Judge to allow some questions about Amy Senser's alcohol use
Prosecutors won't be able to ask questions about Senser's general drinking habits, but they can raise questions about her alcohol use the night of a deadly crash.
Prosecutors won't be able to ask questions about Senser's general drinking habits, but they can raise questions about her alcohol use the night of a deadly crash.
The 28-year-old is facing 2nd-degree murder charges.
His new podcast, called 'My First Concert,' launched last week.
The crash remains under investigation by the United States Coast Guard.
Investigators say children were approached by a man in a white minivan who falsely claimed he'd been a local school principal.
The latest from the state health department.
Officers arrived to the scene and found one person suffering multiple gunshot wounds.
The incident happened last week in north-central Wisconsin.
A number of national chains have departed Uptown in recent years.
It's the first U.S. Navy ship to be commissioned in Minnesota.
The principal said Friday she had been fired from her role over her support of a student protest.
The crash occurred on Highway 169 early Sunday morning.
Prosecutors claim the wife of former Viking Joe Senser told one of her daughters that she had been drinking before she fatally struck a man along a freeway on-ramp in Minneapolis. She was in court on Monday for her last plea before jury selection in a criminal vehicular homicide case.
Amy Senser will be sentenced Monday morning in a hit-and-run accident that killed a Roseville man last August on a freeway exit ramp in Minneapolis. In May, a jury convicted the wife of former Minnesota Viking Joe Senser of two felony counts of criminal vehicular homicide. Prosecutors want the judge to send Senser to prison for nearly five years. Her defense attorney has asked for probation.
Joe Senser says he was not surprised his wife failed to keep an agreement to give their daughters a ride home from a concert last August. The former Viking testified about the night when prosecutors say Amy Senser struck and killed a man with her SUV and failed to stop. Her attorney says Amy Senser was not aware of hitting anyone.
Former Vikings star Joe Senser testified at his wife's vehicular homicide trial Wednesday, saying Amy Senser told him she'd hit a construction cone or barrel. After seeing news reports that a man was struck and killed on an I-94 exit ramp, Joe Sener says his wife told him she had used that ramp but was not involved in the incident. Earlier, an expert testified that 45 messages were deleted from Amy Senser's phone the day after the hit-and-run.
KSTP reports the subpoena was entered into the court file Wednesday and asks for "raw audio and video footage" of interviews with jurors following Amy Senser's criminal vehicular homicide trial. The wife of former Vikings tight end Joe Senser was convicted of two felonies and is scheduled to be sentenced July 9. Her attorney is working on an appeal.
Prosecutors contend former Viking Joe Senser admitted to the doctor that his wife, Amy, knew she had hit someone the night Anousone Phanthavong was killed along Interstate 94 in Minneapolis. Amy Senser's vehicular homicide trial is scheduled to begin on April 23.
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