South Bend first baseman Josiah Hartshorn and right-hander Mason McGwire were named to the Futures Game roster.
Iowa
Cubs Minor League Wrap: Aaron Bummer, Liam Hendriks pitch for Iowa
Right-hander Kenten Egbert went back from Triple-A Iowa to High-A South Bend.
Right-hander Eduarniel Núñez, whom the Cubs designated for assignment last week, cleared waivers and was assigned to Iowa.
The Cubs signed third baseman Michael Hallquist from the Milwaukee Milkmen of the independent American Association and assigned him to South Benc.
Everyone lost tonight. That stinks.
The Iowa Cubs were chicken against the Toledo Mud Hens (Tigers), 7-4.
Starter Doug Nikhazy didn’t make it out of the first inning. Nikhazy got pummeled for five runs on two hits and four walks while just retiring one batter. At least that one out was a strikeout.
Aaron Bummer made his Cubs debut in this game, pitching the sixth inning. Bummer faced four batters and retired three of them. The other one hit a solo home run. Bummer did not have a strikeout.
Liam Hendriks made his Cubs debut in the bottom of the seventh. He allowed a single and a walk, but no runs in his one inning of work. Hendriks struck out two.
Left fielder BJ Murray hit his tenth home run of the year with the bases empty in the sixth inning. Murray went 1 for 3 with a walk. He scored twice.
Right fielder Ben Cowles was 3 for 4 with a steal. He singled home Murray in the fourth innning.
Second baseman Owen Miller went 2 for 4 with a double and two steals, one of which was a steal of home as part of a double steal with Cowles. He drove in one with an RBI groundout. Miller also scored one run.
The double steal of second and home.
The Knoxville Smokies got squeezed by the Columbus Clingstones (Braves), 8-3.
Brooks Caple gave the Smokies a good start, but he ended up getting the loss anyways. Caple allowed two runs on three hits over five innings. He walked two and struck out three.
This game 2-1 Columbus until Frankie Scalzo Jr. gave up six runs in the top of the ninth.
Center fielder Andy Garriola hit a two-run home run in the bottom of the ninth, his 17th on the season. Garriola went 1 for 4.
First baseman Edgar Alvarez was a perfect 3 for 3 with two doubles and a walk. He drove in one run.
The South Bend Cubs were dropped by the Beloit Sky Carp (Marlins), 9-8 in ten innings.
Mason McGwire threw the first three innings and surrendered one run on three hits. McGwire struggled with control as he walked three and hit two batters. McGwire struck out two.
After the Cubs failed to score in the top of the tenth, Grayson Moore entered the game, trying to send the game to the 11th inning. Instead, he gave up a walk-off two-out RBI double. Moore’s final line was one run on one hit over two-thirds of an inning. The run was earned—the automatic runner was doubled off of second on a lineout. Moore did not walk anyone but he did hit a batter who turned out to be the winning run.
South Bend blew a 7-1 lead in this game after five-and-a-half innings.
In his affiliated baseball debut, second baseman Michael Hallquist hit a two-run home run in his first at-bat in the second inning. Hallquist went 1 for 4 with a walk and two runs scored.
Catcher Logan Poteet hit his first South Bend home run in the sixth inning with the bases empty. It was Poteet’s 15th overall home run. Poteet went 2 for 4 with a walk. He scored two runs and had two RBI.
DH Jose Escobar connected on a solo home run in the top of the seventh. It was his fourth home run with South Bend and sixth overall. Escobar went 1 for 4 with a walk and two runs scored.
Poteet’s round-tripper.
Jose Escobar really got a hold of this one.
The Myrtle Beach Pelicans were allergic to the Hickory Crawdads (Rangers), 6-2.
David Bracho started, gave up one run in the first, three in the second and two in the third. Bracho’s final line was six runs on seven hits over three innings. He walked three and struck out two.
Yoendris Gonzalez and Anhuar Garcia then each threw three innings of no-run, no-hit baseball. Both of them struck out five. Gonzalez walked one. Garcia hit one batter. It was Garcia’s Myrtle Beach debut.
Catcher Jairo Diaz hit an RBI double in the bottom of the ninth. He was 1 for 4.
Highlights, such as they are.
