Milestone coming for new Lansing bridge

Final link. Wisconsin and Iowa will be coneceted physically again on Thursday at Lansing when the central s pan of the new Mississippi River bridge is lifted into place. The so\pan wilk be hoisted from a barge anchored in the navigation channel. River shipping and the term ferry service will be suspended a couple days. Project completion target: 2027.
Earlier: Lansing bridge: Good-bye, ol’ friend
Minnesota prep
Softball: St. Francis Fighting Saints 6, Byron Bears 1
Islamic holy to be Rochester non-school day
ROCHESTER, Minn. — Rochester Public Schools will add the Islamic feast day Eid-al-Adha to its 2028 calendar as a holiday. The holiday typically falls in May. The change was recommended by the district’s teachers and principals, who noted that absences on Eid-al-Adh have been high anyway.
Rocco on You Tube: Why Chauvin deserves retrial
DULUTH, Minn. — The mystery delegate at the Republican state convention, who created an unscheduled tribute to a convicted murderer, has posted an explanation of sorts on You Tube. In the 10-minute video, Christopher Rocco meanders through a confusing nonsequitur retinue that killer-cop Derek Chauvin was railroaded through an unfair trial for murdering George Floyd. Rocco claimed that Chauvin deserves a retrial and a federal pardon. At the convention Rocco had taken a microphone during a preliminary open-mic proceeding and asked for a moment of silence for Chauvin: “I apologize because I know you asked me not to do this. I’d like to suspend the rules for a moment of reflection for Derek Chauvin.” There was a roar of approval from the floor, although nobody at the moment seemed to recall the high-profile 2021 Chauvin trial that attracted national news attention — “Chauvin who?” Convention Chair Danny Nadeau bowed his head. In respectful quietude. So did the crowded auditorium with 2,300 delegates. After that the convention moved on to other matters as if nothing untoward had occurred.

Rocco. Flag-draped for his You Tube post. Where’d this guy come from: Nobody much knows.
Minnesota prep
Softball: Caledonia Warriors 5, Rockford Rockets 1
Softball: Adams Southland Rebels 3, Barnum Bombers 2
Army Corps has plan to snuff out algae
ST. PAUL, Minn. — The Army Corp of Engineers has an idea to control invasive algae in lakes and ponds. The plan is to cover shorelines with clay. The Corps cited scientific evidence that opaque covers will halt algae spread with only minor adverse effects that would be temporary. The Corps plans to proceed with experiments only after reviewing public input. The deadline for citizen comments: June 29. If no red flags, the Corps plans experiments beginning this summer at three stormwater ponds in Minneapolis along Chicago Avenue..
Crash between Wilson, Winona hurts driver
WINONA, Minn. – A St. Charles driver was injured, albeit not seriously, in a two-vehicle accident on State Highway 43 heading downhill toward Winona. Scott Vernon Ehlenfeldt, age 40, was taken five miles to the Winona hospital for evaluation. The accident was about 5:30 p.m. near the Gilmore V alley turn-off. The vehicles, a 2015 Chevrolet Equinox driven by Ehlenfeldt, and a 2017 Subaru Outback driven Angela Sue Weber, age 39, of Winona, were on a two-lane section of section of Highway 43. Weber and two toddlers, girls, ages 3 and 2, were unhurt. They were belted. State troopers said. Ehlenfeldt was not.
Bennett’s secret sidekick: Troubled fellow solon
LINE O LAKES, Minn. — State Representative Elliott Engen has come forward as having agreed to be on Peggy Bennett’s gubernatorial ticket as her lieutenant governor. It was unclear when Bennett and Engen agreed to be team mates. Neither one ever announced the partnership. It is clear, niw however, that their communication has been sporadic to say the least. It was in a text Tuesday that Engen notified Bennett that he was reneging. Engen had been a rising star in Minnesota Republican politics until March when he was arrested for driving drunk after skipping a House committee meeting. With Engen in the car was drinking buddy Walter Hudson, a fellow legislator, who was carrying a gun. Since then: Engen, age 27, has been under a House ethics investigation.
She said-he said
Questions linger about the now-aborted Bennett-Engen ticket to head Minnesota’s state government as governor and lieutenant governor. Both acknowledged the partnership Tuesday but neither explained why they never made it public earlier. Bennett claimed that Engen told her that he was considering a career move out of state. In his public statement. he made no such mention Oddly: About the same time Engen texted Bennett on Tuesday that he was bowing out, he was filing candidacy documents for re-election to his House District 36A seat.

