Winona Journal – Home
23June 2026

Walz on judge ordering Trump to stand down

ST. PAUL, Minn. — Governor Tim Walz welcomed a federal judge’s rejection of President Trump’s push for a criminal investigation into Minnesota officialdom’s resistance to a federal military occupation last winger. Walz called the judge’s ruling “a victory for the rule of law and our democracy.” In effect, Minneapolis-based U.S. Judge Patrick Schiltz’s ruling dead-ended Trump’s claim that the Minnesota resistance was a criminal insult to federal authority over state sovereignty. The judge found Trump’’s position as petty politics and unsustainable court. Said Walz:

“This case was just one example of the U.S. Justice Department pursuing criminal investigations into the President’s political opponents. We are seeing daily reminders of this administration’s lawlessness — in Minnesota and around the country. We all must continue to seek justice and uphold the rule of law.”

Trump never forgave Walz for an energetic campaign against him as the Democratic vice-presidential nominee in 2o24. Even though Trump won the presidency, he is notoriously thin-skinned and has incessantly ramped up a retaliation against Walz. Trump’s bitterness grew beyond Walz and culminated last winter in a 2-1/2 military siege of Minnesota, supposedly to end a crisis of lawlessness in the streets when in fact there was no crisis. Trump’s antagonism to Walz deepened when citizen resistance to the military occupation forced Trump in nto an embarrassing withdrawal of his troops. Heis seething, unabated, eventually morphed into the now-defeated attack on Walz and oyher Minnesotans as criminals. Here are responses from other Minnesota leaders whom Trump had wanted lock toup:

State attorney general

Keith Ellison: “It should disturb every American that Donald Trump is weaponizing the criminal justice system against people he disagrees with.”

Minneapolis mayor

Jacob Frey: He said that criticizing government action is not a crime: “One of the defining strengths of our democracy is the ability to challenge those in power without fear of retribution. Elected officials have both the right and the responsibility to speak honestly about how government decisions affect the people they serve. Subpoenaing political opponents because they spoke on behalf of their constituents violates the core tenets of our democracy and human decency.”

St. Paul mayor

Kaohly Her: She called Trumo’s subpoenas “a politically motivated retaliation against our city for lawfully standing up to ICE and fighting for our residents.”

22June 2026

Traveler in odd downtown mini-dramas

WINONA, Minn. — After a couple of odd disturbances downtown involving an Anoka man, police decided the best course was to send him packing out of town. Alexander Craig Larson, 32, was last seen fueling up his pickup truck. Police said that he indicated he was heading for New Orleans. The disturbances:

> Blooming Grounds, 50 East Third Street. Police were called about 1 p.m for a man throwing food inside the eatery. Police found Larson parked outside in a [pickup truck. He first refused to respond to officers tapping on the window to open up but finally lowered the window. He was issued a standard trespass warning not to return to Blooming Grounds.

> Gabby’s, 179 East Third Street.  Police were called about 4:30 p.m. for a man acting strangely outside Gabby’s bar. Police found Larson had parked his 2007 black GMC Yukon pickup and placed  tires and orange traffic cones as well as tires. in the street. Larson, wearing a black face mask, was out in the street spray-painting the pavement with a 15-foot circle of orange, yellow and black. Seeing the officers, he walked away but when confronted he explained he was hoping to raise gas money. He didn’t make much sense, the officers said, but stgere was something about his “street art” meant to convey “Anoka to New Orleans” and something about the country’s 250th anniversary. He was issued a disturbing-the-peace citation and tlod where to find a chafity agency that mught help with gas money to leave town.

