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Bill seeks crackdown on ‘sanctuary’ policies for undocumented immigrants

News

March 3rd, 2017 by Ric Hanson

A bill now eligible for debate in the Iowa Senate would bar Iowa cities and counties as well as public schools and colleges from having “any policy that discourages enforcement of federal immigration law.” The Des Moines School Board recently adopted a policy that requires immigration officials to first contact the superintendent if they want to speak to someone on school grounds.

Immigrants and their advocates crowded into a statehouse hearing on the bill yesterday, watching as Republican Senator Julian Garrrett of Indianola questioned Des Moines School Board member Rob Barron. “Do you recognize that the federal government has jurisdiction in this area over immigration law?” Garrett asked. Barron responded: “There’s not a single person in this room that believes that the federal immigration policy is right. What law enforcement asks for is not always appropriate or right or legal.”

The bill also would make officials in Iowa cities and counties liable if they fail to detain someone federal officials suspect is in the country illegally — and that person commits a felony within the next decade.

A bill that cleared a committee in the Iowa HOUSE about a month ago would deny state funds to any city, county, community college or public university with policies that seek to “restrict or limit” enforcement of federal immigration laws.

(Radio Iowa)

Death penalty bill stalls in Iowa Senate

News

March 3rd, 2017 by Ric Hanson

The lead sponsor of legislation that would have reinstated the death penalty in Iowa says scheduling conflicts have doomed the bill and it will not be considered again THIS year. Republican Jerry Behn of Boone has been trying to reinstate capital punishment in Iowa since he was first elected to the senate in 1996. “I’m hoping we can get it taken back up next year,” Behn says.

Behn’s bill ONLY would have allowed a death sentence when someone was convicted of kidnapping, rape and then the murder of the victim. “This is an effort to appease some of those who thought, basically, that the death penalty was inappropriate at any time,” Behn said. “After some of the horrific murders that have occurred, I said maybe we can get a consensus to get something back on the books again.”

Behn says he’s especially troubled by the life sentence given to the man convicted of the brutal 2005 death of a 10-year-old Cedar Rapids girl who was kidnapped, raped and murdered. Jetseta Gage’s mother had planned to travel to Des Moines Thursday afternoon to testify for Behn’s bill. However, the senate schedule was chaotic Thursday, as senators rushed to find meeting rooms and take committee votes on dozens of bills. The room in which debate on the death penalty bill was to occur was double-booked. Connie Ryan of the Interfaith Alliance of Iowa was in the hallway outside that room.

“We had a line-up of people of faith and civil rights advocates and other folks who were prepared to speak and say that Iowa should not ever be a death penalty state,” Ryan says. With D-N-A evidence exonerating some death row inmates and officials in other states struggling to find the right drugs to administer lethal injections, Ryan says it would have been “surprising” to see Iowa reinstate capital punishment.

“States were not getting it right…We know as a nation we’re having these conversation and really questioning whether states across the nation should be doing this,” Ryan says. “…It was disappointing to see the bill, but we’re very grateful that the conversation has stopped for the moment, at least.”

Four other Republicans serving in the senate co-sponsored the bill with Behn. He believes that’s the most support he’s seen for reinstating the death penalty in the past two decades. “I would truly like to believe we’d never have to use it. To say that I am a proponent…that’s not really accurate. I would just as soon nobody ever had to use it,” Behn says. “I just think it needs to be a toolbox that’s available.”

Iowa outlawed capital punishment in 1965. Three decades later, in 1995, the Iowa Senate overwhelmingly rejected a bill that would have reinstated the death penalty. Only 11 of the 50 senators voted for it.

(Radio Iowa)

Iowa early News Headlines: Friday, March 3rd, 2017

News

March 3rd, 2017 by Ric Hanson

Here is the latest Iowa news from The Associated Press at 3:50 a.m. CST

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — A Senate committee in the Iowa Legislature has approved a bill that would ban most abortions in the state after 20 weeks of pregnancy. The Senate Human Resources Committee voted 9-3 in support of the measure. It’s now available for debate on the Senate floor. The legislation advanced beyond a legislative procedural deadline this week that stopped a separate personhood bill from moving forward.

