News summary at mid-week: June 10, 2026
RIVER: CHS shifts grain-shipping infrastructure
POLITICS: Beset Minnesota legislator cancels out
POLITICS: Walz ridicules Trump claim he’s soft on fraud
POLITICS: Veep Vance urges new Minesota criminal probe
CRIME: Feds: No death penalty for Hortman assassinations
OUTDOORS: Exhausted hikers rescued in Bluffs Park
OUTDOORS: Why did the turtle cross road?
Fatal collision on wet highway near Chatfield
CHATFIELD, Minn. —The State Patol confirmed a fatality in a two-vehicle collision on U.S. Highway 52 outside Chatfield in southern Olmsted County. Until family are notified, the names were not released. The collision occurred on wet pavement about 11:45 p.m. This was near the County Road 7 intersection.
> A Preston man, age 40, driving a 2013 Ford Explorer, was northbound ward Rochester.
> A Chicago man, age 62, driving a 2015 Jeep Cherokee, was southbound into Chatfield.
Driver, rider, dog survive Garvin roll-over
WINONA, Minn. — A driver, unfamiliar with the steep and dangerous crooks on Garvin Heightts Road, lost control near the base. Desperate to regain control, the driver pressed his emergency brake, which compounded the problem. The vehicle slid sideways through a grove of trees, rolled twice, and stopped finally on its roof in the U.S. Highway 61 ditch at Huff Street. Both occupants were taken to the Winona hospital. Police described their injuries as non-life threatening. A dog in the vehicle survived.This was about 12:45 p.m.
Bail at $75,00 in Lewiston sex case
WINONA, Minn. — A Lewiston man posted $75,000 bail and was released on condition that he not contact the teen-age girl with whom he’s accused having carnal relations. Jack Edward Schott, age 42, was advised at his hail hearing about details in the criminal complaint.
Walz ridicules Trump claim he’s soft on fraud
ST.PAUL, Minn. — Through a spokesperson, Governor Tim Walz called a Congressional committee report that called for him to be investigated for complicity with fraud was “nothing more than a joke.” The 100-page report, released over the weekend by a Trump-controlled committee, was seriously flawed, said Teddy Tschann, the Walz spokesperson:
“This committee has proven time and time again to be nothing more than a joke. They continue to rehash CoVid-era fraud to distract from endless wars, gas prices, ICE, and the president’s insider trading.”
Trump’s vice president, JD Vance, glommed on the report to encourage that Walz be investigated, along with Keith Ellison. Minnesota’s attorney general. Said Tschann:
“Governor Walz is glad to see fraudsters are going to prison. If the committee is concerned about corruption, they should investigate why President Trump continues to let fraudsters out of prison.”

Swearing allegiance to truth. Walz and Ellison, both Democrats, were summoned before the Republican-controlled U.S. House Oversight Committee about fake claims for federal reimbursements from private entities in Minnesota. The hearing was in March. Now, 3-1/2 months later, the committee issued its recommendations.
Walz repeatedly has noted that several changes have been made over the last few years to address fraud. These include anew state Office of Inspector General, which has independent power to investigate fraud.
Earlier: Ellison on Vance charges: “A political stunt”
No 101 degrees: Wild storms nonetheless loom
WINONA, Minn. — The forecasting model that predicted a 101-degree afternoon Tuesday was wrong. Temperatures didn’t get much into the 80s. Consider it a quiet interlude: We’re not out of Harm’s Way. Atmospheric unrest that brewed in South Dakota and Nebraska was heading across southern Minnesota with possible tornadic activity. The first storms were expected Winona County in the late morning or early afternoon. Unknown was how quickly the atmosphere will recover. Muggy air with high dew points could create powerful updrafts that favor rotating supercells. A complicating factor could be an encroaching cold front.
He said she went at him with punch, nails
WINONA, Minn. — A Winona man called police that his girlfriend punched and clawed him during an argument. Arrested was Cayla Marie Schleich, age 28. The arrest was in the 600 block of Main Street at the apartment from which the man, age 32, had called police. This was about 1 a.m. Officers reported fresh scratch marks on one of the man’s arm and a wound inside the mouth. He didn’t require medical attention. Schleich admitted to the punch, police said.
Evening fog rising from spring-fed creek