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22June 2026

Judge damns Trump’s Minnesota Meanness

MINNEAPOLIS — A federal judge has blocked President Trump’s g escalating campaign against Minnesota Governor Tim Walz and other elected officials. Judge Patrick Schiltz declared that Trump was guilty of illegally harassing people he didn’t like. The judge called it a deplorable and grossly illegal misuse of presidential power that Trump was seeking grand jury indictments of the Minnesota state and local leaders.  Trump has been hammering them for months as traitorous in countless tirades forthe citizen resistance to his Operation Metro Surge — a brutal military occupation of the state over the winter. In February Trump finally was humiliated into withdrawing his troops by the hundreds. He has been seething since and vowing retribution. Judge Schiltz’s ruling was the latest in a growing number of judicial rebukes of Trump for using U.S. Justice Department to carry out personal vendettas. Critics use the word “weaponize” for his shifting the Justice Department’s energies into a vehicle to bully and harass political rivals. Judge Patrick Schlitz was blunt. About Trump’s Minnesota actions he found the President’s “dominant purpose” was to “coerce Minnesota officials into assisting the federal government with enforcing civil immigration law and to harass and retaliate against them for failing to do so.” Among those whom Trump ordered the U.S. Justice Department to seek indictments:

> Tim Walz, governor.

> Keith Ellison, state attorrney general.

> Jacob Frey, mayor of Minneapolis.

Kaohly Her, mayor of St. Paul.

> Officials in Hennepin and Ramsey counties.

SCHILTZ patrick judge MN b - Winona Journal

Schiltz. Chief judge for the U.S. District of Minnesota. A Harvard Law School graduate with honors. Appointed to the federal bench by President George W. Bush, a Republican, in 2005.

Anatomy of judge’s rebuke

Judge Schitz ruled that there appeared to be “extremely weak to nonexistent” connections between the information sought in the U.S. Justice Deoartment’s subpoenas and any possible criminal violation. The subpoenas seek materials “that largely if not entirely relate to constitutionally protected conduct,” the judge wrote. He noted that Minnesota has the legal right not to devote its resources to coercing federal immigration law. The Justice Department “is not conducting a criminal investigation but is instead using the grand jury process for unlawful purposes, Schiltz said. He called the evidence overwhelming that the Department’s subpoenas were issued for unlawful reasons. About the Justice Department attempts to justify Trump’s motives: “The  Department has struggled — without success — to identify a single plausible plausible investigatory justification.”

21June 2026

$100,000 damage to Lewiston solar array

LEWISTON hs - Winona Journal

Lewiston-Altura High School. On County Road 25 on the Lewiston East End. Enrollment: 360 students in Grades 9 to 12. Spring classes ended May 22.

Lone vandal seen smashing sunray collectors

LEWISTON, Minn. — A vandal smashed solar panels at the Lewiston High School with the damage estimated initially at $100,000. The attack was at twilight, about 6:40 p.m. A witness called the police dispatcher in Winona and was able describe an automobile before it drove off. Sheriff’s deputies found a vehicle matching the description a quarter mile away in a Dollar General parking lot. Deputies said the driver, Brenden Robert Myers, age 21, of Lewiston, admitted to the vandalism. There was an odor of marijuana, deputies said: Also field sobriety tests suggested impairment. Myers was jailed on a tentative charge of driving while impaired and damage to property. A final DWI charge hinge on pending results from a blood sample drawn at the county jail in Winona. Not immediately clear was how the damage to the solar panels was accomplished. Deputies said an electrical cord of some sort apparently was involved.

Earlier: Charge ahead: Lewiston schools go solar

21June 2026

Minneiska biker hits deer, badly hurt

WABASHA, Minn. — A rural Winona County motorcyclist was critically injured when he ran into a deer. David Michael Deering, 66, was taken to the Wabasha hospital. The accident was on a four-lane section of U.S. Highway 61 between Wabasha and Kellogg. First-responders described his condition as life-threatening. This was about 11 :25 a.m. Deering was on a BMW R1200 and headed south toward home near Minneiska. No one else was injured.

