
Democrats on Minnesota 'assassin' Vance Boelter's 'hit-list' after he 'murdered lawmaker and her husband'
Suspected assassin Vance Boelter wanted to take out several A-list Democrats, a chilling hit list seized by police has suggested.
Boelter, 57, is accused of shooting dead Melissa Hortman, the top Democrat in the Minnesota House, and her husband, Mark, in their home on Saturday. He is also suspected of shooting and wounding state Senator John Hoffman and his wife Yvette at their home a few miles away.
But the alleged killer seemingly planned to target more liberal lawmakers and abortion providers, according to a list of about 70 names recovered from the crime scene.
US Senator Amy Klobuchar and 'squad member' Rep. Ilhan Omar were among the most prominent lawmakers featured on the list, according to The Minnesota Star Tribune and Alpha News reporter Liz Collins. Both women are Democrat members of Congress and are among the most famous females in their party.
Congresswoman Kelly Morrison, Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison, Minnesota Lt. Gov. Peggy Flanagan and even Jeff Bezos ' ex-wife MacKenzie Scott - whom Boelter listed as an 'author and philanthropist, were also on the list.
All four are well known liberal figures.
The suspect included doctors that work for Planned Parenthood, as well as several abortion clinics on his list, even noting one that is due to open in Omaha, Nebraska.
Boelter, a former public servant and Gov. Tim Walz appointee, was apprehended and taken into Hennepin County custody Sunday night after two days on the run.
He is now facing two state murder charges as well as two attempted murder charges, and a federal warrant for 'unlawful flight to avoid prosecution'.
Department of Justice officials are also mulling federal charges against Boelter, a source told CNN Monday morning. If convicted on a federal murder or terrorism charge, Boelter could end up being executed.
Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension Superintendent Drew Evans, who confirmed investigators found the manifesto during a Sunday night news briefing, said the document 'gives some indications' about Boelter's motives.
'This is not a document that would be like a traditional manifesto that's a treatise on all kinds of ideology and writings,' Evans explained, according to the Star Tribune.
He said it was instead a notebook 'with a lot of lawmakers and others ... as opposed to a succinct document'.
'I don't want the public to have the impression that there's this long manifesto that's providing all of this information and details and then associated with names. It's much more about names,' Evans added.
But Boelter, now a Donald Trump supporter, is believed to have targeted Hortman and Hoffman due to their support for abortion rights.
The suspect's roommate also revealed Boelter texted him the night before the murders, saying he was 'going to be gone for a while'.
Boelter's best friend and roommate David Carlson tearfully read aloud text messages from the accused assassin to KARE 11.
'David and Ron, I love you guys,' the eerie note began. 'I made some choices, and you guys don't know anything about this, but I'm going to be gone for a while.'
He also said he 'may be dead shortly' and did not wish to involve Carlson or his other roommate Ron Ramsey.
Boelter is scheduled to appear in court Monday at 1:30 p.m. local time, jail records showed.
Boelter had been impersonating a police officer when he carried out the shootings on Sunday night. He was wearing an officer's uniform and driving a Ford SUV with police-style lights, a criminal complaint said.
He allegedly entered Hoffman and his wife Yvette's home around 2 a.m. by posing as a cop and opened fire.
Police were called to the scene of the home by one of their children, after Yvette went down trying to protect her adult daughter Hope. The couple were rushed to the hospital.
When Brooklyn Park police then realized Hoffman was a state legislator, they deployed other officers to the Hortman residence out of precaution, according to court documents obtained by The Minnesota Star Tribune.
By the time the officers arrived at around 3am, they noticed Boelter's vehicle was already in the driveway, and watched as he fatally struck Mark Hortman, the charging documents claim.
Officers encountered Boelter fleeing Hortman's home at 3.35am and exchanged gunfire with him. Chilling photos showed the suspect donning an unsettling costume mask covering his entire head.
Yet officers somehow let the suspect slip through their fingers as he escaped the scene on foot. He was allegedly heavily armed at the time.
