September 11, 2000 - Two Republicans are vying for the chance to take on Democratic Congressman Jim Oberstar in Minnesota's 8th district, stretching from the Iron Range down to the northern Twin Cities suburbs. Oberstar has held the seat for 26 years. But so far, much of the Republican attempt to unseat him has centered more on an internal dispute on who should control the party. Minnesota Public Radio's Stephanie Hemphill reports. { The dispute boils down to this. Bob Lemen, a Grand Rapids computer consultant, has the GOP party endorsement. Warren Nelson, an engineering consultant from Chisago County, says the endorsement should have gone to his friend Mike Darling. Darling's candidacy did get a vote of support, but party leaders say it happened at a meeting which was not meant to endorse anyone. Darling is now running as an independent.
August 29, 2000 - Hearings continue today on the Minnesota portion of the proposed power line between Duluth and Wausau Wisconsin. Minnesota Public Radio's Stephanie Hemphill reports on last night's opening session. { The evening hearing started noisily. But once those crowd got into the hearing room, the discussion was detailed and wide-ranging. Technically, the question in this week's hearings is, should the short 12 mile section of the project in Minnesota be exempt from the normal environmental revuew? But opponents are discussing much broader questions about how we should power our lives. Speakers last night raisedf concerns about possible health effects of electromagnetic fields, more mercury in the environment, and lower property values. Northern Manitoba's Cross Lake Cree were represented by William Osborne. He said flooding from the massive hydroelectric power plants that the new line will allow to be sold in Wisconsin and throughout the midwest have destroyed his peoples way of life.
August 22, 2000 - People in the tiny Northern Minnesota community of Meadowlands held a memorial service today - for their school. The Toivola-Meadowlands Charter School, one of the first in the state, is closing after seven years. Like many rural schools, it's a casualty of declining enrollment. Minnesota Public Radio's Stephanie Hemphill reports. { sfx: hymn (fades under):
August 17, 2000 - Donald Blom has received the maximum possible sentence in Minnesota - life in prison without parole - for kidnapping and murdering Katie Poirier. Today's sentencing hearing in Carlton was another dramatic episode in a case that has left many people feeling relieved but still angry. Minnesota Public Radio's Stephanie Hemphill reports. { The Poirier family asked that sentencing take place on Monday so they could have more time to prepare their victim impact statements. But in court, both of Katie's parents and her brother talked about how her murder has affected their lives. Steve Poirer, Katie's father, said to Donald Blom, "I don't know what God has coming for you but hopefully he'll allow Katie to put some boards on your fire."
August 17, 2000 - Donald Blom will be sentenced today for kidnapping and murdering Katie Poirier. He now faces a life sentence without the possibility of parole. The sentencing comes just one day after a jury found him guilty. Minnesota Stephanie Hemphill reports on events at the courthouse in Virginia Wednesday. The St Louis County courtroom was packed, and the tension evident after five weeks of difficult and emotional testimony. Judge Gary Pagliacetti sternly warned against any outbursts regardless of the verdict. But when the crowd heard the word "guilty," a collective gasp of relief and satisfaction broke out. Defense attorney Rodney Brodin asked for a poll of the jury, and as each juror was called by name, they said yes, that is my verdict. Throughout Donald Blom was still, his hands clasped on the table in front of him, no emotion on his face. Katie Poirier's mother, Pam Poirier, sobbed silently and curled against her son Patrick. Outside, there were tears, grins and hugs, and people applauded as the Poirier family walked out of the courthouse for the last time.
