The day after Terrell Mayes, Jr. celebrated Christmas with his family, the 3-year-old and his siblings heard gunshots. A stray bullet struck Terrell as he ran up the stairs inside his north Minneapolis home. For more than a decade, WCCO has followed his grieving mother's push to find her son's killer.
This development comes two days after WCCO shared the frustration of homeowners who all say they hired Charles Workman to build pools for them. They paid him tens of thousands of dollars upfront, but the work hasn't been done. All together, they're in for more than a million.
New information in a WCCO investigation: several families want to warn others after they say the same pool contractor took their savings and didn't do the job.
troops in case protests turn violent. here s jennifer mayerle of our cbs minneapolis station wcco. reporter: amir locke was asleep just before 7:00 a.m. wednesday when a minneapolis swat team entered the apartment with their guns drawn. in police body camera video, 22-year-old locklocke is scene lying on the couch wrapped in a blanket. a gun is visible in locke s hands, just before officers opened fire, only about nine seconds after entering the apartment. i ve seen it happen. i ve seen it happen too many timeses. reporter: today, locke s parents are mourning their loss. i should be able to tell my son that i love you and he says, i love you, too. reporter: the use of no-knock warrants came under fire in 2020 following the shooting death of breonna taylor by police in kentucky. that prompted minnesota legislators to tighten restrictions on the tactic to limit the likelihood of bad