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Charges: Shoplifting suspect delivered several strikes to Roseville officer's head, injuring him
Charges: Shoplifting suspect delivered several strikes to Roseville officer's head, injuring him

Yahoo

time07-03-2025

  • Yahoo

Charges: Shoplifting suspect delivered several strikes to Roseville officer's head, injuring him

Charges say a Roseville police officer took repeated strikes to the head from a man he was trying to arrest Wednesday for stealing from Walmart. The officer was called to the store and met with loss‐prevention staff, who had detained Collin Scott Magnuson, 31, of Minneapolis, on suspicion of theft. When told he was under arrest, Magnuson became 'uncooperative and physically aggressive' with the officer, who then grabbed onto his arm, the criminal complaint says. Magnuson used his weight to 'charge' and push toward the officer, who brought him to the ground. Magnuson swung his arms toward the officer's face, hitting him near his eye with a closed fist. He ripped the officer's radio off his vest, and had one of his hands around the back of the officer's neck, the complaint says. Magnuson continued swinging at the officer's face and thrashing his legs as the officer tried to get control of his arms. Magnuson's knee struck the officer on the left side of his face, causing him to become dizzy and 'lose a sense of his surroundings,' the complaint states. 'The next thing the officer could remember was a (a man) asking him if he needed help.' The man had seen the assault and took hold of Magnuson's wrist, but Magnuson tried to bite the officer's hand and punch him again, the complaint says. The officer then used his taser on Magnuson, who laughed and said, 'I am so (expletive) scared of your taser.' He held Magnuson to the ground until other officers arrived and helped get him into custody. Walmart's surveillance footage showed Magnuson assaulting the officer, who felt dazed and blurry and had a 'pounding headache from receiving repeated strikes,' the charges state. His left temple had begun to swell. Roseville Deputy Police Chief Joe Adams said Friday that the officer, who did not want to be identified, continues to experience concussion symptoms and has been told to take some time off work. The assault was the fourth against a Roseville officer since Jan. 15, Adams said, adding 'that's an anomaly for us.' Magnuson faces one count each of third- and fourth-degree assault, both felonies. He went before a judge Friday in a first appearance on the charges and remains jailed in lieu of $40,000 bail. Crime & Public Safety | Apple Valley man jailed in fatal Bloomington hit-and-run Crime & Public Safety | Mexican cartel leader's son is sentenced to life in prison for role in major drug trafficking plot Crime & Public Safety | Ex-Olympian, accused in drug ring tied to Southern California, added to FBI's 10 Most Wanted list Crime & Public Safety | Hudson man charged with killing wife with knife in the couple's townhome Crime & Public Safety | Minnesota funeral home owner accused of attempting to transport body while intoxicated Court records show Magnuson was put on unsupervised probation for one year on April 11 after pleading guilty to disorderly conduct and fourth-degree criminal damage to property in St. Louis County in connection with an October 2023 incident in the lobby of a Duluth apartment building where he lived at the time. Witnesses said he yelled at a man and then became 'extremely upset and agitated' and threw tables and chairs. Magnuson's criminal record includes disorderly conduct convictions in 2016 and 2017. Magnuson has an open St. Louis County case from June that says Duluth officers were called to the Fond-du-Luth Casino on May 31 for a welfare check and saw him charge at a man unprovoked. The two then fought on the ground before officers broke it up. Magnuson was charged with fifth-degree assault and in January pleaded guilty to an amended charge of disorderly conduct. His sentencing is set for April 3.

Fulton judge accused of detaining woman during parents' divorce hearing, calling in favor for uncle
Fulton judge accused of detaining woman during parents' divorce hearing, calling in favor for uncle

Yahoo

time20-02-2025

  • Yahoo

Fulton judge accused of detaining woman during parents' divorce hearing, calling in favor for uncle

A Fulton County Superior Court judge is facing charges accusing her of misconduct. Earlier this week, the Judicial Qualifications Commission brought 15 charges against Judge Shermela Williams. Several of the charges accuse the judge of taking too long to render a decision on child support and child custody cases, some taking as long as 30 months. [DOWNLOAD: Free WSB-TV News app for alerts as news breaks] One of the complaints involves a 22-year-old woman being detained after testifying in her parents' divorce case. During her testimony, the woman reported having a strained relationship with her father and going to his apartment and damaging it. While attorneys delivered closing arguments, Judge Williams reportedly stopped them to discuss the daughter's testimony. She is quoted in the complaint as telling the woman she had admitted to 36 years in prison worth of crimes in her testimony before having a deputy 'show her what that cell looks like.' The woman was then left in a holding cell for more than 30 minutes. When she was brought back into the courtroom, Judge Williams is quoted as telling the woman about 'girls who came in here with daddy issues.' The JQC complaint says that Williams had no legal justification to detain the woman in a cell. TRENDING STORIES: Carson Beck's Mercedes-Benz, Lamborghini stolen from his Miami home Boss shoots, kills employee at Gwinnett McDonald's parking lot 'RHOA' star's estranged husband's citizenship request denied In a separate incident, the complaint details Judge Williams asking a metro Atlanta law firm to call her on a personal cell phone after hours. When speaking with an associate with the law firm, the judge is accused of asking for an extension in a case so the respondent, her uncle, would have more time to file his answer. She is quoted as telling the associate that because others at the firm were reasonable, they should 'work something out.' The complaint claims Williams used the 'prestige of her office to advance the private interest of another.' Channel 2 Action News has reached out to Judge Williams' office for a comment. S25Z0722 JQC Formal Charges by Jennifer Smith on Scribd [SIGN UP: WSB-TV Daily Headlines Newsletter]

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