
Gunshots heard near Minnesota assassin's marital home as cops swoop on abandoned car
Police have swarmed an isolated farming community after finding Minnesota assassin Vance Boelter's abandoned car.
Heavily armed SWAT officers shut down a section of Highway 25 in Faxon Township in Sibley County, southwest of Minneapolis, late on Sunday morning.
The area is about eight miles from the home in Green Isle that Boelter shares with his wife Jenny, who was pulled over by cops and suspicious items found in the car.
Boelter, 57, is wanted for allegedly shooting dead Democratic State Representative Melissa Hortman and wounding his colleague John Hoffman on Saturday.
Hortman and her husband Mark were killed at their home in Champlin, while Hoffman and his wife Yvette suffered serious injuries at their home in Brooklyn Park.
Farmers in the area where police converged said one of their neighbors claimed he heard gunshots late at night hours before cop arrived.
They received an emergency alert telling them to stay indoors, and police appeared to be fixated on an abandoned car as they searched the whole area.
TV news footage showed police roadblocks and armored SWAT trucks near the crossroad of Highway 25 and 301 Avenue.
Police showed up after stopping Boelter's wife at a convenience store while driving a car with three other relatives inside near Onamia at 10am on Saturday.
She was found with a weapon, ammunition, cash and passports about 75 miles from where the shootings took place in Brooklyn Park and Champlin, Minnesota, eight hours earlier.
Over a dozen officers swarmed Jenny Boelter'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. No one was arrested, law enforcement officials said.
Whether Boelter's vehicle was stopped randomly or whether it was being tracked by police is still unclear.
Vance and Jenny Boelter both previously worked under Minnesota Governor Tim Walz, according to Legistorm.
The Boelters lived with each other on a rural property in Sibley County, near the small town of Green Isle.
Vance Boelter - who is a Trump supporter - also lived part-time at a rental on Fremont Avenue in north Minneapolis with two roommates, according to the Wall Street Journal.
As Boelter's wife is pulled over with weapons and cash, here's what you need to know about the political assassinations that have rocked Minnesota:
Boelter is wanted for the killings of Democratic State Rep. Melissa Hortman and her husband Mark in Champlin. The suspect also shot and wounded Democratic State Senator John Hoffman and his wife Yvette in nearby Brooklyn Park.
Cops first responded to a call about the shooting at Hoffman's home at around 2am on Saturday. They then went to check Hortman's home where they spotted the suspect.
The suspect, dressed in police gear, engaged officers in a gun battle before retreating inside the house and then fleeing out the back on foot.
The FBI believes the attacks were politically motivated and is offering a $50,000 reward for Boelter.
Cops found several rifles in Boelter's vehicle and believe he may still be armed with a pistol.
Inside the car they found handmade 'No Kings' flyers. It comes as anti-Trump 'No Kings' protests were taking place across the US.
Boelter was a Trump supporter and opposed abortion, according to his roommate.
Inside his car cops found a hit list of prominent abortion rights campaigners, many of them Democratic lawmakers.
Donald Trump called the shootings 'terrible' after being briefed on the matter. 'Such horrific violence will not be tolerated in the United States of America,' the president said.
John Hoffman and his wife Yvette were both shot at their home around 2am Saturday in Champlin.
Melissa Hortman and her husband Mark were then fatally shot at their home in Brooklyn Park around 3am.
Police encountered the gunman fleeing Hortman's home around 3.35am and exchanged gunfire with him.
Chilling photos that emerged Saturday afternoon showed the suspect donning an unsettling costume mask covering his entire head.
Officers then let the suspect slip through the cracks as he escaped the scene on foot, according to authorities.
Shortly after the unspeakable slayings, police said Vance, a former appointee of Governor Walz, was being sought by authorities.
As of Sunday morning, he remains on the run.
The horrific incident took place as several 'No Kings' protests were being held across the country to protest against President Donald Trump.
Who was shot?
Melissa Hortman was one of the most powerful and influential Democratic lawmakers in Minnesota politics. Representing a suburban district north of Minneapolis, she held her House seat for two decades after winning her first race in 2004 - and was re-elected 11 times.
She served as Speaker of the Minnesota House from 2019 through early 2025, steering the chamber through major legislative victories on reproductive rights, voting protections, paid family leave, and early childhood education.