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — An Iowa lawmaker says he didn’t mean to mislead anyone by approving a state government website posting claiming he has a business degree from an organization that actually offered a training program for a Sizzler restaurant franchise. Sen. Mark Chelgren’s biography on an Iowa Senate Republican website had noted he had a business management degree from Forbco Management school. The information was removed Wednesday after reports Forbco Management is a company that operated a Sizzler franchise.

CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa (AP) — A judge has ordered a 15-year prison term for a Rwandan man who lied to gain entry into the U.S. after helping carry out deadly attacks during his country’s 1994 genocide. U.S. District Judge Linda Reade says that Gervais Ngombwa was “an active participant, indeed a leader” of the genocide, in which more than 800,000 Tutsis and moderate Hutus were killed.

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Iowa Secretary of State Paul Pate says the Libertarian Party has obtained official political party status in Iowa. Pate says the status began effective Wednesday after state election officials determined that the party’s presidential nominee, Gary Johnson, received 59,186 votes _ or 3.8 percent of the vote in the November general election. That surpassed the 2 percent threshold required by Iowa law to obtain official political party status.

No. 22 Drake women win 18th in row despite 46 from Fruendt

Sports

March 2nd, 2017 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Becca Hittner scored 22 points and Lizzy Wendell 21 and No. 22 Drake extended its school-record winning streak to 18 games, beating Missouri State 98-91 on Thursday despite a 46-point performance from the Lady Bears’ Liza Fruendt.

Brenni Rose added 16 points as six Bulldogs scored in double figures. Drake (24-0, 17-0) will seek to become the first Missouri Valley Conference team to go undefeated in regular-season MVC play when it takes on Wichita State on Saturday.

Drake led from early on and was up by 22 midway through the second quarter. Missouri State (16-12, 12-5) went on a 10-0 run to get within one, 52-51, with 7:27 left in the third quarter. The Bulldogs clung to their lead, finally putting the game away by making 8 of 8 free throws in the final minute.

Fruendt’s 46 points are the fifth-most in school history. She was 17-of-31 shooting, 6 of 16 from the arc and made 6 of 7 free throws.

Late 3 gives Iowa win over mistake-prone No. 11 Wisconsin

Sports

March 2nd, 2017 by Ric Hanson

MADISON, Wis. (AP) — Jordan Bohannon hit the game-winning 3-pointer with 9 seconds left, and Iowa capitalized on No. 22 Wisconsin’s sloppy final few minutes with a 7-0 run to beat the Badgers 59-57 on Thursday night.

After Ethan Happ missed two free throws that could have sealed the win for Wisconsin, Iowa’s Peter Jok missed a jumper in the lane. But Cordell Pemsl corralled the offensive rebound and Bohannon hit the 3 from the left wing, stunning the crowd at the Kohl Center after Wisconsin led by nine with 4:15 left.

The Hawkeyes (17-13, 9-8 Big Ten) have won two straight road games as they try to improve their postseason resume.

The Badgers (22-8, 11-6) lost their third straight game, going scoreless for the final 3:12. Iowa forced turnovers on consecutive Wisconsin inbounds passes in that stretch, converting each mistake into baskets to set up Bohannon’s game-winner. Bohannon finished with 11 points. Bronson Koenig led the Badgers with 19 points.

Girls State Basketball Scoreboard 03/02/2017

Sports

March 2nd, 2017 by Jim Field

Class 1A Semifinals

Springville 61, Kingsley-Pierson 43
Turkey Valley 48, Exira/Elk Horn-Kimballton 44 (OT)

Class 2A Semifinals

Western Christian 71, Iowa City Regina 49
Treynor 43, Cascade 41

Class 3A Semifinals

Sioux Center 81, Cherokee 56
Pocahontas Area-LM 80, Center Point-Urbana 59

Spartans fall short against Turkey Valley in OT

Sports

March 2nd, 2017 by Jim Field

The rematch is set in Class 1A. For the second straight year, it’s Springville against Turkey Valley for the state championship.

Second-ranked Turkey Valley completed that pairing by pulling out a 48-46 overtime victory over Exira/Elk Horn-Kimballton. The Trojans will take a 23-2 record against No. 1 Springville at 6 p.m.

Springville edged Turkey Valley 48-47 in last year’s title game and beat the Trojans 40-27 earlier this season. The Orioles advanced with a 61-43 victory over Kingsley-Pierson.

