Vance Boelter Bio: Minnesota Lawmakers Attack Suspect Charged
Vance Luther Boelter, the 57-year-old man suspected of shooting two Minnesota lawmakers and their spouses at their residences, is facing federal murder charges that could carry the death penalty, authorities announced.
Boelter is being charged on the federal level with stalking both lawmakers, murdering state representative Melissa Hortman and her husband Mark, and shooting state senator John Hoffman and his wife Yvette, the acting U.S. Attorney for Minnesota, Joe Thompson, said during a press conference on Monday. The murder charges could potentially subject him to the death penalty if he is convicted, Thompson said, though he declined to say whether his office would seek the penalty in the case.
Boelter also faces multiple state charges. Drew Evans, superintendent of the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension, told reporters that Boelter was arrested under a state criminal warrant and charged with the murders of Melissa and Mark Hortman as well as the shootings of John and Yvette Hoffman.
Minnesota has abolished the death penalty. The maximum sentence for first-degree murder in the state is life in prison without the possibility of parole.
Boelter is set to appear in both state and federal court Monday afternoon.
Boelter's apprehension on Sunday night ended what Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz called a 'complex and dangerous manhunt,' which involved local, state, and federal law enforcement officials. At a press conference Sunday night, Walz thanked the authorities involved for spending 'Father's Day away from their families to deliver justice for Melissa and Mark Hortman and their children who spent this Father's Day alone.'
Read More: FBI Offers $50k Reward in Hunt for Man Suspected of Killing Minnesota Lawmaker and Her Husband
Hortman and her husband were killed at their residence in Brooklyn Park in the early hours of Saturday morning. A short while before, the Hoffmans had been targeted at their home in nearby Champlin, where they were shot multiple times but survived the attack. Police discovered the couple after responding to a 911 call at around 2 a.m. local time. They have since undergone surgeries and are recovering in the hospital.
The FBI had earlier placed Boelter on its Most-Wanted list, describing him as having gray hair and brown eyes with a 6 ft., 1 in. height and weighing about 220 lbs.
Per the FBI, the suspect was impersonating a police officer when he carried out the assaults. Additional reports suggest he may have been wearing a realistic-looking latex mask.
Minnesota's Commissioner of Public Safety Bob Jacobson said at the press conference that Boelter 'exploited the trust our uniforms are meant to represent,' adding that the 'betrayal is deeply disturbing to those of us who wear the badge with honor and responsibility.'
When officers searched a fake police vehicle, believed to have been used by the suspect, on site near Hortman's residence, they found a 'manifesto,' which named a number of local lawmakers and organizations (including Hoffman and Hortman). This led to fears the suspect may have had additional targets in mind.
Authorities said they are continuing to investigate whether anyone helped Boelter, but that nothing in the criminal complaint suggests he did.
Walz decried how one man's 'unthinkable actions have altered the state of Minnesota' and promised that Boelter will 'serve justice.' Walz also emphasized that 'this cannot be the norm. It cannot be the way that we deal with our political differences.'
Here is what we know about Boelter.
Mark Bruley, chief of Brooklyn Park Police in Minnesota, described the operation as 'the largest manhunt in the state's history,' with over 20 different SWAT teams involved in a span of 43 hours.
Earlier on Sunday around midday local time, residents of Sibley County, Minn., were sent an emergency alert informing them that Boelter's vehicle had been found near the state's Highway 25. Boelter was not present at the scene. Prior to this, the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension reported that Boelter was last seen on Saturday morning in Minneapolis, shortly after the shootings, when at around 6 a.m., local time, he stopped by a home near 49th and Fremont, where residents say he had rented a room. Security cameras captured footage of Boelter wearing casual clothing and a cowboy hat.
Officials said the search for Boelter included the use of unmanned aerial vehicles and helicopters, as well as infrared technology.
Bruley said authorities created a perimeter after they were provided information that Boelter was seen in the area of Sibley County, which Evans, the superintendent, described as 'rural' and filled with 'streams, fields, woods, crops.' Where Boelter 'was ultimately taken into custody was in a field,' Evans said, adding that Boelter was armed during his arrest.
