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Midwest Sports Headlines: 3/1/2019

Sports

March 1st, 2019 by Ric Hanson

Here is the latest Mid-America sports news from The Associated Press

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — When star point guard Nick Norton went down for the year with a knee injury, Drake’s season seemed to be in jeopardy. The Bulldogs responded by making a somewhat startling run at the Missouri Valley Conference title. Drake, picked to finish ninth in the 10-team league, is just one win away from at least a share of the conference crown. The Bulldogs visit Missouri State on Saturday.

ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) — Jon Teske scored a career-high 22 points, and No. 9 Michigan easily rebounded from its loss to Michigan State with an 82-53 victory over Nebraska. The Wolverines were without Charles Matthews, who was out with a right ankle injury, but they raced out to a 22-point halftime lead behind Teske and Iggy Brazdeikis. Michigan lost to rival Michigan State over the weekend.

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Samajae Haynes-Jones scored 20 points and hit a jumper at the buzzer as Wichita State erased a 10-point deficit and beat Connecticut 65-63. UConn’s Alterique Gilbert scored on back-to-back 3-pointers inside the final minute that tied the game at 63. Haynes-Jones took an inbounds pass with 6.4 seconds to go, dribbled the floor and sealed it with an off-balance shot from the corner.

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Johnny McCants had 12 points off the bench to lift New Mexico State to a 75-55 win over UMKC, the Aggies’ 14th consecutive victory. Terrell Brown had 12 points for New Mexico State.

JUPITER, Fla. (AP) — Yadier Molina is likely two weeks from an exhibition game appearance at catcher for the St. Louis Cardinals as the nine-time All-Star recovers from left knee surgery. The 36-year-old started limited catching of bullpen sessions and took batting practice. Molina will appear in games at first as a designated hitter, and manager Mike Shildt is targeting a March 14 game against the New York Mets as Molina’s first behind the plate. Molina is the only catcher on the Cardinals’ 40-man roster.

UNDATED (AP) — The Big 12 is going into March without 14-time defending champion Kansas on top. The Jayhawks still have a chance to extend their title streak. But they are a game behind co-leaders Texas Tech and Kansas State with three regular-season games left. There are no more head-to-head games against that trio. They all split their two-game sets. Texas Tech has a six-game winning streak, including a 29-point home win over Kansas.

Iowa early News Headlines: Friday, March 1st, 2019

News

March 1st, 2019 by Ric Hanson

Here is the latest Iowa news from The Associated Press at 3:35 a.m. CST

EARLVILLE, Iowa (AP) — Authorities say the husband of a woman killed in what was initially believed to be a fatal fall at a northeastern Iowa farm has been charged with her murder. The Delaware County Sheriff’s Office said in a news release Thursday that 42-year-old Todd Michael Mullis had been arrested on a warrant charging him with first-degree murder in the Nov. 10 death of 39-year-old Amy Lynn Mullis. An autopsy shows Amy Mullis was stabbed multiple times in the back with a corn rake.

IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — The state of Iowa settled sexual harassment claims against an agency director for $4.15 million after one victim’s lawyer threatened to sue before the November election and to investigate the harasser’s long association with Gov. Kim Reynolds. Records show Attorney Paige Fiedler backed off her plan to file the lawsuit after a top state lawyer told her Nov. 1 that he had “just got authority this morning” to settle from the governor’s administration. The agreements were negotiated weeks later.

DAVENPORT, Iowa (AP) — An Iowa farm and its managers have been given probation in a water pollution case. Federal prosecutors for Iowa said in a news release that Etcher Family Farms owner Scott Allen Etcher was sentenced Tuesday to five years of probation. Farm manager Benjamin Allen McFarland was sentenced to two years’ probation. Officials say that in July 2015, McFarland _ at the direction of Etcher _ dumped agricultural waste at the New London farm that ended up in Big Creek.

MARSHALLTOWN, Iowa (AP) — Police in central Iowa say no one was hurt when officers executing a search warrant at a Marshalltown home fired their guns. Marshalltown police say in a news release that the incident happened around 10:20 a.m. Thursday when the officers entered the home and encountered an armed man. Neither the man nor the officers were injured, and the man was detained. The two officers who fired their service weapons have been placed on paid administrative leave.

2 Marshalltown officers fire weapons serving search warrant

News

February 28th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

MARSHALLTOWN, Iowa (AP) — Police in central Iowa say no one was hurt when officers executing a search warrant at a Marshalltown home fired their guns.

Marshalltown police say in a news release that the incident happened around 10:20 a.m. Thursday when the officers entered the home and encountered an armed man.
Neither the man nor the officers were injured, and the man was detained. The two officers who fired their service weapons have been placed on paid administrative leave, per department policy, while an investigation into the shooting is conducted.

Police say the Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation will conduct that investigation.
The officers’ names have not been released.

Probation sentences handed down in Iowa ag pollution case

Ag/Outdoor, News

February 28th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

DAVENPORT, Iowa (AP) — An Iowa farm and its managers have been given probation in a water pollution case. Federal prosecutors for Iowa said in a news release Thursday that Etcher Family Farms, near New London in southeastern Iowa, has agreed to five years of organizational probation and a $50,000 fine.

