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St. Paul restaurateurs complains about the crime of “out of control” to Fox News when the crime rates decrease

Welcome back to the transfer, your daily digestion of important, overlooked and/or interesting news from Minnesota.

Goes to Fox News so that the host can describe the place where her customers live as “Gotham City”. Good For the business?

“Really a kind of the last three or four years that has dealt with control … it explodes again and again,” said Brian Ingram, owner of the Purpose Restaurants Group, based in St. Paul, on Friday during a appearance in Fox News. (According to the SPD, violent crime has decreased in St. Paul for over two years, and a recently carried out analysis showed that the crime rates are significantly falling across the board.)

“I know that they wanted to reinterpret the police work there. It seems like it's like Gotham City,” says Fox & friends Host Lawrence Jones. (St. Paul never had a ballot initiative to think about the police, and in Minneapolis the voters rejected one before MPD was financed more than ever.)

“What I am most frustrated about is that they keep talking about facts, 'good crimes is no longer' …” added Ingram before offering his own anecdotes, um, facts. (For the sake of the symmetry, we will use these third brackets aside to offer an independent treat about Ingram, which “not” not “has a big rule” and last year by the General Prosecutor's office because of his hope, who may be violating the charity and legal efforts laws.)

Ingram appeared in the right cable approach to accuse the recent closure of his apostle support club about soft-on-crime politicians, a story that will reliably record Fox News like an dry dog. It is the same approach that he pursued on social media and triggered a round in panicked local news last week. Fortunately, Justine Jones and Stephanie March von MSP today offered an excellent, measured comment on the Apostle -Supper -Club Bouhaha. While you find that the city center of St. Paul currently has a lot of problems, they write:

It just doesn't seem fair that a failed restaurant defines everything that “Downtown Saint Paul is simply not a sustainable place for small, independent restaurants to thrive”. In fact, some of the commentators on social media wondered whether the pork chop of 40 US dollars or the quality of the service contributed to the apostle. Others pointed out that the same concept in Duluth was no longer possible for more than a year and wondered why this was not mentioned. The big truth is: As with most small companies, there is probably a whole boat load of why it didn't work. And while a business owner has the right to signal his frustrations for the city tour, this selected method is associated with costs for other small companies that fight every day not to break their lease in order to keep his employees busy.

Perhaps closed apostles because of crimes. Or maybe the restaurant group invested 4 million US dollars to build a concept, since pedestrian traffic in the city center decreases in an industry with a notorious narrow profit margins, although the Fox News Anchor didn't seem to be interested in any reason.

Scrapped by MPR/APM, In the dark Wins Pulitzer

In 2022, Minnesota Public Radio/American Public Media unloaded his Peabody-Refined APM Reports Division, which was responsible for the hit In the dark Podcast. “It positions us to invest the local news,” said MPR President Duchesne Drew during the examination of the corporate culture of MPR.

Set it under “Whoopsies”. In 2023 the New Yorker acquired In the dark And on Monday his bet paid hell: Madeleine Barans Longform Investigative Journalism Podcast won a Pulitzer price for audio reporting. The Pulitzer Committee describes the last season of In the dark AS, “A combination of convincing storytelling and relentless reporting given the obstacles of the US military.”

Congratulations, gait! Industry observers agree that batTheir scope of Ghost Hunters to Cheeseburger chefs to Radio legends from Twin Cities is ready to tidy up at the Pulitzer ceremony next year.

Basketball hoop -drama -update

Last week, a neighboring neighbor in St. Louis Park took the Twin Cities News Universe. On the one hand you have Julia Ramos, apparently apparently Really Happed to be near Basketball tires. On the other hand, you have the four-person Moeding family, which is sued together with the city of Ramos about the travel shop built on your own property.

“I lost so much sleep. It was so stressful,” says Lilly Moeding, who launched a gofundme to cover the legal costs, to Fox 9.

On Monday, Fox 9 published an update in which court documents were highlighted, which show that a lawyer of the city argues that Julia Ramos does not provide any evidence of their Bananas lawsuit. Here Ramos is in court, according to court documents …

I have not complained anywhere else or other basketball tires in the neighborhood. I complain about this special because it is right in front of my door … my kitchen window is right there. I have to watch her. I don't want to have to watch her.

And here is the city's answer …

The proposed base of Ramos for the interim decision is security and transition concerns, but even if these concerns were valid, this unusual application drastically exceeds the scope of this lawsuit. The final solution to this lawsuit by the court will determine the right place of a common residential complex, a basketball tire. It will not dictate children's how to drive up.

The Moedings collected $ 23,768 of their $ 28,000 gate, and they are apparently for the playoff game of Timberwolves-Garriors on Thursday (see below). Let these children uh!

Discovered in Duluth …

The people in the R/Duluth Subreddit showed themselves about the effectiveness of the copy/layout, but this billboard campaign from more perfect union – a progressive advocacy orga that was launched by Senior Bernie Sanders Advisor Faiz Shakir – has achieved greater success in R/National Park. (We turned to MPU to discuss it, but not belong back.)

At the beginning of this year, Senator Tina Smith Kate Severson, a Voyageurs National Park Ranger, who was released by Doge, invited her guest to the joint congress address of President Trump. “The employees in the first year are a waste of taxpayers' money,” Severson told WCCO. “There were no thoughts. It was only: 'Let us get rid of these people.'”

Doge has split around 1,000 workers from the National Park Service. In the meantime, legions of worthless hucker enjoy a job in the White House.

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