logo
Accused Minnesota assassin's transition from popular local athlete to radical far-right Christian

Accused Minnesota assassin's transition from popular local athlete to radical far-right Christian

New York Post17-06-2025
MINNESOTA — Accused assassin Vance Boelter was a popular high-school athlete before becoming born again in his teens, moving into a tent in the park to preach and eventually morphing into an apparent far-right Christian.
Boelter — a 57-year-old married dad of five accused of murdering Minnesota Democratic state Rep. Melissa Hortman and her husband and trying to assassinate Dem state Sen. Mark Hoffman and his wife early Saturday — gave few hints in his childhood of the seeming religious radicalization he would undergo.
The suspect was born into a sports-mad Lutheran family and raised in the small town of Sleepy Eye, with his father Donald a high-school baseball coach later selected for the Minnesota State High School Baseball Coaches Association Hall of Fame.
Advertisement
10 Minnesota assassination suspect Vance Boelter seen preaching at a church in the Democratic Republic of Congo.
FEVRIER DEVANT TA FACE
In high school, Boelter was named 'Most Friendly' and 'Most Courteous,' according to pictures of his high-school yearbook shared by one of his classmates.
One of five siblings, he seemed to have shared his family's love for sports and was listed as captain of the basketball team and a member of the baseball and football teams, as well the chorus, in the yearbook.
Advertisement
'Vance was a normal kid who came from a middle-class background,' former classmate Wendel Lamason told the Washington Post.
Boelter was raised in the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, with his father active in the church council and he himself participating in its youth groups.
'He wasn't rebellious. He was polite and all that. He was just a good kid,' said Ron Freimark, who pastored a different Lutheran congregation in the town, to the outlet.
10 Boelter allegedly in a mask before the Hoffman shootings.
District Court of Minnesota
Advertisement
10 Boelter under arrested after a manhunt for him in Minnesota.
HANDOUT/RAMSEY COUNTY SHERIFF'S OFFICE HANDOUT/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock
Conversion
Then at 17, Boelter had a religious conversion and declared himself born again, according to people in his life.
While at high school, he began preaching in his local park and even lived there in a tent, according to lifelong friend David Carlson.
'Everything in his life — he just changed. People were saying, 'Yeah, Vance is in the park preaching.' He was just trying to spread the word about Jesus,' Carlson said.
Advertisement
10 Boelter experienced a religious conversion in high school and even began preaching in a park, according to a friend.
C.E.F Arche de l'Alliance Makala
Boelter later claimed he had met the Holy Spirit and began producing pamphlets about Jesus and giving them to everyone he knew.
'So often in the world today, everyone wants an excuse for not doing the right thing. We want to blame someone else,' Boelter said during a sermon he gave in the Democratic Republic of the Congo in 2023, according to footage shared online.
'God doesn't say, 'Oh, your parents messed up, I know you came into this world all troubled.' You have a choice, you have a decision,' he said in his talk — which included an anti-abortion rant.
Boelter graduated from St. Cloud State University with a degree in international relations, according to his LinkedIn profile, before attending the small, now-defunct Catholic college Cardinal Stritch near Milwaukee.
He was later 'ordained' in 1993 after studying at the Dallas-based Christ for the Nations Institute and said he had made several overseas trips seeking out 'militant Islamists' and persuading them 'violence wasn't the answer,' according to a biography on the now-defunct website for his nonprofit, Revoformation, seen by the Washington Post.
Christ for the Nations Institute confirmed Boelter graduated in 1990, saying it was 'aghast and horrified' at the charges against their alumnus in a statement.
Advertisement
'This is not who we are. We have been training Christian servant leaders for 55 years and they have been agents of good, not evil,' the statement read.
Radicalization
At some stage, Boelter's views appear to have shifted to the 'far right' of Christian beliefs in the United States, according to Matthew Taylor, a senior Christian scholar at the Institute for Islamic, Christian and Jewish Studies.
The suspect believed in demons and a satanic evil in the world, as well as a need 'to fight back against it,' Taylor told the Washington Post after an analysis of Boelter's online presence.
10 Boelter allegedly killed former Minnesota House Speaker Melissa Hortman and her husband.
AP Photo/Abbie Parr, File
Advertisement
10 State Sen. John Hoffman and his wife were injured in the shooting.
MelissaHortman/Facebook
Some people in these online radical Christian spaces spread 'very extreme' anti-abortion rhetoric, portraying it as a form of child sacrifice which empowers demons, according to Taylor.
Boelter 'seems very much to embrace some of the violent rhetoric and ideas that circulate through those spaces,' Taylor said.
In some of his sermons, Boelter preached against LGBTQ+ rights, as well as abortion.
Advertisement
'God will raise an apostle or prophet to correct their course,' he said in footage of one sermon shared online, apparently referring to American churches which he felt had gone soft on abortion.
In Boelter's car, cops found a list of family planning centers along with 45 state and federal Minnesota officials, according to investigators.
10 A page of notes found in Boelter's car.
District Court of Minnesota
10 Police discovered a list of family planning centers and Minnesota state official in his vehicle.
District Court of Minnesota
But friends said that although they knew Boelter was religious and conservative, he rarely discussed politics and his views didn't seem extreme.
Advertisement
'He was right-leaning politically but never fanatical, from what I saw, just strong beliefs,' longtime friend Paul Schroeder told AP.
'He never talked to me about abortion. It seemed to be just that he was a conservative Republican who naturally followed Trump,' Schroeder said.
10 Boelter is facing a sentence of life in prison.
Getty Images
10 A courtroom sketch of Boelter getting charged in federal court on June 16, 2025.
REUTERS/Cedric Hohnstadt
Boelter worked mainly in the food industry but spent several years as a security contractor in the Middle East and Africa before returning to the US in 2023.
In August of that year, he began working for a funeral home transporting bodies of those who had died in assisted living facilities, telling friends he needed the work to pay the bills.
His most recent job was extracting eyeballs from corpses as part of an organ donation program, Carlson said.
The suspect was also spending nights away from his wife and four daughters and son, renting a room in a small house in northern Minneapolis with acquaintances, while working.
'Dad went to war last night,' Boelter said in a message to his family sent after his alleged shooting spree, CNN reported Monday.
He has now been charged with federal crimes that could land him the death penalty.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump administration seeks to keep Nevada US Attorney in place before court can act
Trump administration seeks to keep Nevada US Attorney in place before court can act

