Klobuchar fund-raising leads Minnesota governor pack
ST. PAUL, Minn. — The Amy Klobchar campaign for governor is doing well financially. The campaign has raised $7 million-plus so far this year, 97% of which came from individual contributions. From political committee was $97,000, from lobbyists $67,000. These data are from periodic reports that candidates are required to file by law. Klobuchar, who has been a U.S. senator since2007, is the endorsed Democratic candidate for governor and has no significant opposition in the party’s August primary election. Competing with each other on the Republican side in the primary:
> Mike Lindell, of MyPillow fame: $650,000 raised this year.
> Kendall Qualls, the party-endorsed Republican candidate: $360,000.
> Lisa Demuth, Minnesota House speaker: $210,000.
Earlier: Poll: Klobuchar leads GOP rivals for governor
Earlier: Klobuchar leads gubernatorial fund-raising
No Winona splashin’ yet: Pool still closed
WINONA, Minn. — The contractor for repairs and upgrades at the Bob Welch swimming pool is more behind than expected. The city Parks Department said it can’t promiise an opening date, which was supposed to be Wednesday. What’s the problem? The Parks explanation
“This project includes the largest mechanical equipment replacement effort since the Aquatic Center first opened in 1990. Upgrades include new heaters, chemical controllers, and a modern high‑efficiency water filtration system. Although construction crews have made substantial progress, the contractor must complete final installation work, conduct system testing, finalize safety checks and inspections prior to opening.”
Meanwhile, one local alternative, the Levee Park water feature, is closed through Sunday for Steamboat Days.
I-90 crash: Car crunched between trucks
EYOTA, Minn — An Owatonna woman was injured when her mid-weight 2024 Kia Carnival was caught in a collision of two Peterbilt trucks. This was about 9:30 a.m. just east of the Intestate 90 exit into Eyota. Jenna Lee Fernandez, age 41, was taken 12 miles to a Rochester hospital. Her injuries appeared sustainable, according to Olmsted County deputies. The collision was in the westbound lanes toward Rochester. Unhurt were:
> Bruce David Jacobs, age 50, of Huntington, Indiana, in a 2013 Peterbilt.
> David Bradley Marks, age 69, of Wabash, Indiana, in a 2022 Peterbilt.
Driver dies in another I-90 Marion crash
ROCHESTER, Minn. — A woman from St. James in south-central Minnesota was killed in a three-vehicle accident near Interstate 90’s Marion exit into Rochester and to Chatfield. The victim was Evelyn Marie Brye, 72. She was driving a 2023 Toyota Rav 4, which was stuck by a 2013 Nissan Altima, which had sideswiped with a 2005 International truck. This was about 9 a.m. on wet pavement. Brye, who was belted, was alone in her car. Unhurt:
> Alex Blake Whiteis. 46, of Austin, driver of the Nissan.
> Reese Jessica Whiteis, 18, of Austin, a passenger.
> Louis Antone Plaskey, 43, the trucker, of Loyal, Wisconsin, which is 140 miles away near Marshfield.
Poll: Minnesota leans Blue for U.S. Senate
MINNEAPOLIS — Asked how they’re inclined to vote in November to replace Tina Smith in the U.S. Senate, Minnesotans favor Democrats, according a new poll. The poll found:
> 49% favored the Democrats, whichever candidate prevails in the August primary.
> 41% favored the Republican, whichever one prevails in August
> 9% were undecided.
The poll was June 8 to June 10 with 800 telephone interviews statewide. The statistical margin of error was slim and made the poll a useful snapshot for analysts.
Fields in flux
The leading Democrats, both with aggressive television advertising campaigns going into the August primary election that decides who represents the party on the November ballot.
> Angie Craig, currently in the U.S. House from MN-2.
> Peggy Flanagan, the party’s endorsed candidate and currently lieutenant governor.
The leading Republicans going into the August primary:
> Michelle Tafoya, a network television sports interviewer.
> Adam Schwarze, the party’s endorsed candidate and who has federal experience in foreign affairs.
State eyes eradication of invasive moth

Spongy moth caterpillers. Incredibly voracious creatures in 360-degree chow-down around a birch trunk. At risk: Minnesota forest, farm and tourist industries.
Tool is waxy substance to suppress mating
WINONA, Minn. — The state Agriculture Department is going airborne for to battle the spread of an invasive moth that threatens Minnesota forests. The target: Spongy moths. The battleground includes 19 sites in southeast Minnesota’s Fillmore, Mower, Olmsted, Wabasha and Winona counties and cities including Austin, Goodview, Rochester, Stewartville and Winona. Crop-dusting planes will spray 112,000 acres. The weapon will be non-toxic substance that messes with the mating instincts of male spongy moths. Next year, according to the the plan, will be largely devoid of caterillars that would morph into the spongy moths. The Agriculture Department says the substance is benign to humans, animals, birds and other insects.