21June 2026

Rochester college shies off sports dome

ROCHESTER, Minn.— Plans have been abandoned for a new bubble dome for sports at Rochester Community and Technical College. The college president, Jeffery Boyd, expressed doubts about the viability of a new bubble: “Given the level of risk associated with potential fabric and mechanical system failures, we do not believe it is a wise investment at this time.” The existing dome not only has been problematic to maintain but also is at the end of its useful life. The dome has been used by the college for winter sports as well as by youth and adult community recreation programs. The college, meanwhile, is keeping long-term plans on the drawing board for a $55 million sports and recreation complex.

Earlier: Rochester ponders beefed-up RCTC sports site

20June 2026

News summary at week’s end: June 20, 2026

20June 2026

Cops: Biker’s own camera recorded misdeeds

DAKOTA Minn. — A deputy gave chase to bikers who, mufflers disconnected, had been roaring around nearby LaCrescent and disturbing the peace. The bikers got away from LaCrescent police and headed north into Winona County. The deputy intercepted them on County Road 1. They went even louder and faster onto Interstate 90. The deputy, siren shrieking and lights flashing, was on their tails, at points at 100 mph. Finally one biker pulled over. The deputy arrested Miguel Ramone Dodge, age 19, of LaCrosse, and confiscated his bike-cam. Police are seeing bike-cams more and more for bikers to relive their stunt-riding and ultra-speeding. The cam left no doubt that Dodge deserved to be arrested, the deputy said. The second biker, however, kept on going. He’s now on police list to be apprehended. This was all was about 7:10 p.m.

20June 2026

Cruisers and rods outside Peter’s Biergarten

2026 06 20 WNA steamb fays CARCSGW scaled - Winona Journal

25th annual event. Invitation-only diagonal parking on downtown Winona’s blocked-off Third Street for the Steamboat Days car show. Business was hopping at Peter’s fresh-air beer garden. “Anybody see my glitzy ’57 DeSoto?” Image: Helen Nordby

20June 2026

Elgin driver hurt in sunny afternoon crash

POTTSDAM, Minn — An Elgin man was injured in a three-car collision at Reikes Corners west of Zumbro Lake on White Bridge Road. Zackary Austin Peterson, 36, was taken 18 miles to a Rochester hospital. His injuries were non-life threatening, first-responders said. No one else required medical attention. The collision was about 1:20 p.m. Peterson was eastbound toward Plainview on State Highway 247. He was driving a 2007 Chevrolet Impala whose airbag deployed. Others in the accident:

> Michael Paul Halasy, 55, of Rochester, driving south on State Highway 63 toward Rochester in a 1998 Porsche Boxster convertible.

> Jon Palmer Dunham, 56, of Rochester, driving north in a 2020 Ford F150 pickup and turning west toward Oronoco.

> Tara Louise Kenitz, 54, of Rochester, a passenger in the pickup.

20June 2026

Notable journalism

Morgan James (KTTC, June 18, 2026): “Uncertainty in Pine Island as Data Center Debate Continues”

Rachel Mergen (Winona Daily News, June 19, 2026): “The Coffee Camper Expands with New Alma Vineyard Spot”

Richard Molseed (Rochester Post Bulletin, 19, 2026):  “Tornado Carried Items into Wisconsin from Plainview Family Home”

20June 2026

Return of the chopsticks on West End

WINONA, Minn. – A new albeit somewhat familiar tenant has been added to the leaderboard at the Winona Crossing strip mall off U.S. Highways 61 on the West End. A soft-opening for Asian Buffet is scheduled for June. 30 The site earlier was occupied by New China King, also an all-you-can buffet. Asian food is not hard to find in Winona:

> Great Hunan: 111 West Third Street.

> Miya Japanese Bistro: 62 East Third Street.

> Novary: 1035 Frontenac Drive.

> Ocean Sushi: 1213 Gilmore Avenue.

> Panda Express: Kryzsko basement at Winona State University.

