Comparing the WaPo article to the NYTimes
Suspect in Minnesota shootings in custody after wide manhunt
The man suspected of shooting two Democratic lawmakers and their spouses was arrested and charged after a two-day manhunt involving more than 100 officers.
Updated
June 16, 2025 at 1:18 a.m. EDT today at 1:18 a.m. EDT

Dozens of law enforcement officials were in Green Isle, Minnesota, on Sunday, about 45 miles outside of Minneapolis. (Craig Lassig/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock)
By Patrick Marley and Meryl Kornfield
MINNEAPOLIS — The man suspected of shooting two Democratic lawmakers and their spouses in their homes in what officials describe as politically motivated attacks was arrested and charged Sunday evening after authorities scoured the rural area around where he had a home after a sprawling manhunt involving more than 100 officers.
For nearly two days, authorities had been searching for 57-year-old Vance Luther Boelter, a resident of Green Isle, Minnesota, a small town in Sibley County about 45 miles southwest of the Twin Cities.
The search began after a gunman opened fire on state Sen. John Hoffman and his wife in the quiet Minneapolis suburb of Champlin early Saturday before driving about 10 miles to the neighboring suburb of Brooklyn Park, home of state Rep. Melissa Hortman, the former speaker of the Minnesota House. Hortman and her husband, Mark, were shot and killed, while Hoffman and his wife, Yvette, survived and remain hospitalized in serious condition.
The suspect in the case posed as a police officer to gain entry to the homes of the two lawmakers, authorities have said. The gunman fled after a shootout with police following the second of the two predawn attacks, leaving behind a chilling trove of evidence and a sprawling police search.
Earlier on Sunday, law enforcement authorities in Green Isle found another car associated with Boelter and seized belongings they believed relevant.
At about 9 p.m. local time, law enforcement apprehended Boelter. A grim-faced Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz (D) said that violence cannot be the way the country deals with its political differences, after announcing the apprehension of Vance Boelter on suspicion of killing a lawmaker and her husband.
“One man’s unthinkable actions have altered the state of Minnesota,” Walz said.
Boelter was charged with two counts of second-degree murder and two counts of attempted second-degree murder, according to a complaint unsealed in Hennepin County District Court Sunday night. The FBI will review whether federal charges should also be issued, said Drew Evans, the superintendent of the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension.
Police said they have not found evidence of Boelter making previous threats to politicians. They have not found a “traditional manifesto” associated with Boelter laying out a motive for the crimes.
Still, authorities believe that the shootings were deliberate and targeted. Officials have said they found in one of Boelter’s cars a roster of dozens of names, including Democratic lawmakers and people who are supportive of abortion rights and other liberal causes. They also found “No Kings” fliers, sparking worries for law enforcement that the suspect may have wanted to attack one of Saturday’s gatherings protesting President Donald Trump.
The list included Sen. Tina Smith (D-Minnesota), prominent abortion rights advocates and, according to a Democratic lawmaker from Wisconsin, at least 11 Democratic legislators from that state. Other names on the list came from across the Midwest, including Michigan, Illinois and Iowa, according to Evans.
As part of their investigation, officials spoke with Boelter’s wife and family members, who were cooperative and were not taken into custody, Evans said earlier Sunday.
At a Minneapolis home where Boelter rented a room, his housemates also were interviewed by law enforcement.
Interviews and a review of Boelter’s online presence paint a picture of a man who had a hodgepodge of work experiences, embraced his born-again Christian faith, and split his time between his rural home and a place in Minneapolis. At times, he seems to have played up his security qualifications while paying his bills by working at funeral homes.
Boelter reveled in his plans to start a security firm, went to church weekly, offered to help anyone and sometimes complained about Democratic politicians, said David Carlson, his roommate and lifelong friend. Because of the distance from the Green Isle home Boelter shared with his wife, he had been staying at Carlson’s home in Minneapolis a couple of nights a week for the past year or so when he was working on-call shifts at funeral homes.
Boelter quit a few months ago so he could take a two-week trip to Africa, where he hoped to set up a security business. When he returned, he took a job extracting eyeballs from dead bodies for organ donation, Carlson said.
After returning from Africa, he seemed to be “struggling a little bit,” but he exhibited no signs he would commit violence, Carlson said.
“He wasn’t as cheerful as he used to be,” Carlson said. “He had a job and everything. He was doing okay.”
Boelter was trying to set up an armed home security company called Praetorian Guard Security Services, but he struggled to get the business off the ground, Carlson said. On its website, Praetorian touts that the firm uses vehicles that look like police SUVs.
“That was just Vance,” Carlson said. “He would just try to get things started. ‘Oh, I bought the two cars for security.’ But he had no clients, and he had no business. He had no employees. He wasn’t doing security for anybody. It wasn’t his job.”
