Close encounters of the nerd kind: Smiling troopers in 2 states pull over 'out of this world' vehicle heading to UFO Festival



Smiling troopers in two states performed traffic stops in recent days on a spaceship-like vehicle heading to the UFO Festival in — of course — Roswell, New Mexico, Fox News reported.

A couple of close encounters of the nerd kind, one might say, to borrow from a sitcom episode from the last century.

The first took place in Missouri, as the Crawford County Sheriff's Office wrote in a Facebook post last Friday about a pair of "friendly humanoids, who have come in peace."

'He was also warned about our strict enforcement of warp speed on the interstate and to keep his phasers on stun only while traveling.'

The sheriff's office noted that the traffic stop "was a little out of this world," but law enforcement was assured that the vehicle's occupants — as the below dashcam image indicates — were "heading west to Roswell, NM for a festival."

Image source: Crawford County (Missouri) Sheriff's Office

The sheriff's office added in its post that "there was a brief conversation about his out of space, correction, out of state registration, but he assured us that he would take care of that issue when he returned to Krypton. He was also warned about our strict enforcement of warp speed on the interstate and to keep his phasers on stun only while traveling."

Image source: Crawford County (Missouri) Sheriff's Office

Fox News, citing an email from the sheriff's office, said the vehicle's driver was observed committing a lane violation; the vehicle's Indiana tag also was expired.

Considering the "wind/traffic of the interstate plus the size and aerodynamics of his vehicle, he understood that the potential for lane violations existed," a Crawford County Sheriff's Office official added in a statement to Fox News.

"Given the good nature of the driver and the interesting nature of the vehicle, we opted to provide a fun social media post for our community," the official added in the statement, the cable news network said. "It was a great interaction, and we wished him safe travels to his destination."

There was a second close encounter with same vehicle Monday in Oklahoma, Fox News said.

Image source: Oklahoma Highway Patrol

"It's not every day you pull over a UFO," the Oklahoma Highway Patrol wrote Tuesday on its Facebook page. "Trooper Ryan Vanvleck #722 pulled over this vehicle on the Turner Turnpike yesterday for an obstructed tag. They were on their way to a UFO festival in Roswell, New Mexico. Trooper Vanvleck let them go with a warning."

Image source: Oklahoma Highway Patrol

The event to which the vehicle's occupants apparently were headed looks to be the "UFO Festival" set to take place in Roswell from July 5 through July 7. The annual gathering promises attendees that they can participate in a "cosmic extravaganza filled with out-of-this-world events, including the renowned Roswell Galacticon, family fun at the AlienFest, the gripping Roswell Incident, the captivating Roswell Film Festival, and enlightening experiences at the International UFO Museum and Research Center."

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NYPD sets the record straight after Central Park 5 member told racially charged tall tale about traffic stop



New York City Councilman Yusef Salaam, a member of the Central Park Five, was pulled over in Harlem by police Friday evening, just days ahead of a council vote on legislation that would bury police in paperwork over low-level stops.

Salaam complained about the traffic stop, suggesting he had been pulled over without a reason and that racial bias was a factor. Bodycam footage of the interaction told an entirely different story.

For besmirching the police force and using a revisionist account of the traffic stop for political purposes, Salaam's peers are now calling for his resignation.

The stop, according to Salaam

The Democrat, who assumed office on Jan. 1, claimed in a statement — which was well trafficked by the liberal media — that upon being pulled over, he introduced himself as "Councilman Yusef Salaam, and subsequently asked the officer why [he] was pulled over."

"Instead of answering my question, the officer stated 'We're done here,' and proceeded to walk away," continued Salaam. "The fact that the officer did not provide a rationale for the stop, which would have only been legal at 'level 3' (with reasonable suspicion) or higher as required for vehicle stops, calls into question how the NYPD justifies its stops of New Yorkers and highlights the need for greater transparency to ensure they are constitutional."

"This experience only amplified the importance of transparency for all police investigative stops, because the lack of transparency allows racial profiling and unconstitutional stops of all types to occur and often go underreported," added Salaam.