Yellow bird in shallow swoops. Under contract are pilots of small yellow crop-dusters with wing tanks loaded with spray. Weather permitting, the eight-day aerial campaign begins June 24. Repeated tree-top swoops begin daily at 6. a.m.

Up North toward Minnesota’s Arrowhead. A second theater of the state’s war on spongy moths. Lighter colors are infested but less so. Individually the moths appear harmless enough Typical length is 1 to 1-1/2 inches.
Fuller detail on Stewartville wrestling attack
STEWARTVILLE, Minn. — Investigation documents into the shooting on the Stewartville High School parking last December reveal a bit more about what happened and perhaps why.
> The high school wrestler who was shot, and who has since recovered, knew the shooter well.
> The shooter, Logan Moyer, a recent Stewartville graduate, who had been hanging around the team as a volunteer assistant, had two rifles the morning of the shooting. One rifle he fired from a distance at the wrestling team — a single shot — as the team
was boarding a bus. Moyer then committed suicide with a second shot. The other rifle was in Moyer’s nearby car and wrapped in a blanket with two boxes of ammunition.
> Coaches had been aware of a problem between Moyer and the wrestler who was shot. The coaches, sometime earlier, had ordered Moyer to stay away from the gym.
> Text messages on the wounded student’s phone revealed that Moyer had asked several times to meet with him. The student declined.
The fresh details were drawn from more than 40 interviews by Olmsted County sheriff’s investigators. The case was closed in February.
Earlier: Stewartville school shooter possibly upset at rebuff
Earlier: Hospital discharges wounded Stewartville wrestler
Earlier: Sheriff holds back names in school shooting
Earlier: Athlete shot at Stewartville school; suicide follows
Poll: Klobuchar leads GOP rivals for governor
MINNEAPOLIS — Five months ahead of Minnesota’s gubernatorial election, Democrat Amy Klobuchar has clear leads over GOP candidates. This is according to a poll by the Minnesota Star Tribune, KARE television and the Hubbard School of Journalism at the University of Minesota. Klobuchar is her party’s endorsed candidate and has no serious challengers in the August primary election. Here are Klobuchar’s advantage over the leading Republicans who are fighting it out in the Augyst primary for a place on the November ballot:
> Against Kendall Qualls, Klobuchar leads by 11 percentage points, with 14% of voters undecided.
> Against Lisa Demuth, the Minnesota House speaker, Klobuchar leads by 8 points, with 12% undecided.
> Against Mike Lindell, an ally of President Trump, Klobuchar leads by 17 points, with 11% undecided.
The poll used probability a sampling to identify 800 respondents likely to vote in November. The poll was June 8 to June 10 by telephone.
Earlier: GOP convention backs Qualls for governor
Earlier: Klobuchar looks to Fergus Falls for ticket mate
Earlier: Klobuchar declares for Minnesota governorship
Earlier: Klobuchar files papers for governor bid
Earlier: Klobuchar seen as gubernatorial front runner
Earlier: No GOP shortage of rivals to Walz re-election
Earlier: Walz to seek third term as governor
Fatality in Rochester motorcycle-pickup crash
ROCHESTER, Minn. — One person died in the collision of a motorcycle and a pickup truck in a Far Southeast retail district. The accident was about 7:40 p.m. on 48th Street Southeast at St. Bridgett’s Road.
Odd theft led to disturbance led to arrest
LEWISTON, Minn.— A Lewiston woman reported belatedly that personal items and money were stolen from her apartment Saturday evening. She had called deputies Monday about 7:40 p.m. about a disturbance that had just occurred at her place behind the Lewiston Country Club in the 300 block of Benson Drive North. She said the disturbance involved the man who stole from her two days earlier. Missing since Saturday, she said, were:
> A case of Michelob Golden beer in bottles.
> A comforter and pillows.
> A $20 bill and a jar with $80 in coins.
The thief, she said, had come back these two days later and just driven off in his pickup truck. Shortly after she recited her account to a sheriff’s deputy, a State Patrol trooper stopped Pierre Lamont Davis, age 36, in his pickup. But, the trooper said, he gave a false name. A second trooper arrived and recognized Davis from previous dealings in a Twin Cities suburb. Then a Winona deputy arrived and confirmed the driver’s real identification through an online photo database — and also discovered he was wanted on warrants from Dakota and Scott counties. As best as officers could determine, Davis had no permanent address but stayed off and on in Lakeville. a south Twin Cities exurb 80 miles from Lewiston. He was in Lewiston visiting a brother.
Alighting briefly from the woodlands