Following the fatal shooting, authorities questioned Boelter's wife, Jenny, who was stopped at a convenience store while driving a car with three other relatives inside near Onamia about 10am on Saturday.
She was found with a weapon, ammunition, cash, and passports about 75 miles from where the shootings took place in northern Minneapolis eight hours earlier.
More than a dozen officers swarmed Jenny's car during the traffic stop and they were at the scene for two to three hours.
Jenny was detained for questioning after officers found the items inside the vehicle, but no one was arrested as she was released.
Authorities have since said she and other family members were cooperative with the investigation. But it remains unclear whether her vehicle was stopped randomly or being tracked by police.
One day later, officers searched Boelter's SUV after the shootings and discovered three AK-47 assault rifles, a 9-mm handgun, and the list of other public officials including their addresses, the criminal complaint showed.
Working on a tip that Boelter was near his home in the city of Green Isle, more than 20 SWAT teams combed the area, aided by surveillance aircraft, officials said.
Boelter was armed but surrendered with no shots fired.
The Sibley County Sheriff's Office also told Fox News Boelter 'verbally' identified himself to authorities, and Lt. Jeremy Geiger, of the Minnesota State Patrol, said authorities did not have to use any force to detain Boelter.
The suspect was then pictured being handcuffed, as the Ramsey County Sheriff's Office wrote that he is 'the face of evil.'
Boelter has armed security experience in the Middle East, Africa, Eastern Europe, and North America through the Praetorian Guard Security Services, his biography on the website detailed.
'He brings a great security aspect forged by both many on the ground experiences combined with training by both private security firms and by people in the US Military,' it read.
'Vance Boelter has focused all this experience to make sure Praetorian Guard Security Services covers the needs you have to keep your family and property safe.'
Boelter had also lived a life of public service before Saturday's tragedies, and he even served on the Governor's Workforce Development Board, which works closely with Gov. Tim Walz to give advice on the state's workforce.
He served on the board from June 2016 to June 2018 as a private sector representative and from December 2019 to January 2023 as a board member.
He was appointed under Walz both times.
Authorities went house to house in rural Belle Plaine, Minnesota on Sunday as the search for Boelter continued
Additionally, Boelter was the chief executive of Red Lion Group, which was based in the Democratic Republic of Congo.
Red Lion Group has since deleted its website and LinkedIn pages, but Boelter's LinkedIn said he started at the company in December 2021.
Boelter previously worked for Metro First Call, a funeral company in Minneapolis, in August 2023 to February 2025, where he took bodies from nursing homes to the business to be prepared for burial.
He said in a video posted online that he worked with police and death investigators at crime scenes.
Boelter updated his LinkedIn a month ago to say he had returned to the US and was looking for work in the food industry on the corporate side.
He had previously worked at 7-Eleven and Greencore as a general manager, a system manager at Del Monte Foods, and an operational leader at Johnsonville Sausage, according to his LinkedIn.
The social media page also shows his deep connections to politics, as he asked his followers to vote ahead of the 2020 election.
Privately, Boelter was an avid Trump supporter and voted for the Republican candidate, Carlson told KARE11 about his roommate.
Residents left flowers and American flags in Hortman's memory
He also described the suspect as a Christian who opposed abortion.
In fact, the suspect worked as a pastor and was seen in a newly unearthed video dancing in a church service in Africa.
The clip, filmed in February 2023, showed him delivering a passionate testimony about how he met Jesus at the age of 17.
'I met the Lord when I was 17 years old and I gave my life to Jesus Christ,' he says in the clip.
He went on to describe naming his five children - who he shares with Jenny - after Christian virtues, Grace, Faith, Hope, Joy, and David, in what he calls a testament to God's blessings on his life.
Still, Carlson said he doesn't 'know why he did what he did.'
