A 22-year-old man revved up his motorcycle to more than 140 miles per hour just south of Rochester and explained to a sheriff's deputy during a contentious traffic stop that his need for speed was because of the heat, according to charges.
Noah A. Doherty of Pine Island, Minn., was charged in Olmsted County District Court with reckless driving, interference with a police officer and driving after his license was revoked in connection with the encounter on a toasty Tuesday afternoon.

Doherty was booked into jail that day, released in lieu of $6,000 bail and is due back in court on July 13. Reached by phone Thursday, Doherty said in a text message that he was trying to cool off and the officer, who had been sitting in a blind spot, was eager to rip him off the bike or "it wouldn't have gone down like it looks."
Under questioning by law enforcement, Doherty "claimed that he was going fast because it was hot," the charges against him read. The temperature in Rochester around that time was 95 degrees, according to the National Weather Service.
Sheriff's Lt. Lee Rossman said Doherty was riding a 2007 Suzuki GSX-R1000, which the lieutenant described as a "crotch rocket-type motorcycle."
Doherty did not have on a helmet and instead was wearing a paintball mask for eye protection, Rossman said.
According to the criminal complaint and the Sheriff's Office:
A deputy on routine patrol saw the motorcyclist traveling "extremely fast" on Hwy. 63 just east of the Rochester International Airport and clocked him at 144 mph. But "out of a concern for public safety," the deputy chose not to pursue the motorcycle, the complaint read.