Gorgeous front-door greeting. At a home in East Burns Valley. With its wings folded and with striped antenna, this butterfly is of the northern pearly eye variety. They usually hold their wings together above the body, opening only occasionally and briefly. They fancy-grassy edges and openings and dirt roads and trails in mature deciduous woodlands, usually near streams, rivers or marshes. Their flight is bouncy. Adults emerge in late June and are around into August. They feed on dung, fungi, carrion, mud, and sap, but not flower nectar. Image: Andy Frank
MiEnergy: No hanky-panky on our data center
RUSHFORD, Minn. — The utility co-op MiEnergy asks people not to confuse its data-center project in Harmony with larger projects whose giant developers are using sweet-talk, secrecy and strong-arm tactics to force essential local zoning changes. MiEnergy’s chief executive, Brian Krambeer calls the Harmony project “a small edge data center.” Krambeer’s assurances come amid growing alarm about ultra-scale data centers that Google and other major players are forcing on local communities. These giant players for desperate for land to install super-computers for the new Artificial Intelligence Age. The ultra-scale data centers take hundreds of acres out of agricultural production and pose environmental concerns, among which is draining aquifers for water to cool their super-heated computers. The developers promise jobs and tax revenue to local zoning authorities, whom hey bind into secrecy agreements to fast-track rezoning without public hearings and citizen review. In contrast, Krambeer described MiEnergy and its predecessor Tri-County Electric as building on an 80-year relationship of trust and transparency. He said Harmony officials are working through public processes for zoning adjustments. About grid demands that ultra-scale data centers pose, Krambeer said that MiEnergy has sufficient existing capacity without any new transmission projects. About concerns that that the electricity demands of data centers will send homeowner and other user costs soaring, Krambeer said MiEnerry already has a large-load discount rate from Dairyland Power of LaCrosse, its electricity-generating wholesale source.

Krambeer. President and chief executive of MiEnergy. The co-op has 19,000 users in southeast Minnesota and northeast Iowa.
Harmony profile
In southern Fillmore County. Population 1,000. About 1,000 Swartzentuber Amish in the area, mostly in low-tech enterprises that produce furniture, baskets, rugs, quilts, jams, baked goods and cashew crunch. Niagara Cave usa nearby tourist attraction. The area sits on a major karst aquifer that moves massive amounts of water south to the Upper Iowa River. As in most of Fillmore County, farmers are dependent on the aquifer for water.
Unexpected slithering in backyard

.
Bug-eyed. And fang-less.

Surprise visitor. A gardener was momentarily unsettled when, unexpectedly, there was motion in a rubble pile along Peterson Creek in central Winona County. The garter snake quietly slithered into the rocks. The gardener was sure the creature was six feet, maybe seyen, maybe eight. Who’s to say otherwise. But garter snakes generally are two to four feet. Garter snakes werelong thought to be non-venomous, but discoveries in the early 2000s discovered they produce a neurotoxic venom, but it’s too weak to injure humans. Also: They lack fags to deliver the venom. Image: Jackie Rislow
Notable journalism
Alicia Eler (Minnesota Star Tribune, November 21, 2025: “Douglass Flanders, Champion of Famous and Unknown Artists, Dies at 75”
Grace Monk (WKBT, June 9, 2026: “Onalaska Restaurant Owner Responds to Backlash over Video Disparaging Female Servers”
Olivia Prondzinski (KTTC, June 11, 2026): “Mantorville Family Out More than $1,000 after Kasson Daycare Abruptly Closes Amid Fraud Charges”
Aspiring lawmaker trio kick off door-knocking

