logo
Suspect who terrorized Minnesota's political leaders after deadly shooting found crawling in rural field

Suspect who terrorized Minnesota's political leaders after deadly shooting found crawling in rural field

Yahoo16-06-2025
The suspect wanted in the slaying of a Minnesota lawmaker and her husband, as well as in the injury shooting of a state senator and his wife, was found Sunday night armed and crawling in a field in a sparsely populated stretch of Minnesota, authorities said.
Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz announced Vance Boelter's capture at a news conference after saying Saturday that the suspect's alleged crimes included a "politically motivated assassination." Despite being armed, authorities said, Boelter was taken into custody without incident and no injuries were reported.
Boelter is in custody and has been charged in connection with the murders and the attempted murders, Drew Evans, superintendent of the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension, said at the news conference.
Evans added that his team was in contact with the FBI and U.S. Attorney's Office who he said were examining whether to bring their own additional charges.
Law enforcement numbering nearly 200 — including members of 20 regional and local SWAT teams — descended on eastern Sibley County, about an hour outside Minneapolis, starting Sunday morning. But the suspect may have taken advantage of rural terrain to remain hidden most of the day, authorities said.
It was without doubt the biggest manhunt in the state's history, said Police Chief Mark Bruley of Brooklyn Park Police Department said.
The governor expressed relief that the suspect had been apprehended after collaborations from federal, state and local law enforcement that concluded when Minnesota State Patrol officers put their handcuffs on him.
"After a two-day manhunt, two sleepless nights, law enforcement have apprehended" the alleged shooter, Walz said.
"This cannot be the norm. It cannot be the way that we deal with our political differences," he added.
Authorities allege Boelter tried to kill state Sen. John Hoffman, a Democrat, and his wife, Yvette, at their home in Champlin at roughly 2 a.m. Saturday before fatally shooting state Rep. Melissa Hortman, a 55-year-old Democrat, and her husband, Mark, in nearby Brooklyn Park.
In a statement released by the Hoffman family following Boelter's arrest, Yvette Hoffman thanked law enforcement for the suspect's capture.
"John and I are both incredibly lucky to be alive," the statement read. "We continue our healing journey and are humbled by the outpouring of love and support our family has received from across the state and our nation."
Authorities said Boelter left behind a notebook with a hit list of other politicians as well as those who have been vocal in support of abortion rights. The names included those of Hoffman and Hortman near the very top, said Democratic Party executive Ron Harris, a fellow Minnesotan.
Evans said the list also included politicians based in Wisconsin, Illinois, Michigan, Nebraska and Iowa.
Boelter emerged as the suspect as police covered locations familiar to him and spoke to people associated with the married 57-year-old.
The hunt was jolted into renewed action about 6:30 on Sunday morning when his car and cowboy hat were found not far from his residence in Green Isle in the eastern portion of Sibley County, authorities said.
A Buick Regal associated with the suspect as well as his cowboy hat, found at the side of a road in a wooded area about three miles from the residence, drew a massive manhunt, authorities said.
But the trail seemed to get cold through nightfall as there was no sign of the suspect for more than ten hours despite evidence he had spoken to people while on the run, Evans, the criminal apprehension superintendent, said at a news conference earlier in the day.
Boelter remained somewhat of a mystery even as authorities spoke to his wife and relatives following a Sunday traffic stop, during which they cooperated fully with investigators, Evans said.
There was no evidence, he said, the suspect ever previously threatened the lawmakers he shot or anyone else on that list.
Warrants for his arrest included a state warrant alleging he committed second-degree murder and a federal warrant alleging he was on the run to avoid prosecution. It wasn't clear if the suspect has obtained legal counsel.
Officials say Boelter impersonated law enforcement to get close to the lawmakers' at their suburban Twin Cities homes before opening fire.
Police in Brooklyn Park, Minnesota, conducting a welfare check at the Hortmans' residence encountered a man in front they believe is Boelter and dressed as a police officer, with a police-style SUV, emergency lights on, in the driveway, Brooklyn Park Police Chief Mark Bruley said on Saturday.
It was apparent the home had taken fire before the officers' arrival, he said, and when the suspect realized police had arrived, he opened fire and exchanged rounds with them before fleeing through the home and escaping out back, he said.
No other injuries were reported, but inside that home was the slain couple, authorities said.
A statement of probable cause filed in support of charges reflected in the state warrant stated the suspect was seen on security video earlier at Hoffman's home, shortly after 2 a.m., presenting himself at their door as a police officer, wearing a mask over his face, and using a Ford SUV that had the appearance of a marked patrol vehicle.
The couple's daughter was not struck and called 911. Walz cited the daughter, Hope, as he spoke Sunday night, calling her actions "heroic."
Authorities said they found three semiautomatic rifles and two 9mm handguns in the abandoned SUV. Also inside, they said, was the notebook with the alleged hit list.
At the news conference, Evans said a local police officer reported seeing a man running into the woods, and authorities, including SWAT teams and a state public safety helicopter overhead, rushed the area. They called for the suspect to surrender and captured him as a crawled on a field, he said.
Detectives were interviewing the suspect overnight, Evans said.
In video circulating online the suspect describes himself as a married father of five from Green Isle who works for two funeral homes. He said he previously worked for three decades in the food industry and once traveled to the Democratic Republic of Congo to partner with farmers and fishermen there to help them stimulate their food supply system.
Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar said Yvette Hoffman was well enough to text updates, including that her husband has had to undergo multiple operations since the shooting in which she said he was struck by nine rounds and eight others hit her.
She said the state senator is 'closer every hour to being out of the woods," according to Klobuchar. Later, Walz said Hoffman emerged from the last of many immediate operations he needed and was recovering.
Walz said the shootings will nonetheless have a deep impact on Minnesota politics, with the loss of Hortman presenting a double-edged sward of political violence and the loss of a leader who he described as ardently effective and compromising.
"Melissa Hortman was the core of who our values were," the governor said. "It's not about hatred. It's not about mean tweets. It's not about demeaning someone. It's leading with grace and compassion and vision and compromise and decency. That was taken from us."
This article was originally published on NBCNews.com
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

