logo
Rochester police investigating second incident where man grabs a runner from behind, 'simulates sexual acts'

Rochester police investigating second incident where man grabs a runner from behind, 'simulates sexual acts'

Yahooa day ago

Jun. 11—ROCHESTER — The Rochester Police Department is investigating an incident that happened when a female runner was grabbed from behind by a man.
The incident reportedly occurred around 10 a.m. Sunday, June 8, near the 800 block of 16th Street Southwest, according to an RPD release.
The man began to "simulate sexual acts," the release said. The woman was able to break free, and the suspect fled the scene. The suspect was described as a 6-foot-tall, thin Black man in his 20s. He was last seen wearing a Minnesota Twins beanie and red pants, RPD said.
RPD said the incident is similar to an April 2025 report when a man inappropriately touched a female runner near the Soldiers Field area. The suspect described in the April 2025 incident matched the description of the man involved in Sunday's incident, police said.
If anyone has information about the suspect, RPD urges them to contact Detective Craig Jacobsen by calling the non-emergency number, 507-328-6800.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Officers sue to compel Congress to install a Jan. 6 riot memorial at Capitol

timean hour ago

Officers sue to compel Congress to install a Jan. 6 riot memorial at Capitol

WASHINGTON -- Two of the police officers who defended the U.S. Capitol from a mob of Trump supporters filed a lawsuit on Thursday seeking to compel Congress to follow one of its own laws and install a memorial to the Jan. 6, 2021, attack. The officers claim the failure to install the memorial plaque on the Capitol reflects an effort by President Donald Trump and his congressional allies to rewrite the history of the Jan. 6 riot. 'Even those who recognized the violence of the day eventually partnered with the man who both inspired and minimized it,' the suit says. More than 100 law enforcement officers were injured in the attack. Hundreds of people were convicted of Capitol riot-related crimes, but Trump erased all of the cases in a sweeping act of clemency on his first day back in the White House. In 2022, Congress passed a law directing the Architect of the Capitol to install a memorial honoring the officers who tried to hold off the mob. The deadline for installing it passed over three years ago. In April, Architect of the Capitol Thomas Austin told a House subcommittee that House Speaker Mike Johnson, a Louisiana Republican, had not instructed him to install the plaque. The speaker is responsible for any modifications to the House side of the Capitol, Austin noted. Spokespeople for Austin's office and Johnson didn't immediately respond to emails seeking comment on the lawsuit. The lawsuit's plaintiffs — Metropolitan Police Department officer Daniel Hodges and former Capitol Police officer Harry Dunn — have been outspoken critics of Republicans' revisionist history of Jan. 6. 'Both men live with psychic injuries from that day, compounded by their government's refusal to recognize their service,' the suit says. Hodges was nearly crushed in a door frame during a battle for control of a tunnel entrance. Rioters ripped a gas mask off his face and dislodged his helmet. Dunn left the Capitol police before running an unsuccessful campaign for a House seat in Maryland last year, losing in the Democratic primary. Dunn, who is Black, has said rioters yelled racial slurs at him during the siege. Hodges and Dunn joined Rep. Jamie Raskin in the Maryland Democrat's office on Thursday to discuss the memorial and their lawsuit. Raskin said he placed a poster replica of the plaque outside his office and is encouraging his colleagues to do the same until Johnson complies with the law. Dunn said they tried applying political pressure and 'asking nicely' for the memorial to be installed. 'It didn't work,' he said. 'It's unfortunate that we had to file a lawsuit to compel Congress to follow their own law, but here we are.' Raskin, who led Trump's impeachment over the insurrection, thanked them for taking their campaign to court. 'All you're asking for is the law to be followed,' he said.

Danville man sentenced to 9 years for 2023 armed robbery
Danville man sentenced to 9 years for 2023 armed robbery

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Danville man sentenced to 9 years for 2023 armed robbery

