
Accused Minnesota maniac Vance Boelter rants to The Post about Tim Walz, calls governor ‘traitor to the American people'
Boelter, 57, claimed he first met Walz when the governor 'personally reappointed' him to serve on Minnesota's Workforce Development Council in 2019, he wrote from Sherburne County Jail, using its internal messaging system.
Walz 'was always telling me China was the future, China knows how to get things done, China knows how to control their people,' Boelter ranted.
4 Minnesota Governor Tim Walz 'was always telling me China was the future,' accused Minnesota maniac Vance Boelter bizarrely claimed from jail this week.
CRAIG LASSIG/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock
The Democratic vice presidential candidate was dogged last year on the campaign trail by questions about his ties to China — which he's famously visited more than 30 times.
'Tim would say stuff like everyone should be either working for the government, or be supported by the government,' Boelter claimed.
Walz's name, Boelter said, was on the list he carried on June 14 — the day he allegedly murdered Minnesota House Speaker Melissa Hortman and her husband, Mark, and shot Sen. John Hoffman and his wife, Yvette. He has since pleaded not guilty to murder and attempted murder charges.
The madman bizarrely claimed the names — which he insisted was not a 'hit list' — were of those 'getting massive financial amounts from the Chinese government,' citing unspecified 'financial documents' that he'd seen.
4 Boelter whined he shouldn't be given the death penalty — because he didn't shoot at cops when he claimed he had the chance to do so.
Sherburne County Jail
Walz, 61, first visited China in 1989 as a fresh college grad, working for the WorldTeach program in Foshan, according to reports. Three years later, Walz and his wife Gwen helped launch an exchange program in Beijing for high school students.
During a school lesson in 1991, he said of China's communist system 'means that everyone is the same, and everyone shares,' the Washington Free Beacon reported.
Follow the latest on the arrest of suspected Minnesota assassin Vance Boelter:
While serving in Congress, Walz was also a visiting fellow at a state-run university in China – which led the House Committee on Oversight and Accountability to open a probe last August into his ties with Chinese government officials. The Committee has not released any definitive conclusions on the matter.
The North Star State governor 'even wanted me to go over to China. He said they will make sure you have a really good time,' claimed Boelter, who alleged that such communications with Walz happened over the phone.
4 Boelter claimed he only intended to do '4 or 5 Citizen arrests' on June 14, 'and everyone was going to be released safe in the morning,' he said.
FBI
The US Attorney's office in Minnesota has slammed Boelter's claims as 'fantasy' and local prosecutors previously said they'd 'seen no evidence that the allegations regarding Governor Walz are based in fact.'
Walz's office has called the shooting 'deeply disturbing' and a 'tragedy.'
Boelter claimed he only intended to do '4 or 5 Citizen arrests and everyone was going to be released safe in the morning…My goal was not to go around shooting people.'
Boelter wanted to 'question' his targets about how people 'were dying in Minnesota after getting the COVID 19 vaccine' and 'how the MN government leaders were covering it up.'
His plan 'went horribly wrong,' after the Hoffman's and their adult daughter rushed at and tried to subdue him.
4 Boelter said his plan 'went horribly wrong,' after state Sen. John Hoffman, his wife Yvette and their adult daughter rushed at and tried to subdue him.
johnhoffmanmn/Instagram
'At that moment I aimed the gun down between us at the floor hoping not to shoot my foot and just started firing until I was out of the house,' he told The Post, adding his 'mask had shifted during the struggle,' so he couldn't see where he was shooting.
'As I started shooting, people started letting go at different times and so my arm was being pushed and pulled and so where [sic] all the rounds that were going at That point is hard to say. When I stopped shooting I realized I was outside the door.'
He whined he shouldn't be given the death penalty — because he didn't shoot at cops when he claimed he had the chance to do so when they closed in as he left the Hortman home.
