North Dakota
Doug Leier: A refresher course in North Dakota’s hunting license lottery and bonus point process
WEST FARGO – Understanding how the Recreation and Fish Division’s lottery and bonus level system works can assist candidates make higher choices based mostly on their expectations.
First, it’s a matter of understanding the lottery system. Terminology is essential if you consider a bonus level versus the misnomer of a desire level. There isn’t any desire. Only a bonus.
The license lottery consists of 4 separate drawings, one for every selection on the applying. First, we maintain a drawing for the primary unit/first deer selection. When these are issued, we draw for the primary unit/second deer selection, then the second unit/first deer selection, and at last the second unit/second deer selection.
Subsequent is to remember the bonus factors and lottery solely influence the primary selection.
If you happen to fail to attract your first license selection in any given 12 months, you obtain a bonus level. You would not have to use in the identical unit, or for a similar deer kind every year, to qualify. You get an extra bonus level every year you apply and don’t obtain your first license selection. You preserve your collected bonus factors if you happen to apply within the first drawing no less than as soon as each two years.
You obtain extra probabilities within the drawing for every bonus level collected. For factors one via three, you might be entered within the drawing two instances the variety of factors you could have. So, if in case you have two factors, you’ll get 4 extra probabilities to be drawn, in comparison with an individual who bought his or her first selection the earlier 12 months. If you happen to’re each competing for a similar license, you could have 5 probabilities; she or he has one.
Whenever you accumulate 4 or extra factors, the variety of extra probabilities is decided by cubing your bonus factors. So, when you could have 4 factors, you’ll be within the drawing 64 extra instances, 125 instances if in case you have 5 factors, and so forth. Bonus factors are collected so long as you don’t draw your first license selection and apply within the first drawing no less than each different 12 months. You don’t obtain bonus factors in years you don’t apply.
Every drawing continues to be random, however the extra bonus factors you could have, the higher your odds. Whenever you obtain your first license selection, you lose your bonus factors and begin over. Bonus factors can solely be earned, or used, within the first drawing for every species in every year.
- 79,857: Variety of individuals – not together with 12,113 free of charge candidates – who utilized for deer gun lottery licenses, down from 79,999 in 2020.
- 52.98: P.c of profitable candidates, excluding free of charge and nonresidents, for deer gun and muzzleloader licenses.
- 19: Most variety of bonus factors for any applicant (nonresident mule deer buck candidates).
- 12,636: Candidates with 4 or extra bonus factors.
- 13.59: P.c of candidates with 4 or extra bonus factors.
- 50.83: P.c of candidates with 4 or extra bonus factors who utilized for a muzzleloader buck license.
Drawing a buck license in 2021 was, like most years, not simple. Randy Meissner, Recreation and Fish Division licensing supervisor, mentioned after 11,811 resident free of charge licenses and 722 nonresident licenses have been subtracted from the general license allocation, simply 31,160 buck licenses have been out there for the 66,591 hunters who utilized for them as their first selection within the lottery.
North Dakota
ND Agriculture offering free remote session for produce growers
MINOT, N.D. (KMOT) — Produce growers in North Dakota can gain free training thanks to the North Dakota Department of Agriculture.
The session is free and will be held on Wednesday, Jan. 15, remotely.
Registration is open to anyone in the U.S., however non-produce growers will be invoiced for course materials.
Produce safety, worker health, soil amendments, and more will be topics covered in the session.
The session will be from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. with registration at 8:30 a.m.
To register, follow this link: https://forms.office.com/g/Ct33hhgg5z.
To ask questions about either the session or the FSMA Produce Safety Rule, please contact Katrina Hanenberg at 701-328-2307 or kmhanenberg@nd.gov.
Copyright 2025 KFYR. All rights reserved.
North Dakota
Judge denies Greenpeace request to investigate mailer critical of DAPL protests • North Dakota Monitor
A judge has denied a request by environmental group Greenpeace to gather evidence on a right-wing, pro-fossil fuel mailer that may have targeted potential jurors in its legal battle with Energy Transfer, the developer of the Dakota Access Pipeline.
Some Morton County residents in October reported receiving a 12-page direct mailer called “Central ND News” containing material complimentary of Energy Transfer as well as stories that highlighted criminal activity by anti-Dakota Access Pipeline protesters.
Greenpeace is one of many activist groups that backed the demonstrations in 2016 and 2017. Protesters camped in rural south-central North Dakota for months in solidarity with the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe, which says the pipeline is a tribal sovereignty and environmental threat.
Energy Transfer filed suit against Greenpeace in Morton County District Court in 2019, accusing the group of coordinating a misinformation campaign against the company and of engaging in criminal acts during the demonstrations.
Greenpeace seeks court permission to research mailer critical of DAPL protests
The pipeline developer seeks tens of millions of dollars in damages from Greenpeace.
Greenpeace says its role in the protests was limited, that it did not spread misinformation about Energy Transfer and that it never participated in or endorsed criminal activity. The case is scheduled for trial before a nine-person jury beginning in February.
In court documents, Greenpeace expressed concerns that the direct mailer was written specifically to give Energy Transfer the upper hand when the suit goes to trial. It requested permission from Southwest Judicial District Court Judge James Gion to conduct discovery into a Texas company that printed and distributed the Central ND News.