DANVILLE, Ill. (WCIA) — A Danville man has been sentenced to nine years in prison for an armed robbery that happened in October of 2023. Court records show KeShawn Stapleton, 23, was facing five felony counts for crimes including armed robbery and mob action and a misdemeanor count of obstructing identification. On Monday, he reached a plea deal with prosecutors that saw him plead guilty to a Class 1 felony count of armed robbery; the other counts were dismissed. Acquitted, accused again, convicted: Champaign man found guilty of murder Evidence presented in court showed that on Oct. 26, 2023, Stapleton was one of five Black males who approached a person walking to a trash dumpster near Lewis Street. The group held the victim at gunpoint and stole his backpack, which had an Xbox inside, his cell phone and the shoes off the victim's feet. The crime was recorded by a security camera. As detectives were speaking with the victim, Danville Police received a call about robbery suspects running toward Moore Street. When officers responded to the area, they saw several Black males exiting a car on Moore Street. Stapleton was arrested during this police encounter. The State's Attorney's Office said Moore was identified as one of the perpetrators based on his clothes; what he was wearing when he was arrested matched the clothes of the suspect who was recorded on camera taking the robbery victim's shoes from his feet. The shoes and the victim's cell phone were subsequently found inside the vehicle Stapleton exited on Moore Street. Sangamon, Menard Co. Crime Stoppers seeking tips in theft at Springfield church 'I commend the Danville Police Department for quickly identifying and apprehending these violent offenders. We are grateful to the victim for coming forward,' State's Attorney Jacqueline Lacy said in a news release. 'Armed robbery is a dangerous crime that threatens the safety of our entire community. My office remains committed to working with the police to pursue justice and protect victims of violent crime.' Stapleton was given credit for 592 days he's already served in custody, and his sentence will be served at 50%. Once out of prison, he will spend one year on parole. Two other people have been charged in connection to the robbery. Alvin Daniels, charged with the same five felony counts as Stapleton, pleaded guilty in February to one of them and was sentenced to five years in prison. Another person, who is a juvenile, has been charged, but the State's Attorney's Office did not go into further detail. The investigation into the robbery is still ongoing, and people with relevant information are asked to contact law enforcement. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Chabria: First they came for the immigrants. Then they took down our Latino senator
Chabria: First they came for the immigrants. Then they took down our Latino senator

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Chabria: First they came for the immigrants. Then they took down our Latino senator

Things were looking tense in Los Angeles on Thursday even before federal agents took down U.S. Sen. Alex Padilla. We had the Marines, slightly trained in domestic crowd control, heading out to do crowd control. We had ICE raids, sweeping up a man from a church. Or maybe it was ICE — the armed and masked agents refused to say where they were from. But then the situation went further south, which to be honest, I thought would take at least until Monday. Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem was in town to cosplay at being an ICE agent herself. You know she loves to dress up. Padilla, who was in the same building to meet with a general, went to a news conference she was hosting and tried to ask her a question. Bad idea. Federal agents manhandled him out of the room, shoved him down onto his knees and handcuffed him. The FBI has confirmed to my colleagues that he was not arrested, but that's little comfort. While officers may not have known Padilla was a U.S. senator when they started going after him, they certainly did by the time the cuffs were snapping. Padilla was heard saying, 'Hands off, hands off. I'm Sen. Alex Padilla," as the officers pushed him back. The hands remained on. Shortly after the video of this frightening episode hit social media, Gov. Gavin Newsom posted on X, "If they can handcuff a U.S. Senator for asking a question, imagine what they will do to you." Indeed. After the news conference, Noem offered a sorry-not-sorry. "I wish that he would have reached out and identified himself and let us know who he was and that he wanted to talk," she told reporters. "His approach, you know, was something that I don't think was appropriate at all, but the conversation was great, and we're going to continue to communicate.' It was great! Send in the Marines! When asked why she had ordered the removal of Padilla, Noem deferred to law enforcement. 'I'll let the law enforcement speak to how this situation was handled, but I will say that it's people need to identify themselves before they start lunging at these moments during press conference," she said. "Lunging." It is starting to feel like being brown in America is a crime. Brown man allegedly lunging is the new Black man driving — scary enough that any response is justified. Sen. Adam Schiff, our other California senator, came to his colleague's defense, demanding an investigation. "Anyone who looks at it — anyone — anyone who looks at this, it will turn your stomach," he said. "To look at this video and see what happened reeks — reeks — of totalitarianism. This is not what democracies do." Political pundit Mike Madrid pointed out how personal this issue of immigration is to Padilla. Padilla is the son of Mexican immigrants, Santos and Lupe Padilla. He went into politics in 1995 because of the anti-immigrant Proposition 187, the California measure that knocked all undocumented people off of many public services, including schools. He's been a champion of immigrant communities ever since. "Hard to describe how angered and passionate Senator Alex Padilla is — I've known him for 25 years and never seen anything like this," Madrid wrote online. "He's a living example of how Latinos feel right now." And not just Latinos — all Americans who care about democracy. We are about to have approximately 3,000 hours of debate on whether Padilla deserved what he got because he was not invited to the press conference. The right wing is going to parse the video looking for that lunge and saying Padilla was aggressive. The left will say he has a right to ask questions, even a duty because he is an elected representative whose constituents are being detained and disappeared, even ones who are U.S. citizens. I'll say I genuinely do not care if you are pro-Trump or pro-Padilla. If you care about our Constitution, about due process, about civil rights, watching a U.S. senator forced onto his knees for asking questions should be a terrifying wake-up call. It turns out that it's true: After they come for the vulnerable, they do indeed come for the rest. Sign up for Essential California for news, features and recommendations from the L.A. Times and beyond in your inbox six days a week. This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

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