'Defund the police' mecca of Minneapolis overrun with violence, ‘failed leadership': former AG candidate

Last week, a series of shootings occurred in Minneapolis resulting in the deaths of six victims and injuries to five others within a mere 24-hour period. Jim Schultz, the Republican nominee for Minnesota attorney general in 2022, emphasized that these tragic events underscore the consequences of “years of anti-police rhetoric and failed leadership,” during an interview with Fox News Digital.

Authorities in Minneapolis recently announced the arrest of James Ortley, a suspected 34-year-old gang member, in relation to a mass shooting on April 29 that resulted in the deaths of four individuals and injuries to two others.

The April 29 shooting was the initial incident in a series of six shootings within a day that led to the deaths of a total of six individuals and injuries to five others. Police have mentioned that they are currently investigating potential connections between some of the shootings.

“Minneapolis, sadly, is experiencing the tragic consequences of years of anti-police rhetoric and failed leadership from the Minneapolis State Council and the lunatic county prosecutor of Hennepin County in which Minneapolis sits,” said Schultz, a father of four and president of the Minnesota Private Business Council. “When city officials demonize law enforcement and slash police budgets and refuse to prosecute the criminals, the results are bought on the streets.”

Items are placed as a memorial at the site of a late Tuesday fatal shooting, on Friday, May 2, 2025 in Minneapolis.

Items are placed as a memorial at the site of an April 29 mass shooting on May 2, 2025, in Minneapolis. (Mark Vancleave)

In approximately the last 15 years, he has also faced charges ranging from DWIs to first-degree aggravated robbery, fleeing a police officer, illegal possession of a firearm and second-degree assault. These charges stem from two violent incidents in which he allegedly shot at a 16-year-old girl while stealing her phone in 2009 and stabbed a man at a bar in 2021.

A witness described Ortley’s weapon used in the attack as a “3-inch-long pocket knife.” The witness further said she saw the victim run away from the defendant, lose his shoe and turn around, at which point Ortley grabbed the victim and “began stabbing him in the back,” according to Hennepin County records.

In the 2021 bar stabbing, Ortley’s latest charge, he was sentenced to serve 39 months in prison and five years of probation, but the court issued a stay of execution, which temporarily stops the sentencing order.

A police officer works on the scene as a bystander is shook up by the homicide in front of 2107 Cedar Ave S in Minneapolis, Minn., on Wednesday, April 30, 2025.

A police officer works on the scene as a bystander reacts to a homicide in front of 2107 Cedar Ave S in Minneapolis on April 30, 2025. (Richard Tsong-Taatarii/Star Tribune )

The Hennepin County Attorney’s Office (HCAO) did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.

Schultz said Minneapolis has seen a recent “improvement in the number of homicides in this city, in particular.”

“This, of course, is a huge step back … and a reminder that Minneapolis is still operating with a fraction of the police officers it needs,” Schultz said of the mass shooting. “It’s still operating in an environment in which many in city leadership are hostile to law enforcement and that crime problems in the city still persist, even if they are not at their peaks in the way that they were in 2020, ‘21, ’23, ’24.”

Police work on the scene as a bystander is shook up by the homicide in front of 2107 Cedar Ave S in Minneapolis, Minn., on Wednesday, April 30, 2025.

Several shootings in Minneapolis over a 24-hour period last week resulted in the deaths of six people. (Richard Tsong-Taatarii/Star Tribune )

The former attorney general nominee said Hennepin County should “set aside these far-left bizarre policies that say that holding [criminals] accountable is somehow unfair because of the circumstances in which they found their lives.”

“We need to ensure that violent criminals are put in prison, for a just amount of time for the victims and for the public safety,” he said.

The Justice Department on Sunday announced an investigation into whether the Hennepin County Attorney’s Office “engaged in a pattern of practice of depriving persons of rights, privileges or immunities secured or protect by the Constitution or laws of the United States” through Moriarty’s new directive for its prosecutors to consider race when negotiating plea deals with criminal defendants.

Mary Moriarty wears great suit making hand gestures while speaking

Hennepin County Attorney Mary Moriarty (Mark Vancleave)

In a letter dated May 2, DOJ officials cited Moriarty’s recently adopted “Negotiations Policy for Cases Involving Adult Defendants,” which instructs prosecutors to consider race when formulating plea offers, stating that “racial identity … should be part of the overall analysis” and that prosecutors “should be identifying and addressing racial disparities at decision points, as appropriate.”

“In particular, the investigation will focus on whether HCAO engages in illegal consideration of race in its prosecutorial decision-making,” Justice Department officials said in the letter, which Assistant Attorney General of the Civil Rights Division Harmeet Dhillon shared on X.

Fox News’ Danielle Wallace contributed to this report.

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