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Biden commemorates war dead at Arlington National Cemetery

By CALVIN WOODWARD

ARLINGTON, Va. (AP) — President Joe Biden honored America’s war dead at Arlington National Cemetery on Memorial Day by laying a wreath at the hallowed burial ground.

The president was joined on Monday by first lady Jill Biden, Vice President Kamala Harris and second gentleman Doug Emhoff in a somber ceremony at the Virginia cemetery’s Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, which is dedicated to the fallen U.S. service members whose remains have not been identified.

After approaching the wreath, Biden bowed his head before the wreath and made the sign of the cross. Later, he delivered a Memorial Day address and called on Americans to honor their fallen heroes by remembering their sacrifices.

“All those we honor today gave their lives for the country, but they live forever in our hearts,” he said.

On Sunday, Biden addressed a crowd of Gold Star military families and other veterans in a ceremony at War Memorial Plaza in New Castle, Delaware. Earlier in the day, he and other family members attended a memorial Mass for his son Beau Biden, a veteran who died of brain cancer six years ago to the day.

Last year, Biden, then a presidential candidate, chose Memorial Day to make his first public appearance in the two months after the coronavirus pandemic closed down the nation.

Popular Iowa State Park Passport program back for second year

The passport program that offers prizes when you visit state parks is back this year. Iowa Tourism Office spokesperson Jessica O’Riley says they launched the program last year to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the state parks.

“It was such a phenomenal success that we thought we need to bring it back this year,” O’Riley says. “We had nearly 30-thousand check-ins at parks across the state with last year’s version. So now we have relaunched it with new prizes to entice people to get outdoors and explore again this year.”

The Iowa Department of Natural Resources is partnering with the Tourism Office on the program.

“If you check into ten of the 62 participating state parks — the first one-thousand people to do that — win a state park passport t-shirt — a highly coveted t-shirt I am sure,” O’Riley says, with a laugh.

The prizes ramp up as your visits increase. If you check into 30 parks you can win one of four activity tracker and then your check-ins each month qualify you to win a larger prize, such as a paddle board and watersport accessory in June. You can find out more about the passport by visiting traveliowa.com/passport or by texting PARKS to 515-531-5995.

(By Pat Powers, KQWC, Webster City)

Volunteers join search for missing 11-year-old from Montezuma

Hundreds helped search Sunday for a missing boy who was last seen late Thursday morning in Montezuma. Sunday was Xavior Harrelson’s 11th birthday.

About 375 volunteers and 125 law enforcement officers searched areas within a mile of the boy’s home and in rural areas around Montezuma. Mitch Mortvedt of the Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation spoke with KCRG TV.

“We covered a lot of area, a lot of territory,” he said. “We couldn’t be more appreciative of the people that did show up.”

Mortvedt said this is classified as a missing child case — NOT a kidnapping. Searchers have gone door-to-door in Montezuma and dive teams have searched Diamond Lake which is about a mile west of Montezuma.

Florida Georgia Line Announce “I Love My Country Tour”

Florida Georgia Line is ready to return to the road. The duo just announced dates for their new “I Love My Country Tour,” featuring special guests Russell Dickerson, Lauren Alaina and Redferrin.

“Touring is back, y’all! This is the longest we’ve gone without being on the road, and we’ve been counting down the days until we can finally say – we’re going on tour!,” Tyler Hubbard shares, while Brian Kelley adds, “We’re excited to see your faces, feel the energy, and bring some good vibes to your city this fall. Let’s make some new memories!”

The trek is set to kick off September 21st in Atlanta, Georgia with dates confirmed through November 20th in Seattle Washington. Tickets go on sale to the general public June 4th.

Check out the first few dates below:

September 24: Atlanta, GA – Cellairis Amphitheatre at Lakewood
September 25: New Orleans, LA – Smoothie King Center
September 26: Houston, TX – Toyota Center
September 30: Cincinnati, OH – Riverbend Music Center
October 1: Cleveland, OH – Blossom Music Center
October 2: Indianapolis, IN – Ruoff Music Center
October 7: Virginia Beach, VA – Veterans United Home Loans Amphitheater at Virginia Beach
October 8: Hartford, CT – XFINITY Theatre
October 9: Syracuse, NY – St. Joseph’s Health Amphitheater at Lakeview
October 14: Des Moines, IA – Wells Fargo Arena