Minnesota State Patrol Assistant Chief Lt. Col. Jeremy Geiger said law enforcement did not use force during the arrest and no law enforcement personnel was injured. Boelter 'crawled to law enforcement teams,' Geiger said, before his arrest.
Boelter and Hoffman worked together in some capacity on the Governor's Workforce Development Board. In a press conference, superintendent Evans was asked about the nature of the relationship between Boelter and Hoffman.
'There's certainly some overlap with some public meetings with Sen. Hoffman and the individual, but we don't know the nature of the relationship or if they actually knew each other,' Evans said.
It's unclear if the suspect had previously crossed paths with state Rep. Hortman or her husband.
When officers arrived on the scene at Hortman's residence, they spotted a fake police vehicle. When law enforcement searched the SUV, they found a 'manifesto' marked with around 70 names of lawmakers and organizations. Hoffman and Hortman were named.
The list reportedly included several different lawmakers across Minnesota, the Midwest, and the Capitol, as well as locations for Planned Parenthood.
Superintendent Evans has said it would be 'premature' to comment with any certainty on the motivation of the attacks based on the writing alone.
The authorities have sent extra security to those that they believe are in harm's way with the suspect still at-large.
On Meet the Press, Klobuchar said that more security had been added to her team.
'It was politically-motivated, and there clearly was some through line with abortion because of the groups that were on the list, and other things that I've heard were in this manifesto,' Klobuchar said.
In an interview with NPR, Minnesota Sen. Tina Smith, a Democrat, said she was on the manifesto list and that she is currently working closely with Capitol Police and local law enforcement.
There were also "No Kings" flyers, in reference to the protests that took place across the U.S. on Saturday, found in the vehicle. As a result, police urged the public not to attend the Minnesota "No Kings" demonstration. Despite the organizers canceling the event, large crowds still showed up.
Boelter is listed as having a home near Green Isle, Minn. The Police conducted a search of the home on Saturday.
David Carlson, a friend of Boelter, is quoted as telling CNN affiliate KARE that Boelter texted his friends in the lead-up to the shootings.
'I just wanna let you know that I love you guys and I wish it hadn't gone this way. I don't wanna 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 all the trouble this has caused,' the text reportedly said.
According to Carlson, Boelter worked at a funeral home, owned guns, and voted for President Donald Trump last year.
A LinkedIn page that seemingly belongs to Boelter states he has a doctorate in educational leadership and a master's of science in management from Cardinal Stritch University in Milwaukee. The prefix "Dr." is used across his online profiles.
That LinkedIn profile puts Boelter as the CEO of the Red Lion Group, a self-described security services company.
Boelter also appears to be listed as 'director of security patrols' for Praetorian Guard Security Services, which is introduced on the company's website as a security firm that provides residential security patrols, event security services, and uniformed security. The company describes how it drives "the same make and model of vehicles that many police departments use in the U.S.' A woman named Jenny, believed to be Boelter's wife, is listed as the company's president.
Read More: The Trump Assassination Attempt Represents a Dark New Chapter in American Politics
Boelter appears to be an Evangelical Christian, who has delivered testimonials in Africa.
In one video reviewed by TIME, a man that resembles a strong likeness to Boelter can be seen criticizing the LGBTQ+ community, saying: 'There's people, especially in America, they don't know what sex they are, they don't know their sexual orientation, they're confused. The enemy has gotten so far into their mind and their soul.'
Six years ago, a post on the LinkedIn profile believed to belong to Boelter urged people in the U.S. to vote, though it did not specify who people should vote for.
Contact us at letters@time.com.
