logo
What we know about the attack on two Minnesota lawmakers

What we know about the attack on two Minnesota lawmakers

BBC News18 hours ago

On Saturday, two state lawmakers from Minnesota were attacked in their homes in what Governor Tim Walz called a "politically motivated assassination" attempt. The attacks left one politician dead and another seriously injured.Police are hunting for a suspect, Vance Luther Boelter, who remains at large.The attacks drew condemnation from across the political spectrum. President Donald Trump said in a statement that "such horrific violence will not be tolerated".US Senator Amy Klobuchar, a Democrat who represents Minnesota, called it "an attack on everything we stand for as a democracy."
Who were the victims?
State representative Melissa Hortman and her husband, Mark, were shot and killed in their home, the governor said. She had served in the Minnesota House of Representatives for 20 years, and was speaker of the chamber from 2019-25.State Senator John Hoffman and his wife were shot multiple times and injured, but survived. They had surgery.Both lawmakers are Democrats.
What happened?
So far, local law enforcement has confirmed that the attacks occurred in the early hours of Saturday in the city of Brooklyn Park, Minnesota.Drew Evans, superintendent of the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension, said police received a call at 02:00 local time about an incident at Senator Hoffman's house. Another call to police came in at 03:35, when officers were checking on Hortman's home.Police exchanged gunfire with the suspect at Hortman's house in nearby Champlin, but he escaped. A manhunt is underway.Officials said the attacker was impersonating a police officer, driving a vehicle that resembled a police car and using a badge and uniform.
Who is the suspect?
Police said they are looking for a single suspect, 57-year-old Vance Luther Boelter.A former political appointee, Boelter was one a member of the same state workforce development board as Hoffman."We don't know the nature of the relationship or if they actually knew each other," he said.Chief Mark Bruley of the Brooklyn Park Police said authorities found a manifesto and a target list of individuals in the suspect's vehicle.US Senator Tina Smith of Minnesota, a Democrat, was on the list, a spokesman for her office confirmed to BBC. Boelter is a security contractor who has worked in Africa and the Middle East, according to an online CV. He has also had managerial roles at firms in Minnesota.He texted odd messages to friends at a Minneapolis residence, where he had rented a room and would stay one or two nights a week, the Minnesota Star Tribune reports.Boelter said: "I'm going to be gone for a while. 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."But police did not give details on a possible motive.
What is the fallout?
The governor has discouraged Minnesotans from attending planned protests against the Trump administration's policies that were set to take place in the state, and around the US, on Saturday, out of an abundance of caution.The attacks have also put a renewed spotlight on the issue of political violence in the US.President Trump survived two assassination attempts in 2024. In April this year, the house of Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro, a Democrat, was the target of an arson attack.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Man has $30,000 Rolex stolen by girl he brought back home from bar
Man has $30,000 Rolex stolen by girl he brought back home from bar

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Man has $30,000 Rolex stolen by girl he brought back home from bar

A Nashville man's date night took a turn after a woman he brought home from a bar allegedly stole his $30,000 Rolex. Audrey Schump, 24, was arrested and booked into the Davidson County Jail when police recovered a Rolex that was reported stolen by a man who invited her back to his place after a night out at the bars. Police received the report of a stolen watch on Thursday, June 12, by an unnamed victim. The man told cops he and his friends had been partying in Nashville Thursday night when they started talking to two women before inviting them back to their Airbnb. The two women agreed to go home with them and joined them at their place. At some point, the man said he took off his Rolex Daytona and stashed it under a hat on his nightstand, according to an arrest affidavit obtained by WVLT. He then headed to the bathroom, but when he returned he says he caught Schump reaching across the bed to the spot where the luxury watch had been placed. 'The victim states that he came back to the bedroom from the bathroom and observed the defendant reaching over the bed towards where his watch was located,' the affidavit states. Schump then allegedly bolted from the bedroom and fled the rental home with her friend. 'The victim states that the defendant then abruptly left the room.' The victim quickly called 911 to report the theft. The unnamed victim gave police a description of the suspect's appearance. Officers were quickly able to track the pair down just 'a block and a half away' from the rental unit. Schump was arrested and taken to Davidson County Jail. Officers found the alleged stolen Rolex was still on her at the police station. Schump was charged with felony theft of more than $10,000. She was released on a $25,000 bond. Crime, including theft, has increased by about 11.4 percent in Nashville as compared to this time last year.

Trump's immigration raids split White House
Trump's immigration raids split White House