'If I withheld shooting at the police and they decide to pursue the death penalty that will send the message that the government sees no value in that,' he continued. 'That's not a good message to put out there.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Hill
18 minutes ago
- The Hill
GM's quarterly results illustrate the folly of tariffs
General Motors, a cornerstone of American industry, is suffering the consequences of President Trump's unconstitutional 25 percent tariffs on imported vehicles and auto parts. In the second quarter of 2025, GM suffered a $1.1 billion tariff blow to its operating income, slashing the company's profit margin from a healthy 9 percent to just 6.1 percent. Net income plunged by 36.1 percent from the prior quarter and by a staggering 40.7 percent compared to a year ago. Although the estimated tariff impact for the full year of $4 billion to $5 billion is less than 3 percent of GM's overall revenue, that cost represents more than half of the typical annual income for the company over the past decade. The consequences extend far beyond GM's balance sheet. Tariffs, paid by importers to the federal government, are partly absorbed by companies and partly passed to consumers. We've especially seen this in import-sensitive sectors including furnishings, appliances, clothes and toys. Men's shirts and sweaters, for instance, rose 4.9 percent in June alone. When businesses 'eat' the cost, as GM tried to do last quarter, the fallout is no less severe. Diminished earnings mean less capital for investment in better technology or expanded operations, slowing broader economic growth, fewer resources for pay raises or new jobs — hardly the boon for workers that tariff advocates promise. The data confirms this. Nationwide, 14,000 manufacturing jobs disappeared in the past two months, erasing all gains in 2025. In June, real average weekly earnings dropped by 0.4 percent, an annualized loss of nearly 5 percent. Shareholders are also feeling the pinch. Stock valuations track a company's expected future earnings. Since 2012, GM's stock price increased by more than 200 percent. GM's price-to-earnings ratio today stands at 6.83, almost identical to 2012 levels. Stock prices increased alongside earnings. A sustained $5 billion annual hit, wiping out over half of GM's annual net income, could erase more than $20 billion in market capitalization if valuations adjust. With tariffs eroding profits, is it any wonder that GM's stock has slid 8 percent since its post-2024 election peak and now languishes 13 percent off its 2021 highs? This affects millions of middle-class Americans and retirees with pensions and savings invested. More broadly, lower dividends and diminished returns discourage investment, starving companies of the capital needed to expand. The result: slower growth, fewer jobs and weaker wage gains. GM, to its credit, is fighting to offset 30 percent of this burden by boosting U.S. production, cutting costs and increasing domestic content to comply with the USMCA trade agreement's labyrinthine rules. Yet even if successful, the net impact of $2.8 billion to $3.5 billion will devour a significant slice of GM's already thin margins. Profit margins at GM — as in most other sectors — are far less than conventional wisdom. GM's net profit margin over the past decade has averaged less than 5 percent. In other words, a $30,000 vehicle yields less than $1,500 in profit. GM's plans to shift some production to U.S. plants and rework supply chains is a testament to private enterprise's resilience. But make no mistake: These shifts sacrifice efficiency for compliance. Restructuring operations in a free market in pursuit of efficiency yields more profit, consumer benefit and economic growth. Doing so under duress to escape arbitrary tariffs may result in survival, but without these benefits. Resources that could have fueled innovation or lowered prices are now squandered on navigating artificial trade barriers. As an important sidenote, roughly half the tariff's cost stems from GM's South Korean operations, a stark reminder of the folly of taxing trade with allies. Rather than strengthening ties with democratic partners through bold free-trade agreements, these tariffs risk pushing nations like South Korea toward China, America's chief adversary. Far from economic strategy, it is geopolitical shortsightedness. Politicians sometimes prefer tariffs to other forms of taxation because they are less visible than taxes on income or sales. This makes it easier to dodge accountability by blaming 'greedy' corporations. For this reason, Trump called Jeff Bezos to deter Amazon from listing tariff costs on purchases. The White House press secretary labeled this a 'hostile and political act by Amazon.' Regardless, protectionism is not cost-free. Sustained tariffs will raise prices, shrink profits, erode real wages and slow economic growth. GM's quarterly results are a warning.