Engen. In second term from House District 36A. Earlier in the year he campaigned for state auditor but withdrew. Politically a right-winger in the spirit of the late provocateur-orator Charlie Kirk.
Electoral history
> 2022: Engen defeated Susie Strom, a Democrat, 51% to 38% in House District 36A.
> 2024: Defeated Janelle Calhoun a Democrat, 54% to 45%.
> 2026: Lost the Republican endorsement for House District 36A to Jim DeMay, a fellow Republican. Regardless he filed for re-election as an unendorsed candidate in the August primary election.
Verbatim
Engen, in a public statement: “Peggy is a terrific servant-leader, and I wish I could be the partner she deserves in a lieutenant governor. . Unfortunately, this was not in the best interest of my family. Like so many other young families across our state, we aren’t in the financial position to have logistically made this work. For a leader like Peggy to have considered me for this position is truly humbling, and I hope someday our political system elevates voices like hers and turns away from coronating lukewarm conservative candidates. She’s a voice for reform in a state and party that desperately needs it, and I wish circumstances allowed me to be the partner she deserves.”
Dredging the Chippewa River delta

Unending challenge. At the Mississippi River bottleneck at Reads Landing, where the Chippewa River empties tons of western Wisconsin silt into the Mississippi annually. Dredging is a perennial chore for the Army Corps, which manages inland waterways. The challenge here for the Army Corps giant dredge Goetz: Keeping the Mississippi navigation channel at nine feet so barges don’t scrape bottom and get hung up. Image: Melanie Peterson
Bennett gubernatorial ticket falls apart
ALBERT LEA, Minn. — A long-shot Republican candidate for governor, Peggy Bennett, has quit the race. She was among several hopefuls who lost the GOP endorsement for governor at the party’s state convention over the weekend in Duluth. She had been expected, however, to proceed to file her candidacy as an unendorsed candidate. The filing deadline was 5 p.m. on Tuesday. She missed the deadline. In announcing Thursday that she was shutting down her campaign, Bennett said her choice for lieutenant governor had texted her about 1 p.m. on Tuesday that he was backing out. That was only four hours before the statewide filing deadline. The time to regroup was impossibly short, Bennett said. She had never identified her choice as a running mate and continued to shield his identity She said he explained in his Tuesday text that he was exploring a job out of state.
Electoral history
> 2014: Defeated Shannon Savick, a Democrat incumbent, 53% 40%, and Thomas Pices, an Independent , 7% in House District 27A.
> 2016: Defeated Gary Shudle, a Democrat, 62% to 37%.
> 2018: Defeated Terry Gjersvik, a Democrat, by 56% to 43%.
> 2020: Defeated Thomas Martiezm, a Democrat, 66% to 36%.
> 2022: Defeated Mary Heinnenkampo, a Democrat, 66% to 34% in renumbered House District 23A.
> 2024: Bennett defeated Joe Stakoch, a Democrat, 67% to 21%.

