Midwest
North Dakota lawmaker hit with misdemeanor charge in speculation case
- Republican North Dakota state Rep. Jason Dockter has been charged with a misdemeanor over a state-owned building owned by companies he’s tied to.
- While vague, the complaint alleges Dockter voted “on legislative bills appropriating money to pay for property he had acquired a pecuniary interest in.”
- Dockter has pleaded not guilty in the case, and is scheduled to be tried on May 3.
A North Dakota lawmaker faces a misdemeanor charge in connection with a state-leased building he has ownership ties to.
Republican state Rep. Jason Dockter, of Bismarck, was charged last month with speculating or wagering on official action. While the complaint offers few details, it says Dockter broke the law by “voting on legislative bills appropriating money to pay for property he had acquired a pecuniary interest in” and cites testimony from the state Ethics Commission’s executive director.
Prosecutor Ladd Erickson confirmed the charge involves a building leased in 2020 under the late attorney general, Wayne Stenehjem.
JUDGE CALLS FOR NEW NORTH DAKOTA LEGISLATIVE DISTRICT IN WIN FOR TRIBAL ADVOCATES
Dockter is a co-owner of companies that own and renovated the building, which was leased by the attorney general’s office to house divisions of the office. Dockter was friends with Stenehjem, but has said the relationship was not a factor in arranging the lease.
The building incurred a construction cost overrun of over $1 million under Stenehjem, who died in January 2022. Current Attorney General Drew Wrigley disclosed the cost overrun, which was covered by various attorney general funds, in June 2022 — shocking lawmakers, who raised concerns about trust and how the building project was handled.
Republican North Dakota state Rep. Jason Dockter chairs a legislative meeting on Tuesday, Aug. 22, 2023. (AP Photo/Jack Dura, File)
Soon afterward, records requests from the media revealed that Stenehjem’s assistant had directed the deletion of his state government email account days after his death, as well as that of his chief deputy after he resigned months later.
Those deletions added to the public uproar and Stenehjem’s assistant resigned around the time reporters found out.
Wrigley has said his office recouped about $625,000 after reconciling the initial estimate of the overrun with the building owner, but it’s unclear what the final number is.
Wrigley said his office has provided “every bit of information that is available to us and will continue to do the same up ahead. Like everyone else, we await the results of the process playing out.”
The controversy led to new leasing transparency and email retention laws by the Legislature, and also probes by North Dakota’s state auditor and a Montana investigator.
Dockter, who has served in the North Dakota House since 2012 and was reelected in 2022, declined to comment on the charge. A woman who answered the phone at Dockter’s attorney’s office said his attorney is also not commenting on the case.
Dockter has pleaded not guilty in the case and is scheduled for a jury trial on May 3.
The misdemeanor carries a maximum penalty of nearly a year in jail and/or a $3,000 fine.
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Indianapolis, IN
Predicting Indianapolis Colts’ 2026 season record
How many wins will the Colts have in 2026?
Let’s make a way-too-early record prediction for the Indianapolis Colts’ 2026 season.
At this time, we know who the Colts’ opponents will be and where the games will be played, but we do not know the exact order of the schedule — and that can impact the overall difficulty of it, depending on how some games fall.
In addition to that, we don’t exactly know what the Colts’ 2026 roster will look like with the draft and free agency still ahead.
However, while there are always going to be changes to some degree, this team could look somewhat similar to what it did in 2025. One of the reasons that GM Chris Ballard is back is because there is a belief that the Colts’ start to the 2025 season is repeatable and sustainable.
So, with there still being unknowns around what’s ahead for this team, let’s do our best to predict how the upcoming season unfolds.
Indianapolis Colts 2026 record prediction
Final prediction: 10-7
Cleveland, OH
Anti-ICE Protests Erupt Across Northeast Ohio in Organized School Campus Walkouts
CLEVELAND, OH — Students at multiple Northeast Ohio school campuses walked out of classes Thursday afternoon to protest Immigration and Customs Enforcement actions and federal immigration enforcement policies, joining a broader wave of youth‑led demonstrations that began earlier this week.
Walk‑outs at Glenville High School, John Hay High School, the John Marshall Campus, Wickliffe High School, Cleveland School of the Arts, Cleveland Heights–University Heights schools, Facing History New Tech High School and the Garrett Morgan Campus began at or shortly after 2:00 p.m., according to the Cleveland branch of the Party of Socialism and Liberation. Students at Case Western Reserve University participated in a similar walk‑out on Wednesday. The coordinated actions followed national demonstrations tied to opposition to ICE and related enforcement practices.
Organizers and participants framed the actions under messaging that included demands such as “ICE Out of Our Cities” and described the protests as expressions of solidarity with immigrant families amid heightened national focus on immigration enforcement. Many students said they coordinated the walk‑outs through social media and peer networks rather than through formal school channels.
Some participants expressed concern about safety and possible retaliation from law enforcement, particularly when considering marching into busier city corridors or downtown areas. Students at Cleveland School of the Arts discussed avoiding main streets and heavily policed zones as they moved through neighborhoods near school campuses.
