North Dakota
Police board to decide if external review into North Dakota officer shootings is warranted
FARGO — The Fargo Human Rights Fee will depart a choice on whether or not to
rent an exterior advisor to research
two shootings the place officers killed two males to town’s police oversight board, however some worry nothing will occur.
The fee voted in September to type a subcommittee that may formulate a proposal to search out an outdoor agency to look into the deadly shootings of Shane Netterville and Andrew Martinez. The fee then would ship that proposal to the Fargo Metropolis Fee, which might make the ultimate choice to rent a advisor.
However Metropolis Lawyer Nancy Morris advised the human rights members on Thursday, Oct. 20, that the movement made was out of order, in line with parliamentary guidelines. She mentioned the movement was not a part of a particular agenda merchandise and violated Robert’s Guidelines of Order, which most authorities our bodies comply with when conducting conferences.
The board additionally didn’t have the authority to take up the matter, in line with Range, Fairness and Inclusion Director Terry Hogan. It may possibly assessment human rights points, however gadgets involving regulation enforcement fall below the authority of the Metropolis Police Advisory and Oversight Board, he mentioned.
He advisable the human rights fee enable the police board to take up the difficulty. No motion was taken on that advice, nor was it wanted, he mentioned. The police advisory board intends to place the proposed initiative on its agenda, Morris mentioned.
Nonetheless, human rights members questioned in the event that they have been ignoring the shootings altogether in the event that they took that path. Some appeared confused by the method and puzzled if something would change by following the advice.
“This case was with the police oversight (board), and apparently nothing was achieved,” human rights board member Hamida Dakane mentioned. “Then it got here to this board. Now that this board took motion and mentioned this ought to be investigated, then all of those guidelines are coming. So what are we not conscious of? I’m very confused sitting right here.”
North Dakota Lawyer Common Drew Wrigley dominated Fargo police have been justified in each shootings and wouldn’t face fees. An inner investigation performed by Fargo police discovered officer Adam O’Brien didn’t violate any company insurance policies when he shot and killed Netterville on July 8.
Some criticized the capturing, noting O’Brien is white and Netterville was Native American.
Martinez was half Caucasian, half Hispanic, and the 4 officers who shot him additionally have been white.
A choice on whether or not the 4 officers — Sgt. Travis Moser, Detective Josh Heller, Detective Ryan Jasper and Investigator Jordan Kortev — violated coverage had not been introduced as of Thursday.
Activist Wess Philome requested the human rights board in the course of the public remark portion of the assembly in September to think about hiring an “unbiased, unbiased agency” to research whether or not the 2 shootings violated civil rights. The purpose of the initiative was, on the floor, to get justice for Netterville and Martinez, Philome mentioned Thursday.
“Beneath that floor, it’s about seeing who on this metropolis, what our bodies, what persons are actually prepared to battle on behalf of our marginalized and BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, and other people of shade) group and on behalf of the Shane Netterville household and the Andrew Martinez household,” Philome mentioned.
Philome additionally mentioned he tried to get his proposed initiative on the agenda however was denied.
Between September’s and Thursday’s conferences, Mayor Tim Mahoney, Metropolis Commissioner Denise Kolpack, Human Rights Fee Chairman Cody Severson, Police Chief David Zibolski, Morris and different metropolis officers met to debate the initiative, Philome mentioned.
Kolpack confirmed that assembly. She mentioned the human rights fee doesn’t have the appropriate to make a advice or request of one other fee or board, except the Fargo Metropolis Fee. The police advisory board reviewed the Netterville case and is slated to take up the Martinez capturing at its subsequent assembly on Oct. 27.
Human rights member Barry Nelson mentioned he made the movement on the final assembly as a result of he wished the board to take a step in opposition to ignoring points.
“We’re not simply coping with an incident right here,” Nelson mentioned. “We’re coping with a long-term historical past on this nation of how points like this are usually not handled.”
Individuals requested the human rights board to take motion, member Carolyn Becraft famous. Town wants to reply and ensure a good investigation is completed.
“Let the details come out as they’re, however there’s a group excited by that, and we will’t simply blow it off,” she mentioned.
Human rights member Sekou Sirleaf mentioned the board ought to do every little thing it could possibly to construct belief with the group. He was involved nothing would occur with the initiative if it was despatched to the police advisory board and it could come again to the human rights fee.
“I don’t assume the police oversight assessment board is ample as a result of you’ll be able to’t anticipate somebody to research themselves and do a correct job of it,” human rights member Jacqueline Dotzenrod mentioned.
Human rights member Sarah Boonstoppel requested if letting the police board deal with the matter meant the human rights fee would drop it. Hogan mentioned the human rights board might take it below advisement.
Severson mentioned his board will comply with up on the proposed initiative subsequent month.
The board did vote on Thursday to draft a letter to the U.S. Lawyer’s Workplace in North Dakota that may ask the U.S. Division of Justice to research the shootings. The Justice Division’s civil rights division has investigated different officer-involved shootings throughout the nation, together with ones that led to the deaths of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor.