Earlier: Golden China to close doors in May

WNA asian buffet WNA CROSSING 1 scaled - Winona Journal

Winona Crossing. Updating the tenant list again. Image: Steve Lunde

19June 2026

Byron ballerina new Miss Minesota

BRENNAN anna miss mn 2026 - Winona Journal

Anna Brennan. Crowned Miss Minnesota at Treasure Island casino event. From Byron. As talent she performed classical ballet to “Tango de Roxanne.” Studying journalism at University of St. Thomas and interning at television station KSTP.

19June 2026

Acuity employees reeling at plant closure

WINONA, Minn. — Members of the Electrical Workers union at Acuity’s Winona lighting factory feel betrayed. The company’s top management, far away in Georgia, has sent down word that the plant will close soon. Employees learned of the decision at a surprise assembly. Afterward the business manager of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local Union 953, Brady Weiss , accused the company of “misplaced priorities,” particularly with its ongoing revenue gains:

“For decades, our members working at this facility have contributed not only to the success of Acuity Brands but added value to this community through good-paying family-supporting jobs. We are disappointed that the company’s misplaced priorities, despite their $563 million profit, have led them to the decision to close this facility following many years of committed partnership. “

Weiss said the union is committed to ensuring that its members are afforded “every protection available” under their collective bargaining agreement and the law.  Weiss said the Electrical Workers  contract gives “bump rights” to members to relocate to different Acuity facilities for equivaent  jobs held by less senior Acuity employees. Also: The state jobs agency has assistance for workers in mass layoffs.

Earlier: Lighting manufacturer Acuity closes Winona factory

19June 2026

Steamboat Days reveler crashes car into tree

WYATTVILLE, Minn. — A northern Arizona man, seemingly after too much fun at Steamboat Days in Winona, crashed his car into a tree 24 miles away on County Road 12. A sheriff’s deputy who came across the wreck said Joshua Ray Leach, age 37, was unhurt but drunk He was wearing a beer-tent access bracelet from Steamboat Days. A roadside breath test put his blood at 0.12% alcohol, four points more than law allows. The crash was at the 90-degree corner where County Road 12 forks into County 25.  This was about 3:45 a.m.

19June 2026

Notable journalism

Allison Murray (WXOW, June 195 2026): “Warrens Woman Charged after Kids Found Wandering Campsite; Home Deemed Uninhabitable”

Olivia Prondzinski (KTTC, June 12, 2026): “Investigation Notes Reveal Details of Stewartville High School Shooting”

Chris Rogers (Winona Post, June 12, 2026): “Refugees Rebuild in Winona”

19June 2026

“Fight?” What fight?” Nobody talking to cops

WINONA, Minn. –— Police responded to a call about a street fight in an East Side residential neighborhood. Although officers found people milling around, the fight was over. Police said no one would talk about what happened. Officers handed out forms and encouraged people in the remaining crowd to submit written statements in the morning when they sobered up. All appeared to be adults, officers said. This was about 1:25 a.m. on East Sanborn Street between Kansas and Liberty streets.

18June 2026

LaCrosse to AI giants: Slow it down

LACROSSE, Wis. — The La Crosse County Board voted 26-2 to put ice on construction of hyper-scale artificial intelligence data processing plants. It’s an 18-month moratorium to allow the Board time to review a major study it com missioned on environmental and other impact. Board member Dillon Mader said the Board didn’t want AI data center to be built before anybody understood downsides. Elsewhere giant AI companies have been secretly ramming consent for zoning revisions through local governmental agencies with binding non-disclosure agreements that preclude community knowledge and input.

Earlier: Mayor quits as hyper-scale Google project looms

Earlier: Pine Island data center: Judge insists on answers

Earlier: MiEnergy: No hanky-panky on our data center

Earlier: Earlier: Pine Island data center: Judge insists on answers

Earlier: Harmony frets at MiEnergy’s water-mining plan

18June 2026

Stockton Hill route project gets final trim

WINONA Minn. — The narrowing of U.S. Highway 14 up Stockton Hill on the Winona side was a one-day project, said state transportation spokesperson Mike Doughery. A crew was tarring caps on pilings that hold back new retaining walls on steepest sections of the highway. Also: Thousands of night-time  reflectors were afixed  atop  new guardrails. Pilot cars led motorists in single columns between Knopp Valley in Winona and the 1110-degree turn near the summit at Seminary Road.

