North Dakota
Investigators tight-lipped on fatal Fargo shooting; here’s what authorities are — and are not — saying
FARGO — Authorities are answering few questions about a Friday, July 14,
shooting in Fargo that killed a police officer,
including why the shooter opened fire.
The Fargo Police Department has declined to discuss the
Friday shooting
that killed 23-year-old
Officer Jake Wallin.
Fargo Chief Communications Officer Gregg Schildberger referred questions to the North Dakota Bureau of Criminal Investigation, or BCI, noting the state agency is leading the investigation.
Fargo Police Chief David Zibolski did not return a message left by The Forum seeking comment on this story, but City Deputy Chief Communications Officer Katie Ettish said in an email that he was unavailable for an interview with The Forum on Monday.
“The first thing we always want to know in a situation like this is why,” Zibolski said Saturday during a news conference identifying those involved in the incident. “Why would somebody do this? What happened?”
Questions remain unanswered about the motive behind the actions of 37-year-old Fargo resident Mohamad Barakat, who Zibolski identified as the shooter.
The Forum asked authorities how Barakat came to North Dakota, how long he lived in the state, what kind of gun he used, how he obtained it and whether the firearm was obtained legally.
North Dakota Attorney General Drew Wrigley, who oversees the BCI, said the case remains “a very active investigation,” adding he couldn’t comment. He said he is committed to discussing the case when the investigation is complete, though he didn’t have a timeline for when that would happen.
When asked about motive, including indications that Barakat’s actions were part of a terror attack, Wrigley said the BCI doesn’t have enough information to make an assessment on that. Agents are being open-minded and gathering as much information as possible before drawing conclusions, he said.
“All of that is being assessed,” he said. “We are making a full and complete assessment of this individual, his affiliations, his connections and the possibility of others’ involvement.”
Wrigley confirmed the BCI is the lead investigating agency, but he described efforts to find out what happened as a joint investigation with the FBI and Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, or ATF.
“We’re on the ground here,” Wrigley said. “It’s fair to say that the BCI is the lead investigative agency on it, but we are working very much hand-in-glove with the FBI. They’ve been very helpful.”
The FBI did not return a message requesting comment. North Dakota U.S. Attorney Mac Schneider, who was present during the Saturday news conference, declined to comment on the case, including why the FBI was involved.
“The only comment I can make is that the investigation is ongoing,” Schneider said.
The ATF frequently responds to incidents during which officers are injured, spokeswoman Ashlee J. L. Sherrill said. The entire Fargo office responded to the Friday shooting, she said.
ATF agents can help interview bystanders, but the most important service the ATF can offer is running traces on firearms used in a shooting to determine how they were obtained, Sherrill said.
The ATF is working to trace the gun used in Friday’s shooting, Zibolski said.
Wrigley said agencies are not aware of a danger to the public.
“If we were, we would absolutely be talking about that, but we are not,” he said. “If we had an imminent threat, an immediate danger of some kind to the public, people can be assured that we would be sharing that information. We don’t have that information right now, and if that were to change, we would change our communication posture.”
Fargo Mayor Tim Mahoney said he hasn’t been given status updates on the investigation, including possible motive. The young ages of the officers involved in the shooting made the tragedy more upsetting, he said.
“It’s very hard,” he said, adding that the shooting is all the more unfathomable in the absence of any known motive. “It’s a horrible event. I’d like to know why.”
‘Put the pieces of the puzzle together’
Aside from names of the officers and suspect, few details have been released regarding the shooting.
“Down the road, we will know the whys,” Zibolski said Saturday, adding he is confident the FBI and BCI will “put the pieces of the puzzle together as to why this individual chose to do this.”
The Fargo Police Department is “not in a position to provide many details,” regarding the case, Zibolski said Saturday. Police were responding to a routine crash when Barakat shot at officers, he said.
“For no known reason at all, a violent gunman attacked our officers, firing multiple rounds, striking three of them,” Zibolski said.
Officers were called at 2:43 p.m. Friday to an injury crash on 25th Street near Ninth Avenue South, near the Avalon Events Center. About 24 minutes later, police reported shots were fired, according to a recording of dispatch calls obtained by WDAY.
“Officers down,” an officer says in the call. “Got an AR-(style rifle). It’s rapid fire.”
Officer Zachary Robinson, 31, shot and killed Barakat, police said. Robinson has been placed on administrative leave, per Fargo police policy. Zibolski credited Robinson with ending a threat and preventing future harm to others.
The two other officers, 22-year-old Tyler Hawes and 28-year-old Andrew Dotas, were critically injured in the shooting. Both were in the hospital Monday, with conditions listed as critical but stable, Schildberger said.
