North Dakota
PHOTOS: Scenes from Central Cass earning N.D. Class B boys state basketball title to cap perfect season
BISMARCK — Prime-seeded Central Cass capped an ideal season Saturday night time on the Bismarck Occasion Middle. The
Squirrels used a giant fourth quarter to earn a 61-44 victory
in opposition to No. 2 seed Bismarck Shiloh Christian to earn the North Dakota Class B state boys basketball championship.
“I am simply so happy with these youngsters,” Central Cass head coach Matt Norman mentioned. “They put their coronary heart and soul into this. … They have been dreaming about this since they have been on their driveway.”
The Squirrels completed the season with a 26-0 report. Central Cass received its first state boys crown since Casselton received in 1968 and third in program historical past.
Junior ahead Cole Holzer scored 15 factors and grabbed 14 rebounds to steer Central Cass, which outscored Shiloh Christian 22-8 within the fourth quarter. Squirrels senior guard Sam Kobbervig had 14 factors and 4 assists within the title sport and was named the match’s Most worthy participant.
“Whenever you’re enjoying with guys like these, it simply makes the job a lot simpler,” Kobbervig mentioned.
“We labored so onerous for this so I am glad we may lastly get it completed and get the win,” Holzer added.
Holzer was additionally named to the all-tournament workforce. Central Cass junior guard Carter Vrchota added 10 factors, whereas junior ahead Eli Buhr chipped in 9 factors and 6 rebounds.
Sophomore guard Caden Englund paced Shiloh Christian with 13 factors. The Skyhawks completed with a 22-5 report.
The title sport was the ultimate Class B match in a two-class system earlier than the state strikes to a few lessons for basketball subsequent season. The Central Cass ladies workforce additionally received the ultimate Class B grils crown earlier than the state heads to a few lessons.
“It is nice to be a Squirrel,” Norman mentioned.
Under are scenes from championship sport:
Peterson covers faculty athletics for The Discussion board, together with Concordia School and Minnesota State Moorhead. He additionally covers the Fargo-Moorhead RedHawks impartial baseball workforce and helps out with North Dakota State soccer protection. Peterson has been working on the newspaper since 1996.
North Dakota
Supreme Court upholds North Dakota’s majority-Native legislative subdistricts • North Dakota Monitor
The U.S. Supreme Court settled a North Dakota voting rights case Monday, leaving in place two majority-Native American subdistricts challenged as unconstitutional.
“I’m glad that it’s finally been resolved,” said Rep. Lisa Finley-DeVille, a citizen of the Mandan, Hidatsa and Arikara Nation who represents one of the subdistricts. “It’s very important that we’re able to represent our needs at the table.”
The lawsuit, brought by two non-Native North Dakota residents, alleged that the subdistricts are racial gerrymanders — meaning the Legislature established them based predominantly on the racial makeup of their communities, rather than looking at other criteria like geography, population size or the political interests of residents. The plaintiffs argued the Legislature relied heavily on anecdotal evidence, not legitimate research, when it created the districts.
The plaintiffs claimed the subdistricts violate the Equal Protection Clause of the 14th Amendment by strengthening the voting power of Native American residents at the expense of constituents who aren’t Native American.
Native Americans gain representation in North Dakota Legislature as Republicans keep supermajority
The Legislature established the two subdistricts in 2021. District 4A follows the boundaries of the Fort Berthold Reservation, while District 9A includes the Turtle Mountain Reservation and some surrounding communities.
A three-judge district court panel found in 2023 that the map was constitutional.
The panel wrote that even if the Legislature did look to race when making the map, federal courts have previously found that states may consider race in a “narrowly tailored” capacity when drawing district lines to comply with the Voting Rights Act.
Unsatisfied with that decision, the plaintiffs asked the U.S. Supreme Court to send the lawsuit back to a lower court for further proceedings, or to accept the case.
The high court on Monday dismissed the appeal of District 9A and affirmed the district court’s decision on District 4A. The court did not explain its reasoning.
Robert Harms, an attorney representing the plaintiffs, called the decision disappointing.
“The troubling aspect of this whole case is that the North Dakota Legislature didn’t have in front of it any statistical analysis,” he said Monday.
The lawsuit was filed by Charles Walen and Paul Henderson, both of whom are former district chairs for the North Dakota Republican Party, Harms said. Walen last year successfully ran as a Republican for a District 4 state Senate seat.
The boundaries of District 9A and District 9B changed for the 2024 election after a federal judge imposed a new map following a separate voting rights lawsuit brought by the Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa.