The city council is set to vote Tuesday to override Mayor Eric Adams veto on leftists' "How Many Stops Act."

The bill, supported and promoted by Salaam, would require police to provide quarterly reports detailing information on "level one, two, and three investigative encounters between the police and civilians, including the race/ethnicity, age and gender of the civilian approached by the police, the factors that led to the interaction, and whether the interaction led to a summons or use of force incident."

While police officers don't have to provide a reason for a stop, Salaam stressed the officer should have done so anyway, reported the New York Times.

"We know that the danger is there every single time a black man in particular gets behind the wheel of a car," said the councilman.

The stop as it really happened

In the bodycam footage of the incident, an officer approaches a blue BMW with heavily tinted windows — so tinted as to preclude an officer from seeing the race of whoever was driving — then politely asks Salaam, "Will you roll your back window, please?"

After peering into the rear of the vehicle to confirm there were no threats lurking behind the opaque glass, the officer approaches the driver's side window and identifies himself.

Salaam interrupts, noting he is "Councilmember Salaam. This district, District 9."

"Okay. Have a good one," responds the officer. "You're working, right? ... Take care, sir."

— (@)

The NYPD confirmed in a statement that an officer operating in the 26th precinct pulled over a blue sedan with a Georgia license plate for driving with dark tint beyond legal limits, a violation of New York State law.

"As the video shows, throughout this interaction, the officer conducted himself professionally and respectfully," said the NYPD. "He followed all proper procedures, including procedures that were put in place after Detective Russel Timoshenko was shot and killed through tinted windows in 2007."

Police also made clear that contrary to Salaam's understanding, "Last night's exchange was not a Level 1 interaction, as any vehicle stop is, by definition, a Level 4 encounter since the officer had probable cause of a violation of the New York Vehicle and Traffic Law."

Mayor Adams later lauded the officer for doing an exemplary job.

"We saw, really, a picture-perfect example how civilian and police officers responded. Professional, courteous, communicative," said Adams. "I think we need to be proud."

Backlash

NYC Councilman Robert Holden (D) called on Salaam to resign as public safety chair, writing on X, "This is damning: an elected official with illegal tints and out-of-state plates, not legally registered, using his official title to evade the law. Worse yet, he lied about the exchange until NYPD set the record straight."

"The stop was not illegal," Councilwoman Joann Ariola (R) stated. "The stop was done by the book. What is illegal is the percentage of tinting on his windows, using your Council Member title to get out of a ticket and lying about the interaction."

"How can we expect him to be impartial as chair of the Public Safety Committee when he did not depict an accurate accounting of the event?" added Ariola.

Republican NYC Councilman Joe Borelli shared the bodycam footage, noting, "As you can see. Police stops are already recorded... What is sad is taking an incident where someone cuts you a break, does right by you, and then misrepresenting the truth to get them in trouble."

Councilwoman Inna Vernikov (R) similarly took issue with Salaam's political weaponization of the apparent lie, writing, "What this experience amplifies is how [Salaam] lied, [is] potentially committing insurance fraud, using the race card, as well as using [his] status as Councilmember to evade the law."

"The officer did everything by the book, and was nothing but extra nice to you," continued Vernikov. "What he could have done is ticket you for tinted windows and driving over speed limit. The officer and @NYPDnews are entitled to a public apology from you."

The Police Benevolent Association of the City of New York also called for Salaam to apologize.

PBA president Patrick Hendry said in a statement, "Facts matter, and the video doesn't just expose the lies about this incident. It shows the truth about the outstanding, professional work our members do every day. This Council member and every other elected official who baselessly smeared our police officers owe them an apology."

NewsNation indicated that Salaam has denied using his title to evade a ticket. The councilman also claimed in an interview that, despite moving back to New York in December 2022, he is still in the process of transferring the registration of his vehicle from Georgia to New York.

As for New York's prohibition on overly tinted windows, Salaam reportedly expressed ignorance, noting he would have addressed the issue had he known it was a problem.

