Minneapolis-area BLM organizer, Cities Church invader and St. Paul School Board Clerk Chauntyll Allen has suggested urinating on the corpses of White people buried at Christian cemeteries.
On June 21st, following a Minneapolis Park Board 8-1 vote closing Minnehaha, a popular Minneapolis off-leash dog park, Allen posted the following on the Facebook group, “We love our dog park: Minnehaha:”
“I don’t get why we don’t just make dog parks at White Christian cemeteries if white Christians are ok with it? This is a simple fix. Leave indigenous land sacred and piss on the white corpses.”
When asked by another Facebook user, Clark Hoelscher, if there was any good park space near her home, Allen doubled down on her comment:
“There’s some cemeteries on Rice street”
Responding to Allen’s statement on her ideal location for dog parks, Minnesota director for Moms for America Amanda Hughes criticized Allen’s conduct in light of her position on the St. Paul School Board in an X post:
“A Cemetery is a place of remembrance, mourning, and respect. Every grave, regardless of the race, ethnicity, or background of the person buried there, should be treated with dignity
“Public officials, especially school board members, should be working to unite communities, model respect, and set a positive example for the next generation—not inflame racial division.”
The land adjacent to the park has been recognized as a sacred site for the Dakota tribe for centuries due to its position and nearby cold spring, according to the National Parks Service. Its historical significance increased during the U.S.-Dakota war of 1862, when it became the site of a camp in which members of the Dakota tribe were held by U.S. forces, many dying there in the cold winter, according to Maggie Lorenz, a member of the Native American Advisory Council to the Minneapolis Park Board. This consideration eventually led to the planned closure of the park.
This is not Allen’s first confrontation with conservatives. Last January, Allen was one of three leaders arrested for her efforts organizing the intrusion at Cities Church in St. Paul, of which one of the pastors, David Easterwood, is also the St. Paul ICE field director.
On TMZ, defending the invasion of the church while services were being held, Allen argued that “that’s what needed to be done to get the message across” and classified the intruders as merely “going into a space to educate.”
She also accused ICE agents of terrorism and said she could not tolerate an ICE leader serving as pastor:
“You have these people in our community just terrorizing, terrorizing our children and our women and our different immigrant communities.”
....
“And then we have the head of this whole operation standing in a pulpit preaching to a congregation every Sunday morning. And so that was really just not okay for us.”
Chauntyll Allen was elected to the St. Paul School Board in 2020 and is up for reelection in 2028. The St. Paul City Republican Party on X.com recommended that journalist Jenna Gloeb question incumbents up for election this year on the issue of Allen still being on the board, despite her involvement organizing the intrusion of Cities Church:
“[Gloeb] Should corner the incumbents seeking re-election to the ISD 625 School Board. There are 3 school board seats on the November's ballot. Chauntyll Allen clearly violated the Code of Ethics of the Board in the attack on City Church. Board members not seeking to remove her is damning”
CNSNews covered two stories last month on the Cites Church intrusion, one on City Attorney Irene Kao refusing to prosecute the intruders for city crimes and another on the city attorney and other city attorneys in the state suing DHS and officials, including Pastor Easterwood, who also leads the regional ICE field office.