Karlee Koswick, a Boston-area native who recently moved to Fargo, also was hospitalized after being shot. She was in “good condition” as of Monday, Sanford spokesman Nathan Aamodt said.
Koswick’s father said she was driving one of the two vehicles involved in the crash.
The Fargo Police Department warned the public on social media shortly after the shooting to stay clear of the area but called it a “critical incident,” not a shooting. Residents were told to either evacuate the area or stay sheltered in place.
Fargo police did not say the incident was a shooting until nearly eight hours after it happened. They said an officer and the suspect died in the shooting, while two officers and a citizen were injured.
A spokesperson held a press conference Friday night but did not release information that wasn’t published on social media, nor did they take questions.
Police have not released information about the crash. The North Dakota Highway Patrol confirmed it was investigating the crash to determine a timeline of events, Capt. Bryan Niewind said. Troopers are waiting for the BCI to interview those involved in the crash before the Highway Patrol questions them, he said.
A crash report was not available Monday.
During the Saturday news conference, Zibolski said police didn’t think Barakat was involved in the crash.
“The investigation into that is still ongoing,” he said Monday in a statement to The Forum. “It does not appear that he was part of the collision, but again I would have to defer to the BCI and their investigative findings.”
Few details are known about Barakat. A background check did not reveal any serious criminal charges.
The Fargo Police Department doesn’t have any additional information on him, Zibolski said Saturday. Barakat had contact with police, but nothing “significant,” the chief said.
Barakat was issued a speeding ticket by the Fargo Police Department in November 2018 that warranted a $31 fine, according to the background check. That ticket indicated he was living in Fargo at the time.
The Fargo Police Department declined an open records request for any incident reports that mention Barakat. That includes police reports filed before the shooting because the BCI and FBI requested them, said Jean Syverson, records office manager for the Fargo Police Department.
“Until their case is closed or inactive, the information you requested cannot be released,” she said.
What is known is that Barakat lived at Bluemont Village Apartments, 2801 23rd Ave. S.
Fargo Police, FBI agents and the ATF searched his apartment after the shooting. The Red River Regional Bomb Squad also responded to the apartment complex on Friday.
Wrigley confirmed the bomb squad has been involved in the case, though he declined to say why that team was called to Barakat’s apartment complex.
The background check also listed 4255 Ninth Ave. Circle S. as a previous apartment for Barakat, the same address that was on the speeding ticket.
Neighbors in the two apartment complexes that Barakat lived in said they didn’t know what the man looked like. Managers in one apartment complex Barakat lived in refused to speak to The Forum.
On social media, there are no digital footprints that The Forum has discovered.
Forum reporters Robin Huebner, C.S. Hagen and Patrick Springer contributed to this report.
North Dakota
North Dakota Horse Park gets finances on track as 2025 season takes shape
FARGO — Slowly, the North Dakota Horse Park in Fargo is growing its live horse racing meet and for the first time in nearly a decade, the organization that runs the track is not scrambling to make the tax payment that once loomed over it.
The Fargo track is operated by Horse Race North Dakota, a nonprofit organization that contributed when the track was built in 2003.
At a meeting of Horse Race North Dakota on Friday, Dec. 20. Cindy Slaughter, accountant and co-owner of TaxLady, which contracts with Horse Race North Dakota, said the track’s overall income is up about $93,000 from this time last year.
A fourth weekend of racing cost the track about $148,000 this year. However, that cost can be offset in the future by factors such as attendance and the amount bet on the races.
“There’s a couple of things we could do differently this year to reduce that amount,” North Dakota Horse Park General Manager Hugh Alan Drexler said.
While Drexler and HRND will look to decrease costs, they will not try to do that at the expense of the horsemen, as they hope to keep purses for each race flat or increase them in 2025.
“I don’t want to cut the purses at all, that would be the last thing we would cut,” HRND President Jay Aslop said.
“That is what our goal is, to promote racing and to increase race dates,” Drexler said. “The day the finances don’t look the same, that is when we need to make a change.”
Live racing receives additional funds from the North Dakota Racing Commission. The commission will meet in February to determine the amount of funds that will be granted to the Fargo track as well as Chippewa Downs, the second horse racing track in North Dakota near Belcourt.
Overcoming financial struggles
Heavy special assessments loomed over the North Dakota Horse Park for several years after it opened.
In 2003, the city of Fargo spent $1.5 million to extend sewer, water and other infrastructure to the track. The city planned to recoup the costs with special assessments, a kind of property tax assessed to benefiting properties, but the city agreed to suspend the assessments for five years in hopes that the race track would stimulate the development of commercial and residential properties. This would spread the assessments over more property owners and create a smaller bill for the track, which in 2015 was about $1.9 million.