The MHA Nation, Finley-DeVille and MHA citizen Cesar Alvarez joined Walen and Henderson’s lawsuit on the side of the state, arguing that the Legislature had gathered sufficient evidence to warrant the creation of the subdistricts.
That included testimony from tribal representatives, information about the use of subdistricts for Native American reservations in South Dakota and previous redistricting litigation, according to a brief filed by the MHA Nation, Finley-DeVille and Alvarez.
MHA Chairman Mark Fox testified during the redistricting process that candidates favored by Native residents of District 4 had been repeatedly defeated by the district’s white majority.
The plaintiffs disagreed. In one response, they argued that even before the subdistricts were created, voters in District 4 and District 9 were able to elect Native lawmakers to the Legislature, and that therefore the subdistricts are not necessary. The brief cites Rep. Dawn Charging and Sen. Richard Marcellais as two Indigenous lawmakers elected in District 4 and District 9, respectively.
The U.S. Department of Justice in a December brief advised the Supreme Court against considering the case.
In an unusual move, North Dakota came out against the district court’s ruling, despite that the court had ruled in the state’s favor. In a memo filed this spring, the state said that the Legislature did not rely on race as a predominant factor in the redistricting process, and that the district court was wrong to rule that such behavior would be permissible in any circumstance. The state asked the Supreme Court to send the case back to district court for further proceedings.
“We said before and we maintain now that race was not the predominant motivator for the redistricting,” North Dakota Attorney General Drew Wrigley said Monday.
The Supreme Court has taken up two other voting rights cases challenging a majority-Black district in Louisiana as racial gerrymandering.
In a 2023 voting rights case, Allen v. Milligan, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled 5-4 that Alabama had violated the Voting Rights Act when it created only one majority-Black district, finding that this unlawfully weakened the power of Black voters in the state.
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North Dakota
Fargo insurance agent fined by state disputes giving kickbacks
BISMARCK — A Fargo insurance agent facing the largest fine ever imposed by the North Dakota Insurance Department says the state agency misrepresented what led to the fine.
Tyler Bjerke, a representative for Midwest Heritage Insurance and Valley Crop Insurance, has been fined $136,500 and his license to sell insurance in North Dakota has been placed on probation for four years for violating a law that limits gifts to clients and potential clients, according to the order finalizing the penalties.
The per person limit means insurance agents can give a gift of $200 to a client couple, said Insurance Department spokesperson Jacob Just.
The Insurance Department said Bjerke gave 182 pub-style tables to clients and potential clients valued at $213.95.
Bjerke doesn’t dispute the cost but contends that he originally ordered the tables from China in July 2022 at a price of $199.95 per set. He said in September 2022, he was told that the price had gone up to $213.95 due to port fees and tariffs.
He said he tried to cancel the order but would have lost a $20,000 deposit.
“I made a business decision based on $14.95 over the gift allowance and thought that no one would care about $14.95,” he said in the email. “This was $2,720.90 over the limit and I was fined $136,500, $750 per violation.”
Insurance Commissioner Jon Godfread said in a statement that licensed insurance agents aren’t allowed to give high-value gifts to consumers “because it essentially boils down to bribing clients for business.”
“Insurance should only be sold based on the competitive coverage options and premiums offered by an agent, not by those who can offer kickbacks in exchange for business,” Godfread said.
Bjerke said the pub tables were for clients with “man-caves, shops, lake homes, etc.” as a way to thank clients he considers family members.
“For the insurance commissioner to mention that gifts are kickbacks in exchange for business is a gross misrepresentation of what occurred,” Bjerke said.
The Insurance Department also found that Bjerke hosted a concert by the band Sawyer Brown in February 2023 with free admission to clients and potential clients, with the value also exceeding the $100 limit. Prosecution of that case was deferred as a condition of Bjerke’s license being placed on probation.
Bjerke said the band was booked as part of a company and client celebration after a day of training sessions that included updates from the U.S. Department of Agriculture, which administers crop insurance programs, and U.S. Sen. John Hoeven, R-N.D., a crop insurance advocate. He said there were no tickets to the event.
Bjerke said he tried multiple times to meet with the Insurance Department and complied with their request for four years of company records.
He said the Insurance Department has a vital role to play in creating an equal playing field for North Dakota insurance agents, but he said he believes his agency was targeted.
Jeff Kleven, executive director of Independent Insurance Agents of North Dakota, said these kinds of violations should be taken seriously and can hurt the reputation of the industry.
Kleven said every licensed insurance agent is aware of the rules on gifts.
“It’s part of the test,” he said.
This story was originally published on NorthDakotaMonitor.com
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