Farm owner Scott Allen Etcher was sentenced Tuesday to five years of probation. Farm manager, 29-year-old Benjamin Allen McFarland, was sentenced to two years of probation.

Etcher and McFarland pleaded guilty in October to violating the Clean Water Act. Officials say that in July 2015 at the Etcher Family Farms facility, McFarland discharged agricultural waste that went directly into an unnamed tributary to Big Creek. Officials say the discharge was committed under the direct supervision of Etcher.

Husband arrested in death of woman killed at Iowa farm

News

February 28th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

EARLVILLE, Iowa (AP) — Authorities say the husband of a woman killed in what was initially believed to be a fatal fall at a northeastern Iowa farm has been charged with her murder.

The Delaware County Sheriff’s Office said in a news release Thursday that 42-year-old Todd Michael Mullis had been arrested on a warrant charging him with first-degree murder in the Nov. 10 death of 39-year-old Amy Lynn Mullis.

The department says an autopsy showed that Amy Mullis died after receiving injuries that included multiple stab wounds to her back with a corn rake. Mullis was arrested without incident on Thursday and remains jailed without bail.

2-for-1: Sen. Ernst on proposed gun control, wasteful spending

News

February 28th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — U-S Senator Joni Ernst doesn’t put much faith in gun control legislation which passed the U-S House on Wednesday ever seeing the light of day in the Senate. The bill would require background checks for virtually all sales of firearms nationwide. Ernst, a Republican from Red Oak, questions the intent of the legislation, which was pushed through the Democratic-majority House.

“I don’t know that that one will be coming up,” Ernst says. “We should go back and, of course, scrutinize the text of the language and what we are trying to accomplish.” Under current law, background checks only have to be done by licensed gun dealers, not those who are unlicensed.

The House bill would require background checks by both. Ernst served in the Iowa Army National Guard for 22 years and is the first female combat veteran elected to the U-S Senate. Ernst remains skeptical of the first gun control legislation to pass the House in more than two decades. “We certainly want to make sure that we are protecting our Second Amendment rights,” Ernst says. “I’ll be honest, it’s a House bill right now. I have not had the time to go back and read the text.”

Iowa Congressman Steve King, a Republican, voted against what he called “a resolution that seeks to place unconstitutional restrictions on the God-given, 2nd Amendment Right to Bear Arms enshrined for all Americans in our Constitution.”

King urged President Trump to veto the bill, should it reach his desk. Iowa Congresswoman Abby Finkenauer, a Democrat, voted for the Background Checks Act of 2019. In a statement, Finkenauer said: “It’s long past time Congress came together to pass a bipartisan bill addressing gun violence.”

Iowa Senator Chuck Grassley criticized the Pentagon last year for spending ten-thousand dollars on a toilet seat. Now, Iowa’s other U-S senator is sponsoring legislation she says targets scores of other incidents of excessively wasteful spending. Senator Joni Ernst is blasting California’s “bullet train” project, which Ernst says is 13 years behind schedule and 44-billion dollars over its original price tag.

“Hard-working Iowans should not be footing the bill for this out-of-control spending,” Ernst says. “That’s why I’ve introduced the Billion-Dollar Boondoggle Act which would require an annual report to taxpayers listing every government-funded project that is one-billion dollars or more over budget, or five years or more behind schedule.” Ernst calls the bullet train project “infamous,” and says her legislation is vital to ending such cases where federal funds are being wasted on a massive scale.

“My bill will bring about needed accountability and transparency,” Ernst says. “It will allow us to identify train wrecks, like the disastrous California rail project, before they become bottomless pits of taxpayer dollars.” Planners say the high-speed train project will eventually carry passengers from Los Angeles to San Francisco in about two-and-a-half hours. The original cost was estimated at 35-billion dollars. The latest projections by the High-Speed Rail Authority show it in excess of 77-billion.

Bill seeks uniform academic suspension policies in Iowa schools

News

February 28th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — Iowa legislators may get involved in a dispute over how long an Iowa high school student may be suspended from extracurricular activities for academic reasons. Senator Jake Chapman of Adel says one central Iowa student was barred from athletics for 30 days, then had to sit out of drama for the NEXT 30 days.

“Really, the student was double penalized,” Chapman says. Chapman says a suspension because a student is failing in the classroom should last 30 days — for all activities. “It’s not just one case. There’s been several cases of this occurring,” Chapman says. “Obviously we want our students to excel in academics, but we also want them to excel in extracurricular activities and because there’s no clarity, they’re getting double-penalized.”

Chapman says the bill directs the Iowa Girls High School Athletic Union and the Iowa High School Association, which oversees boys sports, to develop a policy that does NOT impose “multiple periods of ineligibility.”

“We’ve met with the different stakeholder groups and they thought this language was appropriate to sit down together and come up with that policy,” Chapman says. The School Administrators of Iowa is the only group registered as opposed to the bill. A spokesman for the group says local school boards and administrators should make the call on what suspension policies should be in their districts.