Earlier: Stockton Hill 4.0: For another century

WNA stockton hillhill CREW 2026 06 18 - Winona Journal

Downhill to Winona. Spray-coating the pilings. Image: Steve Lunde

18June 2026

Lighting manufacturer Acuity closes Winona factory

WNA acuity lighting scaled - Winona Journal

Turning off the lights. The sprawling Goodview manfacturing campus , at 3760 West Fourth Street, is quiet at the end of a workday. Will become more so after the summer when shutdown completed. Operations moving to Indiana. Image: Steve Lunde

Bye: Pink slips to 86 union workers

ATLANTA, Ga. – The global lighting manufacturer Acuity is closing its suburban Winona factory in Goodview and laying off 86 employees. The announcement came as a surprise locallyin Winpna.  Atlanta-based Acuity has had a Winona presence since 2010 when it acquired the longtime local employer Winona Lighting. Acuity called its new decision part of “ongoing efforts to align our manufacturing network to best support our customers and long-term business needs.” Manufacturing currently at the Winna plant is  being shifted immediately to an Acuity plant in Indiana — a process expected to be compelted in August. The company made no mention of labor costs as an issue. Indiana has lax labor laws. Workers at Goodview have the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers as their collective bargaining agent.

Acuity profile

Acuity is the largest lighting company in North America. Headquartered iin Atlanta, Georgia. Globally it has 12,000 employees at scattered sites in North America, Europe and Asia. Its annual sales are $3.8 billion. These days the company operates as Acuity Brands. Its stock s traded publicly on the New York Stock Exchange as AYI. The president and chief executive, Neil Ashe, earns $12.5 million a year. His compensation package  includes $1 million in salary, $8.6 million in stock, $1.5 million in performance incentives, and $1.4 million in miscellany.

18June 2026

Cops: Rollingstone postal thief nabbed red-handed

ROLLINGSTONE, Minn. — U.S. Postal detectives staged a sting and claimed to have caught a Rollingstone mail worker red-handed opening a package and stealing prescription pills. Miranda Diane Tesch of St. Charles faces two counts of felony theft of mail. The sting was in November, although she was charged only Thursday through a summons. Here’s what happened: Alerted to theft reports over several months, agents put together a package made to resemble a prescription delivery from a VA hospital. Inside they put a bottle with fake pills and a sensor designed to trigger upon opening. An undercover agent took the package to the Rollingstone post office, where Tesch was working alone. The agent told her that a relative had died. The agent requested the package be returned to  the VA hospital. The agent left and waited outside with a fellow agent. The sensor in the decoy package went off. They rushed in. They read Tesch a Garrity warning that advised her she was compelled as a federal employee to answer their questions. At first, they said, Tesch claimed she opened the package to find identifying information because she could not make out what was the label. Eventually, they said, she admitted to opening the pill bottle. Agents found the 28 fake pills in her own prescription bottle, which was in her purse.

ROLLINGSTONE post ofc - Winona Journal

Crime scene at Zip 55969. An unassuming and quaint presence on Main Street in Rollingstone. Image: Steve Lunde

Tesch profile

Tesch, age 37, lives in St. Charles in far western Winona County. She commuted 24 miles through Whitewater State Park to work in Rollingstone. According to the complaint, Tesch stated she had previously resigned from a hospice-care facility after being accused of stealing pain medication from a patient.

An undercover officer approached Tesch, who was the only employee working at the post office at the time.

