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Burglary trial for Sen. Nicole Mitchell begins in Detroit Lakes

The jury trial for Sen. Nicole Mitchell in Becker County District Court started Monday, July 14, with a full day of jury selection.

Mitchell composite.jpg
Minnesota Sen. Nicole Mitchell in her Legislative headshot, left, and in a mugshot from her arrest, right.
Contributed images

DETROIT LAKES — The first day of a felony burglary trial for a Minnesota senator was dominated by jury selection Monday, July 14, in Becker County District Court.

Sen. Nicole Mitchell is accused of burglarizing her stepmother’s house in Detroit Lakes in April 2024. According to court documents, when Mitchell was arrested, she told police officers she was retrieving items that belonged to her late father.

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Mitchell was charged with two felony burglary counts: first-degree burglary and possession of burglary or theft tools. She pleaded not guilty to the charges. If found guilty, Mitchell could face prison time.

In a Facebook post in the days after her arrest, Mitchell said her family was “watching a loved one decline due to Alzheimer’s and associated paranoia.” The post went on to say she went to check on that family member. After she entered the house, Mitchell startled the relative and was accused of stealing, she wrote, an accusation she denied.

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As Mitchell’s attorney, Bruce Ringstrom Jr., questioned the pool of prospective jurors, he asked about their affinity to grabbing a gun if somebody broke into their house, and experiences with break-ins and unexpected people showing up at their houses.

He polled them on experience with Alzheimer’s, dementia and memory loss, and how jurors would feel seeing a witness with memory loss being questioned.

Ringstrom touched on Mitchell’s status as a state lawmaker, asking prospective jurors whether lawmakers should be held to a higher standard than the average person. Questions mostly steered clear of politics but touched on how prospective jurors handle political disagreements and the fact that some may see the outcome of the trial as a political statement.

As the prosecutor, Becker County Attorney Brian McDonald, took the podium, he asked if jurors had been involved in disagreements over inheritance or family property. He also asked follow-up questions to some of Ringstrom’s inquiries related to their experiences with crimes, such as break-ins and burglaries.

Following jury questioning, attorneys whittled the group of 23 prospective jurors questioned down to a group of 15.

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Democratic Sen. Nicole Mitchell, of Woodbury, appeared in the Becker County District Court for the first day of her trial in Detroit Lakes on Monday, July 14. She stands accused of breaking and entering into her late father's Detroit Lakes home where her stepmother lives.
Jerry Holt / Pool via The Minnesota Star Tribune

Mitchell, a Democratic-Farmer-Laborer lawmaker from Woodbury, was charged during the 2024 Minnesota legislative session. She was on April 22, 2024.

According to an filed Feb. 10, around 4:45 a.m. April 22, 2024, Detroit Lakes police officers were dispatched to the home of Mitchell’s stepmother for a report of a break-in. There, officers found Mitchell in a basement bathroom, dressed in black clothing.

The complaint said Mitchell claimed she was trying to retrieve a couple of her father’s things. Mitchell’s father died in 2023 without a will, according to court documents. His surviving spouse, Nicole Mitchell’s stepmother, was awarded 100% of his estate.

On Feb. 10, McDonald added the possession of burglary tools charge, focusing on items found at the house. Court documents say Mitchell was carrying a flashlight covered by a black sock and that her stepmother found a crowbar in an egress window well. Mitchell denied that the crowbar belonged to her.

Charges against Mitchell were a point of contention in a divided Senate during the last two legislative sessions. DFL leaders or party caucus meetings. Senate Republicans called for her resignation and unsuccessfully from the Senate.

The trial has been pushed back multiple times. It was scheduled for January but was to allow Mitchell to participate in the legislative session.

The trial was then scheduled to begin June 16 but was pushed back again of Minnesota Rep. Melissa Hortman and her husband, and the attempted assassination of Sen. John Hoffman and his wife.

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This week, the trial is scheduled to continue through Friday, July 18.

The felony burglary charge carries a mandatory minimum sentence of at least six months in jail or a county workhouse, and a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison and a $35,000 fine. Felony possession of burglary tools carries a maximum sentence of 3 years in prison and a $5,000 fine.

Ingrid Harbo joined The Forum in March 2024.

Harbo reports on Moorhead and Clay County news.

Readers can reach Harbo at 701-241-5526 or iharbo@forumcomm.com. Follow her on Twitter @ingridaharbo.
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