The 21-year-old woman charged with fatally shooting a native Minnesotan working in Vermont as a federal border agent used a gun bought by someone who is charged with a homicide in California and was a “person of interest” in two homicides in Pennsylvania,
Vermont, Minnesota and Border Patrol
A procession was held earlier in the day in Burlington, Vermont, before the 44-year-old Blue Earth, Minnesota native was escorted to his return flight home.
The partnership comes after the town of Colchester issued violations against the company for housing company workers in “grossly hazardous and unsafe” spaces.
The tragic death of U.S. Border Patrol agent, David Maland, 44, hits home here in Minnesota. A few lifestyle habits can make or break your feet. As President Donald Trump’s health care agenda for a second term takes shape, it’s becoming clear that many Biden-era policies won’t make the cut.
David "Chris" Maland, 44, was fatally shot in the line of duty on Tuesday in Coventry, Vermont, according to the Vermont State Police. Maland was an agent with the U.S. Border Patrol Swanton Sector and was conducting a traffic stop at the time.
A criminal complaint filed in federal court accuses Teresa Youngblut of assault as Agent David Maland's casket brought to Colonie for flight home to Minnesota.
David Maland, 44, was a military veteran who worked security duty at the Pentagon during the Sept. 11 attacks, his family said.
The woman accused of killing U.S. Border Agent David Maland allegedly used a gun bought by someone who was a person of interest in a double murder, prosecutors said.
A 21-year-old woman has been charged in the fatal shooting of a Minnesota-born border patrol agent during a traffic stop in Vermont earlier this week. The United States Attorney's Office said Teresa Youngblut,
Teresa Youngblut has charged her with assault of a federal law enforcement officer for the death of 44-year-old agent David "Chris" Maland, who graduated from Fairmont High School.
Maps show the U.S. states with the healthiest diets, based on fruit and vegetables, alcohol, food insecurity, and diseases.