Term Limits-Signatures
North Dakota term-limit backers submit signatures
BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) — A change to the state constitution that would place term limits on the governor and members of the Legislature is a step closer to bringing the issue before voters. Secretary of State Al Jaeger said Tuesday that backers submitted about 46,000 signatures, or more than the 31,164 signatures needed to put the measure to voters in November. Jaeger has 35 days to review the signatures. The initiative would add a new article to the state constitution imposing term limits of eight cumulative years each in the House and Senate. The governor could not be elected more than twice.
BC-ND-ELECTION 2022-NORTH DAKOTA-SENATE
Fargo art, antiques dealer, a Democrat, runs for US Senate
BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) — A Fargo art and antiques dealer is running for U.S. Senate, saying North Dakota needs Democratic representation in Washington, D.C. Michael Steele says he a started his campaign four years ago in an effort to unseat Sen. John Hoeven. Campaign finance records show Steele has raised about $2,000 since then. A state party spokeswoman says she had not heard of Steele until this week. Democrat Katrina Christiansen, an engineering professor at the University of Jamestown, announced her bid for U.S. Senate on Monday. The Democratic state convention is next month in Minot. Delegates will endorse candidates for state and congressional offices.
BAKKEN OIL-FUTURE
Oil company leaders describe Bakken oil patch as ‘mature’
BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) — The Bakken’s oil boom appears to be in the rear view mirror. North Dakota Mineral Resources Director Lynn Helms say a word he heard many times when he met in Texas with executives from 10 oil companies with wells in the Bakken is “mature” in describing the state’s oil patch. Helm says the Bakken has been rebranded. He says U.S. oil producers are more focused on growing their operations in the Permian Basin of Texas and New Mexico. Helms says while North Dakota could still see small annual production increases, drilling is expected to taper off in about a decade.
MURDER CONSPIRACY-SENTENCE
Man gets at least 21 years in prison for murder conspiracy
BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) — A Canadian man has been sentenced to serve at least 21 years in prison for plotting the death of a Bismarck man in what authorities say was a love triangle that involved a life insurance policy. Forty-three-year-old Earl Howard earlier reached an agreement with prosecutors and pleaded guilty to four felonies in the death of Chad Entzel. The body of the 42-year-old victim was found Jan. 2, 2020 after a house fire northeast of Bismarck. Authorities say Entzel died of gunshot wounds to the head. Investigators say Nikkisue Entzel and Howard were in a romantic relationship and that she took out a $26,000 life insurance policy on her husband in the days before his death.
VIRUS-OUTBREAK-PROTESTS-NORTH DAKOTA
North Dakota’s busiest border crossing slowed by protest
BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) — The busiest U.S.-Canada border in North Dakota remained open Monday but continued to be blocked on the Canadian side by demonstrators angry over the country’s COVID-19 restrictions. Officials say since the protest began Thursday, traffic has slowed from up to 900 trucks daily to near nothing between Emerson, Manitoba, and Pembina, North Dakota. Demonstrators were blocking lanes of the highway with semitrailers and farm equipment in Canada but they were allowing some trucks hauling livestock to pass through into the U.S.. Drivers of a few smaller vehicles also have made their way around the blockade.
AP-US-TRIBAL-JAILS-DEATH-INVESTIGATIONS
US announces tribal lockup reforms after 16 deaths reviewed
FLAGSTAFF, Ariz. (AP) — The U.S. Bureau of Indian Affairs has announced a series of reforms after reviewing the deaths of 16 inmates in correctional facilities it oversees. The agency did not publicly release the details of its review, making it difficult to gauge what prompted the reforms that it says will protect the rights, dignity and safety of tribal members taken into custody. The reforms include policy changes to quicken the response to in-custody deaths and regular updates to the the bureau’s Office of Justice Services. Other reforms focus on training and working with other federal agencies to define the roles of investigators.
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