“We should have the right to figure out who sent it, when they did and why,” Everett Jack, an attorney representing Greenpeace, said in a hearing in December.
Energy Transfer has disputed this claim, arguing there’s no meaningful evidence the mailer was intended to prejudice the jury. Trey Cox, representing the pipeline developer, last month called Greenpeace’s motion a “thinly veiled attempt” to delay the trial and move the case to a different court.
In a Dec. 17 order, Gion seemed to agree with Greenpeace that the mailer may have been an effort to sway jurors.
“The Court takes an extremely dim view of attempts to influence a jury panel before the trial,” he wrote.
Still, the judge found it would not be appropriate to approve the discovery request without further evidence the mailer has had a measurable impact on the jury pool.
“There is only one way to determine if such an attempt is successful, and unfortunately the Court agrees with Energy Transfer that way is through the jury questionnaires and jury selection,” he wrote in the order. “If the Court cannot empanel a jury in Morton County, there will obviously be a delay in the trial and the Court can revisit this issue at that time.”
The direct mailer resembles a print newspaper. Its distribution in Morton County residents was first reported in a joint article by the North Dakota News Cooperative and climate news publication Floodlight. The article identifies the owner of the publication as Metric Media, which has launched hundreds of conservative-leaning local news outlets that rely heavily on algorithmically generated content.
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North Dakota
In appeal, man tied to former Sen. Ray Holmberg says search warrant in his own case was unconstitutional
FARGO — A Grand Forks man connected to a former North Dakota senator who traveled abroad with plans to sexually abuse children is appealing
his own federal child sex abuse conviction,
arguing a search warrant in the case was unconstitutional.
Nicholas James Morgan-Derosier, 37, argued evidence showing he possessed child sex abuse material should have been thrown out due to what his defense team called an “overbroad” search warrant. The warrant was used to search Morgan-Derosier’s home in September 2020 for evidence that he violated a judicial order that banned him from doing business as Team Lawn, his landscaping business.
The search turned up a thumb drive that contained child sex abuse materials, according to court documents. Police applied for a search warrant once they found images of children being sexually abused, court documents said.
The evidence likely would have been used in a trial in North Dakota U.S. District Court, but Morgan-Derosier pleaded guilty in September 2023 to charges that said he received, distributed and possessed child sex abuse materials. The plea came after U.S. District Judge Peter Welte denied Morgan-Derosier’s motion to suppress.
Prosecutors also said the defendant sexually abused multiple children over the years, including some he met online and lured to a physical location. Morgan-Derosier and another man sexually abused a boy in 2020 together in a tent near Park Rapids, Minnesota, court documents said.
Morgan-Derosier did not have to admit to the sexual abuse, but he is serving a 40-year sentence for possessing thousands of child sex abuse materials and sharing some of the images online.
Morgan-Derosier reserved the right to appeal his conviction based on the search warrant.
He filed a notice to appeal
last year in the U.S. Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals.
In an appeals brief that was recently unsealed, Morgan-Derosier’s attorney argued that the search warrant was unconstitutional, overbroad and lacking particularity. His team also argued that the warrant led to evidence of a crime that was unrelated to the investigation of his business dealings, the brief said.
“The warrant essentially authorized the police to seize all computers and electronic devices for any crime that was committed at any time,” the brief said. “It is difficult to conceive a less particular or more broad case.”
Morgan-Derosier has been connected to former Sen. Ray Holmberg, R-Grand Forks.
The Forum reported on phone records
that showed Holmberg and Morgan-Derosier exchanged dozens of text messages while Morgan-Derosier was jailed in August 2021.
During Morgan-Derosier’s
January 2022 detention hearing,
First Assistant U.S. Attorney Jennifer Puhl said a “77-year-old man from Grand Forks” texted Morgan-Derosier on Aug. 23, 2021, about bringing Morgan-Derosier’s 19- or 20-year-old boyfriend “over for a massage.” Puhl did not identify the 77-year-old, but the age matched Holmberg’s at the time.
In an interview with The Forum, Holmberg denied asking Morgan-Derosier about a massage but acknowledged he texted Morgan-Derosier about patio work and “a variety of things.”
Other documents and audio recordings revealed Holmberg gave Morgan-Derosier a
ride to Bismarck
shortly after police searched Morgan-Derosier’s home. Once there, Morgan-Derosier spoke with North Dakota consumer protection officials about his business, according to a transcript from the North Dakota Attorney General’s Office. Holmberg attended a legislative energy development and transmission committee meeting that day.
Holmberg was
charged in October 2023
in federal court, with prosecutors saying he
traveled to Prague
multiple times in the 2010s with plans to sexually abuse children. He pleaded guilty to the charge in August.
During that plea hearing,
prosecutors said Holmberg and Morgan-Derosier watched child sex abuse material together.
Holmberg has been
jailed in Minnesota
after
a judge
determined he
violated presentence release conditions.
A sentencing hearing has not been scheduled in his case.
Holmberg served in the North Dakota Senate from 1976 to 2022, when he
resigned shortly after The Forum
broke the story about his connection to Morgan-Derosier.
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