House candidate arrested on suspicion of domestic assault

October 4, 2016 at 1:30AM

A candidate for a south metro district in the Minnesota Legislature was booked in the Dakota County jail over the weekend, after being arrested on suspicion of domestic assault and strangulation.

Brad Gerten, of Burnsville, is the GOP candidate for House District 51A, which extends into Burnsville and Eagan. According to jail booking records, Gerten was arrested by Burnsville Police late Saturday night and could face three separate domestic assault charges. He was booked into jail at 1:44 a.m. Sunday, and remained there Monday morning.

No additional information about the incident was immediately available Monday, but Gerten is scheduled to appear in court at noon Tuesday. Domestic assault by strangulation is a felony, while the other two possible charges listed on Gerten's booking records are misdemeanors.

Gerten has not been charged, but a spokeswoman for the Dakota County attorney's office, said charging decisions would be made by Tuesday afternoon.

House Speaker Kurt Daudt, R-Crown, released a statement on the incident Monday morning: "Domestic violence is unacceptable to our party and our caucus." Daudt said House Republicans have not contributed money in the race and won't in the future.

State GOP Chairman Keith Downey could not be reached for comment, and DFL Chairman Ken Martin declined to comment on Gerten's arrest.

Gerten's opponent, Rep. Sandra Masin, DFL-Eagan, said the news of the arrest was troubling.

"I just think that domestic violence is a very serious issue and it's never acceptable," she said. "It hurts families, it damages communities … but I trust that our legal process will address the issue."

Erin Golden • 612-673-4790

about the writer

about the writer

Erin Golden

Cities team leader

Erin Golden is a cities team leader at the Minnesota Star Tribune, working with reporters who cover Minneapolis, Hennepin County and metro suburbs. She was previously a reporter at the Minnesota Star Tribune and other newspapers covering topics ranging from state politics to education to business.

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