Democratic state Sen. Nicole Mitchell was charged with first-degree burglary on Tuesday after she allegedly broke into her stepmother’s house a day earlier to take her late father’s belongings.
Mitchell, a first-term senator from Woodbury, was arrested in Detroit Lakes early Monday morning. Officers responded to a burglary call around 4:45 a.m. and arrested the 49-year-old Mitchell at the scene.
Police found Mitchell in the basement of her stepmother’s home “dressed in all black clothing and a black hat,” according to the charges filed Tuesday. As she was being detained, she told her stepmother “something to the effect of, ‘I was just trying to get a couple of my dad’s things because you wouldn’t talk to me anymore,’” the charges state. Her father died last year.
Officers found a flashlight near Mitchell that had with a black sock covering it. A sliding window in the basement had been opened and had a black backpack stuck in it, according to the charges.
“Officers searched the backpack and discovered two laptops, a cellphone, Mitchell’s Minnesota driver’s license, Mitchell’s Senate identification, and miscellaneous Tupperware,” the charging document states. Mitchell allegedly told an officer that both laptops were hers and that she had “just gotten into the house,” and commented, “Clearly, I’m not good at this.”
After an officer read Mitchell her Miranda warning, Mitchell stated, “I know I did something bad,” the filing states. She told the officer her father recently passed away and her stepmother ceased all contact with the family. Mitchell wanted some of her late father’s belongings, such as pictures, a flannel shirt and ashes, and said her stepmother had refused to give them to her.
Her father, Roderick Mitchell, died in March 2023 at age 72. His estate was settled in January. The senator and her stepmother were listed as the only two heirs.
Mitchell’s estate valued at $172,931 was left entirely to Carol Mitchell, according to court documents filed in Becker County. Roderick Mitchell didn’t have a will, but the court gave his estate to his surviving spouse.