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'I could see legs hanging out of the door': State trooper dragged at 115 mph after traffic stop; car crashes into tractor-trailers — then a 'miracle' occurs



Randi Stanley-Gibson was driving through Henrico County, Virginia, with her husband Friday afternoon when they saw a state police vehicle on the shoulder of Interstate 295 with no one inside it, WRIC-TV reported.

Soon they saw something else unusual — and quite a bit more unsettling.

“The traffic just started slowing down. People were switching lanes,” Stanley-Gibson recounted to the station. “I told [my husband] ... ‘I believe someone’s trying to jump out of the vehicle,’ because I could see legs hanging out of the door that was open.”

Turns out a state trooper was partially inside the vehicle and being dragged at speeds reaching 115 mph after the driver sped away from a traffic stop just after 4 p.m., police told WRIC.

What are the details?

The trooper noticed a 2021 Mazda CX-30 SUV traveling south at nearly 100 mph in a 70 mph zone, after which the trooper made a traffic stop, with the driver pulling onto the shoulder, the station said, citing a police news release.

The trooper approached the Mazda on the passenger side, and the driver agreed to let the trooper search the vehicle, police told WRIC.

Amid the trooper's search, the driver sped away, and the passenger door closed on the trooper, the station said, adding that at first the trooper was partially inside the vehicle, then soon managed to pull himself inside.

Stanley-Gibson told WRIC she called 911 and told the dispatcher what she was seeing.

“His hat had flown out, and we were just like, ‘Oh my gosh, the police officer’s in the vehicle. He’s being dragged,’ because he was hanging out of it,” she recounted to the station. “As we were on the phone with [the dispatcher], we kind of lost them. We could still see them swerving in and out of cars periodically. Then, all of a sudden, there’s just a cloud of smoke.”

The trooper and driver struggled for about three miles, police told WRIC, and then the driver hit two southbound tractor trailers near the Creighton Road exit and reportedly ran from the scene.

'Miracle'

"At that point we had pulled over, and a couple other people had as well," Stanley-Gibson told the station, noting they wanted to check on the trooper's condition.

He was going to be OK.

The trooper was treated for minor, non-life-threatening injuries, police noted to WRIC, adding that he suffered rib bruises and airbag burns — but his young age and good physical condition, as well as his ballistic vest, helped him survive.

Stanley-Gibson told the station the trooper was shaken up but that "it’s obviously a miracle that the officer wasn’t more seriously injured. But it sounds like it’s a miracle, too, that no other cars, like, nobody else on the road was hurt.”

“I’m so grateful that he was okay,” she added to WRIC. “We have family in law enforcement. Like, that could have been my father. Like, what if he had kids at home?”

What about the driver?

First responders' scanner audio described the suspect as a black man with a goatee, weighing approximately 200 pounds, and wearing a white T-shirt and either blue or black pants, the station said.

A search perimeter was set up, WRIC said, and the Mazda driver was found near Cold Harbor Road in Hanover. What's more, authorities said a handgun was found in the Mazda, the station added.

Milton Jermaine Lewis, 38, of Delaware was charged with reckless driving by speeding, felony eluding of a police officer, having a concealed weapon, altering a serial number on a firearm, felony assault of a law enforcement officer, abduction, attempted capital murder, failure to maintain control of a vehicle, driving with no seatbelt, and felony hit and run, WRIC noted.

Lewis also suffered minor, non-life-threatening injuries, authorities told the station, and was behind bars at Pamunkey Regional Jail.

'My auntie probably your boss': New video shows Chicago cops' drug bust traffic stop of car owned by internal affairs chief — that her niece was driving



Chicago police bodycam video shows what went down when cops on Feb. 1 pulled over a Lexus belonging to Yolanda Talley, their new chief of internal affairs.

While Talley wasn't in the vehicle, her niece was — along with a male passenger who tried to ditch 84 packets of heroin valued at $6,300, the Chicago Sun-Times reported, citing police records and a source familiar with the investigation.

What does the video show?

WLS-TV said it obtained the bodycam video under the Freedom of Information Act. It shows the woman who was driving the silver Lexus telling officers that her police officer aunt owns the vehicle and that "my auntie probably your boss."

