The man charged in the brutal murder of a beloved Loring Park grocery store clerk last winter was ruled mentally competent to stand trial Tuesday, after an earlier psychological evaluation had determined he was unfit to participate in his own defense.
Taylor Justin Schulz, 45, was charged with second-degree murder in the death of Robert Skafte on Dec. 9, 2023. Skafte, 66, worked at the Oak Grove Grocery store and was an acclaimed ballet dancer and employee at the neighborhood store for nearly two decades. He was beaten and impaled with a golf club behind the counter.
Earlier this year, Schulz refused to appear for a virtual Hennepin County District Court hearing but was found mentally incompetent to stand trial by judicial officer Danielle Mercurio based off a mental competency evaluation that was ordered in the aftermath of the killing.
On Tuesday, Judge Julia Dayton Klein asked Schulz’s lawyer, Emmett Donnelly, during a virtual hearing if he objected to the new evaluation which ruled Schultz competent to stand trial.
“We do not have grounds to contest the opinion at this time,” Donnelly said.
Hennepin County attorney Liz Murphy also had no objections.
Donnelly had no additional comment, a message left for Murphy was not immediately returned. The next hearing for Schulz will be set at a future date, while his bail remains set at $1 million.

When Schulz was ruled incompetent, then Hennepin County Attorney spokesperson Nicholas Kimball explained how that determination could change.