Iowa
Iowa’s governor and her family on weeklong tour of Iowa tourist sites – Radio Iowa
Governor Kim Reynolds, her husband and five of their grandchildren stopped in Mason City this morning to get a look at the city’s new bike park.
“This is a great example of Destination Iowa funds,” Reynolds said, “I think they received $4.5 million, and the partnerships is how we get things like this done.”
Starting in 2023, Governor Reynolds used federal pandemic relief dollars to create the Destination Iowa program to invest in infrastructure, like airports, and boost locations to attract tourists and new Iowa residents and legislators have provided state tax dollars to continue the program. Reynolds said an Iowa Economic Development Authority survey shows the value of the program. “It really pointed out that when people come here from out of state and if they love the experience, they really are more likely to move here and become a resident,” Reynolds said.
The Reynolds family is making a week long tour around the state, visiting outdoor destinations and attractions to draw attention to the governor’s June 8 executive order that established an Iowa Office of Outdoor Recreation. “It’ll partner with tourism, it’ll really highlight all of the great amenities that we have in this state and really drive people to the state,” Reynolds said.
This is day three of the Reynolds’ family road trip. Yesterday they hiked in the Loess Hills and stopped at the West Bend Grotto. The governor said her grandkids were excited this morning as they drove into Mason City’s new bike park. “The whole Winnebago was full of the wow factor,” Reynolds said. “They were lined up on the windows and they were like pointing stuff out and we about tripped over each trying to get out the door so they could get out there and experience it.”
The Prairie Rock Trails Bike Park features wood boardwalks, jumps, and several single-track routes for riders of varying ages and skill levels. It connects riders to more than 20 miles of trails and 600 acres of scenic parkland.
(By Bob Fisher, KGLO, Mason City)
Iowa
New York Times/Siena Polls in Alaska, Iowa, North Carolina, and Ohio – Siena Research Institute
- Alaska: Sullivan 47% – Peltola 45%
- Iowa: Hinson 48% – Turek 46%
- North Carolina: Cooper 50% – Whatley 43%
- Ohio: Husted 50% – Brown 47%
All Toplines
All Crosstabs
AK Toplines
AK Crosstabs
IA Toplines
IA Crosstabs
NC Toplines
NC Crosstabs
OH Toplines
OH Crosstabs
“The fight for control of the U.S. Senate is on. Republicans hold razor thin leads in Alaska, Iowa and Ohio while in North Carolina, the former governor holds an early 7-point advantage,” according to Siena Research Institute’s Executive Director, Don Levy. “Of the six states we polled, these four as well as Maine and Texas, all except for North Carolina are well within the margin of error.”
Contact Information:
Siena Research Institute Director, Dr. Don Levy is available starting at 8:30 AM ET Wednesday, July 1st, to discuss the findings.
Levy can be reached at (518)-284-3551 or don.levy@reconmr.com to arrange for interviews in person or via phone.
Iowa
Iowa judges take ICE to task over ‘astonishing conduct’ and violations of court orders
CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa (Iowa Capital Dispatch) – Two federal judges in Iowa have sharply criticized government officials for repeatedly violating the law in immigration cases, with one Iowa ICE enforcement officer held in contempt for “astonishing conduct” and willfully violating a court order.
The two cases, each handled by a different federal judge, involve Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials who have moved detainees out of Iowa jails and the court’s jurisdiction while the individuals have pending immigration cases before the court.
The judge in one of the two cases took aim at the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Iowa, saying “the court expects better” of assistant U.S. attorneys who, she said, should be working in the interests of justice. The judge also criticized ICE and the U.S. Department of Homeland Security for what she called their “unprecedented disregard for court orders and continued failure to follow the law.”
In the second case, the chief judge of the Southern District of Iowa referenced ICE’s “record of defying court orders,” and warned the federal government that “noncitizens are not bargaining chips to be shifted from district to district as litigation strategy.”
ICE officer held in contempt
The first of the two Iowa cases involves Pardeep Saini, 22, of Sacramento, California, who was pulled over by Iowa State Patrol Trooper Aaron Taylor in February 2026 along Interstate 80 in Jasper County. Taylor instructed Saini to go to a weigh station where, according to court records, ICE officials were waiting.
