The organizers of a rodeo in the tiny northern Minnesota town of Effie are facing state punishment after disregarding warnings not to hold the event in violation of an executive order restricting the size of public gatherings. It's the first time the state has brought an enforcement action against an entertainment venue that has operated "in open defiance of the law," Attorney General Keith Ellison said in a news release.
Meanwhile, at least one person who attended the rodeo has tested positive for COVID-19, according to the Minnesota Department of Health.
Ellison on Friday filed a complaint in Itasca County District Court against North Star Ranch for alleged violations of Gov. Tim Walz's executive order limiting attendance at public events during the pandemic.
The ranch and its owner, Cimarron Pitzen, could face a fine of up to $25,000 for each violation of the order and be forced to give up any money collected at the event, as well as pay costs and attorney fees.
Pitzen, whose family has staged the rodeo since 1955, did not answer his phone Friday. The voice mail greeting on his answering machine said it was turned off.
Ellison's complaint alleges that Pitzen became angry after state officials told him he'd have to limit attendance at the event, billed as the largest outdoor rodeo in the state.
Officials had told him that based on the venue's size, no more than 132 people could attend.
After angrily and profanely ending a conversation with a representative of Ellison's office, he took to Facebook and encouraged rodeo fans to protest, the complaint says.