After the 2024 election, in which Democrats and Republicans split the chamber 67-67, Hortman was named Speaker Emeritus and Party Leader as part of a rare bipartisan power-sharing agreement.
Hortman was widely known for her policy expertise and progressive advocacy, particularly on issues of democracy and bodily autonomy.
'The most rewarding piece of legislation we passed - for me - is paid family and medical leave,' she said at the close of the 2024 session.
She also pushed for voter protections, including pre-registration for 16- and 17-year-olds and tougher penalties for election interference.
Born and raised in Fridley, Hortman earned her bachelor's degrees in philosophy and political science from Boston University, a J.D. from the University of Minnesota Law School, and a master's in public administration from Harvard's Kennedy School.
Before launching her legal career, Hortman interned for former Vice President Al Gore and worked for Senator John Kerry.
She later served as an assistant attorney in Hennepin County.
Despite her progressive platform, she often emphasized unity across geographic lines: 'I have no desire for us to be a predominately suburban- and city-based party,' she once said.
'I'm committed to... representing agricultural regions and the Iron Range, in addition to the cities and suburbs.'
Her husband of 25 years, Mark, 55, was a practicing attorney and father of two.
A devoted family man, Mark supported his wife's decades-long political career while remaining active in the Brooklyn Park community, where the couple had lived for more than two decades.
He ran a local law practice focused on civil and family matters, according to public records, and was known among friends and colleagues as steady, thoughtful, and deeply private.
Roughly 90 minutes before the Hortmans were killed, state Senator Hoffman and his wife Yvette were shot multiple times at their home in Champlin, about eight miles away.
Both remain in critical condition following emergency surgeries, Governor Walz said.
Hoffman, 59, has represented District 34 since 2012. Before joining the legislature, he served on the Anoka-Hennepin School Board, the largest in the state.
He also runs Hoffman Strategic Advisors, a public affairs consulting firm, and has long been involved in disability rights advocacy.
He and Yvette, a community volunteer, share one adult daughter named Hope.
Who is the suspected killer?
Vance Boelter has armed security experience and a history of public service.
He 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 said.
'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 has 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 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 Governor Walz both times.
Boelter was also the CEO 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.
He announced two years ago that he was in the country with his company, working on 'private business projects.'
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.
His LinkedIn also revealed his deep connections to politics, as he asked his followers to vote ahead of the 2020 election.
Boelter has also worked as a pastor as he 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.
What were his motivations?
Although Boelter's exact motivations remain unclear at this time, FBI investigators believe the shootings were politically motivated and are offering a $50,000 reward for information leading to his whereabouts.
His best friend and roommate David Carlson told local news outlet KARE11 he is an avid Trump supporter and voted for the Republican candidate.
He also described the suspect as a Christian who opposes abortion.
The night before the deadly shots were fired, Boelter texted his roommates he was 'going to be gone for a while.'
Carlson, who shared a North Minneapolis home with Boelter, tearfully read aloud text messages from the accused assassin.
'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.
'I don't know why he did what he did,' Carlson told KARE 11.
'It's just it's not Vance. ... He had lots of friends, trust me, and I wish I could have been there to stop him.'
The FBI believes Boelter is attempting 'to potentially flee' the Twin Cities - Minneapolis and St. Paul, The Washington Post reported.
