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Democrat State Senator Caught in Shocking Late-Night Home Intrusion Case

In that tense courtroom, the images and words told two very different stories. On one side, prosecutors portrayed Nicole Mitchell as a calculated intruder: dressed in black, entering through a nonstandard access point, flashlight hidden in a sock, a backpack wedged in the window holding electronics, IDs, and containers. Her own remark to officers — “Clearly, I’m not good at this” — was framed as a quiet admission that she knew she had crossed a line. To them, this was not grief breaking through a door; it was a lawmaker deliberately breaking the law.

Her defense, however, rests on something less visible than bodycam footage: the chaos of a fractured family. Mitchell’s attorneys describe a daughter cut off after her father’s death, desperate to reclaim ashes, photos, and memories from a stepmother struggling with Alzheimer’s. They argue that she did not run, did not lash out, but surrendered and explained. Now, beyond the legal verdict, Minnesotans are left to confront a harder question: when those who write the laws stand accused of violating them, can public trust ever fully return?

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