Carlson said he did not recall ever hearing Boelter talk about Hortman or Hoffman, the two state lawmakers who were attacked. But Boelter sometimes disparaged other Democrats, Carlson said.
“He didn’t like Nancy Pelosi,” he said, referring to the California congresswoman and former speaker of the House. “He didn’t like [Tim] Walz. He didn’t like [former president Joe] Biden.”
Boelter’s comments were ordinary complaints about politicians, and he didn’t express extreme views, Carlson said. He said Boelter supported Trump and tuned in to programming from Alex Jones’s conspiracy-filled Infowars site. Boelter would be offended if anyone called him a Democrat, his roommate said.
Boelter became a born-again Christian in high school, Carlson said. “He just changed everything in his life, 100 percent,” he said. “Everything in his life, he just changed. And he was preaching in the park, living in the park in a tent.”
He remains religious and is a “very caring, loving person,” Carlson said.
According to a 2023 sermon that was streamed online, Boelter told a congregation he “met Jesus” when he was 17 and printed pamphlets about his experience so he could spread the word of God.
He told the congregation to recognize God’s plan for them. “When I die and go to heaven — and go to heaven — I don’t want to just listen to the other people tell their stories,” he said. “I want to have my own story to tell.”
Carlson said he last spoke with Boelter at about 7 p.m. Friday, when he talked to him through the door to his room. Boelter said he was already in bed so he would be well-rested for his overnight job, Carlson said. The shootings occurred several hours later.
Boelter returned to their Minneapolis home at about 6 a.m. Saturday, according to home security footage that Carlson described. He said one of Boelter’s car windows had been smashed out, and a hammer was left on the passenger side of the car.
That day, Boelter sent a text message to Carlson and another friend telling them he loved them, Carlson said.
“I made some choices, and you guys don’t know anything about this, but I’m going to be gone for a while,” Boelter wrote, according to Carlson. “May be dead shortly, so I just want to let you know I love you guys both and I wish it hadn’t gone this way.”
Carlson said he called Boelter but couldn’t reach him. He then called the police, he said. Saturday afternoon, officers in an armored truck broke down the door to Carlson and Boelter’s home and smashed out the windows.
At a news conference Saturday, Walz called Hortman’s killing “a politically motivated assassination.” As of Sunday afternoon, Walz had not received a call from Trump about the shootings, a person close to the governor said, speaking on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issue. Biden and Vice President JD Vance called and spoke with the governor on Saturday.
Earlier in the day, Trump told an ABC News reporter that he thought Walz was “a terrible governor. I think he’s a grossly incompetent person.” He then was noncommittal on whether he would offer support. “But I may, I may call him. I may call other people too,” Trump said.
The White House did not respond to questions about whom the president had called about the shootings and search for a suspect. Trump said Saturday afternoon in a Truth Social post that he had been briefed on the shooting and promised the Justice Department would prosecute “anyone involved to the fullest extent of the law.”
“Such horrific violence will not be tolerated in the United States of America,” he wrote.
The Hoffmans were each shot multiple times and underwent emergency surgery, a relative, Mat Ollig, wrote in a Facebook post and confirmed to The Washington Post. Yvette Hoffman “threw herself on her daughter, using her body as a shield to save her life,” according to Ollig, the couple’s nephew. Yvette Hoffman said she was hit by eight bullets while her husband took nine. Her husband is having more surgeries but is “closer every hour to being out of the woods,” she wrote in a text message that Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minnesota) posted online.
Klobuchar described Hortman as a friend she grew close to as a fellow mother in politics and a public servant committed to bettering their state.
“Melissa Hortman is the most incredible person that I wish everyone in the nation knew,” Klobuchar said Sunday on CNN’s “State of the Union.” She described the late Democratic leader’s work on landmark legislation to provide free school lunches and paid family leave and experiences as a Sunday school teacher and Girl Scout leader. “She was extraordinary.”
Walz ordered Minnesota flags to fly at half-staff Saturday in honor of Hortman, whom he described as “the most consequential Speaker in state history.”
On Sunday morning, two FBI agents and a state agent returned to the Minneapolis home where Boelter resided a couple of times a week. They were there for another round of interviews with Carlson and another roommate.
Afterward, Carlson spoke to reporters on his doorstep for about 25 minutes. He said he wanted the public to have a fuller picture of the caring person whom he still considers his best friend.
“I just want you guys to just not say ‘crazy right-winger gone nuts’ and that was all he is, you know,” he said. “It just bothers me that that’s his legacy, but I knew — I knew him my whole life. He was a good guy.”
He broke into tears and stepped back into his home.
Kornfield reported from Washington. Holly Bailey in Minneapolis, Niha Masih in Seoul, and Dylan Wells, Shannon Osaka, Kyle Rempfer and Praveena Somasundaram in Washington contributed to this report.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/2 ... er-update/