North Dakota
Investigation into North Dakota AG building, emails referred to county state's attorney
A Montana investigation into an over-budget building project and deleted emails of former Attorney General Wayne Stenehjem was referred to a state’s attorney after a string of failed attempts to get a prosecutor on board, Attorney General Drew Wrigley confirmed Wednesday, Jan. 10.
The handoff, made on Friday, Jan. 5 to Mountrail County State’s Attorney Wade Enget, marks the latest step in a yearslong search for answers on the two matters.
Enget said Wednesday he was not familiar with the case and was still waiting on materials to arrive in the mail.
“I have no idea what’s involved in it,” he said. “I just said that I would take a look at it.”
Under Stenehjem, the Attorney General’s Office leased and renovated new office space in a series of business deals linked to Rep. Jason Dockter, a Bismarck Republican. The project exceeded anticipated costs by more than $1.7 million.
Stenehjem died in January 2022. Immediately after his death, Liz Brocker, his executive assistant, directed IT staff to erase the former attorney general’s email account. Brocker has said the request was at the direction of Troy Seibel, Stenehjem’s chief deputy, according to the Montana investigation.
After Seibel resigned that March, some of Seibel’s emails were permanently wiped, too, at the direction of Brocker.
The deletion of Stenehjem’s emails became publicly known after media open records requests related to the building project.
The building lease and deleted emails prompted repeated calls for further inquiry.
The purpose of the investigation by the Montana Division of Criminal Investigation — which culminated in a 131-page report made public in September — was to straighten out the facts of the case. It didn’t take a stance on whether any criminal activity may have occurred; rather, it’s up to Enget’s office to decide whether to bring charges based on the report’s findings.
The investigation would normally fall under the jurisdiction of the Burleigh County State’s Attorney’s Office, but Brocker now works there.
The Montana investigator, Don Guiberson, told lawmakers in a December meeting his probe was limited in scope due to a lack of subpoena power.
Lawyer previously referred the Montana investigation to prosecutors in Morton and Grand Forks counties, but both declined.
The Montana investigation is separate from an inquiry by the Ethics Commission into Dockter. The Ethics Commission probe led to a misdemeanor charge that accuses Dockter of voting to support funding for a property in which he had a financial interest, court records show. Dockter has pleaded not guilty to the charge. His attorney declined to comment.
This story was originally published on NorthDakotaMonitor.com.
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North Dakota
North Dakota U.S Rep. Julie Fedorchak announces reelection campaign
North Dakota
Letter: Why do North Dakota Republican politicians fear ethics?
Ethics is a system of moral principles guiding behavior, defining what’s right, wrong, fair, and good for individuals and society, essentially asking, “What should we do?”
A commission is a group of people officially charged with a particular function.
The citizens of North Dakota voted for and passed an Ethics Commission measure. The Ethics Commission has infuriated the North Dakota Republican legislators and North Dakota government in general. (NOTE: Every elected state government official in North Dakota is Republican.) They have denied that any monitoring of ethics is needed.
North Dakota Republicans have done everything possible to make sure the Ethics Commission has virtually no teeth, no say, and remains invisible under constant attack by the Attorney General’s Office.
Why do Go. Armstrong, Attorney General Wrigley and the Republican members of the North Dakota Legislature fear ethics?
Henry Lebak lives in Bismarck.
North Dakota
Markhi Strickland has 15 as North Dakota State defeats Oral Roberts 79-77 in double OT
FARGO, N.D. (AP) — Markhi Strickland had 15 points in North Dakota State’s 79-77 double overtime victory over Oral Roberts on Saturday.
Strickland also contributed five rebounds for the Bison (12-5, 2-0 Summit League). Trevian Carson added 14 points while going 6 of 10 (2 for 3 from 3-point range) and eight rebounds. Damari Wheeler-Thomas finished with 14 points, while adding six rebounds.
Yuto Yamanouchi-Williams led the way for the Golden Eagles (5-12, 0-2) with 19 points, five rebounds and two blocks. Connor Dow added 15 points and two steals for Oral Roberts. Ofri Naveh also put up 14 points.
A foul sent Wheeler-Thomas to the line with seven seconds to play, where he sank one of the shots to send the game to overtime. Jack Turner tipped in a shot for Oral Roberts to send the game to a second overtime. Noah Feddersen tipped in a shot for North Dakota state with one second to play for the win for the Bison.
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The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.
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