Prosecutor reveals chilling details of attacks on Minnesota lawmakers
The man suspected of fatally shooting a Minnesota lawmaker and her husband and wounding another and his wife had “stalked his victims like prey” before opening fire at their homes, elaborately disguised as a law enforcement officer, prosecutors said Monday.
Vance Boelter, 57, was allegedly wearing a “hyper realistic” silicone face mask, a tactical vest and body armor when he arrived at the Champlin home of state Sen. John Hoffman and his wife, Yvette Hoffman, early Saturday, according to Joseph Thompson, acting U.S. attorney for the District of Minnesota.

Wielding a flashlight and a handgun, Boelter allegedly knocked on the Hoffmans’ door around 2 a.m. and shouted, “This is the police! Open the door!”
His black SUV had emergency lights and a license plate that read “police,” Thompson said.
The couple answered the door together, the prosecutor said at a news conference. He said Boelter shined his flashlight in their faces, said there had been a shooting reported in the house and asked them if they had weapons.
When Boelter lowered his flashlight, the couple shouted that he was not a police officer. Prosecutors said Boelter then announced “this is a robbery” and tried to force himself into their home.
Hoffman tried to push Boelter out of his home, but the suspect shot him and his wife repeatedly before fleeing to his next target’s home, Thompson said.

The Hoffmans’ daughter called 911. The couple were severely injured and remained hospitalized.
Meanwhile, Boelter continued on his alleged rampage, which he appeared to have plotted for “quite some time,” though it’s still unclear why, officials said.
Authorities said there were more than 45 names of state and federal elected officials in multiple notebooks found in the suspect’s SUV and home.
“Boelter planned his attack carefully,” Thompson said. “He researched his victims and their families. He used the internet and other tools to find their addresses and names, the names of the family members. He conducted surveillance of their homes and took notes of the location of their homes.”
In a statement shared Monday evening, the Wortmans’ adult children, Sophie and Colin Hortman, said they were safe, with loved ones and grateful for the support and privacy they’ve received.
“The best way to honor our parents’ memory is to do something, whether big or small, to make our community just a little better for someone else,” said the statement, which was shared by by Ted Modrich, press secretary for the Minnesota House’s Democratic-Farm-Labor caucus.
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