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A Minnesota state senator was found guilty of burglary on Friday for illegally entering her estranged stepmother’s residence, prompting demands for her swift resignation from a tightly split legislative body where her vote is crucial.
Following approximately three hours of jury deliberation, Democratic state Sen. Nicole Mitchell, 51, was convicted of first-degree burglary and possessing burglary tools.
Immediately after her arrest, she informed police that she was looking for her fatherās ashes and personal keepsakes, although she attempted to distance herself from this explanation during her testimony.
Mitchell displayed little emotion as the verdicts were read.
Democratic Senate Majority Leader Erin Murphy was quick to issue a statement saying that Mitchell has told colleagues that she planned to resign if convicted, āand I expect her to follow through on that pledge.ā
Republican Senate Minority Leader Mark Johnson reiterated the GOPās long-standing demand for immediate resignation or face expulsion.
Gov. Tim Walzās office said he expects her to resign.
But one of Mitchellās attorneys, Dane DeKrey, said in text messages that he didnāt know if she would heed the calls. He said theyāre exploring their options for an appeal.
The Democrat from the St. Paul suburb of Woodbury maintained her innocence and refused to resign since her arrest in the early hours of April 22, 2024, at her stepmotherās home in the northwestern Minnesota city of Detroit Lakes.
Mitchellās father died in 2023 at the age of 72.
He had been married to Mitchellās stepmother, Carol Mitchell, for nearly 40 years.
The jury saw bodycam video of Mitchell telling police repeatedly after her arrest that sheĀ broke into the homeĀ because her stepmotherĀ refused to give her items of sentimental valueĀ from her father, including some of his ashes, photos and a flannel shirt.
The first-term senator was dressed in all-black and had a flashlight covered with a black sock when she was arrested.
The video showed her telling police, āClearly, Iām not good at this,ā and āI know I did something bad.ā
But Mitchell testified Thursday that despite what she told police, she didnāt really intend to take anything. She said she had become increasingly concerned about her stepmotherās worsening memory problems and paranoia, and wanted to check on her well-being.
She testified her stepmother was afraid of being put in a nursing home. Mitchell said she thought her stepmom would be less upset to hear she wanted some of her fatherās items than to have her competency questioned.
The former broadcast meteorologist and now-retired Air National Guard officer was convicted of one count of first-degree burglary of an occupied dwelling, a felony that carries aĀ mandatory minimum of six monthsĀ in jail if thereās an intent to steal.
She was also convicted on a count of possessing burglary tools, a lesser felony without a mandatory minimum.
The judge did not set a sentencing date.
The prosecutor, Becker County Attorney Brian McDonald urged jurors Friday to focus on āthe many lies of Nicole Mitchellā and evaluate her testimony with reason and common sense.
And he urged them to review the body camera video showing what she told police after her arrest.
āI submit to you she was telling the truth on April 22nd, 2024. And if you believe that she was telling the truth to the officers, then you know she had the intent to steal. She told you. She told the officers.ā
Defense attorney Bruce Ringstrom Jr. told the jury that Mitchell did not steal anything and did not intend to.
He conceded that she used poor judgment.
He said everybody has told āwhite lies,ā and that Mitchellās goal was to avoid aggravating her stepmotherās distrust even further.
āWe all know the difference between a white lie and a meaningful, damaging one,ā Ringstrom said. āThe problem is that this happened in the context of something that was a terrible mess, a mess that Nicole made. But it was a mess.ā
Under such difficult circumstances, Ringstrom argued, āNicoleās white lies make perfect sense.ā
Mitchellās rejection of calls for her resignation after her arrestĀ frayed relationsĀ between Democrats and Republicans in the narrowly divided state Senate.
Democrats holdĀ only a one-seat majorityĀ in the Senate, so they needed her vote.
They said she deserved to have the legal process play out.
Republicans periodically tried to kick her out of the chamber but lacked the votes. The Senate canāt vote to expel her until it next convenes, and itās not due to meet again until February.
If she resigns, the governor would schedule a special election.
His office said it would provide more information soon. Mitchellās district mostly votes Democratic.
The Harris-Walz ticket carried it with 61% of the vote last year.