Elli Winter and Kayla Gebel led Turkey Valley with 13 points each. Gebel scored 11 of her points in the second half, including three key buckets in the third quarter to bring the Trojans back with a seven-point halftime deficit. Winter grabbed 10 rebounds to finish with a double-double.

Shelby Reicks added 10 points, six steals and four assists for Turkey Valley, including two free throws that broke the game’s final tie. Morgen Kuennen scored eight for the Trojans.

Exira/EHK got most of its scoring from its strong inside duo of Sophia Peppers and Kealey Nelson. Peppers finished with 21 points and 10 rebounds, while Nelson had 12 points and 11 rebounds. The two were especially strong on the offensive boards, helping the Spartans put up 18 second-chance points.

Peppers scored on a putback to tie it at 42-all with 18 seconds left in regulation, then blocked a shot at the other end to force overtime.

Her two free throws tied it at 44 with 2:33 left in the extra session, but Reicks was fouled 11 seconds later and made both shots for a 46-44 lead. Three turnovers hurt the Spartans in the final two minutes and Gebel sank two free throws for the final points.

Exira/Elk Horn-Kimballton played at state for the third straight year and finishes 24-2.

LOIS SIBENALLER, 84, of Earling (Svcs. 03/04/2017)

Obituaries

March 2nd, 2017 by Jim Field

LOIS SIBENALLER, 84, of Earling died Wednesday, March 1st at Methodist Jennie Edmundson Hospital in Council Bluffs. A Mass of Christian Burial for LOIS SIBENALLER will be held Saturday, March 4th at 2:00pm at St. Joseph’s Catholic Church in Earling. Pauley-Jones Funeral Home in Harlan has the arrangements.

Visitation will be held Friday, March 3rd from 5:00pm-8:00pm at St. Joseph’s Catholic Church in Earling.  Family will greet friends from 6:00pm-8:00pm at St. Joseph’s Catholic Church in Earling with a Catholic Daughters Rosary at 7:00pm.

Burial will be in the St. Joseph’s Cemetery in Earling.

LOIS SIBENALLER is survived by:

Daughters: Kay (Tom) Schechinger, of Westphalia, and Rhonda (Frank) Powers of Defiance, Tammy (Toby) Hastert of Westphalia.

Son: Perry (Susie) Sibenaller of Overland Park, KS.

Brother: Darryl (Janet) Brinker of Champlin, MN.

Sisters: Jerrine Brinker of Weston, WI. Mary Jo Brinker of Weston, WI.

Sisters-in-law: Angie Brinker of Carroll, IA. Gayle Brinker of Santa Rosa, CA.

10 Grandchildren

5 Great-Grandchildren

Commissioner appoints top aide as chief of Iowa State Patrol

News

March 2nd, 2017 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Public Safety Commissioner Roxann Ryan is appointing her top aide to be the new chief of the Iowa State Patrol. Ryan announced Thursday that her executive officer, Jeff Ritzman, will be the patrol’s next colonel effective immediately. He replaces Michael Van Berkum, whose retirement takes effect Friday.

Ryan says in a note to troopers that Ritzman “is the right person for the job at this point in time.” She says Ritzman’s experience makes him “uniquely qualified” to address challenges in law enforcement and lead the force during a time of tight budgets.

Ritzman joined the Department of Public Safety as a trooper in 1982 and has served in several roles, including homeland security coordinator in the intelligence-gathering Fusion Center. Ryan also announced that she was appointing Lt. Randy Olmstead to replace Ritzman as executive officer.

Personhood bill fails deadline to move ahead in Iowa

News

March 2nd, 2017 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — A legislative effort by Iowa Republicans to outlaw abortion in the state has failed to advance past a legislative procedural deadline. The so-called personhood bill was kept off the agenda of a Senate Judiciary Committee meeting Thursday. The committee needed to vote on the measure for it to survive a deadline that requires certain legislative action on policy bills.

Republican Sen. Brad Zaun, committee chairman and co-sponsor of the bill, says he didn’t have enough votes to advance the legislation. Anti-abortion rights groups had rallied around the personhood bill this session amid new GOP control of the Legislature.

Republican lawmakers are still considering a separate bill that would ban most abortions after 20 weeks of pregnancy. A House committee was meeting Thursday to vote on that bill.