California lawmakers approve Newsom's redistricting plan to counter Texas Republicans
California lawmakers approve Newsom's redistricting plan to counter Texas Republicans

Yahoo

time6 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

California lawmakers approve Newsom's redistricting plan to counter Texas Republicans

California lawmakers approved Democratic-led redistricting maps for voters to decide in a special election, a day after Texas House Republicans passed new redistricting plans. The California Legislature on Aug. 21 approved Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom's proposal on a ballot measure to suspend the state's current congressional districts, drawn by an independent commission, and replace them with maps that could give Democrats five U.S. House seats. The redistricting effort in California is in response to Texas, where Republican lawmakers are pushing new redistricting maps at President Donald Trump's request. The Texas Senate could pass its new redistricting plans on Aug. 21, which Republicans hope will give the state GOP an additional five U.S. House seats. Texas Democrats return as Rep. Nicole Collier spends night on House floor in protest

Trump Strips California's Education Grant Over Gender Issues
Trump Strips California's Education Grant Over Gender Issues

Yahoo

time6 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Trump Strips California's Education Grant Over Gender Issues

(Bloomberg Law) -- The Trump administration is stripping some federal education funding from California for refusing to remove what the government calls 'radical gender ideology' from sex education materials. California is poised to lose $12.3 million in the cuts, an HHS spokesperson told Bloomberg Law, which come in the form of the termination of a grant for a program focused on sexual education to adolescents. Why New York City Has a Fleet of New EVs From a Dead Carmaker Trump Takes Second Swing at Cutting Housing Assistance for Immigrants Neom's Desert Ski Resort Strains Saudi Prince's $1.5 Trillion Plan Chicago Schools Seeks $1 Billion of Short-Term Debt as Cash Gone We Need a Reality Check on Crime, Safety and Transit 'Any California school district that doesn't adhere to our Transgender policies, will not be funded,' President Donald Trump wrote Thursday on Truth Social. All told, California's public schools receive nearly $8 billion of aid from Washington each year to support programs for low-income students, pupils with disabilities and special-education services. in June, the US Education Department said the state is violating rules protecting female athletes from unfair competition and also threatened to pull funding. 'California's refusal to comply with federal law and remove egregious gender ideology from federally funded sex-ed materials is unacceptable,' US Department of Health and Human Services' Andrew Gradison said in a statement Thursday on the sexual education grant cut. Gradison is the acting assistant secretary of the department's Administration for Children and Families, which handles the grant funding at issue. 'The Trump Administration will not allow taxpayer dollars to be used to indoctrinate children. Accountability is coming for every state that uses federal funds to teach children delusional gender ideology,' Gradison said. The California Department of Public Health said state 'students deserve access to educational information and materials that help them make healthy decisions about sexual activity, including the decision to delay sexual activity, while honoring and respecting their dignity including gender identity.' The department also noted that the curriculum in question 'is medically accurate, comprehensive, and age-appropriate.' The announcement comes as the Trump administration continues cracking down on gender affirming care services and education in the US. Transgender Rights Under Trump: Policy Battles and Legal Flights The US Department of Justice is also ramping up efforts, with recently unsealed court findings showing the administration subpoenaed the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia for 15 categories of information on gender-related care, including names, addresses, and Social Security numbers of patients that received treatment. The Federal Trade Commission is similarly looking into whether gender-affirming care for minors could count as deceptive trade practices. The HHS said in its Thursday announcement that California was teaching 'curricula that could encourage kids to contemplate mutilating their genitals' and instructed educators to tell students that men are at times born with female anatomy. 'Despite clear direction, California responded to ACF stating they will not be making the required modifications, leading ACF to take decisive action to terminate their PREP grant,' the HHS spokesperson said. The American Academy of Pediatrics has pushed back on an HHS report earlier this year that claimed the department found little benefit for medical intervention for minors with gender dysphoria. The AAP's president, Susan Kressly, said in a May statement that the HHS report 'misrepresents the current medical consensus and fails to reflect the realities of pediatric care.' The HHS told California Department of Public Health officials in a letter that they can appeal the findings within thirty days. —With assistance from Felipe Marques in San Francisco To contact the reporter on this story: Ian Lopez in Washington at To contact the editors responsible for this story: Zachary Sherwood at ; Brent Bierman at (Updates with comment from California Department of Health in seventh and eighth paragraphs.) Foreigners Are Buying US Homes Again While Americans Get Sidelined Volkswagen EVs Outsell Tesla in Europe a Decade After Dieselgate What Declining Cardboard Box Sales Tell Us About the US Economy Survived Bankruptcy. Next Up: Cultural Relevance? Women's Earnings Never Really Recover After They Have Children ©2025 Bloomberg L.P. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store