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Reuters
22 minutes ago
- Reuters
Once known for civility, Minnesota succumbs to spread of political violence
BLAINE, Minnesota, June 15 (Reuters) - From the pulpit on Sunday, Father Joe Whalen exhorted his parishioners to avoid the kind of extreme partisanship and hate that appeared to be behind the killing of one of the church's own, Democratic Minnesota state legislator Melissa Hortman. It was a message that Whalen felt his congregation needed to hear, even at the Catholic church where Hortman once taught Sunday school, and in a state known for the political civility of a bygone era. In his homily at the Church of St. Timothy, Whalen told his parish to adhere to the Christian message of peace and warned against responding to political discourse with unkindness or anger, especially when cloaked in anonymity online. "We can choose all that by our words, by our thoughts, by our actions or we can walk a different path, and we can invite the cycle of retribution," Whalen said. "We know what we need to do." Whalen spoke one day after a gunman killed Hortman and her husband -- a crime Governor Tim Walz characterized as a "politically motivated assassination" -- and shot and wounded State Senator John Hoffman and his wife. The suspect, whom police identified as 57-year-old Vance Boelter, remains at large. The shootings come amid the most sustained period of political violence in the United States since the 1970s. Reuters has documented more than 300 cases of politically motivated violent acts since supporters of President Donald Trump attacked the U.S. Capitol on January 6, 2021. Last summer, Trump, a Republican, survived two assassination attempts during his election campaign. In April, an assailant set fire to the official residence of Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro, a Democrat. Yet the shootings outside Minneapolis seemed to deliver an outsized shock to many, arriving during a stretch of days in which protests over immigration roiled Los Angeles, a U.S. Senator was forcibly removed from a press conference and a rare military parade rolled though the streets of Washington. Not only did the shootings serve as a stark reminder of the spread of political violence, they occurred in a state perceived by many - rightly or wrongly - to be a haven of civic-mindedness and bipartisanship, an impression captured in the cultural stereotype "Minnesota nice". While Minnesota leans blue in state-wide races, control of the legislature is evenly split between the parties, requiring lawmakers to compromise to get anything done. Both Hortman and Hoffman were known to work across the aisle. "Minnesota has a unique reputation, and I think it's somewhat merited. We have typically, at least politically, not been as excessive as other places," David Hann, former chairman of the state Republican Party, told Reuters. "But I think that has changed." Several parishioners said the racial justice protests following the 2020 murder of George Floyd, which were accompanied by looting and violence, had punctured any sense that their state was immune to the excesses of polarization. "The violence is here," said Carolyn Breitbach, 81, after attending Sunday Mass. "I think people are interested in their own agenda. They want to take things into their own hands and make things right." One of Hortman's last acts as a lawmaker was in fact a compromise. Last week, she cast the lone Democratic vote for a bill that cut healthcare benefits for adult undocumented immigrants -- a provision she and her party did not want -- to secure a budget deal for the state. Hortman, the top Democrat in the Minnesota House, teared up as she explained her vote. Larry Kraft, a Democratic colleague of Hortman in the House, said he has seen the rhetoric coarsen in the past few years. "How can it not? The discourse everywhere is becoming harsher and more partisan," Kraft told Reuters. "That said, I think we do a reasonable job in Minnesota of bridging that. We just did with the budget that we passed." The 2024 election ratcheted up political tensions in Minnesota as then-candidate Trump and his allies went hard after Walz, who was Vice President Kamala Harris's running mate, over Minnesota's expansions of abortion and LGBTQ+ rights. Harris won the state with 50.9% of the vote to Trump's 46.7%. Trump narrowed his margin of loss from 2020, however, suggesting a shift to the right. The last time a Republican won Minnesota was Richard Nixon in 1972. Trump condemned the shootings in Minnesota, but told ABC News on Sunday that he had not called Walz, while criticizing him as a "terrible governor" who was "grossly incompetent." Erin Koegel, a Democrat in the state House, pointed to those comments and said Trump was fanning political divisions. "He's the one who is lighting a fire," said Koegel, who attends St. Timothy, adding that she was disappointed that her Republican colleagues in Minnesota were not "stepping up to say that this isn't right." Koegel pointed to Hortman as a model of how a politician should behave, recalling how Hortman made her appointment to committee leadership positions contingent upon her promising to be kind and polite to her Republican counterparts. "That was something that she always preached," Koegel said. "And even when there were really divisive issues for debate on the floor, she would always just be like let's not be angry and mean. We need to be able to debate this civilly."


