XPost: alt.native, alt.politics.democrats, sac.politics
XPost: talk.politics.guns
Dozens of Minneapolis Native residents and city officials gathered at
Cedar Avenue Field Park Thursday morning to grieve five people killed in shootings over the last two days.
Mourners gathered around fires and a drum circle and prayed for an end to
the recent string of violence.
Longtime neighborhood resident Carrie Day Aspinwall led a prayer.
“I've been in this neighborhood, I've been in this park all my life,”
Aspinwall said. “We took care of one another, and that's what we need to
do today.”
Minneapolis police are investigating three shootings that killed five and injured two. The first happened late Tuesday, near the corner of 25th
Street and Bloomington Avenue. Three people were killed: a 17-year-old
boy, a 20-year-old woman and a 27-year-old man. Two shootings in the neighborhood Wednesday left two more people dead: a man in his 30s and a
man in his 50s.
Minnesota NowFatal shootings upend American Indian Month celebrations Investigation continuesMinneapolis police continue to investigate
shootings that left five people dead in less than 24 hours
Police believe none of the shootings were random, and said the first two
appear to be connected. Police Chief Brian O’Hara said he believes the
victims of the first two shootings were Native.
Vin Dionne is a leader of the Many Shields Society, a Minneapolis
organization for Native men. He said the violence has rocked the tight-
knit community.
“When we lose one young person before their time, that's devastating to
us. That's devastating to our future, that creates a lot of trauma,”
Dionne said.
Dionne said he was close with one of the men who was killed and had
recently talked to him about joining Many Shields.
“We have to heal,” Dionne said. “We have to come together. We have to
support one another.”
In a statement Wednesday, Red Lake Nation leaders said they are in touch
with city officials and adding security patrols at the Mino Bimaadiziwin apartment building, near where one of the shootings took place. The
statement said counselors from the Native American Community Clinic will
also be available at the Red Lake Nation Embassy and the Mino Bimaadiziwin Wellness Clinic.
The community had been planning celebrations to kick off American Indian
Month, including a parade, an Indian Health Board groundbreaking ceremony
and a powwow. Those were canceled Thursday in light of the shootings.
O’Hara said extra police are on patrol in the neighborhood.
“We're doing everything that we can both to deploy all available law enforcement resources — federal, state and local — to address the
investigation as well as to provide presence,” O’Hara said at Thursday’s community gathering.
No arrests have been made. O’Hara said investigators are following leads.
https://www.mprnews.org/story/2025/05/01/minneapolis-native-community- mourns-victims-of-gunfire
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