Bennett. A first-grade teacher 30 years in Albert Lea.. Age 67.
Verbatim
Bennett: “I was under the impression that he was ready to go. It is with great sadness and heartbreak that I announce that I am unable to move forward as a candidate for governor,. My 2026 campaign has ended. This is not by my choice.”
Drive-by shooter on probation five years
WINONA, Minn. — A judge accepted a plea deal for a Winona man who shot up houses in Rollingstone late at night a year ago. Kimari Jordan, age 22, received five years of probation and 100 hours of community service. Jordan and a companion drove along residential Speltz Drive in Rollingstone, 15 miles from Winona. Bullets hit two homes and an outbuilding No one was hurt. The second man, Damein Lamont Smith Jr., age 30, of Winona, also has negotiated a plea deal. His sentencing is scheduled for July.
Earlier: No more Rollingstone drive-by arrests seen
Earlier: Winona man jailed for mystery Rollingstone drive-bys
Earlier: Probe continuing in Rollingstone shootings
Earlier: Drive-by attacks: Bullets hit three Rollingstone homes
Tyco pays up for fire foam contamination
MARINETTE, Wis. — A northeast Wisconsin company, Tyco Fire Products, agreed to pay $10 million for contaminating well water with a fire-fighting foam. The foam contained cancer-causing PFAS, also known as “forever chemicals” because they never ever break down chemically. The State of Wisconsin sued Tyco in 2022, alleging that the company had been contaminating acres around a firefighting training center in this Green By community since the 1960s. In Madison the settlement was hailed by Governor Tony Evers as “a key step toward making su e polluters are held accountable, take responsibility for their actions, and ensure Wisconsinites don’t have to foot the bill for cleaning up the messes that others made.” Tyco is a corporate unit of Irish-owned Johnson Controls.
Contractor sought for Lock and Dam 5 upgrade
MINNESOTA CITY, Minn. — The Army Corps has called for bids to build impact cells for boats entering and leaving its lock on the Mississippi River upstream from Minnesota City. This is alongside U.S. Highway 61 and commonly called the Bass Camp dam. Construction is planned after the 2027 shipping season. The goal: To absorbs impact from barges and prevent structural damage.
News summary at mid-week: June 3, 2026
POLITICS: How Republicans came to their “Chauvin Moment”
POLITICS: Minnesota political parties’ 2026 choices
POLITICS: Trump plans trip to uneasy Wisconsin farm country
PLEBEIAN CUISINE: Is Winona coffee market verging on overfloweth?
RESCUE: River rescue: Powerless boat pulled ashore
CRIME: Thieves cart off Minneapolis museum works
CRIME: Mountain of charges against teen biker
CRIME: FBI: No prosecution for unruly air traveler
CRIME: Man back in Rochester jail on 2023 rape charge
ACCIDENT: Biker in Buffalo County wreck dies at hospital
SPORTS: High school girls wrestling OK’d to proceed
Earlier: News summary at week’s end: May 30, 2026
Man sought in trailer court assault
MINNESOTA CITY, Minn. — Officers on policing patrols were alerted to watch for a man for an assault reported up Hidden Valley. The assault was called to the sheriff’s office about 11:15 p.m. Deputies said the victim, a woman, showed them red marks on her neck. The assailant had left, she said.
Minnesota prep
Softball: Caledonia Warriors 5, Glyndon Dilworth-Glyndon-Felton Rebels 3
Tennis (boys): Winona Cotter Ramblers 4, Rock Ridge Wolverines 3
Tennis (boys): Golden Valley Breck Mustangs 6, Winona Cotter Ramblers 1
Drver hurt in Maple Springs bike-deer crash
LAKE CITY, Minn. — A Frontenac motorcyclist was injured when he ran into a deer on two-lane U.S. Highway 61 at Maple Springs south of Lake City. David Cadet Kumferman, 74, was taken to the Lake City hospital. His injuries appeared non-life threatening. The accident was about 9:10 a.m. Kumferman was northbound into Lake City on a 2008 Harley Davidson FLHTCUI Touring. He was without helmet, said Wabasha Countv deputies.
Sleepy driver leaves road, takes out signs
LEWISTON, Minn. — A driver escaped injury when he missed a curve, entered the ditch, launched back across the road, took out a couple signs, and continued through the ditch. This was about 5:40 a.m. south of Lewiston on County Road 29 in the Rush Creek dip above Enterprise. The driver told Winona County deputies he fell asleep.
Mountain of charges against teen biker
WINONA, Minn. — Police say Aiden Michael Wilson’s first mistake was hopping on a motorcycle outside the Kwik Trip at Huff and Sarnia. A police officer saw Wilson and knew that his driving license was revoked. After the ensuing traffic stop, Wilson, age 19, of Dakota was in jail. The charges:
> Underage drinking and driving.
> Carrying a pistol without a permit.
> Carrying a pistol while under the influence
> Driving after revocation.
The arresting officer gave this account: At the stop , about 12:30 a.m. a few blocks away, the officer immediately detected an overwhelming odor of alcohol. Wilson’s eyes were bloodshot and watery. Wison’s backpack was leaking. Wilson initially denied consuming alcohol but later admitted that he had beer in his backpack and had consumed three to four drinks. Wilson also admitted that he did not have insurance and that he had no driver’s license. It had been revoked after a drunk-diving arrest three weeks earlier. Asked whether he had weapons, Wilson first denied having any but later admitted to handgun in his backpack. Officers searched the backpack and located nine cans of Busch Light Apple, a 4.1% alcohol product. One was uncorked and leaking. Also in the backpack: Several marijuana-related items, including loose marijuana, rolling papers, and a marijuana pipe. Wilson admitted to smoking marijuana earlier in the day. The revolver was a .357 Taurus. A breath test showed his blood was 0.07% alcohol — a legally tolerable level, but at 19 he legally ineligible to imbibe at all. Then there was the bike. It had been stolen. The owner discovered the theft after noticing fraudulent charges on a card that had been inside a wallet on the bike.
Minnesota prep
Baseball: Winona Cotter Ramblers 11, Rochester Lourdes Eagles 5
Softball: Olyvia Bird Island-Olivia-Lake Lillian Warriors 4, Adams Soutlhand Rebels 1
Softball: Mendota Heights Visitation Blazes 4, Caledonia Warriors 2
Softball: Byron Bears, Inver Grove Heights Simley Spartans 0
Tennis (boys): Winona Cotter Ramblers 4, Pine City Panthers 3
Tennis (boys): Rochester Mayo Spartans 7, Becker Bulldogs 0
High school girls wrestling OK’d to proceed
BROOKLYN CENTER, Minn — The governing board of the Minnesota State High School League approved girls wrestling provisionally as an interscholastic sport. The decision gives organizing schools as many as five years to demonstrate stability prospects and logistics. Meanwhile the Minnesota Wrestling Coaches Association is continuing on its own with schools that include Chatfield. On the issue of girls flag football, the State High School League delayed action until organizers, which include the Minnesota Vikings, develop rules and a system of scheduling games.
Will $100,000 bail keep accused man in town?
ROCHESTER, Minn. — A Rochester judge set bail at $1000,00 in hope of deterring Phiktor Ajol Makuei of skipping town again, as he did between court hearings on a rape charge in 2023. Makuei, 1ge 37, had been on the loose almost 3-1/2 years.
Who conned GOP leadership into “Chauvin Moment”
DULUTH, Minn. — The man who embarrassed Minnesota Republicans by calling for a tribute to killer-cop Derek Chauvin at the GOP state convention has been identified by a news reporter for the Minnesota Reformer. He was Christopher Rocco, who said he preferred to be known merely as “Rocco” or “Mr. Rocco.” He did not identify from where in the state he had been elected as a delegate to the convention. He was among 2,300 delegates. In the hub-bub of the opening session Rocco grabbed a microphone and called for a moment of silence for Chauvin. And it was so ordered, unwittingly, by party leadership on the podium. Heads were bowed reflexively. For several days now the state GOP apparatchik has repeated disavowals of Rocco’s action as not representative of the party’s values.
Earlier: How Republicans came to their “Chauvin Moment”
Thieves cart off Minneapolis museum works
MINNEAPOLIS — Minneapolis painter Leon Hushcha’ and his assistant Carley Novak opened their North Loop gallery and studio in the morning to discover they’d been robbed. Missing were 18 paintings and about 50 prints. The thieves, police said, knew what they were doing. They entered the studio through a fire escape door, probably with a key, and turned around security cameras. One camera, however, caught the thieves — two men — rolling a cart laden with art across a parking lot. This was between 6:45 and 7:15 a.m. Hushka said the loss at $80,000.

