A relative of the 19-year-old woman critically injured outside the Minnesota State Fair says it’s a miracle she’s alive.

A driver struck Dynasty Scott at Snelling Avenue and Fair Place just after the Fair closed at 10 p.m. Monday. Police are investigating the crash, along with shootings that happened soon after and injured three young men.

Dynasty Scott is seven weeks pregnant and “it’s just amazing how she and the baby” are still here, said Anarah Scott, the woman’s sister. “She’s definitely a fighter.”

Paramedics took Scott, of St. Paul, to Regions Hospital.

Anarah Scott has been with her sister at the hospital, though she wasn’t there when Dynasty was injured and she said she doesn’t know what happened.

Scott was hurt after she got into a vehicle that was in the northbound lane of Snelling Avenue, closest to the center line. She then exited the vehicle on the right side, into the other lane of traffic, and a 39-year-old man driving a sport-utility vehicle struck her, said Steve Linders, a St. Paul police spokesman.

Police said the driver is cooperating with the investigation. “It does not look at this point that there was anything criminal,” Linders said Tuesday.

WOUNDED MAN WAS ALSO SHOT EARLIER IN SUMMER

Soon after the crash, officers were blocking traffic across from the Fair’s main gates at Snelling Avenue and Midway Parkway and they heard shots ring out. Shell casings found at the scene came from two types of guns, indicating there were two shooters, Linders said.

“Until we find out who’s responsible for the shootings, we won’t know for sure” whether they were connected to the collision that injured Scott, Linders said. Police received reports about a fight in the area before Scott was struck.

Police have not announced arrests in the shootings and are asking anyone with information or videos from the scene to come forward.

Two 20-year-old men and an 18-year-old were shot and wounded, and treated for non-life threatening injuries. One of them, Roman Gabriel Prescott, 20, was shot earlier this summer and was charged in connection with that case Wednesday.

Prescott, who was shot in the hand on Monday, was shot in the torso at the BP station at Como Avenue and Dale Street on June 17. He told police he was walking through the parking lot “minding his own business when he was shot for no reason,” according to the criminal complaint.

Police found a .380-caliber handgun in bushes north of where Prescott was sitting and eight spent .380 casings in the parking lot area. Officers also found three spent 9-mm casings.

Surveillance video showed Prescott retrieve something from his waistband and point it at a vehicle at the gas pumps and then at the fleeing vehicle, the complaint said.

When Prescott was later arrested in a different incident involving shots being fired, police told him the gas station shooting was caught on video and asked if the recovered gun was his. He said he had it for protection, the complaint continued.

Prescott has a prior assault case that prevents him from having firearms, and the Ramsey County attorney’s office charged him Wednesday with possession of a firearm by an ineligible person.