Hashtags

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


CNN
32 minutes ago
- CNN
Would-be hitwoman from Wisconsin convicted in UK over failed murder plot
An American woman who was hired by her British lover as a would-be assassin, but then botched the attack and spent five years on the run, has been found guilty of conspiracy to murder. Aimee Betro, 44, from Wisconsin, attempted to shoot a man dead outside his home in Birmingham, England, on September 7, 2019, but failed because her gun jammed – leaving her would-be victim to escape unscathed through 'sheer luck,' according to prosecutor Hannah Sidaway, from the Crown Prosecution Service in the West Midlands. After a case that spanned continents and involved multiple crime agencies, including the FBI and the National Crime Agency, Betro was convicted Tuesday at Birmingham Crown Court. The court had heard that, despite living thousands of miles away, Betro had become entangled in a family revenge plot arranged by father and son, Mohammed Aslam and Mohammed Nazir, from Derbyshire, England. The plot stemmed from a fight the pair had with the owner of a clothing store in Birmingham in 2018. The court heard how the dispute with the store owner, Aslat Mahumad, led the two men to conspire to kill him, or a member of his family, the UK's PA Media news agency reported. His son, Sikander Ali, was the eventual target and victim, according to PA. Aslam and Nazir were jailed for their role in the murder plot last year, West Midlands Police said in a statement. Nazir was sentenced to 32 years in prison while Aslam landed 10 years, according to the CPS. 'Only Betro knows what truly motivated her or what she sought to gain from becoming embroiled in a crime that meant she travelled hundreds of miles from Wisconsin to Birmingham to execute an attack on a man she did not know. The jury clearly agreed this was a planned hit which failed,' the prosecutor said. Over the three-week trial, the court heard how Betro met her lover Nazir on a dating app in late 2018 and flew to meet him in person that Christmas, before returning to the US in January 2019, PA reported. In August 2019, she traveled to the UK again to carry out the planned killing the following month. On the day of the attack, Betro disguised herself in a niqab and waited outside her victim's house in a Mercedes purchased earlier that day, the CPS said. As the man pulled up to his home in his Black SUV, CCTV captured Betro leaving her vehicle, firearm in hand, and attempting to fire shots. As the weapon jammed, the man was able to escape in his car, reversing at speed and clipping the Mercedes' door on the way out of the cul-de-sac, according to the CPS. After the bungled attempt, the hitwoman abandoned her vehicle nearby, before returning to the property hours later in a taxi, the CPS detailed. She fired three bullets through the windows of the house, including a bedroom window. She then returned to her taxi, from which she sent taunting messages from a burner phone to the victim's father, reading 'Where are you hiding,' and ''Stop playing hide 'n' seek you're lucky it jammed.' The damaged Mercedes was later recovered with a key piece of evidence inside, a black glove containing Betro's DNA, the CPS said. Betro fled the UK within hours of the shooting. She was joined in the US three days later by her lover and co-conspirator, Nazir. The pair orchestrated another revenge plot, involving sending illegal ammunition to a man in Derby, England, in the hopes he would be arrested, according to West Midlands Police. The Wisconsin-native then decided to hideout in Armenia, where she was tracked down by Armenian police in July 2024 and extradited, the CPS said. 'This was a complex investigation and extradition process which required bringing together multiple agencies including the National Crime Agency and Armenian Courts. We worked together to make sure we had a watertight prima facie case in order to lawfully arrest Aimee Betro in a foreign country without her becoming aware and potentially fleeing again,' John Sheehan, head of the CPS Extradition unit, said. Betro will be sentenced on Thursday, August 21.


CNN
an hour ago
- CNN
Would-be hitwoman from Wisconsin convicted in UK over failed murder plot
Crime UKFacebookTweetLink Follow An American woman who was hired by her British lover as a would-be assassin, but then botched the attack and spent five years on the run, has been found guilty of conspiracy to murder. Aimee Betro, 44, from Wisconsin, attempted to shoot a man dead outside his home in Birmingham, England, on September 7, 2019, but failed because her gun jammed – leaving her would-be victim to escape unscathed through 'sheer luck,' according to prosecutor Hannah Sidaway, from the Crown Prosecution Service in the West Midlands. After a case that spanned continents and involved multiple crime agencies, including the FBI and the National Crime Agency, Betro was convicted Tuesday at Birmingham Crown Court. The court had heard that, despite living thousands of miles away, Betro had become entangled in a family revenge plot arranged by father and son, Mohammed Aslam and Mohammed Nazir, from Derbyshire, England. The plot stemmed from a fight the pair had with the owner of a clothing store in Birmingham in 2018. The court heard how the dispute with the store owner, Aslat Mahumad, led the two men to conspire to kill him, or a member of his family, the UK's PA Media news agency reported. His son, Sikander Ali, was the eventual target and victim, according to PA. Aslam and Nazir were jailed for their role in the murder plot last year, West Midlands Police said in a statement. Nazir was sentenced to 32 years in prison while Aslam landed 10 years, according to the CPS. 