Case profile

Throughout 2025 the Winona County sheriff’s office received reports of mail theft or tampering in Rollingstone. In February one man received packages missing prescription pills. In June there were packages that clearly had been opened. One contained the prescription opioid Tramadol. In August, a woman reported mailing two greeting cards, each with $50 cash, which were delivered with the cash missing.

Winona irregularities

The Winona postmaster, Sherri Genkinger, pleaded guilty in 2019 after several years of reported irregularities. Postal detectives found 1,300 pieces of undelivered mail in a bag of shredded greeting cards in Genkinger’s office. She was sentenced to two years of probation.

18June 2026

Guilty to 12-year-old as pregnant and doing it

AUSTIN, Minn. — An Austin man pleaded guilty to impregnating a child who gave birth at age 12. Miguel Sebastian Domingo, age 62, entered the plea in Mower County court. He’s been locked since September after the girl told authorities that he raped her multiple times. The guilty plea was contingent on the judge dismissing one of four chagres of criminal misconduct with a minor. The agreement also asks that sentences be served concurrently. Sentencing was scheduled for September.

DOMINGO miguel sebastan AUSTN 12yo rape - Winona Journal

Domingo. Accused of multiple rapes of barely pubescent girl.

18June 2026

Bonfire in street, bullets popping: Why? Why? Why?

WINONA, Minn. – Police continued trying to trace the recent history of a handgun retrieved from a small fire in the street in front of a home near Center and Howard streets five days ago. The home-owner, who called firefighters to the fire, said he was inside and heard popping, and saw the fire out in the street.  In the debris from the fire, police found casings from eight shells that exploded, apparently from the heat. No one was injured. Eighteen unexploded live projectiles were with the gun.  Plastic components of the 9-millimeter Luger, had melted. Police said there was no reason to believe anyone was being targeted. Unanswered questions: Whose gun was it? Who set the fire? Why? And why on Howard Street?

Earlier: Mystery street fire yields melted gun, ammo

CUN luger 9mm cut0away - Winona Journal

9mm Luger. The weapon was an 1898 design by Austrian  gunsmith Georg Luger. It’s still standard police and military issue sidearm in many countries. The total manufactured: 3 million.The cut-away illustrates bullets in a rack inside the weapon and waiting to be fired. The Luger itself is semiautomatic: Toggle-triggered and, recoil-operated.

18June 2026

$50,000 Fastenal gift to Winona tech training

2026 06 18 FASTENAL waps event - Winona Journal

Touring Fastenal. Principals in the Winona Schools’ initiative Forging a Future on a tour inside the major Fastenal plant on Theurer Boulevard on the Far West End. The project is a partnership for workforce development.

School-industry partnership in third year

WINONA, Minn. — The Winona Public Schools fund-raising arm has reached a $326,000 threshold in a project to advance student pathways toward careers in industrial technology. The three-year-old project is continuing toward its $540,000 goal. At an event marking the milestone for the project, schools Superintendent Brad Berzinski singled out Fastenal, the Winona-based global manufacturer and supplier of industrial products, for committing $50,000 to the project, including $25,000 in matching funds. “This partnership is about much more than a donation,” Berzinski added. “Fastenal is helping us create meaningful experiences and opportunities for students while helping ensure our programs remain connected to the needs of today’s workforce.” Fastenal is Winona’s largest employer with a local payroll of 1,800.

18June 2026

Cop links bike to theft, also the rider

WINONA, Minn. — A police officer said that to see Aaron Patrick Devorak wheeling around town on a shiny new Trek bicycle didn’t look right The Trek matched the description of a bike stolen the previous evening from a home garage on Carimona Street, Also Devorak was dressed just like the thief who was recorded on a neighbor’s doorbell cam. Devorak, age 48, of Winona, was arrested. The bike, valued at $880, was returned.

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The worthiest goal of journalism is to promote intelligent citizen involvement. Such is our goal with Winona Journal. We focus on local issues so you can go about your daily activities with confidence that you can be a genuine and valued part of informed public dialogue on the kind of community we’re building.

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