Dilworth: Derrick Kingbird Booked on Burglary Charge
DILWORTH (trfnews.i234.me) — Derrick Lee Kingbird, 45, was booked into the Clay County Jail on July 2, 2026.
The booking was recorded at 11:09 a.m., according to the information provided.
The Dilworth Police Department was listed as the arresting agency.
The jail information lists one third-degree burglary charge.
Charge Listed in Booking Record
The charge alleges Kingbird entered a building without consent.
It also alleges he intended to steal or commit a felony or gross misdemeanor.
The short booking entry does not identify the building involved.
It does not describe any property that may have been taken.
The entry also provides no estimated property value.
No details were provided about the events leading to the arrest.
The record does not list any officer names.
Minnesota Burglary Law
Minnesota law defines third-degree burglary under Section 609.582, subdivision 3.
The law covers entering a building without consent while intending to steal.
It also covers the intent to commit a felony or gross misdemeanor.
The same law may apply when someone commits such an offense after entering.
Readers can review the full law through the Minnesota Revisor of Statutes.

Case Information Remains Limited
The booking information does not include a court date.
It also does not provide a bail amount or current custody status.
Those details may appear later in court or in updated jail records.
Clay County maintains an online inmate roster for current public information.
The county warns that roster information may change or contain errors.
Minnesota Court Records Online provides access to many public district court records.
A criminal complaint may provide more facts after prosecutors file the case.
That document could describe the alleged entry, location, and intended offense.
Charges Are Allegations
An arrest and jail booking do not prove guilt.
Kingbird is presumed innocent unless proven guilty in court.
The listed charge may change as prosecutors review available evidence.
A judge will address future court matters under Minnesota law.
TRF News will update this report when verified information becomes available.
I’m Chris Harper, reporting for TRF News.