Yahoo

time8 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Trump administration seeks to keep Nevada US Attorney in place before court can act

By Sarah N. Lynch WASHINGTON (Reuters) -President Donald Trump's administration has extended Nevada's Interim U.S. Attorney Sigal Chattah's term, aiming to prevent a federal court from rejecting her permanent appointment amid mounting opposition from critics including more than 100 retired federal and state judges, a Justice Department official said. Chattah, an Israel-born former Republican National Committeewoman, has been serving in the interim role since April. The 120-day deadline for her term is set to expire on Tuesday, which would open the door for the federal court in Nevada to appoint a U.S. Attorney since Trump has yet to nominate anyone for the role. The department designated Chattah Acting U.S. Attorney for Nevada under the federal Vacancies Reform Act, the department official said. Chattah announced her new role on X on Tuesday, adding "Rinse and repeat: The law is the ONLY thing that makes ALL people equal." Federal courts have so far rejected two of Trump's other U.S. Attorney picks: John Sarcone in the Northern District of New York and Trump's former personal lawyer Alina Habba in New Jersey. In both of those cases, the Justice Department used a variety of different legal maneuvers to keep them in place. In Habba's case, Attorney General Pam Bondi thwarted the federal court by removing Desiree Grace, Habba's first assistant whom the courts had chosen to serve as the state's top federal prosecutor. The maneuver in New Jersey has injected some uncertainty into federal criminal cases there, and defendants in at least one case have asked that their charges be dismissed based on an argument that Habba's appointment was unlawful. More than 100 retired federal and state judges this week urged the federal court in Nevada not to permanently appoint Chattah, citing her history of racially charged comments and her "extreme partisan bias," according to a letter seen by Reuters. "Chattah has frequently used violence-tinged language suggesting that her political opponent should be hanging from a crane, that protesters should be shot, and that people should 'buy ammo' in response to their grievances," wrote the 116 retired judges in a Monday letter to Andrew Gordon, the chief federal judge in Nevada. The letter listed examples including Chattah referring to former Democratic U.S. Representative Jamaal Bowman as an "antisemitic ghetto rat" and calling Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis "so ghetto" and asking: "Why do we have lawyers like this who litigate in Ebonics?" She also previously suggested that certain Democratic Jewish members of the U.S. Congress are equivalent to modern-day Nazi collaborators. A Justice Department official did not have any immediate comment about the letter criticizing Chattah. Solve the daily Crossword

New North Carolina laws include one allowing guns in private schools
New North Carolina laws include one allowing guns in private schools