Downtown Winona rally. Minnesota House candidate Dan Wilson of Wiscoy Valley is flanked by Mn-1 Congressional candidate Jake Johnson of Rochester and State Senate candidate Jack Hedin of Winona. All are Democrats seeking to flip seats held by Republicans.
MN-1 hopeful sees Democratic ticket as dream team
WINONA, Minn. — A couple hundred volunteers rallied to support Mn-1 Congressional candidate Jake Jihnson, District 26 State Senate candidate Jack Hedin, and 26-A House candidate Dan Wilson. Johnson told the crowd: “This is the most unified and exciting ticket that we have seen in Mn-1 in recent memory. Together we will flip the State House seat, State Senate, and Congressional seat.” The event marked the one-year anniversary of the assassination of Mark and Speaker Melissa Hortman. Said Wilson: “She was the House leader during some of the closest, most consequential elections in our state’s history and she helped win those elections by convincing people to work hard and knock doors.” Wilson claims hundreds of volunteers have signed on for his campaign. He also claims $75,000 in his campaign war chest, which he says is a record.
Verbatim
Wilson: “We can make Winona a growing, thriving city that is the envy of the rest of the state. These things can happen, this future is possible, but first, we must win.”
Hunt on for thief: Thought to be music lover
WINONA, Minn. — The theft construction tools from a house being remodeled on the West Side was reported to police about 2:20 p.m. Missing too was a clarinet. This was in the 1000 block of West Wabasha Street. Police found no sign of forced entry.
Arrest ends wild incident in bar zone
WINONA, Minn. — A woman — drunk, yelling and screaming, rolling in the street, and apparently in a mental crisis — bit a police officer who was trying to subdue her. The bite, on an arm, didn’t require medical attention. This was about 12:20 a.m. in the Third Street bar district downtown. Arrested and booked at jail for fleeing police on foot, obstructing police, and disorderly conduct was Korta, age 28, of La Crosse. Police bare had responded to a call about an intoxicated person outside Gabby’s bar. Their report: In an attempt to calm the woman, officers cuffed her hands. She made some comments about wanting to harm herself. Police called her father, who said he would be right over to pick her up. At this point she seemed calmer. Police uncuffed her. She ran. An officer quickly caught her, which was when he was bit. Subdued again, she was taken to the hospital for psychological evaluation. When medically cleared, she was taken to jail.
News summary at week’s end: June 13, 2026
VIRAL VIDEO: Angelini goes loud against protest crowd
POLITICS: Johnson campaign visiting every MN-1 county
NATURE: Mayfly hatch due soon; snowplows on standby
NATURE: Bluff-top buzz is bees, birds and friends
ACCIDENT: Passenger dies when two vehicles collide
ACCIDENT: Both drivers killed in Chatfield collision
ACCIDENT: Driver, rider, dog survive Garvin roll-over
CRIME: Assassin’s plea deal: Prison forever
CRIME: Cops: Driver drunk; worse, kids on board
CRIME: LaCrosse crackdown: No illicit liquor, sex pills
Angelini goes loud against protest crowd
ONALASKA, Wis. — Besieged restaurant owner Tony Angelini tried for an upper hand against street protesters who were objecting to his sexist hiring practices. Angelini took a microphone to outshout the protesters, who were across the street. He called them “hillbillies” and “looneys.” “You guys all lost,’ he shouted. He already had amped the volume of Trump campaign theme music —Village People’s 1978 “YMCA” and Lee Greenwodo’s 1984 “God Bless the U.S.A.” At his side Angelini had five women. In the background his building was obscured by red, white and blue bunting and flags and Trump posters — and also his budddies who are his restaurant’s managers and a few other men. At Angelini’s feet was a 14-foot banner proclaiming “America 1776-226.” It too was replete with U.S. flags. The protesters, numbering about 30, chanted. A few motorists on busy U.S. Highway 35 honked upport and gave high-fives and thumbs-up High-fiving for Angelini’ and his maller crowd were occasional oter drivers Desoite provocative from both sides of the street, police saw no cause to intervene. Nor was there a calk for pre-pre-arranged police .backup from nearby Holmen nnd LaCrrosse. As the confrrontation wonnd down, Angelini switched ears. He thanked the protesters for comjng. It was a weird moment.

Protesters chose signs. Angelini chose a megaphone amdnmusic at deafening volume. The protesters numbered three dozen at most. They stayed across the street from Angelini’s Italian estishment. From his parking lot Angeoinin hiuled insults insults and unflattering epithets.

