Man fatally shot in St. Paul ID’d as 20-year-old
Police have identified a man killed in a shooting on St. Paul’s West Side as a 20-year-old.
James Q. Baker, of St. Paul, died at Regions Hospital on Wednesday afternoon, soon after he was shot in an apartment complex in the 600 block of Stryker Avenue.
No one was under arrest as of Thursday afternoon. Police said Wednesday they are investigating what led to the shooting.
Baker was the first person since November to be killed in a shooting homicide in St. Paul. There have been three other homicides this year; they were each stabbings.
Related Articles
Crypto crime spills over from behind the screen to real-life violence
Pair sentenced in human smuggling case that left Indian family dead on Minnesota border
Angry with electrical utility, Iron Range official cuts wire, knocking out power to 3 towns
Authorities: Feeding Our Future suspect tried to flee after St. Paul raid
Shooting death in St. Paul is first homicide by gunfire this year
More Stories
Alan Roper: ‘wage and tax policy has stripped £12.6m out of our profits’
Few retailers wear their politics quite so visibly as Alan Roper. Stand the managing director of Blue Diamond, the UK’s...
Netflix sued for spying on children
The streaming giant exploited users and their kids to make billions of dollars selling their data, a legal complaint alleges...
Gilts plunge to 28-year low as Starmer clings on, leaving SMEs braced for borrowing squeeze
Britain’s bond market delivered its sharpest rebuke yet to Sir Keir Starmer’s premiership on Tuesday, with 30-year gilt yields climbing...
Uk borrowing costs spike to 18-year high as Starmer leadership crisis spooks markets
The cost of UK government borrowing climbed to its highest level in nearly two decades on Tuesday, as mounting speculation...
Starmer moves to nationalise British Steel as commercial rescue collapses
Sir Keir Starmer has confirmed that British Steel will be taken into full public ownership, ending months of speculation about...
Poultry powerhouse 2Sisters lifts supermarket prices by £70m to absorb Labour’s National Insurance shock
Britain’s largest poultry processor has handed supermarkets a £70m bill for the Chancellor’s tax-and-wage squeeze, in one of the clearest...
