Minnesota
Minnesota hockey player paralyzed during game seeing ‘small miracles’
Hockey player paralyzed becoming ‘Miracle Boy’
Jackson Drum’s family was told he would probably be a quadriplegic for life after an injury during a hockey game. But since then, small changes already feel like enormous miracles.
(FOX 9) – A few weeks ago, Jackson Drum’s family was told he would probably be a quadriplegic for life, with no sensation or movement below his neck and never able to breathe on his own.
But small changes already feel like enormous miracles.
“They said to expect him to be fully quadriplegic,” Emily Haeg Nguyen, his aunt, told FOX 9. “We were holding onto hope.”
A sudden life-altering moment
The backstory:
Jackson, who hails from Parker’s Prairie north of Alexandria, plays hockey for the Coeur D’Alene Hockey Academy in Idaho.
On Jan. 24, he’d just scored a goal during a game in Vancouver.
Minutes later, a hard hit into the boards changed everything when he went into cardiac arrest on the ice.
Doctors in Vancouver fused two vertebrae in his neck, but told the family to expect lifetime paralysis: no sensation or movement below the neck and never able to breathe on his own.
‘The Miracle Boy’
Dig deeper:
Jackson has since began to recover a slight sensation of people touching him, and started making slight muscle movements.
Doctors in Vancouver couldn’t believe it.
“They just came in there and were shocked,” Jason Drum, Jackson’s father, told FOX 9. “They just said it was a miracle. Their own words!”
Using an alphabet board in his hospital room, Jackson nicknamed himself “the miracle boy.”
Move to Atlanta
What’s next:
Last week, Jackson was airlifted to Shepherd’s Center in Atlanta, which specializes in spinal cord injuries. The nearly $50,000 flight was covered by the generosity of donors to the family’s “Give Send Go” campaign.
He’ll be there for at least a few months, but what they continue to see is nothing short of astounding.
He’s been able to breathe on his own for about an hour a day, which wasn’t supposed to happen.
And his family shared a video of Jackson slightly moving his left leg.
“He started wiggling his shoulders,” said Emily. “And then just these past few days, he started wiggling a few fingers on his left hand. And I guess my sister said she saw him wiggling his pinky toe as well.”
Another fundraiser is planned for April 12 in Alexandria to help cover the costs of his care and to help prepare his home for his eventual return to Minnesota.
What his recovery looks like is still unknown, but what’s happened so far already has inspired the hockey community.
Minnesota
Here’s how much snow parts of Minnesota got on Saturday, Feb. 28
Storm reports in from Minnesota on Saturday, Feb. 28.
LANESBORO, Minn. (FOX 9) – Impressive snow totals were reported in parts of Minnesota after a narrow band of heavy snowfall worked its way across the state.
Minnesota snow totals for the last day of February 2026
Snow totals for Saturday, Feb. 28, 2026. (FOX 9)
By the numbers:
Many areas saw more snow than was expected before temperatures warm up in the coming days.
The following snow totals were reported across Minnesota:
- Lanesboro: 10 inches
- Preston: 10 inches
- St. Peter: 7 inches
- Stewartville: 7 inches
- Caledonia: 6 inches
- Nicollet: 6 inches
- New Ulm: 5.5 inches
- Rochester: 4.9 inches
- Mankato: 4.5 inches
The Source: This story uses information from the FOX 9 weather forecast and the National Weather Service.
Minnesota
East Range Police Department officer passes away
A police officer in northern Minnesota unexpectedly passed away earlier this week.
The East Range Police Department said that Sgt. Cody Siebert passed away on Friday, less than 24 hours after being diagnosed with a brain infection.
The department said that Siebert was known for his happy-go-lucky personality and that “if you couldn’t get along with Cody, it was your fault.”
Siebert started at the K9 program in Babbitt with K9 Taconite (Tac) before going to the East Range Police Department.
“The hole left by Sgt. Siebert’s passing will be impossible to fill,” East Range police said. “We at ERPD love you and will miss you always. We have it from here.”
Mesabi East Schools also stated that the district was “truly blessed to have him walking our halls, greeting students, encouraging staff, and building relationships that went far beyond the badge.”
Click here for a GoFundMe to support Siebert’s family.
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