North Dakota
Obituary for Delmar Zimmerman at Feist Funeral Home
North Dakota
Bankruptcies for North Dakota and western Minnesota published Jan. 11, 2025
Filed in U.S. Bankruptcy Court
North Dakota
Cherie A. Paulin and Rafael Paulin Gordillo, doing business as North Plains Repair, Grand Forks, Chapter 13
Sarah E. Benson, Grand Forks, Chapter 7
Kelly Edward Leidholm, Garrison, Chapter 7
Susan Lorraine Hauck, Dodge, Chapter 7
Minnesota
Bankruptcy filings from the following counties: Becker, Clay, Douglas, Grant, Hubbard, Mahnomen, Norman, Otter Tail, Polk, Traverse, Wadena and Wilkin.
Ariana Barbara Kay Krecklau, formerly known as Ariana Kimble, and Taylor Jacob Krecklau, Moorhead, Chapter 7
Jay William and Ashley Carol Dunbar, Verndale, Chapter 7
Gene Michael and Stacey Lynn Berglund, East Grand Forks, Chapter 7
Micah David Gorder, Frazee, Chapter 7
Paul Monroe and Mikel Lee Sire, Moorhead, Chapter 7
Chapter 7 is a petition to liquidate assets and discharge debts.
Chapter 11 is a petition for protection from creditors and to reorganize.
Chapter 12 is a petition for family farmers to reorganize.
Chapter 13 is a petition for wage earners to readjust debts.
Our newsroom occasionally reports stories under a byline of “staff.” Often, the “staff” byline is used when rewriting basic news briefs that originate from official sources, such as a city press release about a road closure, and which require little or no reporting. At times, this byline is used when a news story includes numerous authors or when the story is formed by aggregating previously reported news from various sources. If outside sources are used, it is noted within the story.
North Dakota
Hawks stumble late against Oral Roberts – University of North Dakota Athletics
TULSA, Okla. – North Dakota men’s basketball was unable to finish off Oral Roberts on Saturday night inside the Mabee Center as the Summit League contest, which saw ten tied scores and seven lead changes, went the way of the Golden Eagles as a late three by Issac McBride, just the fourth by the host all night, cushioned ORU’s advantage in the final seconds with the host winning 83-79.
Sophomore Mier Panoam scored inside to pull UND to within one at 78-77 and then denied a driving attempt by McBride two possessions later with 58 seconds to play, but the latter would net a cushion triple following an empty opportunity from the Hawks.
Three pointers by senior Deng Mayar and a pair from junior Dariyus Woodson aided the Hawks in taking a 53-50 lead as the second half clock neared the 15-minute mark, but the Golden Eagles dominated inside with 50 total paint points and missed just twice inside in the final eight minutes of action after tying the contest at 65.
North Dakota led by as much as nine points in the first half which saw the Hawks hit four early three-pointers kickstarted by a far wing trifecta from Amar Kuljuhovic who led UND with a dozen points in the first twenty minutes. After a handful of made three-pointers, the Hawks struggled going 1-for-8 the rest of the way in the first half. ORU controlled the paint with two dozen points which aided the Golden Eagles’ 59.3% shooting clip in 27 attempts from the floor in the first half.
The Hawks led for over 18 minutes in the opening half of action, but a scoreless stretch in the half’s final 2:11 and a 9-2 ORU run over the 3:12 sent the host into the intermission with the advantage.
North Dakota prepares for a Thursday night matchup in Brookings against South Dakota State, before playing host to Kansas City on Saturday. The Hawks and the Jackrabbits tip off at 7 p.m. on January 16 from inside First Bank & Trust Arena. The action can be seen on Midco Sports and the Summit League Network. Fans can follow the action live with Fighting Hawks men’s basketball radio play-by-play voice Paul Ralston on KSNR 100.3 FM The Cat or on the iHeart Radio app. Live stats for the contest will be available at www.FightingHawks.com.
Postgame Notes
- Kuljuhovic led UND with 17 points on 6-of-11 shooting with six rebounds and two assists
- Treysen Eaglestaff followed with 15 points and Panoam added 13
- Eaglestaff led with five assists and Panoam matched Kuljuhovic in boards with six
- UND’s 15 offensive rebounds marks the 18th straight game with 12+ such boards
- UND’s 14 defensive rebounds are a season low
- The Hawks committed just eight turnovers and have committed less than ten in five of their past six games
- UND finished at +12 in points off of turnovers
- North Dakota was unable to absorb 28 points from McBride and 26 points from JoJo Moore
- ORU shot an opponent-best 60.8% from the floor
- The Eagles produced opponent season lows in three-pointers (4) and steals (3)
How It Happened
First Half
14:13 – UND 12, ORU 10 (ORU +8 paint, 0-of-4 3PT FG)
11:53 – UND 20, ORU 16 (UND 3-of-7 3PT FG)
7:24 – UND 31, ORU 24 (UND 4-of-last-5 FG, UND +4 TOs)
3:49 – UND 37, ORU 34
HALF – ORU 43, UND 42
Second Half
15:42 – UND 51, ORU 50
10:39 – UND 61, ORU 60
6:40 – UND 67, ORU 67
5:28 – UND 71, ORU 69
3:55 – ORU 75, UND 73
FINAL – ORU 83, UND 79
For more information on North Dakota men’s basketball, visit FightingHawks.com or follow on social media @UNDmbasketball.
— UND —
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