November 21, 2013

Page 1

TAKING BACK

THE AXE u See PAGE 9

P.M. SNOW SHOWERS HIGH 35° LOW 23° U OF M

MINNEAPOLIS

ANARAE SCHUNK

Affidavit reveals new evidence Police found a bloody plastic tub possibly related to Schunk’s death. BY MEGHAN HOLDEN mholden@mndaily.com

A plastic tub containing blood and a bloodstained quilt found in the garage of a Rosemount townhouse complex is the latest piece of evidence released in connection with the stabbing and death of a 20-year-old University of Minnesota student.

ST PAUL

THURSDAY

Raptor Center plans facelift

Anarae Schunk’s body was found in a ditch in rural Rice County about a week after she was repor ted missing. Police said she likely died in Rosemount on Sept. 22. Schunk was last seen with her ex-boyfriend Anthony Lee Nelson, also known as Shavelle ChavezNelson, when he allegedly shot and killed Palagor Obang Jobi in the parking lot of a Burnsville restaurant Sept. 22, according to a u See SCHUNK Page 4 Conrade lived in the townhouse where the tub was found.

The neighborhoods around the University of Minnesota have seen a drop in noisy parties, thanks to a collaboration between the University, police and city inspectors. The number of violations of Minneapolis’ noisy and unruly assemblies ordinance has decreased by about 62 percent in the last four years, according to city data. The Southeast Como

CHELSEA GORTMAKER, DAILY

Interpretive naturalist Adam Barnett lets a bald eagle sit on his arm at the Raptor Center on Tuesday afternoon.

U area turns the volume down BY ALEX BITTER abitter@mndaily.com

ONLINE EXCLUSIVES AT MNDAILY.COM

ENVIRONMENT

NEIGHBORHOODS

A collaboration between the city and the U halved noise complaints.

NOVEMBER 21, 2013

neighborhood saw the biggest decrease — from 148 noise complaints in 2009 to about 40 so far this year. Some attribute the drop to the Southeast Strategic Compliance Team, a mixed group of city and University officials aiming to curb noise around campus. Team chair JoAnn Velde said she conceived the group after the 2009 Spring Jam riots. At the time, she was par t of a University District Alliance committee looking at potential off-campus problems related to the new TCF Bank Stadium. Velde and some other alliance members started the u See NOISE Page 4 Noise ordinance violators can face jail time and a $1,000 fine.

The center wants to fix its aging facility to expand its outreach efforts. BY JULIA MARSHALL jmarshall@mndaily.com

capabilities. Raptor Center Execu-

The University of Min-

tive Director Julia Ponder

nesota’s Raptor Center is a

said the project is in its

destination for visitors from

design phase and the total

around the state, but that

cost isn’t finalized yet. The

wasn’t always the case.

center hopes to raise $2 mil-

When its current facility

lion to pay for renovations,

was built in 1988, leaders

she said, and has received

didn’t plan for the nearly

about $1.6 million in private

20,000 visitors it now re-

donations so far.

ceives each year. Some

The University estab-

facilities are becoming run-

lished the Raptor Center in

down, creating accessibility

1974 as part of the College

issues for guests.

of Veterinary Medicine. Its

To accommodate the in-

employees care for more

flux of visitors, the center is

than 700 sick and injured

set to undergo renovations

raptors annually, including

this spring to fix aging facil-

hawks, falcons, bald eagles

ities and boost educational

and owls.

u See RAPTOR Page 3

CAMPUS

West Bank ‘shoe trees’ get a pruning Landcare workers cleared three of four ‘shoe trees’ Wednesday afternoon.

Student robbed outside home An armed man allegedly stole a student’s wallet, cellphone and backpack Wednesday.

BY EMILY EVELAND eeveland@mndaily.com

Around 12:30 p.m. Wednesday afternoon, University of Minnesota students and faculty members stopped to watch Chad Klecker and Jeffrey Hayes remove shoes from three of the well-known “shoe trees” bordering the West Bank side of the Washington Avenue Bridge. Hayes said they were told to remove as many shoes as possible from the three trees closest to land while leaving the original shoe tree untouched. When asked if he knew why the University wanted the shoes removed, he said, “I think it was because it’s unsightly.” Both Klecker and Hayes are gardeners with University Landcare. Hayes, an arborist and official tree climber for the University, used ropes and carabineers to hoist himself into the tree closest to Anderson Hall and removed shoes with a sharp tree pruner. Meanwhile, Klecker stood on the bridge and used another tree pruner to cut shoe-

CRIME

BY CODY NELSON cnelson1@mndaily.com

CHELSEA GORTMAKER, DAILY

University Landcare gardener Jeffrey Hayes cuts down shoes from the trees near West Bank off the Washington Avenue Bridge on Wednesday afternoon.

laces, sending sneakers plummeting toward land. Some shoes landed on the road beneath the pedestrian walkway, witnesses said. Within 20 minutes, the ground below was completely covered with an array of weathered shoes, and the trees were all but bare.

As Klecker finished up, economics junior Jake O’Brien pointed to his pair of blue sneakers in the last remaining shoe tree. “My buddy was drunk last night and threw them in the tree,” he said. Klecker gladly retrieved them.

A University of Minnesota student was robbed at gunpoint while entering his home in Dinkytown early Wednesday morning, according to a Minneapolis police report. The student wasn’t harmed, but the armed suspect stole his wallet, cellphone and backpack, which contained a laptop and class materials, according to the report and student. The incident occurred near 11th Avenue Southeast and Eighth Street Southeast. Alex Granquist, a business and marketing education sophomore, was biking home from a friend’s house after 3 a.m. Wednesday when he noticed a suspicious u See ROBBERY Page 7 The man asked for a cellphone, and when Granquist refused, he pulled a gun and demanded valuables.

VOLUME 115 ISSUE 47


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