The social media posts were ominous: A small-framed man in a mask and hoodie was seen behaving strangely on several occasions in an Eagan park. Word was that he was a predator out to hurt people.
A post about three such incidents last summer on the Eagan Police Facebook page was shared 282 times and garnered 181 comments. Other community Facebook pages shared the post. Residents left related inquiries on friends' pages and TV news stations picked up the story.
Days later, a woman called police saying the "man" in the mask was in fact her 11-year-old son, a shy boy who liked to play make-believe in the park near their home.
"I figured [police] would probably come talk to him and talk to us," said Elizabeth Scott. "And then it just spiraled out of control."
Before the family knew it, Dakota County prosecutors charged her son with disorderly conduct and misdemeanor fifth-degree assault.
"It was shocking," said Nick Leverson, the boy's attorney. "I didn't understand the county attorney's office's unwillingness to recognize this as just a kid being a kid."
In court last week, District Judge Michael Mayer dismissed the assault charge. He withheld judgment on the disorderly conduct charge but ordered a kind of probation: 10 hours of chores for his mother over 90 days.
He won't have a record. But Leverson said he wasn't acquitted because, according to the judge, an 11-year-old should have realized he was scaring people the first time it happened.