Up Witoka way. Ground fog at sunset near the Big Springs cold headwaters of East Burns Valley Creek. Image: Andy Frank
Ellison on Vance charges: “A political stunt”
ST.PAUL, Minn. — Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison pushed back against Vice President JD Vance’s announcement that he and Governor Tim Walz were was aware of fraud involving federal funds and failed to stop it. Ellison was blunt: “The allegations are unfounded.” Ellison said Vance drew on a flawed report from a Trump-controlled Congressional committee. He accused Trump, with Vance as his surrogate, of misusing the machinery of government to target its perceived opponents while extending leniency to those aligned with its interests. Ellison noted that his office has investigated and prosecuted allegations of fraud involving public programs.
Verbatim
Ellison: “It is deeply troubling to see official powers and public resources diverted away from serving the people and instead aimed at pursuing political adversaries. That is not what government is for, and it diminishes public trust in our institutions.”
Teen sex complaint against Lewiston man
LEWISTON, Minn. — Deputies arrested a Lewiston man at his residence on a complaint of sexual criminal conduct involving a female juvenile. Investigators said the case had begun over the weekend as a run-away report. Investigators were told the relationship had been had been going on 1-1/2 years. The arrest was without resistance about 6:50 p.m.
Feds: No death penalty for Hortman assassinations
WASHINGTON — The man accused of assassinating Minnesota House Speaker Melissa Hortman and her husband has escaped capital punishment. The U.S. Justice Department has accepted a federal judge’s opinion that an interstate stalking conviction would not justify the death penalty. Interstate stalking was among multiple federal charges against Vance Boelte. There do remain state charges that could mean life in prison. Minnesota law does not permit execution.
Earlier: Assassination prosecutors unveil lode of evidence
Earlier: Minnesota assassination suspect indicted anew
Earlier: Boelter attorney: Assassination plea not guilty
Earlier: Assassination suspect’s car found 100 miles away
Earlier: $5 million bail in Minnesota assassinations
I-90 roll-over injures pickup driver
EYOTA, Minn. — An Ohio man was injured when he lost control of his pickup on Interstate 90 between the Eyota and Rochester-Chatfield exits. Jarvis Lamar Tolliver, age 41, Cincinnati, Ohio, suffered sustainable injuries, said Olmsted County deputies. Tolliver was taken 18 mils to a Rochester hospital. The accident was about 10:20 a.m. in westbound lanes. The pickup, a 2022 Ford Explorer, rolled in the eastbound ditch.
Beset Minnesota legislator cancels out
LINO LAKES, Minn. — The crumbling political career of two-term Minesota House member Elliott Engen took another dive. The two-term Lino Lakes representative withdrew his candidacy for re-election. For Engen, age 27, it’s been a bewildering career path from rising visibility in state Republican politics to confused ignominy in recent months. His trajectory:
> November 2020: Engen learned the ropes of campaigning in his first his bid for elected office at age 21. This was in District 38B. He barely lost, 50.1% to 49.8%.
> November 2022: On his second try Engen won the seat from the now-renumbered District 36A with 51%. At the Capitol he impressed fellow Republicans as a likable go-getter. “A rising star” he was called.
> November 2024: Engen was re-elected from 36A with 54%.
> October 2025: Perhaps a little too eager to advance his political career, Engen declared his candidacy for statewide office — auditor. In this period he had discussions with fellow Republican representative Peggy Bennett of Albert Lea, who was pondering a gubernatorial bid and who was looking for a running mate for lieutenant governor. A deal was struck. For reasons that were never clear, Bennett put off identifying Engen as her choice. At some point — it’s unclear why or exactly when —Engen lost interest in his campaign for state auditor.
> March 2026: Engen was arrested driving drunk late at night after a day of drinking around town with a fellow Republican House member, Walter Hudson, who was carrying a firearm. During the day he played hooky from a House committee meeting, which would very soon come back to haunt him.
> April 2026: As punishment the House Ethics Committee, chaired by Greg Davids, a Preston Republican, stripped Engen and Hudson of their committee assignments.
> June 2026: Engen texted Bennett that he was withdrawing as her running mate. She quoted him the next day as considering a career change out of state. Engen however, had a different explanation in a news release the next day: That family finances precluded him from continuing in elected office. That same afternoon, however, Engen contradicted himself and filed for re-election from House District 36A, which requires residency not only in Minnesota but also in the district.

Engen. Had made a name for himself as an ideological right-winger in state Republican circles.
Career profile
Elliott Engen was born in St. Paul. As a student in politics and law at Hamline University in 2021, he became imbued by the charismatic Christian nationalist Charlie Kirk. He founded a Hamline campus chapter of Kirk’s Turning Point USA. At a national Turning Point convention Engen found encouragement from fellow Trump loyalists to run for elected office. Engen’s career experience after college includes working as an operations associate at a law firm. He later became public relations manager at Wildlife Forever, a conservation group working against invasive species. He left the job before joining the legislature. In all this Engen honed mannerisms and the signature style of the late Charlie Kirk, who had been assassinated in September.
> June 2026: Feeling let down and betrayed, Bennett ended her gubernatorial campaign. It was impossible to find a substitute runnng mate in the remaining four hours to the filing deadline.
> June 2026: Engen withdrew as a 36A candidate in a message to state election authorities.
Earlier: Bennett’s secret sidekick: Troubled fellow solon
Earlier: Bennett gubernatorial ticket falls apart
Earlier: Auditor hopeful creates stir with fraud charge
Earlier: House leadership distressed at boozing arrests
Exhausted hikers rescued in Bluffs Park
NODINE, Minn. — Overcome with fatigue, hikers called for help from a backtrail in Great River Bluffs State Park. A Nodine rescue team reached the hikers in an all-terrain vehicle and ferried them out. There were no injuries. This was about 3:20 p.m. The access was from Kipp Drive on the Nodine side of the 2,200-acre park. Vistors are pretty on their own. No full-time ranger.

