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Court docs detail Boelter's body bags, weapons stash, and doomsday plan

Court docs detail Boelter's body bags, weapons stash, and doomsday plan

Yahoo24-06-2025
Court docs detail Boelter's body bags, weapons stash, and doomsday plan originally appeared on Bring Me The News.
Unsealed court documents have revealed that Vance Boelter and his wife were "preppers" who had a "bailout" plan in the event of a catastrophe. The documents reveal that Boelter rented a storage unit in Minneapolis — which contained body bags — four days before allegedly carrying out politically motivated attacks in the Twin Cities.
Boelter, the 57-year-old federally charged for the killings of state Rep. Melissa Hortman and her husband, Mark, and the attempted murders of state Sen. John Hoffman and his wife, Yvette, was apprehended near his home in Green Isle, Minnesota, following the largest manhunt in Minnesota history.
Before disguising himself as a police officer and going on a rampage in the middle of the night on June 14, Boelter rented a storage unit that was filled with a duffel bag containing five body bags, multiple gun cases, gun cleaning supplies, and a bike.
The unsealed search warrants also reveal that investigators discovered nearly 50 pistols, along with revolvers, shotguns and rifles on Boelter's property in Green Isle. They also found nearly $18,000 in cash, computers, a cell phone, masks, and a notecard with handwritten names of public officials and the states they live in.
The search warrants also disclose that Boelter's wife, Jenny Boelter, confirmed to police that her husband had recently purchased a silicone mask on Amazon. Boelter wore a silicone mask when he carried out the attacks on June 14.
Jenny Boelter was detained by authorities near Onamia late Saturday night. According to the Minnesota Star Tribune, she and her four children were in a car that contained at least $10,000 in cash, a safe, passports for her and the kids, and two handguns — one in the glove box and another inside a cooler.
The court documents state that Vance Boelter had sent the family a group text saying "Dad went to war" and that people with guns could be coming to their house. Boelter had advised his wife in the text to go to a family member's home in northern Minnesota.
The Star Tribune is also reporting, citing two sources with knowledge, that Vance Boelter wrote an unhinged letter to the FBI, claiming that Gov. Tim Walz "instructed him to kill U.S. Sen. Amy Klobuchar so that Walz could run for the U.S. Senate."
Walz's office has since said there is no truth to Boelter's conspiratorial claim, with Klobuchar telling the Star Tribune that Boelter "is a very dangerous man."
If convicted of the federal murder charges, Boelter could be sentenced to death.This story was originally reported by Bring Me The News on Jun 20, 2025, where it first appeared.
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