The station, citing documents it obtained from the Civilian Office of Police Accountability, reported the car indeed belongs to Talley and that her niece was driving it at the time of the traffic stop.

Chicago police confirmed to WLS that Talley remains chief of internal affairs and that the case was referred to the office of the inspector general to investigate any potential misconduct.

Neither the police department's spokesman nor Talley will comment on the case, the station said, adding that the inspector general's investigation likely will take months to complete.

What's the background?

The traffic stop in the 500 block of North St. Louis Avenue occurred after officers in a gang investigations unit targeting drug sales spotted a man in a black mask picking up a bag near a black SUV and entering the passenger side of a four-door silver Lexus, the Sun-Times said in a previous story, citing a police report.

Officers said they stopped the car because the driver failed to use a turn signal, the Sun-Times said, adding that the passenger tossed a baggie containing 84 pink packets of heroin out of the window. Police said they recovered about 42 grams of heroin worth about $6,300, the paper added.

Police arrested the passenger — 34-year-old Kenneth Miles — for possession of a controlled substance, a felony, the paper said. But Talley’s niece was let go because there wasn’t clear evidence linking her to the heroin, the source told the Sun-Times.

Court records indicate that Talley's niece lives with Miles, the paper said, adding that he's a reputed member of the Traveling Vice Lords street gang and that court records show he has a lengthy criminal record that includes seven drug-related convictions.

Miles on Feb. 1 was free on bail in connection to a separate felony case for allegedly selling fentanyl, the Sun-Times said, adding that the Cook County sheriff’s office said he was being held in jail without bail.

High-ranking police officials decided not to impound Talley's car, even though that's the routine procedure for cars stopped during narcotics arrests so they can be searched for guns and drugs, the paper said.

With that, officers drove Talley’s Lexus back to the block where the arrest took place and returned the keys to her niece, the source told the Sun-Times.

The source added to the paper that “knowing what we know, I don’t think Chief Yolanda Talley had any idea what was going on with her car."

Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot weighs in

Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot said she was concerned about media coverage “which seems to intimate that chief Talley had some involvement in what happened," the Chicago Tribune reported, adding that Lightfoot also said she's seen "seen zero evidence to substantiate that. What I know of her is she is very hardworking, very well regarded, and does her job with integrity.”

Chicago cops pull over internal affairs chief's car; niece behind wheel reportedly says 'My auntie’s probably your boss' after passenger tries ditching 84 heroin packets



When Chicago police on Feb. 1 pulled over a Lexus belonging to Yolanda Talley, their new chief of internal affairs, Talley wasn't in the vehicle — but her niece was, along with a male passenger who tried to ditch 84 packets of heroin valued at $6,300, the Chicago Sun-Times reported, citing police records and a source familiar with the investigation.

What's more, Talley's niece — who was behind the wheel — told cops "my auntie’s probably your boss,” the source noted to the Sun-Times.

What else?

The traffic stop in the 500 block of North St. Louis Avenue occurred after officers in a gang investigations unit targeting drug sales spotted a man in a black mask picking up a bag near a black SUV and entering the passenger side of a four-door silver Lexus, the paper said in a previous story, citing a police report.

Officers said they stopped the car because the driver failed to use a turn signal, the Sun-Times said, adding that the passenger tossed a baggie containing 84 pink packets of heroin out of the window. Police said they recovered about 42 grams of heroin worth about $6,300, the paper said.

Police arrested the passenger — 34-year-old Kenneth Miles — for possession of a controlled substance, a felony, the paper said. But Talley’s niece was let go because there wasn’t clear evidence linking her to the heroin, the source told the Sun-Times.

Court records indicate that Talley's niece lives with Miles, the paper said, adding that he's a reputed member of the Traveling Vice Lords street gang and that court records show he has a lengthy criminal record that includes seven drug-related convictions.

Miles on Feb. 1 was free on bail in connection to a separate felony case for allegedly selling fentanyl, the Sun-Times said, adding that the Cook County sheriff’s office said he was being held in jail without bail.