Axios

time10 minutes ago

  • Axios

New North Carolina laws include one allowing guns in private schools

The Republican-led N.C. General Assembly, with the help of several Democrats, overrode several vetoes by Gov. Josh Stein on Tuesday, including one on Duke Energy's carbon reduction goals and another allowing guns in private schools. Why it matters: The votes highlight the weakness of Stein's veto power over the Republican-led General Assembly, especially with multiple Democrats joining to pass bills despite Stein's opposition. Republicans already held a supermajority in the state Senate, but were one vote shy in the state House, meaning they needed to recruit at least one Democrat to get the bills past the veto. Driving the news: The first bill to bypass the veto was Senate Bill 266, which eliminated an interim goal that requires Duke Energy to reduce carbon emissions by 70% by 2030. It will also change how Duke Energy can set its rates and recover costs from its under-construction plants. Stein said he vetoed it because he believes it will cause ratepayers to pay higher bills. Two Charlotte Democrats, Reps. Nasif Majeed and Carla Cunningham, and Edgecombe County Rep. Shelly Willingham voted to override the veto. State of play: So far, the General Assembly has overridden Stein's veto of eight of 14 bills, including: House Bill 193: A bill that permits private schools to allow some employees or volunteers to carry guns on campus and act as security guards. Democratic Rep. Willingham joined Republicans to pass the law. House Bill 318: The bill strengthens a previous statute that requires sheriff departments in the state to comply with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Democratic Rep. Cunningham joined Republicans. Senate Bill 416: The bill prohibits public agencies from collecting or releasing personal information about members, volunteers and donors to certain nonprofits. Supporters said the bill protects people from being intimidated based on their giving, while Stein said in his veto that it will encourage more dark money in politics and make it harder to crack down on tax fraud. Democratic Reps. Cecil Brockman, of Guilford County; Cunningham and Willingham joined Republicans. Senate Bill 254: This bill shifts some oversight for charter schools in the state from the state Board of Education to the Charter School Review Board, a board that is majority-controlled by the Republican-led legislature. Reps. Brockman, Cunningham and Willingham joined Republicans in the vote. House Bill 805: The bill included several changes, including excluding gender identity from state definitions of biological sex, allowing lawsuits against medical providers who perform gender transitions and banning state funds from being used for gender transition surgery. Democratic Rep. Majeed joined Republicans in the vote. House Bill 549: This bill gives the state auditor access to data and records from any business or nonprofit that gets public funds. It's the latest power that Republican state Auditor Dave Boliek has added since his election. Democratic Rep. Willingham voted with Republicans.

Pope Leo XIV condemns brutal machete attack that killed 49 Christians during prayer in Congo
Pope Leo XIV condemns brutal machete attack that killed 49 Christians during prayer in Congo

Fox News

time10 minutes ago

  • Fox News

Pope Leo XIV condemns brutal machete attack that killed 49 Christians during prayer in Congo

The Pope, the United Nations and a leading Christian group have all condemned a new major attack on Christians in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), which the U.N. says left at least 49 dead. In the latest attack in a tragic long string of mass murders by Islamist terrorists in both Nigeria and the DRC, the U.N. said rebels from the Allied Democratic Forces (ADF), a sanctioned rebel group allied to Islamic State with roots in Uganda, burst into a church in the Eastern town of Komanda and set about hacking Christians who were worshipping inside with machetes and other knives. The congregation was attacked at 1 a.m. last Sunday morning, while they were on a night vigil, reportedly praying for peace. The rebels also burnt nearby homes. Nine children are said to be among the dead. Several villagers have been abducted. "May the blood of these martyrs become a seed of peace, reconciliation, fraternity, and love for the Congolese people," Pope Leo XIV stated from Rome. A Vatican Cardinal added that the Pope "learned with dismay and deep sorrow of the attack." The U.N.'s Stablization Mission in the DRC, MONUSCO, expressed "deep outrage at these heinous acts of violence, which constitute serious violations of international humanitarian law and infringements on human rights." "The killings are strategic," Illia Djadi, senior sub-Saharan researcher for Christian charity Open Doors, who support and speak up for Christians persecuted for their faith, stated. He added, "The ADF have a very clear aim: they want to turn a large part of DRC into an Islamic caliphate, like the horrific one instigated in Iraq and Syria in 2014 by Islamic State." Contacted by Fox News Digital on Tuesday, Djadi said, "The presence of Islamic State groups across the region means that sub-Saharan Africa has become the new epicenter of jihadism." Muslims are in the minority here; it's said that Christians account for between 80-95% of the population. 70 Christians were reported beheaded, again in a church in the DRC, in February. The killings of Christians are worse in Nigeria, with Pope Leo XIV telling crowds at the Vatican that "some 200 people were murdered, with extraordinary cruelty" on June 13 in Yelewata, in Nigeria's Benue State. According to Open Doors International's 2025 World Watch List (WWL), of the 4,476 Christians killed worldwide in WWL's latest reporting period, 3,100 of those who died (69%) were in Nigeria. Djadi told Fox News Digital that despite President Trump's brokered peace deal in the DRC, Christians in the East of the country are still at risk. "There has been a lot of attention paid to the DRC recently, with Donald Trump spearheading a peace initiative between the DRC and Rwanda, whose rebel fighters the M23 have taken a large proportion of territories in the east of the DRC." "However," Djadi added, "while government forces are trying to contain the M23 in the urban regions, the rural areas are left undefended. It has left a security vacuum, meaning that the ADF are free to slaughter hundreds of innocent civilians with impunity, with Christians especially at risk. "It is the primary responsibility of (the) Congolese government to protect the whole nation, regardless of their religious faith or ethnic background. What would happen if the ADF continues its killing unopposed is too awful to contemplate."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store