New York Post
an hour ago
- New York Post
Long Island teen attacked with metal 'Stanley' mug speaks out
A Long Island teen who needed 17 stitches when another girl's mom allegedly bashed her with a metal 'Stanley' water mug says she's too traumatized to return to school — much less ever use the brand of cup again. 'I'm shaking all the time,' said Madison Evans, a 14-year-old student at Brentwood High School, to The Post. 'I can't even look at those cups anymore. Every time I see one, it just brings it all back.' Madison said her horrific ordeal began when she was leaving summer school as usual one day at Brentwood last week and was approached by two girls she had never spoken to before. 7 Madison Evans, a 14-year-old student at Brentwood High School, needed 17 stitches when another girl's mom allegedly hit her with a metal 'Stanley' water mug, and is 'shaking all the time.' ABC 7 NY The girls, including a 15-year-old, have issues with her cousin, which made her a target by extension, Madison said. When the pair began bullying Madison outside the Suffolk County school, she verbally pushed back, she said. In a video obtained by The Post, Madison and one of the girls are seen arguing and being held back by security — while Toni Monroe, the 35-year-old mother of the 15-year-old, is standing next to her daughter and yelling. At one point, Monroe can be heard saying, 'Give me your Stanley' to her daughter, who obliges. The 15-year-old and Monroe then charge Madison, punching her and hitting her in the head multiple times with the cup, according to the video. Eyewitnesses claimed that afterward, Monroe tried to run away before being apprehended by security. 7 In a video obtained by The Post, Madison and one of the girls are seen arguing and being held back by security outside Brentwood High School. ABC 7 NY Madison described the chaos of the fight to The Post and the moment she realized blood was streaming down her face. 'I thought I was going to die,' she said. Police arrested Monroe, who had no prior criminal record, in the parking lot. 7 The 15-year-old and her 35-year-old mother, Toni Monroe, then charged at Madison, punching her and hitting her in the head multiple times with the cup. ABC 7 NY Madison said that at first, she was completely unaware that it was the girl's mother who jumped into the fight. 'I was kind of shocked,' she said of realizing it was Monroe who was swinging the bottle at her. 'I thought it was another student, but then when I looked at her, she had a tattoo — but then I just kept trying to defend myself.' 7 Police arrested Monroe, who had no prior criminal record. ABC 7 NY Monroe's daughter later defended her mom's actions on Instagram, claiming she only tried to break up the fight between her and Madison and was not actually trying to hurt the teen. But Shameakca Forney, Monroe's guardian, called the claim laughable and said the video and the 17 stitches on the teen's head are all the proof she needs to debunk that. 'If you're going to let the kids fight, then let the kids fight — kids will be kids, we've all done it growing up — but you don't jump in and fight kids,' Forney said. 7 'I thought it was another student, but then when I looked at her, she had a tattoo — but then I just kept trying to defend myself,' Madison said. ABC 7 NY Monroe, who claimed she was at the school to complain about bullying against her daughter, was arrested and charged with assault. She was released without bail but ordered to wear an ankle monitor and barred from contacting Madison. In court, Monroe's lawyer insisted it was her daughter who was being bullied. But students said Monroe's daughter is the one known to cause issues between herself and other students. 7 Madison's injuries. ABC 7 NY Madison's family said there is no excuse for Monroe's actions regardless of the situation. 'As a mom you're supposed to diffuse the situation and take your daughter away to see what's going on instead of attacking a kid with a cup,' said Madison's cousin, Tyleen Smith. Brentwood schools Superintendent Wanda Ortiz-Rivera called the incident 'unacceptable' and promised that 'the safety and well-being of our students is always our highest priority,' adding, 'This type of behavior will not be tolerated in our schools.' 7 Monroe claimed she was at the school to complain about bullying against her daughter, but students said Monroe's daughter is the one known to cause issues between herself and other students. ABC 7 NY For Madison, though, the damage is already done. The thought of returning to Brentwood High fills her with dread, and she doesn't feel safe walking the halls again, she said. She has yet to return to the classroom. She also said that while she enjoyed using Stanley mugs before, the thought of it now makes her sick.