In addition, Miles reportedly provided police with bad information that led to a botched raid at the home of Anjanette Young in 2019, WGN-TV reported, citing sources and police records.

The Civilian Office of Police Accountability in November published a report recommending suspensions for seven officers involved in the raid, the station said, adding that City Council in December approved a $2.9 million settlement in Young’s lawsuit stemming from the raid.

What happened to the car?

Following conversations between high-ranking police officials, a decision was made not to impound Talley's car, even though that's the routine procedure for cars stopped during narcotics arrests so they can be searched for guns and drugs, the paper said.

With that, officers drove Talley’s Lexus back to the block where the arrest took place and returned the keys to her niece, the source told the Sun-Times.

One day after the traffic stop, involved officers were taken off the street for training with no further explanation, the Sun-Times said, adding that the source said it was apparent “punishment.”

“This was in direct response to this incident,” the source also noted to the paper, adding that all the officers are expected to return to normal duty next week.

The Sun-Times — citing a high-ranking police official — also reported that pulling those officers from the street is a decision that only could have come from Superintendent David Brown, First Deputy Superintendent Eric Carter, or Chief Ernest Cato.

Still, the source added to the paper that “knowing what we know, I don’t think Chief Yolanda Talley had any idea what was going on with her car."

What did Chicago police have to say about it all?

Police spokesman Don Terry said Tuesday that the incident involving Talley’s car has been referred to the city’s office of the inspector general in order to avoid a conflict of interest due to Talley's role as chief of internal affairs, which involves investigating misconduct allegations against other officers, the Sun-Times said.

The paper added in its initial story that Talley didn't respond to its email seeking comment. Terry declined to answer its questions, the Sun-Times also said.

Talley was promoted to chief of internal affairs in December, the Sun-Times said, adding that prior to that she was deputy chief of recruitment and retention and a deputy chief in charge of district commanders on the South Side.

The paper said Talley’s been a rising star in the department and that many police sources have indicated they believe she's being groomed for an even higher position, such as first deputy superintendent — the No. 2 spot in the department — if Carter retires.

Here's Talley in a CPD video titled "Be the Change," aimed at police recruitment, which was posted to YouTube prior to her promotion to internal affairs chief:

Be The Change: Deputy Chief Yolanda Talleyyoutu.be

Democratic Virginia delegate loses election, admits he tampered with Republican campaign signs at polling place, tells cop it was just 'a little hijinks'



It has not been Chris Hurst's finest week.

First off, the Democrat from the Virginia House of Delegates lost his District 12 re-election bid to Republican Jason Ballard. In fact, Republicans took control of the House by flipping seven seats after Democrats held a 55-45 majority.

But that ain't the half of it.

What else happened?

You see, on the eve of the election, Hurst and his girlfriend were pulled over by Radford City police after a sheriff's deputy allegedly saw them tampering with campaign signs at a polling place, WSLS-TV reported.

Police photos show campaign signs for Republican candidates such as Governor-elect Glenn Youngkin and Hurst's opponent, Delegate-elect Ballard, flipped over and on the ground, the station said.

Image source: YouTube screenshot

#BREAKING: Radford police have just released the bodycam showing the campaign sign incident involving Del. Chris Hurst. https://bit.ly/3nW4uZn\u00a0pic.twitter.com/s7j1ctZD0J

— ABC 13 News - WSET (@ABC13News) 1635956037

'A little hijinks'

The following is a transcript from the police bodycam video showing the conversation between Hurst and the officer who pulled him over, WSLS reported:

Officer: "I think what you need to do after I deal with you here is go back and fix those signs. What do you think? You try to resort to doing this? Instead of doing a fair election? Chris, quit playing. Quit playing. Y'all are up there turning over signs at the polling area and you're sitting here acting like you don't know what's going on?"

Hurst: "...Here's what I would say. I would think that something that was a little hijinks and steam blowing off is exactly what everybody over on the other side of the mountain does and people all over this district do."

Officer: "So you're going to resort to that and represent us?"

Hurst: "I need you to just do your job here tonight and I'll do mine. I have nothing more to say to you, officer. I'm sorry for actions that I may have done or my partner may have done, but I think you're getting a little emotional here."