Sky News
31 minutes ago
- Sky News
Minnesota manhunt continues for gunman who 'posed as cop' to kill Melissa Hortman and her husband
A manhunt is continuing after the gunning down of a Democrat politician and her husband - with police saying they're acting on the assumption he is still alive and dangerous. Melissa Hortman and Mark Hortman were shot dead at home in a Minneapolis suburb on Saturday in what governor Tim Walz called a "politically motivated assassination". Democrat senator John Hoffman and his wife were also shot multiple times at their home nine miles away, but survived. A search is under way for Vance Boelter, 57, who authorities believe posed as a police officer and used a vehicle resembling a squad car. Several AK-style firearms and a list of about 70 names, which included politicians and abortion rights activists, were found inside. Boelter was last caught on camera wearing a cowboy hat - a similar hat was found near another vehicle belonging to him on Sunday. Authorities said at their latest news conference they assume he is still alive. Hundreds of police officers are searching for Boelter, who escaped from the Hortmans' house on foot after an exchange of gunfire. Senator Hoffman was shot nine times and is having multiple surgeries, according to a text message shared on Instagram by fellow senator Amy Klobuchar on Sunday. The text from Mr Hoffman's wife, Yvette, added: "I took 8 and we are both incredibly lucky to be alive." She said her husband "is closer every hour to being out of the woods". "We believe [Boelter's] somewhere in the vicinity and that they are going to find him," Senator Klobuchar told NBC's Meet the Press. "Everyone's on edge here," she added, "because we know that this man will kill at a second." 2:58 Police said they responded to gunfire reports at the Hoffmans' Champlin home shortly after 2am on Saturday and found them with multiple gunshot wounds. They then checked on the Hortmans' home, in the nearby Brooklyn Park suburb, and saw what appeared to be a police car and a man dressed as an officer leaving the front door. "The individual immediately fired upon the officers, who exchanged gunfire, and the suspect retreated back into the home" and escaped on foot, said Brooklyn Park police chief Mark Bruley. Another vehicle belonging to Boelter was searched on Sunday in Minnesota's Faxon Township. A cowboy hat similar to the one seen in the police appeal was found nearby. It's been revealed that the suspect texted friends around 6am on Saturday to say he had "made some choices" and was "going to be gone for a while". According to AP, which has seen the messages, he reportedly said: "May be dead shortly, so I just want to let you know I love you guys both and I wish it hadn't gone this way... I'm sorry for all the trouble this has caused." 1:08 Records show Boelter - a father of five - is a former political appointee who served on the same state workforce development board as Mr Hoffman. However, it's unclear to what extent they knew each other, if at all. Mr Hoffman, 60, was first elected in 2012 and runs a consulting firm called Hoffman Strategic Advisors. Melissa Hortman, a 55-year-old mother of two, was first elected in 2004 and was the top house Democratic leader in the state legislature. She also served as speaker of the Minnesota House of Representatives. Mrs Hortman used her position to champion protections around abortion rights, including laws to cement Minnesota's status as a safe refuge for people from restrictive states, who travel there for an abortion.


The Independent
an hour ago
- The Independent
Friends say Minnesota shooting suspect was deeply religious and conservative
The man accused of assassinating the top Democrat in the Minnesota House held deeply religious and politically conservative views, telling a congregation in Africa two years ago that the U.S. was in a 'bad place' where most churches didn't oppose abortion. Vance Luther Boelter, 57, was at the center of a massive multistate manhunt on Sunday, a day after authorities say he impersonated a police officer and gunned down former House Speaker Melissa Hortman and her husband, Mark, in their home outside Minneapolis. Democratic Gov. Tim Walz described the shooting as 'a politically motivated assassination.' Sen. John Hoffman, also a Democrat, and his wife, Yvette, were shot earlier by the same gunman at their home nearby but survived. Friends and former colleagues interviewed by The Associated Press described Boelter as a devout Christian who attended an evangelical church and went to campaign rallies for President Donald Trump. Records show Boelter registered to vote as a Republican while living in Oklahoma in 2004 before moving to Minnesota where voters don't list party affiliation. Near the scene at Hortman's home, authorities say they found an SUV made to look like those used by law enforcement. Inside they found fliers for a local anti-Trump 'No Kings' rally scheduled for Saturday and a notebook with names of other lawmakers. The list also included the names of abortion rights advocates and health care officials, according to two law enforcement officials who could not discuss details of the ongoing investigation and spoke to AP on condition of anonymity. Both Hortman and Hoffman were defenders of abortion rights at the state legislature. Suspect not believed to have made any public threats before attacks, official says Drew Evans, superintendent of the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension, said at a briefing on Sunday that Boelter is not believed to have made any public threats before the attacks. Evans asked the public not to speculate on a motivation for the attacks. 