Great River Bluffs State Park. Rises 500 feet on ridge connecting King’s Bluff and Queen’s Bluff.
Veep Vance urges new Minesota criminal probe
WASHIGTION — Vice President JD Vance is pressing for federal indictments of Minnesota Governor Tim Walz and Attorney General Keith Ellison. Vance blames the governor and the attorney general for fraudulent claims that were filed by private entities for federal funding. Vance’s move was the latest in a Trump campaign against Minnesota, which the President regards as politically unfriendly. Trump has been especially antagonistic to Minnesota since massive citizen resistance to his Operation Metro Surge over the winter. The resistance humiliated Trump, who found himself forced to call back 3,000 troops he had sent to occupy the state under false premises of rampant lawlessness.
Vance back story
Trump created an ad hoc group that he called the White House Task Force to Eliminate Fraud. That was in March. He put Vance in charge. Meanwhile, the Trump-controlled U.S. House Oversight Committee began investigating thefts of federal funds in Minnesota based on a You Tube video by an independent journalist recruited from Utah. The video purported that child care operators were taking federal money for services that were not provided. On Sunday the House Oversight Committee recommended to Vance that he authorize a U.S. Justice Department investigation. Vance did so within 24 hours. To a new Trump-created DOJ Fraud Division for criminal investigation, Vance said: “Minnesota state officials are not above the law, and if they facilitated fraud, lied under oath about what they knew, or harassed and intimidated whistle-blowers, they must face justice.” Vance offered no evidence to support this suggestion that Walz oand Ellison were knowledgeable or complicit in the fraud.
Earlier: Viral video purports massive Minnesota fraud
Earlier: Trump yanks small-business aid for Minnesota
Earlier: Trump rehashes old news on CoVid-era fraud
Earlier: An unhinged Trump in angry Minnesota attack
Earlier: Walz sees U.S. attorney as Trump publicity hound
Not yet: Repairs delay Winona pool season

Summer fun postponed. Upgrades and repairs not yet ready. Anybody have a backyard with a garden hose?
Temps coming at sweltering100 degrees
WINONA, Minn. — With the first 100-degree day of summer coming Tuesday, the Bob Welch aquatic park still isn’t open. The Winona Parks Department said the contractor performing major repairs on the 36-year-old facility has fallen behind. The target now is to open a week from Wednesday — 11 days late. When open, the park will have new heaters, chemical controllers, and a high-efficiency filtration system. Alternatives:
> Lake Lodge beach on Lake Winona.
> A small wading and splash pool at Levee Park.
bLaCanne Park beach in Goodview.
> Pubic pools with visitor fees 30 miles away in St. Charles, LaCresent, LaCrosse and Trempealeau.
> Indoor pool at Winona Y with visitor fee.
CHS shifts grain-shipping infrastructure
INVER GROVE HEIGHTS, Minn. – The giant CHS agri-business confirmed it’s closing three southeast Minnesota grain collection sites that truck their grain to Winona for downriver shipping and export. Being closed are elevators in:
> Kasson: In Dodge County, 55 miles from Winona.
> Ostrander: In Fillmore County, 66 miles.
> Wykoff. In Filmore County, 39 miles.
The company attributed the closings to “changes in the grain supply chain.” The company avoided explicit reference to the massive loss of U.S. foreign grain sales due the global Trump tariff war. The company also didn’t say how many jobs would be lost in Winona or the Kasson, Ostrander and Wykoff units. In the meantime the company promised to continue accepting crops from Dodge County and Fillmore County farmers through this fall’s harvest. CHS said that some local farmers likely will shift future crops to CHS collection points in Mankato and Fairmont.

Major Winona harbor presence. Where barges are filled with grain for shipment to Gulf ports for foreign customers. This has been a shrinking market since the Trump tariff wars. Image: Steve Lunde
Verbatim
CHS: “CHS continues to optimize its assets to best serve our owners while providing market access to the global ag supply chain. We continually evaluate our facilities to determine if they meet the needs of our cooperative system and our customers. While smaller facilities, such as these three, have served CHS well in the past, the grain supply chain in southern Minnesota has evolved into a market where local corn and soybean processing facilities and river terminals are the primary markets. CHS is committed to operating the right resources in the right locations to position our cooperative to deliver the best value for customers and owners. CHS will continue to operate in this region offering agronomy and energy products and services to producers in the area.”