Angelini. No restraint with insults at protesters, then, oddly, thanked thanked them.

Angelini’s logo. Towers over intereection of U.S. Highway 35, Riders Club Road and Sunset Vista Drive.
Earlier: Restaurateur defiant on “women need not apply”
Earlier: Earlier: Protest targets ristorante’s sexist attitudes
Earlier: Earlier: Readers riled by ristorante’s sexist talk
Search successful for missing canoeists
EAU CLAIRE, Wis. — Two canoeists who were missing in the Chippewa Tuver were found safe albeit wet on the shore. downriver. The search began just before 2 p.m. The canoeists had been seen clinging to their sinking canoe near the Clairemont Avenue overpass in Eau Claire. Fire Department rescuers found loating debris from the canoe. About then two fisherman called that they spotted the canoeists stranded on a riverbank along Ferry Street. They were medically examined and found uninjured.
Bluff-top buzz is bees, birds and friends

A pollinator’s dream. This patch of daisies, clover add milkweed is on Camp Drive into the Winona Y’s East Burns Valley youth summer camp. Image: Andy Frank
Restaurateur defiant on “women need not apply”

Digs heels in deeper. Restaurant owner Tony Angelini goes all-out to link President Trump to his cause. Unclear: Does Angelini feel misogynist connection. Or is he asserting merely that Trump would endorse his right to proclaim whatever he wants. Images: Steve Lunde
Trump décor overwhelms Italian fare signage
ONALASKA, Wis. — In what can be described only as a bizarre business decision, Tony Angelini bedecked his ristorante with Trump posters, some as vulgar as his sexist insults to women in a podcast that went viral. The posters were there at dawn — ahead of a street protest being organized against the podcast insults. The protest was planned for 4 p.m. The link between Angelini’s policy against women servers and Trump was unstated, although Trump has a history of misogyny. One photo-shopped poster showed a defiant Trump with a two-fisted middle-finger message. Other carried the date of 2028, as if Trump could run for an illegal third term. Inexplicably a couple posters expressed support for the neurodevelopmental condition of autism.

Under the eaves. But impossible to miss. Hardly a welcoming invitation to diners.
Business savvy
Data bespeak the questionable wisdom of a business that explicitly espouses dubious moral and the also goes overboard for the est popular U.S. president in history. Census, voting and polling data:
> Gender: 51.06% women, 48.94% men in LaCrosse County, in which Onalaska is a major suburb.
> 2024 election: Trump lost LaCrosse Couny by 9.3 points (Harris, 39,000; Trum, 32,200).
> 2020 election: Trump lost by 13.5% (Biden 37,800; Trump, 32,200).
> 2016 election: Trump lost by 9.5 points (Clinton 2,400; Trump, 28,600).
> Current polls: Trump approval status nationally averages 38%
Exception
Sources say Angelini has one female sevrer on-call as a part-time staffing back-up. She has full-time employment elsewhere.
Earlier: Protest targets ristorante’s sexist attitudes
Earlier: Earlier: Readers riled by ristorante’s sexist talk
Passenger dies when two vehicles collide
CENTERVILLE, Wis. — One person died in a two-vehicle collision triggered by a deer on the road north of Centerville on U.S. Highway 93. Without explanation Trempealeau Count Sheriff Erica Koxlien withheld the victims’ name. The accident was about 5 a.m. Deputies said a vehicle was traveling toward Centerville and hit a deer. The vehicle crossed into the oncomg lane and d collided with a truck. A passenger in one vehicle died apparently instantly. Both drivers were airlifted to hospitals.
Cops: Driver with oodles of impairment signs
WINONA, Minn. — A Winona driver tested as drunk after being stopped for a bad headlamp and expired vehicle registration. At jail Carland Rose Gerdes’ blood showed to be 0.12% alcohol, half again as much as allowed. The stop was about 1:20 a.m. at Fifth and Winona streets. At the scene, police said she smelled of alcohol and had bloodshot and watery eyes and slurred speech. She fumbled through roadside sobriety exercises, the arresting office said. Gerdes, age 27, was released to a sober person to take home.
Minnesota prep
Baseball: St. Cloud Cathedral Crusaders 3, Winona Cotter Ramblers 2
Baseball: Windom Eagles 9, Winona Cotter Ramblers 7
Baseball: Minnehaha Redhawks 13, Cannon Falls Bombers 12
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