Man accused of tossing boy off Mall of
America balcony ordered held without bond
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[April 17, 2019]
(Reuters) - A Minnesota judge on
Tuesday ordered a man accused of critically injuring a 5-year-old boy by
throwing him off a balcony at the Mall of America held in lieu of a $2
million bond until a hearing next month, prosecutors said.
In his first court appearance since Friday's incident, when he allegedly
dropped the boy nearly 40 feet (12 meters), Emmanuel Aranda was charged
with attempted premeditated first-degree murder, Hennepin County
Attorney's office spokesman Chuck Laszewski said.
Prosecutors had asked for bail to be set at $2 million, but Hennepin
Country District Court Judge Jeannice Reding reserved her decision on
the request, ordering Aranda held in lieu of $2 million bond until a May
14 hearing, Laszewski said.
Aranda, 24, who lives in Minneapolis, did not enter a plea, Laszewski
added. It was not immediately clear if Aranda had a lawyer.
Asked by the judge if he had any questions, Aranda standing behind a
glass partition in the courtroom replied: "Not at all."
Police have not identified the boy, but said he suffered
life-threatening injuries from the fall at the Bloomington mall, a major
tourist attraction in the state. On Tuesday they said his condition
remained critical.
A posting late Monday on a GoFundMe page set to help pay for his medical
expenses gave the boy's first name as Landen.
"His condition has very little change at this point, but we are hoping
to get some good news back from some upcoming tests in the next few
days," wrote Noah Hanneman, a family friend who launched the GoFundMe
drive.
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Emmanuel Deshawn Aranda, charged with attempted homicide of a
5-year-old boy thrown or pushed from a third-floor balcony at
Minnesota's Mall of America, is seen in this combination photo from
police released pictures in Bloomington, Minnesota, U.S., on April
12, 2019. Courtesy City of Bloomington Police Department/Handout via
REUTERS
By Tuesday afternoon, the campaign had raised $711,000, well over
its $500,000 goal, since it was launched on Saturday.
Police said Aranda had a history of mental issues and arrests on
relatively minor charges. He told investigators he had been visiting
the mall for years to try talk to women, but their rejection "caused
him to lash out and be aggressive," prosecutors said in a complaint.
Aranda said he had initially intended to kill an adult the day
before the incident, according to the complaint filed with the court
on Monday.
He did not follow through but returned to the mall Friday still
intending to kill an adult. He chose the boy instead, and admitted
throwing him from the building's third tier, the complaint said.
(Reporting by Peter Szekely in New York; Editing by Tom Brown)
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