New York Post
an hour ago
- New York Post
Rubio declares Russia has ‘get something' from peace deal as Putin demands Ukraine's Donetsk region
Secretary of State Marco Rubio underscored that both Russia and Ukraine will have to 'get something' out of a peace deal to end the war. Rubio didn't specify what concession Ukraine will have to make in order to get Russia to end its brutality, but hinted that it will likely be a tough ask. However, Russian strongman Vladimir Putin proposed taking all of the Ukrainian region of Donetsk — even the parts Ukraine currently controls — in exchange for a deal, The Post previously reported. Ukraine's leader has flatly rejected that idea. 3 Secretary of State Marco Rubio stressed that peace negotiations are going to result in both Russia and Ukraine making tough concessions. AP 'What it's going to take to stop the fighting, if we're being honest and serious here, is both sides are going to have to give, and both sides should expect to get something from this,' Rubio told CBS News' 'Face the Nation' on Sunday. 'It's very difficult because Ukraine obviously feels, you know, harmed, and rightfully so, because they were invaded,' he added. 'And the Russian side, because they feel like they got momentum in the battlefield.' Rubio didn't delve into specifics about the territorial concessions Ukraine will have to make, which is expected to be the topic of discussion between President Volodymyr Zelensky and President Trump during their White House meeting on Monday. 3 President Trump met with Russian leader Vladimir Putin for several hours on Friday. AP On Sunday, Trump reposted a user's remark on Truth Social that Ukraine will have to make territorial concessions to Russia in order to end the war. At Friday's summit in Alaska, Putin had demanded that Ukraine surrender the remaining quarter of Donetsk, a minerals-rich, Russian-speaking region, as part of a deal to end the war. In exchange, Putin expressed a willingness to freeze up fighting in the front lines of Kherson and Zaporizhzhia, where Russia has struggled to make significant progress, Axios reported. Critics fear that, because of the heavy Ukrainian fortifications in Donetsk, if they were to surrender that to the Russians, the Kremlin could cut much further into Ukraine in the future. Former National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan, who served under the Biden administration, cautioned that ceding land to Russia 'diplomatically' could 'just set Russia up to attack Ukraine in the future.' 'We definitely should not take Russia's word for it when they say, 'Oh, we won't do this again, even if they put it in legislation in Russia,'' Sullivan told 'Fox News Sunday.' Ahead of Trump's meeting with Putin in Alaska on Friday, the US president threatened to slap crippling secondary sanctions and tariffs on countries that import Russian oil. Rubio stressed that Trump is being cautious about pulling the trigger on those sanctions out of fear that it could end peace talks for an extended period of time. 'If this morning the president woke up and said I'm putting these terrible, strong sanctions on Russia, that's fine. [It] may make people feel good for a couple hours,' Rubio told Fox News' 'Sunday Morning Futures.' 'But here's what you're basically saying. You're saying talks are over. For the foreseeable future, for the next year or year-and-a-half, there's no more talks, because there's no one else in the world that can talk to him [Putin].' 3 Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky is set to meet with President Trump in the White House on Monday. Getty Images The secretary of state also indicated that while Trump pivoted away from a ceasefire push to the pursuit of a full-fledged peace deal, a ceasefire is not out of the question. 'No, it's not off the table,' Rubio told NBC's 'Meet the Press' on Sunday. 'Now, whether there needs to be a ceasefire on the way there, well, we've advocated for that. Unfortunately, the Russians as of now, have not agreed to that.' Rubio also appeared to downplay the possibility of Russia getting all of the Ukrainian territory it has conquered as part of a deal — roughly 20% of Ukraine. 'If there's going to be a peace deal, it's not going to look like that,' Rubio said, referring to a graphic about the Ukrainian territory Russia occupies. 'But he [Putin] certainly is making demands.' 'He's certainly asking for things that the Ukrainians and others are not willing to be supportive of and that we're not going to push them to give. And the Ukrainians are asking for things that the Russians are not going to give up on.'