Man sentenced to 9 years in funeral shooting on Fond du Lac Reservation

Tom Olsen, Duluth News Tribune, Minn.
·3 min read

May 18—A 29-year-old man was sentenced Monday to more than nine years in federal prison for shooting his sister's boyfriend in the back of the head at a funeral on the Fond du Lac Reservation in 2019.

Shelby Gene Boswell, who has a violent criminal history that includes ties to the Native Mob, received the 110-month sentence from Chief Judge John Tunheim in U.S. District Court in St. Paul.

Boswell pleaded guilty at a virtual hearing Sept. 30 to felony charges of being a felon in possession of a firearm and reckless discharge of a firearm within a school zone after the Oct. 18, 2019, assault of 45-year-old Broderick Boshay Robinson at the Fond du Lac Head Start building.

According to court documents, Boswell entered the gymnasium at the Head Start building, 33 University Road in Cloquet, where his grandmother's funeral was being held, and walked up behind his sister and her boyfriend. He used a .22-caliber rifle to shoot Robinson, who was seated, in the back of the head.

After being shot, Robinson, still conscious, turned around and saw Boswell pointing the rifle at him, according to a criminal complaint previously filed in state court. Robinson then ran out of the gym. Meanwhile, mourners managed to disarm and briefly restrain Boswell before he left the building and went to the parking lot, where he was arrested by police, the complaint said.

Police said they found bags of heroin and methamphetamine on Boswell at the time of arrest. During a search at the Carlton County Jail, staff also found a bag of marijuana, according to court documents.

The shooting sent the nearby Fond du Lac Ojibwe School and tribal offices into full lockdown. Although school was not in session because of Minnesota Educator Academy break, a number of children were in the building for programming.

Robinson was treated and released from a hospital the day of the incident.

While authorities never publicly identified a suspected motive for the shooting, Boswell stated in testimony at his plea hearing: "It wasn't my intention to harm anyone. I was just trying to scare someone."

He acknowledged under questioning that the act of bringing a rifle into a funeral and discharging it amounted to a reckless disregard for the safety of the victim and others in attendance.

Defense attorney Paul Engh told the court in September that Boswell had rejected a plea offer from the government, opting to enter the pleas without the benefit of any agreement as to sentencing. A third count, possession of a firearm in a school zone, was, however, dismissed by prosecutors.

Boswell faced a mandatory minimum sentence of five years in prison and a maximum of 15 years. The term imposed by Tunheim fell within the nonbinding sentencing guidelines, which called for approximately 8-15 years, according to the attorneys.

Boswell has been previously convicted of violent crimes, including fifth-degree assault and second-degree assault involving a baseball bat on the Fond du Lac Reservation in 2010, as well as a 2015 third-degree assault in Bemidji resulting in substantial bodily harm.

Boswell also pleaded guilty in federal court to a felony count of assault in aid of racketeering for the 2010 incident. That plea came as part of a sweeping indictment targeting two dozen alleged members of the Native Mob, a regional criminal organization known to operate primarily in Minnesota and Wisconsin.

The funeral shooting initially brought him assault and drug possession charges in state court, but those counts were later dropped as Carlton County Attorney Lauri Ketola said federal prosecution "provides the greatest consequences for Mr. Boswell's alleged crimes."