Turnout varied by campus, with groups ranging from small clusters of students to larger assemblies leaving class together, gathering outside school buildings and marching short distances nearby. As of Thursday evening, no major incidents, arrests or reported violence had been confirmed in connection with the walk‑outs, and no counter‑protests were reported.
The demonstrations in Northeast Ohio are part of a nationwide pattern of student and worker protests this week, often linked to what participants and some media outlets are calling the “Free America” walk‑out movement. In Cleveland, the student actions followed community rallies and university participation earlier in the week, reflecting sustained momentum.
Organizers indicated that additional actions could follow, though no further dates or locations were formally announced Thursday. School districts had not released consolidated statements addressing the walk‑outs as of Thursday evening.
U.S. Rep. Shontel Brown, D‑Ohio, weighed in on the controversy surrounding federal immigration enforcement on Thursday evening after the protests, saying she voted No this week on a House bill that would have funded U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and U.S. Customs and Border Protection. Brown said in an email to Cleveland 13 News that she believes “every day, ICE and CBP under the Trump Administration are committing new abuses with no accountability, no respect for the law, and no regard for civil rights,” and that she will “not support another cent for agencies that continue to terrorize our communities, commit abuses, and escalate violence.”
Brown criticized the broader funding framework that has increased resources for immigration enforcement, saying the Republican‑backed Reconciliation Bill passed last year gave ICE an additional $75 billion in funding, which she called a “ICE slush fund” that should be repealed in favor of other priorities. She also outlined policy changes she supports, including impeaching ICE leadership, requiring body cameras and proper identification for agents, and barring ICE enforcement from churches and schools, tying her position to what she described as a growing national outcry over enforcement tactics and incidents such as recent confrontations and fatal encounters involving federal agents.
At Cleveland 13 News, we strive to provide accurate, up‑to‑date, and reliable reporting. If you spot an error, omission, or have information that may need updating, please email us at tips@cleveland13news.com. As a community‑driven news network, we appreciate the help of our readers in ensuring the integrity of our reporting.
Illinois
Could Iowa take over Illinois counties? Lawmaker’s bill makes the case
How a bill becomes a law in Iowa
The 2026 Iowa legislative session began Jan. 12. Republicans hold control of the House, Senate and governor’s office for the tenth consecutive year.
An Iowa Republican lawmaker wants to pursue a study on absorbing counties in Illinois, where a secessionist movement has grown fueled by divisions over the Prairie State’s policy direction.
A proposal from Rep. Taylor Collins, R-Mediapolis, House File 2141, would establish an “Iowa-Illinois boundary adjustment committee” to consider whether to move the dividing line between the two states by transferring one or more Illinois counties along the Iowa border to the Hawkeye State.
Collins said the bill would primarily look at all counties that along the Mississippi River.
“As somebody that represents really a district that’s right along the border and along the Mississippi River, I know many folks on both sides of the river, and I know there’s a lot of folks in the high-tax state of Illinois that’s now basically supporting career criminals,” Collins said. “They would love to be Iowa residents, and many of them have taken the steps to actually move to the state of Iowa.”
If advanced, Iowa would follow in the footsteps of Indiana, where Gov. Mike Braun in 2025 signed a law creating a commission to explore the possibility of annexing parts of Illinois. That passed after more than 30 Illinois counties voted on nonbinding referendums to secede from the Democratic-led state of Illinois over differences in policy and political ideology with Chicago.
Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker, a Democrat eyeing a run for the White House in 2028, had called Indiana’s legislation a “stunt.”
“I’ll just say Indiana is a low-wage state that doesn’t protect workers, a state that does not provide health care for people when they’re in need, and so I don’t think it’s attractive for anybody in Illinois where wages are higher where the standard of living is higher, and we do provide health care for people in need,” he said.
This is not the first Iowa proposal looking to take a neighboring state’s counties.
Sen. Mike Bousselot, R-Ankeny, introduced a bill in 2025 proposing to enter into negotiations with Iowa’s northern neighbor and allow Iowa to buy nine southern Minnesota counties. It never received a subcommittee hearing.
Under Collins’ bill, the boundary adjustment study committee would be made up of:
- Six individuals from the state of Iowa who are not lawmakers or appointees of the governor.
- No more than four members of the same political party.
- Five individuals from Illinois appointed under Illinois state law.
The governor would have to notify the Illinois governor when committee members have been appointed and schedule the committee’s first meeting no later than Sept. 1, 2026.
The panel would have to submit a report to legislatures in both states containing its recommendations, including any potential legislation and a summary of its work.
Each state would need to approve new boundary lines. And Congress would ultimately have to approve any changes to the states’ boundaries.
Collins said he had not yet spoken with the Senate to gauge support for his bill.
Asked if the bill would receive consideration in a subcommittee hearing, Rep. Jane Bloomingdale, R-Northwood, who chairs the House State Government Committee, said she had only learned of the bill Jan. 22 and had not yet reviewed it.
Marissa Payne covers the Iowa Statehouse and politics for the Register. Reach her by email at mjpayne@registermedia.com. Follow her on X at @marissajpayne.
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