For about 17 minutes on Wednesday night, Ramsey County Sheriff Bob Fletcher chased a stolen car in St. Paul with a camera rolling, sharing the feed with his Facebook followers for another installment of his show "Live on Patrol."
The pursuit — through the East Side, going the wrong way down one-way streets and with the fleeing car briefly accelerating on a residential sidewalk — was never officially joined by St. Paul police, which like many departments weighs the risk to the public when giving chase.
Video of the chase reveals that at one point Fletcher seemed to be aware that he was violating St. Paul police protocol and urged his passenger not to broadcast what they were doing.
Sheriff's deputies eventually arrested the 26-year-old driver, Luiz Miguel Reyes, in the 1400 block of E. Minnehaha Avenue. He was being held at the Ramsey County jail on charges of fleeing police and receiving stolen property.
The chase — speeding down Arlington and Maryland avenues and Rice and Arcade streets, among other roads — was questioned Thursday by Ramsey County Commissioner Jim McDonough, who represents many of the areas the sheriff raced through and said it seemed dangerous to conduct a pursuit that St. Paul police wouldn't make.
Fletcher declined Thursday to speak to the Star Tribune. But on Friday he posted a statement on his Facebook page, defending his pursuit of the stolen car and saying the Sheriff's Office permits pursuit of stolen vehicles as long as the risk isn't severe. In St. Paul, where 2,705 vehicles were stolen in 2019, the police generally don't pursue stolen vehicles.
Wrote Fletcher on Facebook: "The increase in carjackings and auto thefts is in part driven by the criminals' awareness that in some jurisdictions police officers are not allowed to pursue suspects. ... This belief has emboldened the criminal element in our community to commit more crime. Until we change that criminal mind-set, we have no chance of reducing crime."
St. Paul Police Chief Todd Axtell was not available Thursday for comment, according to a spokesman who confirmed that St. Paul police had monitored Fletcher's pursuit but never officially joined it.