Source: Florida Georgia Line

This day in Country Music History

  • Today in 1973, Tanya Tucker’s “What’s Your Mama’s Name?” album was released.
  • Today in 1984, Willie Nelson & Julio Iglesias’ duet, “To All The Girls
  • I’ve Loved Before,” was certified gold.
  • Today in 1986, “Whoever’s In New England” took Reba McEntire to #1 on the Billboard country chart.
  • Today in 1985, Hank Williams Jr.’s “Rowdy” album was certified gold.
  • Today in 1988, Keith Whitley’s “Don’t Close Your Eyes” album and the “Alabama Live” album were released.
  • Today in 1991, Joe Diffie topped the charts with “If The Devil Danced in
  • Empty Pockets.”
  • Today in 1991, Randy Travis married his manager, Lib Hatcher, in Maui, Hawaii.
  • Today in 1991, Tracy Lawrence left a Nashville studio in the early morning hours to celebrate finishing recording his first album, “Sticks and Stones.” A few hours later, he and a female friend were robbed at gunpoint — Tracy was shot four times.
  • Today in 1995, Shania Twain received her first gold album for “The Woman In Me.” The album went on to become the biggest selling album of all time by a female country artist, before being surpassed by her follow-up “Come On Over.”
  • Today in 1997, a very nervous Lee Ann Womack made her Grand Ole Opry debut. She was so nervous that she barely moved from center stage during her performance. Of her big night jitters, Lee Ann later said, quote, “If I had moved, I would’ve peed in my pants.”
  • Today in 2000, after months of speculation, it was finally announced that Faith Hill and Tim McGraw would tour together. The couple’s “Soul 2 Soul” tour went on to become one of the year’s highest grossing tours.
  • Today in 2006, Little Big Town’s Karen Fairchild and Jimi Westbrook were married in Nashville. Bandmates Kimberly Roads (now Schlapman) and Phillip Sweet are among the witnesses.
  • Today in 2008, Rascal Flatts guitarist Joe Don Rooney and Tiffany Fallon welcomed their son, Jagger Donovan Rooney.
  • Today in 2012, Kelly Clarkson and Brandon Blackstock made their public debut as a couple, attending a party for Blackstock’s management client, Blake Shelton, in Nashville.
  • Today in 2013, Cassadee Pope begins her first major concert tour as an opening act for Rascal Flatts and The Band Perry at Jones Beach, New York.
  • Today in 2016, Dustin Lynch announced the launch of his Stay Country clothing line.
  • Today in 2016, Kiefer Sutherland made his debut on the Grand Ole Opry, where he covers Merle Haggard’s “The Bottle Let Me Down.”
  • Today in 2017, Chris Stapleton postponed nine concert dates and cancels a CMA Music Festival appearance. A day later, he announced he broke his right index finger, limiting his ability to play guitar.
  • Today in 2017, Kelsea Ballerini provided the voice of a toucan in an episode of the animated Nickelodeon series “Blaze And The Monster Machines.” The same day? She scored a gold single from the RIAA for her song, “Yeah Boy.”

Bahena Rivera found guilty in 2018 death of Mollie Tibbetts

A jury found a farm laborer guilty of murder Friday (5/28) in the abduction and killing of a University of Iowa student who vanished while out for a run in 2018.

The 12-member jury unanimously found Cristhian Bahena Rivera guilty of first-degree murder in the stabbing death of Mollie Tibbetts, who is remembered as a friendly 20-year-old who was studying to become a child psychologist.

Bahena Rivera, who came to the U.S. illegally from Mexico as a teenager, will be sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole. Judge Joel Yates ordered Bahena Rivera, who has been in custody since his August 2018 arrest, to be held without bond pending a July 15 sentencing hearing in Montezuma.

The verdict came after a two-week trial at the Scott County Courthouse in Davenport, in a case that fueled public anger against illegal immigration and concerns about random violence against women. The jury, which included nine white members and three of Hispanic, Latino or Spanish descent, deliberated for seven hours on Thursday and Friday.

Tibbetts, who ran track and cross country in high school, never returned home after going for a routine run in her hometown of Brooklyn on the evening of July 18, 2018. She was reported missing the next day after she didn’t show up for her summer job at a daycare.

Her disappearance from the town of 1,700 was immediately deemed suspicious, and local, state and federal agencies joined hundreds of volunteers in a highly publicized search for her.

Investigators say they broke the case open nearly a month later after obtaining surveillance video from a homeowner that shows, for a split second, a shadowy figure that appears to be Tibbetts running in the distance. The video shows a black Chevy Malibu with chrome mirrors and door handles driving past 20 seconds later, and back and forth several times in the next 20 minutes.

A sheriff’s deputy spotted Bahena Rivera, who worked at a local dairy farm, driving the distinctive vehicle the next day. During a lengthy interrogation that began Aug. 20, 2018, Bahena Rivera said that he drove past Tibbetts while she was running and turned around to get another look because he found her attractive.

He eventually said that he approached Tibbetts and fought with her after she tried to get away and threatened to call police. He claimed that he then “blacked out” but remembered driving with her body in the trunk of his car. He led investigators in the early morning hours of Aug. 21 to a remote cornfield where they found her badly decomposed body hidden under corn stalks.