CHS headquarters, Landscaped grounds in Inver Grove Heights.
Corporate profile
CHS is one of the largest farmer-owned cooperatives in Minnesota. Annual revenue: $555 million. Its operations include the consumer brand Cenex. CHS began in 1931 as the Farmers Union Central Exchange in St. Paul. Later the company became Cenex, from the combination of the last two words in its previous name. In 2003, after several mergers, the company changed its name to CHS. The company has swanky headquarters in the south Minneapolis suburb of Inver Grove Heights. Employees: 9,900. Chief executive Jay Debertin salary: $10 million a year in compensation package of $12 million.
Rider critical after Lanesboro motorcycle wreck
LANESBORO, Minn.— A Wisconsin woman was hospitalized in critical condition after a motorcycle-car collision outside Lanesboro on Saturday. Her name, Linnea Birgitta Rice, was released belatedly by the State Patrol. The Patrol was waiting for local authorities in her hometown, Galesville, to notify her family. Rice, age 53, was taken to a Rochester hospital, as was the motorcycle driver, who was less seriously injured.
Earlier: Winona biker hurt in Lanesboro crash
News summary at week’s end: June 6, 2026
POLITICS: What to expect in Trump’s Wisconsin visit
POLITICS: Rocco on You Tube: Why Chauvin deserves retrial
POLITICS: Bennett’s secret sidekick: Troubled fellow solon
POLITICS: Bennett gubernatorial ticket falls apart
ENVIRONMENT: Tyco pays up for fire foam contamination
ENVIRONMENT: Sunday forecast: Diminished air quality
RIVER: Milestone coming for new Lansing bridge
RIVER: Army Corps has plan to snuff out algae
RIVER: Dredging the Chippewa River delta
RIVER: Contractor sought for Lock and Dam 5 upgrade
SCHOOLS: Islamic holy day to be Rochester non-school day
CRIME: Drive-by shooter on probation five years
Winona biker hurt in Lanesboro crash
LANESBORO, Minn. — A Winona motorcyclist was injured in a collision on U.S. Highway 16 at the road out of Lanesboro to Mabel. Mathew Christian Barnholtz, age 57, suffered sustainable injuries. He was taken 32 miles to a Rochester hospital. With Barnholtz on his bike was a woman from Galesville in Wisconsin. Troopers delayed releasing her name until family could bc notified. They were westbound toward Preston. The driver of the second vehicle, Robert Lee, 74, of Rochester, was unhurt. Lee was in a lightweight 2024 Mitsubishi Mirage. Troopers said his airbag deployed. He was unhurt. The Barnholtz bike was a 2005 Harley FLHTCI Cruiser and heading east into Lanesboro. Barnholtz was not wearing a helmet, troopers said. They believed alcohol was a factor.
Sunday forecast: Diminished air quality
ST. PAUL, Minn. — The Minnesota Pollution Control Agency issued an air quality alert for people with impaired breathing capabilities. Ground-level ozone is expected to be high through Sunday from central Minnesota south to the Iowa border. The alert includes Fillmore, Houston, Wabasha and Winona counties. Especially vulnerable are people with lung and heartdiseases, children and older adults. Advice: Limit prolonged or heavy outdoor exertion.
Milestone coming for new Lansing bridge

Final link. Wisconsin and Iowa will be connected physically again on Thursday at Lansing when the central span of the new Mississippi River bridge is lifted into place. The span will be hoisted from a barge anchored in the navigation channel. River shipping and the temporary ferry service will be suspended a couple days. Project completion target: 2027.
Earlier: Lansing bridge: Good-bye, ol’ friend
Van stuck on Dakota tracks; trains stopped
DAKOTA, Minn. — An out-of-town traveler turned his van too tight into a vacation rental property and hung up on the Canadian Pacific’s mainline tracks. Winona County deputies called the railroad to halt freight trains both directions. A tow truck rushed 24 miles from Goodview and pulled the van off the tracks. Deputies said the van driver was of good mind and not impaired. The four Amtrak passenger trains that use the CP mainline already had passed through Dakota for the day.
Minnesota prep
Softball: St. Francis Fighting Saints 6, Byron Bears 1
Miner Valley disturbance ends in limbo
LAMOILLE, Minn. — A father called the sheriff’s office that that his adult daughter’s boyfriend had knocked him to the floor and caused minor injuries. This was up Moner Valley near Twin Bluffs about 8:50 p.m. The father told deputies that the boyfriend was keeping the daughter from leaving for work and that the boyfriend struck him when he intervened. By this time deupties were scenee, however, neither the father nor daughter wanted to pursue charges. Rather than escalate the situation, deputies took notes for the county attorney to assess what charges, if any, should be pursued. The boyfriend, deputies said, has a record io domestic abuse.
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