Officer: "I'm not getting emotional at all, you're supposed to be representing us. You're supposed to be out here representing us and not out here acting like a school kid. How am I supposed to vote for you if you're out here doing this?"

Hurst: "Were you planning on voting for me?"

Officer: "Well, that's all up in the air now."

Hurst: "I'm sorry if I lost your support, sir."

At Tuesday night's watch party, Hurst told media members the campaign sign incident was a prank, the station said.

"We flipped over a couple of yard signs, took them, put 'em upside down and put them right side up," Hurst said. "That's what we did."

When asked "whose" signs he messed with, Hurst replied they were "Republican signs .. one Jason Ballard sign and one [Glenn] Youngkin sign."

But WSLS said police photos show more than two signs were tampered with.

Here's a statement from Hurst about the incident via WXFR-TV:

This has been a real drag out race, it's been very competitive, and, in some degree, it's been sometimes nasty. You know, election eve, you've run a really hard race, run a very long campaign, and you just do a prank to be a goof and, you know, it just happens to be done by somebody who is very apologetic for what they've done and realizes that, you know, I have people looking up to me and I have a real responsibility that I need to live up to, and I think in my actions, legislatively and what we've been able to accomplish for this district, I continue to show that we get results for the New River Valley, but again I apologize to people for disappointing them and it's something I'm just looking to move forward from.

Radford police release body cam video of traffic stop involving Chris Hurstyoutu.be

Anything else?

Hurst also was cited at the traffic stop for driving with a suspended license and given a "driving while suspended notification," the station said.

But Hurst told WSLS his license was suspended due to an insurance lapse and that he wasn't aware of it until he was pulled over Monday night. Hurst told WXFR he took care of the insurance issue Tuesday morning.

Hurst also was pulled over in 2020 on suspicion of drunk driving, after which his blood alcohol concentration came in above the legal limit at .085 in a portable breath test, WSLS reported in a separate story. The officer released Hurst without charging him because he believed his blood alcohol concentration would drop below the legal limit by the time he brought Hurst in for a formal breathalyzer test, which is the only admissible test in court.

What's more, the station said it would have been unlikely for Hurst to be prosecuted in court since the Constitution of Virginia dictates that legislators are immune to arrest while the General Assembly is in session unless they've committed treason, a felony, or a breach of peace.

Lawmaker claims he got ticketed for being black. Police chief says race wasn't involved, demands lawmaker apologize to officer.



The police chief of St. Paul, Minnesota, said he wants a state representative to apologize for accusing a sergeant of racial profiling during a July 4 traffic stop, KSTP-TV reported.

What are the details?

State Rep. John Thompson of the Minnesota Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party made the accusation last week at a rally for Philando Castile, who was killed by police in 2016, outside the governor's residence, the station said.

"We're still getting 'driving while black' tickets in this state and, in fact, in St. Paul," Thompson said, according to KSTP. "So let's just call it what it is, right ... I shouldn't have to be profiled, so this is ridiculous. Oh, and by the way, it was a sergeant here in St. Paul ... We promote bad behavior."

But St. Paul Police Chief Todd Axtell took issue with Thompson in a Facebook post Friday, the station said.

"These aren't accusations I take lightly, so I looked into the traffic stop, watched the body worn camera footage, and spoke to the sergeant," Axtell wrote, according to KSTP. "This stop, made at about 1:20 in the morning, had absolutely nothing to do with the driver's race.

"Simply put, the traffic stop was by the books," Axtell added, the station said. "What happened afterward was anything but... I'm dismayed and disappointed by the state representative's response to the stop. Rather than taking responsibility for his own decisions and actions, he attempted to deflect, cast aspersions, and deny any wrongdoing."

Axtell then called out Thompson, KSTP said: "The driver, an elected official who does not dispute driving without a front license plate, owes our sergeant an apology."

While the stop was for lack of a license plate, the Pioneer Press said Thompson was cited for operating a motor vehicle after his driving privileges were suspended.

What happened next?

