In both attacks, authorities believe the assailant impersonated a law enforcement officer.

Manhunt Brooklyn Park police inspect vehicles entering a neighborhood on 14 June, following the fatal shooting of State Rep. Melissa Hortman and her husband. State Sen. John Hoffman and his wife were wounded in a separate but related attack.
Photograph courtesy of Stephen Maturen/Agence france-presse
A manhunt was underway Saturday for a gunman who shot two Democratic state lawmakers in Minnesota, killing one, along with her husband, and wounding the other, in what the northern US state’s governor said were politically motivated attacks.
The shootings came as deep political divisions have hit the United States, the same day that tens of thousands of protestors across the country took to the streets against the policies of Republican President Donald Trump.
Authorities named the assailant as 57-year-old Vance Luther Boelter, who was still at large and considered “armed and dangerous.”
“We believe he’s working to potentially flee the (Minneapolis-St. Paul) area,” Drew Evans, superintendent of the state Bureau of Criminal Apprehension, told reporters.
Boelter had been spotted Saturday morning in the Minneapolis area on surveillance footage obtained from a business, the official said.
Evans said authorities were still investigating the suspect’s motives, and did not know if additional people were involved in the attacks.
Trump and US Attorney General Pam Bondi decried what they called “horrific violence” and said perpetrators would be prosecuted to “the fullest extent of the law.”
The Federal Bureau of Investigation offered a reward of up to $50,000 for information leading to the capture or conviction of Boelter.
Political violence
State Representative Melissa Hortman — the former speaker — and her husband Mark were killed at their home in the Minneapolis suburb of Brooklyn Park, Governor Tim Walz told an earlier press conference.
State Senator John Hoffman and his wife Yvette were shot and wounded at their home in nearby Champlin, the governor said, his voice breaking with emotion.
“This was an act of targeted political violence,” Walz told reporters. “Peaceful discourse is the foundation of our democracy. We don’t settle our differences with violence or at gunpoint.”
Evans said Hoffman was out of surgery and “in stable condition” but that he had suffered “significant injuries.”
The state official said Hoffman and his wife were shot first, and as police investigated, Hortman and her husband were shot about 90 minutes later.
The gunman was able to escape during an exchange of fire with officers near Hortman’s residence, Evans said.
Praetorian Guards Security Services, a home security company, described Boelter on its website as its director of security patrols.
Impersonating law enforcement
In both attacks, authorities believe the assailant impersonated a law enforcement officer.
An image of Boelter released by the FBI showed him wearing what appeared to be a life-like latex mask, potentially an attempt to evade identification.
An anti-Trump rally in Minneapolis — part of the national wave of “No Kings” protests planned for Saturday — was canceled after police issued a shelter-in-place order because of the shootings.
Flyers for the protests were found in the suspect’s car, as well as a manifesto that named numerous politicians and state officials, police said.
Tensions were high across the country, and in Texas authorities said they evacuated the state capitol complex after a “credible threat” towards lawmakers planning to attend a protest there.
In Brooklyn Park, where Hortman lived, authorities lifted a shelter-in-place order Saturday afternoon, saying that while the suspect remained at large, there was “reason to believe he is no longer in the area.”
The United States has been deeply divided since Trump returned to the White House in January.