Here are all the guns that charges say suspect brought to assassination

Charges say 5 guns were found in the SUV that Vance Boelter abandoned after he allegedly shot two state legislators and their spouses.

The Minnesota Star Tribune
June 17, 2025 at 9:41PM
Criminal charges say Vance Boelter had this weaponry in his vehicle as he allegedly moved about the Twin Cities over the weekend and shot two state legislators and their spouses. (U.S. District Court records)

According to a lifelong friend, Vance Boelter knew his way around guns and expressed an interest in weapons from a young age.

Federal prosecutors say that when Boelter, charged with murder and attempted murder in connection with the shootings of two state legislators and their spouses, fled immediate capture early Saturday, he left behind in his SUV semi-automatic “assault-style” rifles among five guns in all.

Also in the SUV, decked out to resemble a police vehicle, was “a large quantity of ammunition organized into loaded magazines,” according to the federal criminal complaint against the Green Isle man.

In addition, a 9-millimeter semiautomatic handgun and at least three magazines were found strewn about the ground a few blocks from where State Rep. Melissa Hortman and her husband, Mark, were fatally shot in their Brooklyn Park residence.

At the time of his arrest late Sunday, Boelter had a gun on him of an unspecified type, according to law enforcement.

There is no law banning the accumulation of weaponry by the 57-year-old Boelter over the years, dating back to at least 2000. Up to this week, he had no criminal history beyond a speeding ticket and a handful of parking violations.

Court records don’t show him having ever been subject to an Extreme Risk Protection Order, also known as a “red flag” law, that could have prevented him from having the guns. Enacted in January 2024, the order allows law enforcement or family members to petition courts to temporarily remove firearms from individuals at risk of harming themselves or others.

Possessing one or more guns in public as Boelter allegedly did is allowed if the person has and can present a state-issued permit to carry. The identities of permit holders are not publicly available, and in Boelter’s case has not been addressed by any level of law enforcement since he was identified as the suspected killer.

Rob Doar, senior vice president of the Minnesota Gun Owners Caucus and a gun rights advocate, reviewed photos of weapons in the federal criminal complaint against Boelter and saw what appear to be semi-automatic “civilian-legal” variants.

“Whether purchased through a dealer or private party,” Doar said, “their acquisition in Minnesota would have required either a permit to purchase or carry and compliance with state and federal transfer regulations.”

Charges in Hennepin County District Court noted Boelter “is the listed purchaser for at least four of the recovered firearms.”

A handgun allegedly possessed by Vance Boelter. (U.S. District Court records)

Vance Boelter ‘kind of like the gun type’

David Carlson, Boelter’s Minneapolis roommate a few days a week and a friend since grade school in Sleepy Eye, Minn., said the two of them “thought guns and weapons were cool. As children, we were like that, and it kind of stuck with us.”

Carlson said he saw that Boelter had a few guns and “was kind of like the gun type. I didn’t think they were automatic ones.”

Boelter’s interest in and possession of guns were not worrisome, Carlson said.

“I thought Vance was so incapable of using those weapons on people,” he said. “I trusted him so much that I lived with him. The weapons I saw were normal weapons, a couple handguns. I know he went to the shooting range.”

Kipp Trebesch Jr., president of the Green Isle Sportsman’s Club, said he checked both records and cameras, and Boelter had never visited there.

“It’s a small community,” he said of Green Isle. “Everybody knows everybody, but I can’t say anybody’s actually really ever talked to the guy.”

Deena Winter, Louis Krauss and Anna Sago of the Minnesota Star Tribune contributed to this story.

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Paul Walsh

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Paul Walsh is a general assignment reporter at the Minnesota Star Tribune. He wants your news tips, especially in and near Minnesota.

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