At the weigh station, Taylor ticketed Saini for failing to stop at the weigh station prior to being pulled over and turned him over to ICE officials, who arrested him on the grounds that his student visa had been revoked. Saini was then taken to the Polk County Jail and detained.
Saini’s attorney filed a lawsuit in U.S. District Court, seeking his client’s immediate release, and on March 19, 2026, U.S. District Judge Rebecca Goodgame Ebinger ordered the U.S. Department of Justice to show cause as to why Saini was not being illegally detained. At the time, Ebinger also ordered federal officials to refrain from moving Saini out of the Southern District of Iowa while the case was pending.
Without notifying the court, ICE officials then transferred Saini from the Polk County Jail in Iowa to a detention facility in McCook, Nebraska. Court records show that ICE Supervisory Detention and Deportation Officer Quintin Erdman later testified that while there was a general understanding that individuals such as Saini would not be transferred out of a judicial district while their court case was pending, ICE officers didn’t place a hold on those detainees to prevent their removal and instead merely noted the pending case in the detainees’ file.
According to court records, Erdman testified that while ICE Deportation Officer Daniel Archer would have been aware of Saini’s pending court case, Archer nevertheless approved Saini’s transfer to Nebraska on April 1, 2026 — almost two weeks after the court issued its order blocking any such transfer.
Erdman testified he became aware of the violation of the court’s order on April 9 or 10, 2026, and acknowledged that he did not notify the court or consult with the U.S. Attorney’s Office on the issue. Instead, he testified, he twice sought guidance from ICE’s own Office of the Principal Legal Advisor, which advised him both times to keep Saini in Nebraska.
Court records show that Assistant U.S. Attorney Andrew Kahl became aware of the violation when Saini filed court papers indicating his presence at a bond hearing held in Nebraska. On June 11, 2026, two days after learning of the violation, Kahl disclosed to the Judge Ebinger that Saini had been transferred from Iowa to Nebraska, but he did so only in a footnote in a court filing.
In reviewing the matter, Ebinger stated that Erdman had known of the violation of the court’s order for more than two months without ever disclosing it to the U.S. Attorney’s Office or to her.
“Astonishingly,” Ebinger noted, at the time of a June 23, 2026, hearing in Saini’s case, “Saini remained in Nebraska despite Erdman becoming aware of the violation of the court’s order on April 9 or 10, 2026, (and) Assistant U.S. Attorney Kahl becoming aware of the violation of the court’s order on June 9, 2026.”
Judge cites ‘unprecedented disregard for court orders’
In her court order responding to the government’s actions, Ebinger observed that “this is not the first time the federal respondents have violated a court order to keep immigration detainees in this district,” adding that they had violated court orders regarding immigration detainee transfers “in matters before every district judge in this district over the past two months … And these violations are not isolated to this district. Courts across the country are struggling with an unprecedented disregard for court orders and continued failure to follow the law.”
Ebinger ruled that Erdman had “knowingly and willfully violated the court’s order” and, rather than take corrective action by returning Saini to Iowa, he had instead perpetuated the violation. “He made no effort, at any point, to bring his agency into compliance,” Ebinger found.
Ebinger concluded that while Erdman was given “plainly erroneous advice” by ICE’s Office of the Principal Legal Advisor, that did not “relieve Erdman of his duty to follow the law, comply with court orders, and comport with his ethical obligations to the court, his agency, and immigration detainees.”
Ebinger said an aggravating factor was Erdman’s action in another recent case involving a different ICE detainee, Abhishek Kumar, who, like Saini, was detained as part of “Operation ICE Wall” involving ICE and the Iowa State Patrol.
Court records show that in that case, Erdman admitted Kumar had been transferred out of the Southern District of Iowa in violation of a court order. The records show Erdman then told the court steps had been taken to ensure similar violations didn’t occur in the future. At the time Erdman made those claims, Ebinger noted in her recent order, he had been aware, for two weeks, of the violation in Saini’s case but said nothing about it.
At the same time Erdman was attesting to ICE’s noncompliance in the Kumar matter, he chose to remain silent as to the exact same noncompliance in this matter.
