Jerry Peterson nursed a glass of cold beer at American Legion Post 65 in Rosemount on Thursday afternoon, contemplating life in one of the metro area's fastest-growing cities.
With the shooting death of 22-year-old Anthony Hartman this week at a town car wash and an arrest Wednesday in the case, Peterson and others are wondering if crime is destined to follow growth.
"It's an odd, freaky thing that happened," Peterson said. "Hopefully, it's not a continuous thing."
When he moved there in the 1970s, 2,500 people lived in Rosemount. Now, the population stands at 21,500.
The killing on Monday was just the second in the city's 152-year history. Coupled with a string of daytime armed robberies this year and a man charged with snapping photographs and cell phone pictures under girls' skirts at the town library this month, it has left longtime residents uneasy and public officials battling the perception of rising crime.
Business at the Car Spa on Canada Avenue, where the shooting happened, has slowed since the shooting, said attendant Scarlet Lund.
"People are afraid now," she said.
Lund estimated that 160 cars drove through the day after the shooting, but most were gawking and few stopped for a wash and vacuum.