The station said Thompson hasn't responded to its nearly one dozen requests for comment via phone, text, and email — and he declined to give police permission to release the body camera video of his traffic stop, which led the Minnesota Police and Peace Officers Association to issue a statement demanding its release.

"Rep. Thompson's signature issue at the state legislature was advocating for rapid release of police officer's body camera footage," MPPOA Executive Director Brian Peters said, according to KSTP. "Now he's blocking the public release of body camera footage of his own incident with law enforcement this past week. As a public official, it's hypocritical and irresponsible. Constituents have the right to see how their legislator conducted himself, particularly when he made such strong claims about what happened during the traffic stop."

More from the station:

We've also learned more about the unusual issue of Thompson having only a Wisconsin driver's license despite serving in the Minnesota State Legislature. A Wisconsin Department of Public Safety spokesman confirmed Thompson has had a license in that state since 2000 and has renewed it in 2005, 2012, and in November of 2020, the same month he was elected to represent the east of St. Paul in Minnesota.

The Minnesota Department of Public Safety says Thompson has never had a Minnesota driver's license. From May 2019 until this week his Minnesota "driving privileges" were suspended due to unpaid child support. Public safety officials said that issue was taken care of this week and he is now eligible to get a Minnesota driver's license.

Without any response from Thompson, it's difficult to know whether he claims his residency in Minnesota or Wisconsin.

KSTP added that it's unclear what any of these revelations will have on his ability to continue in the Minnesota Legislature without more clarity on his residency.

Rebuke from party head

The Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party chairman rebuked Thompson in a statement Sunday, saying he was "disappointed" in him, KSTP reported in a separate story.

"Nobody is above the law, including our elected officials. We expect all of our elected officials, regardless of party, to not only follow the law, but to hold themselves to the highest standards," DFL Chairman Ken Martin said, according to the station. "Whether they like it or not, their words, actions, and behavior are going to be scrutinized by the public. As such it is important for people in positions of power and influence to model the type of behavior we expect from everyone."

Past behavior

When Thompson was campaigning for the State House last summer at the height of George Floyd and Black Lives Matter rioting, he launched into a fiery tirade outside the home of the Minneapolis Police Federation president — and hinted that the town of Hugo should be burned down.

"Why the f*** is we so peaceful in this [homophobic slur removed] neighborhood," Thompson shouted. "F*** your motherf***ing peace, white racist motherf***ers!"

He added in reference to Floyd, "This whole god***n state burned down for $20 god***n dollars, you think we give a f*** about burning Hugo down?"

"Blue lives don't mean s*** to black people," Thompson also said. "F*** Hugo, Minnesota!"

Thompson also was criticized for beating effigies of the police federation leader and his wife outside their Hugo home, KTSP noted, adding that Thompson later apologized.

San Antonio officer shot during traffic stop; returns fire leaving 2 suspects dead, 1 injured



A San Antonio police officer was shot in the hand Friday morning when the driver of the vehicle opened fire on the officer during a routine traffic stop.

The officer returned fire, killing two occupants in the vehicle and injuring the third.

What are the details?

San Antonio Police Chief William McManus explained during a media conference on the incident that the officer's body camera was rolling but did not have audio, Fox News reported. The chief described what occurred according to what the footage showed.

"It was a very casual conversation from its appearance," McManus said, saying that the discussion between the officer and the suspects lasted probably a minute or two when "all of a sudden the gun was pulled and [the officer] ran backward."

He said multiple shots were fired from the truck.

Despite being shot in the hand, the officer was able to return fire, hitting all three occupants in the vehicle and reloading his service weapon at one point after it malfunctioned.

The male driver and a male passenger did not survive, but a female passenger was transported to a hospital with a gunshot wound to her chest.

McManus did not reveal the identity of the officer or the suspects, but said the officer had been with the department for five years. The chief added, "The officer is very lucky to be alive at that close range having been shot in the hand and not somewhere else more vital."

Anything else?

McManus had just delivered a presser the day before to explain another officer-involved shooting in San Antonio.

