Hennepin County officials want to have the 19-month-old son of Minnesota Timberwolves player Malik Beasley put under court-ordered protection citing the felony weapons and drug charges filed last month against the boy's parents as well as new evidence of possible maltreatment.
A petition filed this week in District Court by the county's Human Services and Public Health departments challenges the parental rights of Malik Beasley and wife Montana Yao and levels further allegations against the couple growing out of an altercation the 23-year-old basketball player had in late September with a family outside his Plymouth home.
Beyond the charges filed last week accusing Beasley of aiming a rifle at a couple and their teenage daughter in an SUV outside his house, where a large stash of marijuana and other guns were seized by police, the petition also says Beasley was caught on indoor video surveillance pointing a rifle "in the general direction" of his son in the garage that same day.
The son remains in parental custody as a judge weighs the petition's allegations and whatever response to the filing the parents might offer.
Beasley was charged in District Court with drug possession and threats of violence. Yao, a 23-year-old Instagram model, was charged with a felony drug count.
Messages have been left for Beasley, Yao or their representatives seeking comment about the child protection petition and the earlier criminal charges.
According to the charges against Beasley and Yao, a couple was on the annual Parade of Homes tour Sept. 26 with their daughter and pulled up in an SUV to the 6,600-square-foot home that Beasley and Yao rent but saw it was roped off. While they were stopped to figure out the next home they would visit, Beasley tapped on the vehicle's window and pointed a rifle at them and shouted at them to get off his property.
Beasley trained his rifle at the SUV as it drove away from the home off Mooney Lake that the builder recently had on the market for $2.2 million, the charges read.