'Only Betro knows what truly motivated her or what she sought to gain from becoming embroiled in a crime that meant she travelled hundreds of miles from Wisconsin to Birmingham to execute an attack on a man she did not know. The jury clearly agreed this was a planned hit which failed,' the prosecutor said. Over the three-week trial, the court heard how Betro met her lover Nazir on a dating app in late 2018 and flew to meet him in person that Christmas, before returning to the US in January 2019, PA reported. In August 2019, she traveled to the UK again to carry out the planned killing the following month. On the day of the attack, Betro disguised herself in a niqab and waited outside her victim's house in a Mercedes purchased earlier that day, the CPS said. As the man pulled up to his home in his Black SUV, CCTV captured Betro leaving her vehicle, firearm in hand, and attempting to fire shots. As the weapon jammed, the man was able to escape in his car, reversing at speed and clipping the Mercedes' door on the way out of the cul-de-sac, according to the CPS. After the bungled attempt, the hitwoman abandoned her vehicle nearby, before returning to the property hours later in a taxi, the CPS detailed. She fired three bullets through the windows of the house, including a bedroom window. She then returned to her taxi, from which she sent taunting messages from a burner phone to the victim's father, reading 'Where are you hiding,' and ''Stop playing hide 'n' seek you're lucky it jammed.' The damaged Mercedes was later recovered with a key piece of evidence inside, a black glove containing Betro's DNA, the CPS said. Betro fled the UK within hours of the shooting. She was joined in the US three days later by her lover and co-conspirator, Nazir. The pair orchestrated another revenge plot, involving sending illegal ammunition to a man in Derby, England, in the hopes he would be arrested, according to West Midlands Police. The Wisconsin-native then decided to hideout in Armenia, where she was tracked down by Armenian police in July 2024 and extradited, the CPS said. 'This was a complex investigation and extradition process which required bringing together multiple agencies including the National Crime Agency and Armenian Courts. We worked together to make sure we had a watertight prima facie case in order to lawfully arrest Aimee Betro in a foreign country without her becoming aware and potentially fleeing again,' John Sheehan, head of the CPS Extradition unit, said. Betro will be sentenced on Thursday, August 21.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Mark Ruffalo's Task, From Mare of Easttown EP, Gets September Premiere Date on HBO — Watch Trailer
Mark Ruffalo is taking criminals to task this fall. The network on Tuesday released the full trailer for Task, the forthcoming drama created by Brad Ingelsby (Mare of Easttown), which premieres Sunday, Sept. 7 (HBO, 9/8c), with new episodes airing weekly. More from TVLine Only Murders in the Building Season 5 Trailer Reveals Roles for 8 New Guest Stars - Get Premiere Date The series is 'set in the working class suburbs of Philadelphia,' where Tom (Ruffalo), an FBI agent, 'heads a task force to put an end to a string of violent robberies led by an unsuspecting family man (Ozark's Tom Pelphrey),' according to the official logline. As previously reported, the cast also includes Martha Plimpton (Raising Hope), who plays Kathleen McGinty, the career FBI agent 'who recruits Tom to head up the task force just as she learns that she is being forced to retire.' Meanwhile, Mireille Enos (Killing) co-stars as Susan Brandis, 'Tom's loving wife and the heart and soul of the family. She and Tom married young and [she] is the reason he left the priesthood.' Rounding out the large ensemble are Emilia Jones (Locke & Key), Jamie McShane (Wednesday), Sam Keeley (68 Whiskey), Thuso Mbedu (The Underground Railroad), Fabien Frankel (House of the Dragon), Alison Oliver (Saltburn), Raúl Castillo (Looking), Silvia Dionicio (Chicago P.D.) and Phoebe Fox (The Great). After you hit PLAY on the trailer above, head to the comments to share your first impressions of HBO's ! Best of TVLine 'Missing' Shows, Found! Get the Latest on Ahsoka, Monarch, P-Valley, Sugar, Anansi Boys and 25+ Others Yellowjackets Mysteries: An Up-to-Date List of the Series' Biggest Questions (and Answers?) The Emmys' Most Memorable Moments: Laughter, Tears, Historical Wins, 'The Big One' and More Solve the daily Crossword