Telegraph

timean hour ago

  • Telegraph

Trump's immigration raids split White House

Donald Trump's hardline stance on immigration has caused a split in the White House, pitting the policy's chief architect against politicians under pressure from farming lobbies. The president's administration has been ramping up immigration raids to fulfil Mr Trump's campaign pledge to carry out the 'largest deportation program' in US history. Under the direction of Stephen Miller, Mr Trump's deputy chief of staff, agents trying to hit targets of 3,000 arrests per day have chased migrant workers through fields in Southern California. But on Wednesday, Brooke Rollins, the agriculture secretary, warned Mr Trump that farming groups were concerned raids on agriculture would decimate an industry that relied on immigrant workers, the New York Times reported. She said farmers relied on migrants to work long hours and that farm groups were concerned they would stop turning up for work out of fear. More than 40 per cent of US farmworkers are undocumented immigrants, according to a 2022 report by the US Department of Agriculture. The following day, the US president responded to a post on Truth Social that said migrants in the farming and hospitality industries were 'very good, long time workers'. He wrote: 'Our great Farmers and people in the Hotel and Leisure business have been stating that our very aggressive policy on immigration is taking very good, long time workers away from them, with those jobs being almost impossible to replace. 'In many cases the Criminals allowed into our Country by the VERY Stupid Biden Open Borders Policy are applying for those jobs. This is not good. We must protect our Farmers, but get the criminals out of the USA. Changes are coming!' New guidance issued by Tatum King, a senior official at the United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), instructed agents to put a 'hold on all work site enforcement investigations/operations on agriculture [including aquaculture and meat packing plants], restaurants and operating hotels', according to the newspaper. But White House aides such as Mr Miller, were reportedly furious, exposing divisions within the administration over its immigration policy and Mr Trump's priorities to boost deportations while retaining his political support. Agricultural associations, whose members are typically Republicans, are understood to have been raising concerns with their Senate and congressional offices about the raids. The Trump administration had initially focused on targeting criminal migrants but has shifted gears in recent weeks. Mr Miller is credited as the mastermind who pushed for raids to be expanded to places where immigrants congregate and workplaces in a bid to drive up the numbers. Last month, Mr Miller set quotas for a t least 3,000 arrests a day, a steep jump from the roughly 660 daily arrests during Mr Trump's first 100 days in office. He is understood to have directed ICE chiefs to start targeting spots where migrants congregate, such as farms, stores like Home Depot, and workplaces. Following a spate of raids in Los Angeles, protests erupted in the city, which has spread across the US.

Exclusive: US Export-Import Bank considers $120 million loan for Greenland rare earths project
Exclusive: US Export-Import Bank considers $120 million loan for Greenland rare earths project

Reuters

timean hour ago

  • Reuters

Exclusive: US Export-Import Bank considers $120 million loan for Greenland rare earths project

June 15 (Reuters) - Critical Metals Corp (CRML.O), opens new tab has received a letter of interest from the U.S. Export-Import Bank (EXIM) for a loan worth up to $120 million to fund the company's Tanbreez rare earths mine in Greenland, in what would be the Trump administration's first overseas investment in a mining project. The loan, if approved, would boost U.S. access to minerals increasingly at the center of global economic trade and help offset the country's reliance on market leader China. It also comes after President Donald Trump openly mused earlier this year about acquiring the Danish island territory, an overture that has been repeatedly rejected. In a letter dated June 12 and reviewed by Reuters, New York-based Critical Metals has met initial requirements to apply for the $120 million EXIM loan and, if approved, would have a 15-year repayment term, longer than the company likely would have with private financing. The project would have to be "well-capitalized with sufficient equity from strategic investors" to receive the loan, the letter said. EXIM, which acts as the U.S. government's export credit agency, said in the letter that Critical Metals qualifies for a loan program designed to support companies that compete with China. The Tanbreez project is expected to cost $290 million and the EXIM funds would be used to fund technical work and get the mine to initial production by 2026. Once fully operational, the mine is expected to produce 85,000 metric tons per year of a rare earths concentrate and two minor metals. "This funding package is expected to unlock significant value for our project and our stakeholders," said Tony Sage, the company's CEO. Representatives for EXIM were not immediately available to comment. The move is the latest in a series of supportive actions by Washington toward the Tanbreez deposit and Greenland's mining sector. Reuters reported in January that former President Joe Biden's administration had successfully lobbied privately held Tanbreez Mining not to sell to a Chinese developer and instead sell to Critical Metals. Biden officials were visiting Nuuk as recently as last November trying to woo additional private investment, opens new tab in the island. Trump sent Vice President JD Vance to the island in March. The island's mining sector has developed slowly in recent years, hindered by limited investor interest, bureaucratic challenges and environmental concerns. Currently, only two small mines are in operation. Rare earths have strong magnetic properties that make them critical to high-tech industries ranging from electric vehicles to missile systems. Their necessity has given rise to intense competition as Western countries try to lessen their dependence on China's near-total control of their extraction and processing. Beijing in April put export restrictions on rare earths as part of its trade spat with Trump. The two countries earlier this month reached a truce, although Beijing's control of the sector has exacerbated the West's over-reliance and sparked a global hunt for fresh supplies. Despite the loan potential, Critical Metals would still have to either build a processing facility or find an existing site with spare capacity. The company told Reuters that its goal is to process the material inside the U.S., a goal the EXIM loan would make more achievable. Last year, Critical Metals had applied for funding to develop a processing facility from the U.S. Department of Defense, but the review process stalled ahead of Trump's January inauguration. For the EXIM loan's additional funding requirements, Critical Metals said it is considering offtake agreements, royalty streams and funding from other U.S. governmental agencies. Critical Metals told Reuters earlier this year that it has held supply talks with defense contractor Lockheed Martin (LMT.N), opens new tab, among others. Critical Metals' 10th-largest investor is brokerage firm Cantor Fitzgerald ( which was formerly led by Howard Lutnick before he joined Trump's cabinet as secretary of the U.S. Commerce Department. Sage told Reuters in January he had never met or talked to Lutnick, but acknowledged Cantor's investment was a positive for his company. EXIM last year extended a letter of interest to Perpetua Resources (PPTA.O), opens new tab for a loan worth up to $1.8 billion for its antimony and gold mine in Idaho.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store