Caught in act. After dawn but before gallery opened.

Pushka. Minneapolis painter of Ukranian lineage. Recent exhibit: “Year of the Horse.”

Hushcha profile
Hushcha, now 80, was born in a displaced persons camp in Austria after his parents fled Ukraine following World War II. They immigrated to the United States and Hushcha grew up in Minneapolis. He studied at the Minneapolis College of Art and Design and the University of Minnesota. Only a week ago he had opened the exhibition “The Year of the Horse” at his studio. The exhibition depicted horses and women, celebrating the Chinese Year of the Horse.
Minneapolis art heists
Art heists are unusual in Minneapolis. In 2000 a $30,000 watercolor by French impressionist painter Marie Laurencin disappeared from the long-running Doug Flanders gallery. Police found the painting weeks later inide a false ceiling a downtown men’s toilet.
Erratic driving report leads to arrest
LACROSSE, Wis. — In making a drunk-driving arrest, police discovered that it wasn’t the first —but the fourth — for Scott Jacobson. The 46-year-old LaCrosse man had three earlier DWI convictions in LaCrosse and Trempealeau counties, albeit over a 22-year period. This time he had been reported weaving between lanes and hitting curbs near Main Street and West Avenue in La Crosse. Police found him parked on Ninth Street. He also was charged with five criminal counts, including two felonies.

Jacobson. Felonies among multiple charges.
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