The 30-year-old lawyer suspected of killing prominent Orono physician Dr. Stephen Larson had expressed hostility toward Larson because of how he believed the doctor had treated his mother in an undisclosed medical situation, police said Monday.
Ted C. Hoffstrom of St. Anthony, confronted Orono police outside the 74-year-old OB-GYN doctor's home with a semiautomatic handgun Friday night. "Diligent attempts to negotiate" with Hoffstrom failed and he was shot and killed, authorities said. Larson was then found dead inside the house, shot with the gun Hoffstrom had wielded, ballistics tests would show.
"This is a tragedy of epic proportions for both families involved, as well as the community of Orono," Hennepin County Sheriff Rich Stanek said Monday afternoon at a news conference in Minneapolis.
Hoffstrom's family members either did not answer calls or declined to comment Monday. And Larson's son, Christopher Larson, reiterated Monday that his family did not want to comment.
Just before 9 p.m. Friday, Orono officers responded to a call about trouble at Larson's house on Heritage Lane. Larson had been on the phone with someone who heard him answer the door and heard startling noises. When Larson didn't return to the phone, the person he had been talking to called police, Stanek said.
"We know who committed this murder, yet many unanswered questions remain," Stanek said.
The four Orono officers involved in the shooting were Police Chief Correy Farniok, Officer Brad Schoenherr, Officer Paul Hooper and Officer Joshua Neham, authorities said. They remain on paid leave.
"Orono is a safe community, and there is no threat to the public at this time," Deputy Chief Chris Fischer said.