Pre-election lawsuit threat led to Iowa payout

News

February 28th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — The state of Iowa accelerated an unprecedented $4.15 million settlement with two sexual harassment victims after a lawyer for one of them threatened a lawsuit just days before the election that would dig into Gov. Kim Reynolds’ longtime association with the agency director who harassed them, according to emails obtained by The Associated Press.

Attorney Paige Fiedler backed off her plan to file the lawsuit after a state lawyer told her that he “just got authority this morning” from the governor’s administration to settle the case, the emails show. The exchange came shortly before the Nov. 6 midterm election, which featured a close race between the Republican governor and a Democratic challenger.

Reynolds won the election. Within weeks, her administration backed the $4.15 million payout to two subordinates of former Iowa Finance Authority Director Dave Jamison, a Reynolds ally who had sexually harassed the women for years. The deals included $785,569 in legal fees for Fiedler’s firm — nearly 40 times as much as the other woman’s attorney received.

The payouts were formally approved by a state board this month before any lawsuits were filed — a break from normal practice — and came from a fund used to support affordable housing developments. State Auditor Rob Sand has criticized the deals, saying taxpayers shouldn’t have to foot the bill for Jamison’s misconduct.

In an Oct. 1 letter, Fiedler demanded the state pay $2.6 million to settle with her client, Beth Ann Mahaffey, who left her job at the finance authority after complaining about Jamison. Fiedler told Solicitor General Jeff Thompson that the offer was good until Nov. 4 — two days before the election in which voters would decide a tight race between Reynolds and Democrat Fred Hubbell.

Fiedler told AP that she picked that deadline because she worried Hubbell would be less likely to settle if he won since the scandal happened on Reynolds’ watch. Her client actually had until Dec. 4 to sue under a legal deadline for her claims.

The office of Attorney General Tom Miller denied any political motive in the settlements, saying it recommended them after an independent investigation detailed Jamison’s harassment. Governor’s office spokesman Pat Garrett called the settlements “in the best interest of the state of Iowa, of taxpayers, and more importantly the victims.”

Fiedler warned in the letter that without a settlement, she would conduct “extensive discovery” into Reynolds’ friendship with Jamison dating to when they were county officials in the 1990s. Reynolds called Jamison a family friend whom she knew as a heavy-drinking partier with an odd sense of humor but has denied knowledge of his misconduct. The discovery process includes depositions in which witnesses are questioned under oath and demands for documents.

Fiedler wrote that Reynolds’ claim that she was never saw Jamison act inappropriately “strains credulity.” She warned that if Reynolds had any knowledge of Jamison’s behavior, the state would be liable because it failed to take steps to prevent his harassment. Reynolds fired Jamison last March after the women complained to the governor’s office. An investigation found that Jamison grabbed groped one employee in public, played a pornographic video on his phone in front of her, and constantly made sexual remarks.

The investigation found that employees may not have complained earlier because Jamison bragged about his ties to the governor. Fiedler emailed Thompson Nov. 1, saying she planned to file Mahaffey’s lawsuit the next day because she hadn’t heard from him about the settlement demand. The two later negotiated a $2.35 million settlement on Nov. 23. The state reached a similar agreement with authority employee Ashley Jared for $1.8 million.

Jared’s deal included $20,000 for her attorney, Melissa Schilling, about 2.5 percent of what Fiedler received. The divergent legal fees reflect the different agreements the women had with their attorneys.

DONNA JOYCE [Jackson] WADSWORTH, 76, of Stuart (No services planned)

Obituaries

February 28th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

DONNA JOYCE [Jackson] WADSWORTH, 76, of Stuart, died Feb. 17th, at home. Per her wishes, cremation has taken place, and no services are planned for DONNA WADSWORTH. Johnson Family Funeral Home in Stuart handled the arrangements.

DONNA [Jackson] WADSWORTH is survived by:

Her daughters – Cheryl O’Hara and Linda Rector

Her son – Dan O’Hara.

Her sisters – Peggy and Susan

2 grandchildren, 3 great-grandchildren,other relatives and friends.

Page County Woman Sentenced for Drug and Gun Offenses

News

February 28th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

COUNCIL BLUFFS, Iowa – A Page County woman was sentenced Wednesday in Council Bluffs, to serve 66-months (5-1/2 years) in prison plus three-years of Supervised release, for drug-related offenses. The U-S Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Iowa reports 28-year old Devon Miller, had been charged with possession with intent to distribute a controlled substances namely, Oxycodone, Adderall, and Hydrocodone, while in possession of a firearm.

On July 14, 2017, a Mills County Sheriff’s Deputy conducted a traffic stop on a car driven by Miller. Miller did not have a driver’s license and provided a false name. Subsequent to her arrest, a search of the car located over 100 different pills, all of which were controlled substances. Located with the pills was a loaded .45 caliber handgun.

An Investigation by the Iowa Division of Narcotics Enforcement found Miller was selling the pills in Southwest Iowa. The case was investigated by the Mills County Sheriff’s Office, Taylor County Sheriff’s Office and Iowa Division of Narcotics Enforcement. The case was prosecuted by the United States Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Iowa