The track is now in repayment of its taxes, making annual payments to the city of Fargo, and accountants are confident a fourth weekend of racing in 2025 will not adversely affect the track.
“I don’t have any concerns about running a fourth weekend this year,” Slaughter said.
Horse racing will be held at the Fargo track in 2025 over four weekends, likely July 12 through Aug. 3, track officials said.
“(It will be) some combination of either Friday, Saturday or Saturday, Sunday depending on what other events are going on in the area,” said Drexler.
In 2024, attendance at the Fargo track was up overall with about 8,358 in attendance over the eight race days, up from about 8,127, in 2023.
The Fargo track held horse races on Saturday and Sunday afternoons for four consecutive weekends, starting Saturday, July 13. The weekend of July 27-28, races were held in the evening so as to not compete with the Fargo AirSho. The horse park competed for attendance each weekend as the Fargo Street Fair, Red River Valley Fair and the Renaissance Fair overlapped the schedule. The horse park’s closing weekend coincided with WeFest.
The track hosted only three weekends of racing in 2022 and 2023, as it was constricted to operating expenses and the amount of money granted for a live season by the North Dakota Racing Commission. The Fargo track hosted a four-week meet in 2021 but held only two weekends in 2020.
North Dakota
Sports Spotlight: Ben DeForest
BISMARCK, N.D. (KFYR) – Bismarck High Wrestlers win a lot of titles.
“We’re striving for a state championship, that’s where the bar is set,” said Bismarck High Wrestling head coach Mark Lardy.
Three of said titles belong to the top-ranked 133-pound wrestler in North Dakota, Ben DeForest.
Now, Ben’s going for number four.
“It would mean everything to me,” said Ben DeForest. “There have been some great wrestlers from BHS that have been four-timers it would just mean a lot for me to add my name to that list.”
”He led a lot by example in the past,” said Lardy. “Now he leads not only by example but his voice in the room is heard.“
Even when his BHS days are over, Ben has another chapter to write in his story: He’s committed to Wrestle at UMary.
“We pride ourselves on trying to keep and retain as many local North Dakota kids here at U-Mary and we’re just very thankful that Ben chose to come here and wrestle for us as well,” said U-Mary Wrestling head coach Adam Aho.
The state champ has a bigger goal in mind.
“His goal is way beyond what our room is going to give him. This is just a stepping stone,” said Lardy.
Ben wants a national championship.
“We need every guy to have that type of mentality,” said Aho. “Without it, we will never be relevant on the national scene.”
”Once you get your hand raised you realize, all those morning practices you didn’t want to go to and all those lifts that you were like, uh I don’t know, it’s worth it. It’s worth it,” said DeForest.
Copyright 2024 KFYR. All rights reserved.
North Dakota
My Heartfelt Christmas Wish To You North Dakota
My Heartfelt Christmas Wish To You North Dakota.
Not a “catchy-clicky” title and I doubt many of my listeners or readers will probably even read this article.
However, I wanted to share something with you that is on my heart. This is so not me, as I’m more the guy who writes about “North Dakota’s 10 most quirky this and that”.
It’s not that I’m not a sensitive guy, because when I was growing up, I was probably too sensitive. I would avoid sad movies, songs, or anything that would spark too much of an emotion.
Yes, you could say my heart has become a bit jaded and cold over the years. It’s not something I’m proud of but more of a defense mechanism.
2024 has probably been one of the most challenging years for my family.
From losing loved ones to family issues to health issues to very challenging financial times, it’s been one of those years where you just can’t catch a break. I’m sure many of you can relate.
As we were attending a Christmas Eve candlelight service last night a young child caught my eye.
She was a cute little toddler who was starting to act up. Something I remember oh so well at church with my little now 20-year-old son.
As her father took her outside the sanctuary to attend to her, I couldn’t help but notice this child’s extremely unfair situation. She had a disability at a year or so old, that none of us could ever imagine. It broke my heart.
This poor child and her family no doubt have a long road ahead of them. As we lit our candles later in the service, I caught the wonder in her eyes, and it couldn’t help but melt my cold heart at the time.
She was perfect and I found myself saying a prayer for this little blonde girl with curly locks and her family.
Her situation also reminded me that I should be thankful for what I have and not what I don’t this Christmas. This is my Christmas wish for you North Dakota, that you will realize the same thing.
Be thankful for who you have around the tree today, not what’s under it.
Merry Christmas to all my listeners and readers. I hope at least a few of you get to read this and it will touch you the same way this little girl touched me on Christmas Eve.
LOOK: Popular Dinners Americans Don’t Make as Often Anymore
From classic casseroles to heaping helpings of beige-on-beige, these beloved American dinner dishes have fallen out of the mealtime rotation.
Gallery Credit: Stephen Lenz
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