before voters in 2026.
What’s next
University of Minnesota law professor Jill Hasday says she expects similar lawsuits to pop up in federal court going forward.
“For the anti-abortion movement, the overruling of Roe in 2022 isn’t the end, it’s the middle,” she said. “Their ultimate goal is to have abortion be illegal throughout the United States, either through federal legislation or through a federal court finding that abortion is inconsistent with the U.S. Constitution.”
Any ruling will take a while. Hasday says it could take months if not years for the case to move through federal district court.
“It’s very hard to predict the future, but my own prediction is that the suit is exceedingly unlikely to succeed, in part, because just of the many differences between abortion and involuntary termination of parental rights,” Hasday said. “Don’t see this case as this is the case that’s going to end legal abortion in Minnesota.”
Minnesota
Faribault inmate dies after being found unresponsive, DOC says
FARIBAULT, Minn. — Authorities are investigating after an inmate at a southern Minnesota prison was found unresponsive and later died.
The inmate was found at the Minnesota Correctional Facility—Faribault around 12:30 p.m. on Thursday, the Minnesota Department of Corrections said.
Staff tried to save the inmate’s life, the department said, and they were transported in an ambulance. Medics pronounced the inmate dead at 1 p.m.
“Local law enforcement and [the Department of Corrections] are investigating the incident,” the department said.
Officials gave no information about the inmate’s cause of death.
Earlier this year, family and friends of inmates at the Faribault prison accused state officials of withholding information about a series of lockdowns. The advocates said it was not staff shortages that caused the lockdowns, but drug overdoses.
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