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The Sun
35 minutes ago
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Minnesota ‘assassin' found with ‘hit-list' of 70 names & addresses including Squad member Ilhan Omar and Jeff Bezos' ex'
THE man accused of fatally shooting a Minnesota state lawmaker and her husband allegedly had a hit list with 70 names after being caught by police. Vance Boelter, 57, is accused of shooting and killing Representative Melissa Hortman and her husband at their home on Saturday, along with injuring Senator John Hoffman and his wife in another shooting. 9 9 9 9 9 During the search for the suspect, investigators found a fake police vehicle that Boelter allegedly used to pose as a police officer to carry out the shootings. Inside the car, police found a cache of weapons, including at least three AK-47 assault rifles and a manifesto with the names and addresses of other public officials. There were about 70 names in the manifesto, some of which were abortion rights advocates, said law enforcement officials. Boelter was arrested near his home in Green Isle on Sunday night after a brief manhunt. He has been charged with two counts of second-degree murder and two counts of second-degree attempted murder, according to Hennepin County court records. LIST OF DEATH Named on the list were Senator Amy Klobuchar and "squad member" Rep. Ilhan Omar, reported The Minnesota Star Tribune. Others include Congresswoman Kelly Morrison, Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison, Minnesota Lt. Governor Peggy Flanagan, and Jeff Bezos' ex-wife, MacKenzie Scott. Some doctors who worked for Planned Parenthood were on the list, as well as several abortion clinics, including one that is scheduled to open in Omaha, Nebraska. Former congressman Dean Phillips claimed in an X post that he was on the list as well, writing, "I extend heartfelt gratitude to Minnesota's law enforcement professionals," after Boelter's arrest. "Now, we must take steps to prevent political violence before it's too late." Vance Boelter's car found as cops continue to hunt for 'fake cop' suspect who 'shot dead Melissa Hortman' in Minnesota The Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension Superintendent Drew Evans confirmed that investigators found the manifesto in a press briefing, saying the documents "gives some indications" on a possible motive. "This is not a document that would be like a traditional manifesto that's a treatise on all kinds of ideology and writings, Evans said. He called it a notebook "with a lot of lawmakers and others ... as opposed to a succinct document." "I don't want the public to have the impression that there's this long manifesto that's providing all of this information and details and then associated with names," he added. "It's much more about names." NIGHT OF TERROR Boelter was named as a suspect on June 14 after of Hortman and Hoffman. Hortman and her husband, Mark, were pronounced dead at their Brooklyn Park home. Timeline of Minnesota's shooting Vance Boelter has been arrested for the targeted shootings of Minnesota lawmakers Rep. Melissa Hortman and Sen. John Hoffman. Below is a timeline of events: Saturday, June 14 2 am - Cops receive a phone call about a shooting at Hoffman's house. Cops call nearby officers to proactively check Hortman's home because it's close by in Brooklyn Park, Minnesota. 3:35 am - Police arrive at Hortman's home and find a car that looks like a cop car in her driveway. Officers see the suspect, dressed as a cop and wearing a latex mask, leaving the Hortman's house. Cops exchange gunfire with the suspect, who runs back into the home and leaves out the back door on foot. 7:11 am — A shelter-in-place warning is issued for three miles around Brooklyn Park. 7:35 am - Minnesota Governor Tim Walz posts on social media that he's been briefed on the shootings. 9:30 am - Walz and cops give the first news conference on the shootings and confirm the Hormans' deaths. 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Hoffman and his wife Yvette had surgery after suffering multiple gunshot wounds at their residence in Champlin, about nine miles away from the Hortmans. Officials said they are "cautiously optimistic" that the pair will survive what Governor Tim Walz called an "unspeakable tragedy" and a "politically motivated assassination." The Hoffmans' nephew revealed that the couple had been shot 11 times during the horror attack. He shared in a Facebook post how his aunt Yvette had thrown herself on top of her daughter to protect her. Boelter is scheduled to appear in court on Monday for the charges against him and a federal warrant for "unlawful flight to avoid prosecution." His other charges will soon be upgraded as the state "intends to pursue first-degree murder charges against Boelter," said Hennepin County Attorney Mary Moriarty at a news conference. 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