– U.S. District Judge Rebecca Goodgame Ebinger
“At the same time Erdman was attesting to ICE’s noncompliance in the Kumar matter, he chose to remain silent as to the exact same noncompliance in this matter,” Ebinger stated in her order. “Federal officials, including ICE officials and the federal respondents in this matter, are in a position of power over numerous lives. Detainees’ rights depend on these officials complying with the law and court orders … It is untenable that federal officials refuse to meet their obligation to follow the law and court orders, especially in this context … This is astonishing conduct and exceedingly unacceptable.”
Ebinger ruled Erdman was in civil contempt and admonished him for his conduct in the case, warning him that any future violations could result in sanctions.
While Erdman told Ebinger that ICE has implemented a plan to prevent court-prohibited transfers in the future, the judge said she did not find that assertion convincing and noted that “ICE continues to struggle to follow the law and court orders.”
Ebinger ordered Erdman to conduct a review of all Southern District of Iowa cases in which ICE detainees are challenging their detention and to then file a statement with the court attesting to the fact that all of those individuals remain in the district.
In her order, Ebinger also reminded the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Iowa of its “ethical obligations to the court and the Iowa Bar.” She noted Kahl’s footnoted disclosure to the court, made two days after he became aware of the violation, calling it “insufficient” in meeting those obligations.
“The court expects better, particularly from assistant U.S. attorneys,” Ebinger stated. “The court will not tolerate willful disobedience of judicial orders.”
MacKenzie Benson Tubbs, the public information officer for the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Iowa, did not respond Tuesday to messages from Iowa Capital Dispatch seeking comment.
Chief judge: ‘Noncitizens are not bargaining chips’
The second recent Iowa case that has resulted in a judge taking federal officials to task over their handling of an immigration case involves Osmar Jose Arraiz Montilla. He was originally detained in Cedar Rapids, within the Northern District of Iowa, before being transferred to the Southern District of Iowa while his court challenge was still pending.
In that case, the judge in the Northern District had not issued an order explicitly barring such a transfer. But the chief judge of the Southern District, Stephanie M. Rose, noted in a court order this week that such transfers aren’t typical, since they would enable the government to “transfer noncitizens from district to district in search of a more favorable locale, or to forestall adjudication of the legality of their detention.”
Rose cited concerns about Montilla’s transfer, given the government’s “record of defying court orders.” She noted that in the previous three weeks, the government had violated two orders prohibiting the transfer of immigration detainees outside the Southern District of Iowa.
“Noncitizens are not bargaining chips to be shifted from district to district as litigation strategy dictates,” Rose stated in her order. “If (Montilla’s) transfer was necessary to make room for other detainees, that interest does not justify defeating a court’s jurisdiction over a pending petition. If it was meant to impede (Montilla’s court challenge), the matter is graver still. Either way, this pattern of behavior is troubling.”
Rose stated that ICE’s transfer of Montilla and the resulting jurisdictional uncertainty it triggered “wasted two weeks of litigation and judicial resources in both the Northern District and Southern District of Iowa.”
Rose’s order bars ICE from transferring Montilla outside the Southern District of Iowa, but with the understanding that if the parties determine that the Northern District is better suited to handle the case, they can notify her so she can clear the way for Montilla’s transfer back to the Northern District.
As part of her order, Rose also directed the federal government to state in writing “the true reason for (Montilla’s) transfer from the Northern District of Iowa to the Southern District of Iowa.”
Copyright 2026 Iowa Capital Dispatch. All rights reserved.
-
Detroit, MI18 seconds agoThe worst Detroit sports uniform from every pro team
-
San Francisco, CA8 minutes agoDiscovery Bay driver arrested for San Francisco fatal vehicle collision | Contra Costa Herald
-
Dallas, TX15 minutes agoErling Haaland’s Dallas Western wear purchase goes viral
-
Miami, FL18 minutes agoMiami’s FIFA Fan Fest draws thousands to Bayfront Park to watch Team USA win World Cup match against Bosnia
-
Boston, MA23 minutes ago2026 Yukon Denali Ultimate gets pricey, but tops the charts
-
Denver, CO30 minutes agoNuggets Sign Marvin Bagley to 1-Year Deal: What It Means
-
Seattle, WA33 minutes agoFOURTH OF JULY 2026: Here’s where Seattle Parks will leave the lights on longer
-
San Diego, CA38 minutes agoUSA fans pack San Diego bar to cheer on USMNT’s dominant World Cup knockout win