'We often want easy answers for complex problems,' he told reporters. 'Those answers will come as we complete the full picture of our investigation.' Friends told the AP that they knew Boelter was religious and conservative, but that he didn't talk about politics often and didn't seem extreme. "He was right-leaning politically but never fanatical, from what I saw, just strong beliefs,' said Paul Schroeder, who has known Boelter for years. A glimpse of suspect's beliefs on abortion during a trip to Africa Boelter, who worked as a security contractor, gave a glimpse of his beliefs on abortion during a trip to the Democratic Republic of Congo in 2023. While there, Boelter served as an evangelical pastor, telling people he had first found Jesus as a teenager. 'The churches are so messed up, they don't know abortion is wrong in many churches,' he said, according to an online recording of one sermon from February 2023. Still, in three lengthy sermons reviewed by the AP, he only mentioned abortion once, focusing more on his love of God and what he saw as the moral decay in his native country. He appears to have hidden his more strident beliefs from his friends back home. 'He never talked to me about abortion,' Schroeder said. 'It seemed to be just that he was a conservative Republican who naturally followed Trump.' A married father with five children, Boelter and his wife own a sprawling 3,800-square-foot house on a large rural lot about an hour from downtown Minneapolis that the couple bought in 2023 for more than a half-million dollars. Seeking to reinvent himself He worked for decades in managerial roles for food and beverage manufacturers before seeking to reinvent himself in middle age, according to resumes and a video he posted online. After getting an undergraduate degree in international relations in his 20s, Boelter went back to school and earned a master's degree and then a doctorate in leadership studies in 2016 from Cardinal Stritch University, a private Catholic college in Wisconsin that has since shut down. While living in Wisconsin, records show Boelter and his wife Jenny founded a nonprofit corporation called Revoformation Ministries, listing themselves as the president and secretary. After moving to Minnesota about a decade ago, Boelter volunteered for a position on a state workforce development board, first appointed by then-Gov. Mark Dayton, a Democrat, in 2016, and later by Democratic Gov. Tim Walz. He served through 2023. In that position, he may have crossed paths with one of his alleged victims. Hoffman served on the same board, though authorities said it was not immediately clear how much the two men may have interacted. Launching a security firm Records show Boelter and his wife started a security firm in 2018. A website for Praetorian Guard Security Services lists Boelter's wife as the president and CEO while he is listed as the director of security patrols. The company's homepage says it provides armed security for property and events and features a photo of an SUV painted in a two-tone black and silver pattern similar to a police vehicle, with a light bar across the roof and 'Praetorian' painted across the doors. Another photo shows a man in black tactical gear with a military-style helmet and a ballistic vest with the company's name across the front. In an online resume, Boelter also billed himself as a security contractor who worked oversees in the Middle East and Africa. On his trip to the Democratic Republic of Congo, he told Chris Fuller, a friend, that he had founded several companies focused on farming and fishing on the Congo River, as well as in transportation and tractor sales. 'It has been a very fun and rewarding experience and I only wished I had done something like this 10 years ago,' he wrote in a message shared with the AP. But once he returned home in 2023, there were signs that Boelter was struggling financially. That August, he began working for a transport service for a funeral home, mostly picking up bodies of those who had died in assisted living facilities — a job he described as he needed to do to pay bills. Tim Koch, the owner of Metro First Call, said Boelter 'voluntarily left' that position about four months ago. 'This is devastating news for all involved,' Koch said, declining to elaborate on the reasons for Boelter's departure, citing the ongoing law enforcement investigation. Boelter had also started spending some nights away from his family, renting a room in a modest house in northern Minneapolis shared by friends. Heavily armed police executed a search warrant on the home Saturday. 'I'm going to be gone for awhile' In the hours before Saturday's shootings, Boelter texted two roommates to tell them he loved them and that 'I'm going to be gone for a while,' according to Schroeder, who was forwarded the text and read it to the AP. 'May be dead shortly, so I just want to let you know I love you guys both and I wish it hadn't gone this way,' Boelter wrote. 'I don't want to say anything more and implicate you in any way because you guys don't know anything about this. But I love you guys and I'm sorry for the trouble this has caused.' ___ Associated Press writer Mike Balsamo contributed to this report from Washington. Contact AP's global investigative team at Investigative@ or