August 10, 2000 - Donald Blom took the stand in his own defense and told the jury he was at home in bed when Katie Poirier was abducted and killed late on the night of May 26, 1999. His nearly four hours on the stand Wednesday provided another dramatic day in the fourth week of testimony in his kidnapping and murder trial. Minnesota Public Radio's Stephanie Hemphill reports. { Last week the Virginia courtoom heard a tape of Donald Blom confessing to kidnapping and killing Katie Poirier: a confession he later recanted. Many people, including Katie Poirier's family, have asked why someone would confess to a crime they had not committed. Wednesday, Donald Blom gave his explanation. He said he had recently turned fifty, was suffering from various health problems, and had two small girls to worry about. He said he had "been through this" years ago - referring to earlier convictions for sex offenses - and had been hoping never to have to go through it again. Blom talked about sitting in his Carlton County jail cell, hearing from his wife Amy about things taken away from the family home in Richfield for evidence - "truckloads of things," he said, including the children's school clothes. His wife was afraid to go out of the house, someone threw a firebomb at the house, and she was getting threatening phone calls. Meanwhile, Blom said he was confined to a small cell without a window 23 hours a day much of the time. His voice breaking, he said the last straw was when someone from the FBI told him his wife could be implicated in the crime; she could be charged with transporting Poirier's body to Wisconsin in the trunk of the family car, making it a federal offense subject to the death penalty. He said he felt authorities were deliberately trying to "make him crack." He told defense attorney Rodney Brodin his confession was what he thought investigators wanted to hear.
August 7, 2000 - Amy Blom today told a Virginia Courtroom her husband, Donald Blom, was at home with her and their four children the night Katie Poirier disappeared. The wife of the man accused of kidnapping and murdering Poirier in late May last year was the first defense witness to testify at the trial. Minnesota Public Radio's Stephanie Hemphill reports. { Amy Blom said her husband was away two nights the week Katie Poirier disappeared, but she said on the night in question he was in their Richfield home. She told the court she remembered the events of Wednesday, May 26th because the next day she saw a report about the missing convenience store clerk on television. She says it "stuck out in her mind" because the Bloms owned vacation property near Moose Lake. She said Blom telephoned her from work during the day on Wednesday to say he was going to spend some time fishing. He arrived home around 9:30, they watched the 10:00 news, and then went to bed. The next morning Blom said her husband was gone, but she thought he'd gone to work because the coffeepot was on as usual. Security video tape from the convenience store, which is just off I-35 about 100 miles north of the Twin Cities, shows Poirier being abducted at about 11:30 Wednesday night by a man wearing a New York Yankees shirt .
August 4, 2000 - The prosecution has rested its case in the Donald Blom kidnap and murder trial. Three weeks of testimony culminated with emotional stories from two women who had been kidnapped and assaulted by Blom seventeen years ago. Minnesota Public Radio's Stephanie Hemphill reports. { The Blom jurors heard two women describe how - 17 years ago when they were both in their teens - they picked up Blom who was hitch-hiking near Stillwater. They said he threatened them with a knife, forced them into the woods, and attempted to choke and rape one of them. When a police car stopped to check on the abandoned vehicle, Blom ran off. One of the women recognized him two months later and he pled guilty to the assault and served four years in prison.
August 4, 2000 - Jurors in an Iron Range Courtroom heard a tape of Donald Blom confessing to abducting and killing Katie Poirier Thursday. The taped confession which Blom has since recanted, was a long-awaited and painful part of the prosecution's case. Minnesota Public Radio's Stephanie Hemphill reports. { The Virginia courtroom was more crowded than usual, and Katie Poirier's friends and family wiped their eyes and gave each other supportive hugs as they heard Blom's voice describe taking the teenager from the convenience store where she was working alone late at night, driving to his nearby property, and strangling her. The tape was actually dominated by the voice of BCA investigator Paul Wagner, who conducted the interview. Blom said he'd been drinking that night and his memory of what happened hazy. Wagner had to lead him repeatedly through various episodes, trying to corroborate evidence provided by witnesses, or just trying to get Blom to recall exactly what happened.
August 2, 2000 - Local officials from northeastern Minnesota sat down with Governor Ventura's staff today and shared ideas about how to grow the region's economy. It was the first time the Governor's cabinet has met outside St. Paul, and state officials say this trip was so successful, similar meetings around the state could become a regular feature of the Ventura Administration. Minnesota Public Radio's Stephanie Hemphill reports. { During the election campaign Jesse Ventura didn't know what I-triple R B stood for, and he stumbled on the Tonight show with Jay Leno when asked to describe taconite. But no more. Ventura and the heads of twenty-four state agencies learned about mining and a lot more on a two-day tour of the Iron Range. Yesterday they toured Minntac, the state's largest iron ore mine and taconite plant. Today they heard from local officials about efforts to diversity the Range economy.