BALSAM LAKE, WIS. — A Minnesota man charged with fatally stabbing a Wisconsin angler after a dispute between fishermen along the St. Croix River last week was pushed to the ground moments before the killing, a sheriff's investigator testified Wednesday.
Details of the confrontation were disclosed at a preliminary hearing in Polk County Circuit Court for Levi C. Acre-Kendall, 19, who was charged last week with first-degree reckless homicide in the April 14 death of Peter S. Kelly.
The case has been cast as a dispute between a family man — Kelly, a father of five from St. Croix Falls — and a group of rowdy teenagers with no respect for Interstate Park's family-friendly reputation.
But testimony from Polk County sheriff's investigator Rick Gearhart complicated that narrative with information that Kelly and his friend, Ross Lechman, watched Acre-Kendall and his friends in the dark before confronting the younger men and that Lechman initiated physical contact.
However, Gearhart also testified, the younger men didn't attempt to quell the escalating dispute, but instead swore and beckoned the older men to come across the river.
"The fact is that this whole thing … turned out tragically, and that's the bottom line," Polk County District Attorney Daniel Steffen said after the hearing.
Authorities allege that Acre-Kendall, of Cambridge, and two friends were fishing on the Wisconsin side of the river in Interstate Park while Kelly, 34, and Lechman fished on the Minnesota side. A dispute erupted between the groups, and the older men eventually drove across the river to confront the younger men.
Steffen said Acre-Kendall's use of force was unwarranted. Acre-Kendall's attorney, Eric Nelson, argued that Kelly and Lechman were the aggressors.