On Thursday, a San Antonio Park Police officer fatally shot a suspect who allegedly drove the wrong way down the terminal roadway at San Antonio International Airport, before stepping out and "firing indiscriminately" at people — including the officer — when confronted.

The suspect, described as a man in his 40s, also fit the description of the suspect who had fired shots at people from a highway overpass earlier that day.

The airport suspect was known to police and had mental health issues, according to McManus.

Video released showing suspect shooting two Tulsa police officers — killing one — during routine traffic stop



A Tulsa County district judge ordered video footage released this week that shows two officers being shot by a suspect during a routine traffic stop that left one officer dead.

The footage is extremely graphic, and some authorities have condemned its release, but Judge William Musseman determined that the public has the right to see what exactly happened during the horrific traffic stop that occurred in June.

What are the details?

KWTV-TV reported on Monday that Tulsa Police Chief Wendell Franklin held a news conference using slides and describing key parts of what happened after Officer Aurash Zarkeshan stopped convicted felon David Ware — who had expired tags, no driver's license and no proof of insurance — and Sgt. Craig Johnson responded to the stop on June 29.

Ware's attorney argued that parts of the original affidavit against his client were inaccurate, and that Ware was "painted in the worst light," according to the outlet.

Ware, 33, is currently awaiting trial on charges of first-degree murder, drug possession with intent to distribute, and possession of a firearm after a felony conviction, the StarTribune reported. He scheduled to appear in court Oct. 5.

Franklin argued that the video footage should only be shown in a courtroom but released it at the judge's request. During Franklin's description of what happened, he noted, "Our officers gave more than 40 commands — 40 times they asked him to exit that vehicle before they used any type of force. Seven times [the suspect] was warned before he was 'tased.'"

Tulsa Mayor G.T. Bynum (R) released a statement on the video suggesting, "If you do not have to watch this video for your job, don't watch it."

He added, "I have to watch a lot of body camera footage as part of my job. I can only think of two times in my life — upon the death of family members — when I wept like I did watching the conclusion of this video. It is terrible."

TheBlaze viewed the video, which was posted by TexAgs. It is graphic and extremely "disturbing," as the site describes. The footage shows the suspect refusing officers' repeated commands and arguing with them.

For several minutes, the officers pleaded with Ware to exit his car. Eventually, they deployed a Taser on him and thereafter used pepper spray in an effort to get him to comply. Finally, the officers tried to pry Ware out of the vehicle, and the suspect is then seen pulling out a firearm and firing several times, striking both officers.

Sgt. Johnson later died from his injuries and Officer Zarkeshan was critically injured.

TheBlaze's Jessica O'Donnell wrote on Twitter, "This is what [officers] face on a daily basis. Tasers and pepper spray often don't work. Remember this scene when you are quick to condemn officers in escalating situations."

Amy Swearer, a legal fellow at The Heritage Foundation, compiled a list of scenarios in a Twitter thread showing several other instances where officers were shot during traffic stops, saying those cases "flashed through [her] mind," after watching the video of Zarkeshan and Johnson's traffic stop.

"This matters," Swearer wrote. "I'm tired of people pretending that every police shooting victim is Breonna Taylor sleeping innocently in her bed. I'm tired of a one-sided conversation on policing where the civilian's actions aren't scrutinized, or the officer's legitimate fears acknowledged."

This writer's perspective

This writer remembers when an idol of hers — Officer Molly Bowden, whom she met at 4-H camp at the age of 12, was killed 15 years ago after being shot by a man during a routine traffic stop.

Bowden, 26, pulled over a vehicle driven by Richard Evans, 23, on Jan. 10, 2005, in Columbia, Missouri.

The Columbia Police Department reported:

[Bowden] was initially shot and wounded in the shoulder. As she retreated to the rear of the suspect's vehicle for cover, the suspect exited and shot her in the neck. After she fell to the ground, the suspect shot at her two more times, striking her in the neck again.

The following morning, the suspect shot and wounded a second Columbia officer who was staking out his mother's home. The suspect then committed suicide.

Officer Bowden eventually succumbed to her injuries one month later. Her end of watch was Feb. 10, 2005.