An autopsy found that Tibbetts died of sharp force injuries from several stab wounds to her head, neck and chest. DNA testing showed that her blood was found in the trunk of the Malibu, but investigators never found the murder weapon.

Prosecutor Scott Brown said in a closing argument that Bahena Rivera killed Tibbetts out of anger after she rebuked him. He said Bahena Rivera also had a sexual motive, noting that Tibbetts was found partially naked with her legs spread when her body was found.

During dramatic testimony Wednesday, the 26-year-old Bahena Rivera denied that he killed Tibbetts. He claimed for the first time that two masked men took him at gunpoint from his trailer, forced him to drive as one of them killed Tibbetts on a rural road and directed him to a rural area where he left her body.

Bahena Rivera’s defense suggested one of the men may have been Tibbetts’ boyfriend, Dalton Jack, who admitted that he had an affair with another woman and past anger problems. But police said they cleared Jack, who had bought an engagement ring and planned to soon propose marriage to Tibbetts, after establishing that he was out of town for work when Tibbetts vanished.

Then-President Donald Trump, Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds and other Republicans had cited the vicious crime ahead of the 2018 midterm elections to call for harsher policies to deter illegal immigration. But their efforts eventually stopped after Tibbetts’ parents said the slaying should not be used to advance a political agenda that Tibbetts would have opposed.

GOP blocks bipartisan probe of deadly Jan. 6 riot at Capitol

By MARY CLARE JALONICK and LISA MASCARO

WASHINGTON (AP) — Senate Republicans on Friday blocked creation of a bipartisan panel to study the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol, turning aside the independent investigation in a show of party loyalty to former President Donald Trump and an effort to shift the political focus away from the violent insurrection by his GOP supporters.

The Senate vote was 54-35 — short of the 60 votes needed to take up a House-passed bill that would have formed a 10-member commission evenly split between the two parties. It came a day after emotional appeals from police who fought with the rioters and lawmakers who fled Capitol chambers that day.

Six Republicans voted with Democrats to move forward. Eleven senators missed the rare Friday vote.

Though the Jan. 6 commission bill passed the House earlier this month with the support of almost three dozen Republicans, GOP senators said they believe the commission would eventually be used against them politically. And Trump, who still has a firm hold on the party, has called it a “Democrat trap.”

The vote is emblematic of the profound mistrust between the two parties since the siege, especially among Republicans, as some in the party have downplayed the violence and defended the rioters who supported Trump and his false insistence that the election was stolen from him.

The attack was the worst on the Capitol in 200 years and interrupted the certification of Democrat Joe Biden’s win over Trump. Four people died that day, and Capitol Police Officer Brian Sicknick collapsed and died afterward of what authorities said were natural causes. Two police officers took their own lives in the days after the riots.

The vote came after Sicknick’s mother, girlfriend and two police officers who fought the rioters went office to office and asked Republicans to support the commission.

While initially saying he was open to the idea of the commission, which would be modeled after an investigation of the 9/11 terrorist attacks, Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell turned firmly against it in recent days. He has said he believes the panel’s investigation would be partisan despite the even split among party members.

McConnell, who once said Trump was responsible for provoking the mob attack on the Capitol, said of Democrats, “They’d like to continue to litigate the former president, into the future.”

Still, six in his caucus defied him, arguing that an independent look is needed.

Alaska Sen. Lisa Murkowski said Thursday evening that she needs to know more about what happened that day and why.

“Truth is hard stuff, but we’ve got a responsibility to it,” she told reporters. “We just can’t pretend that nothing bad happened, or that people just got too excitable. Something bad happened. And it’s important to lay that out.”

Of her colleagues opposing the commission, Murkowski said some are concerned that “we don’t want to rock the boat.”

GOP opposition to the bipartisan panel has revived Democratic pressure to do away with the filibuster, a time-honored Senate tradition that requires a vote by 60 of the 100 senators to cut off debate and advance a bill. With the Senate evenly split 50-50, Democrats need support of 10 Republicans to move to the commission bill.

The Republicans’ political arguments over the violent siege — which is still raw for many in the Capitol, almost five months later — have frustrated not only Democrats but also those who fought off the rioters.

Michael Fanone, a Metropolitan Police Department officer who responded to the attack, joined Sicknick’s family on Capitol Hill Thursday. In between meetings with Republican senators, he said a commission is “necessary for us to heal as a nation from the trauma that we all experienced that day.” Fanone has described being dragged down the Capitol steps by rioters who shocked him with a stun gun and beat him.

Sandra Garza, the partner of Capitol Police Officer Brian Sicknick, who collapsed and died after battling the rioters, said of the Republican senators, “You know they are here today and with their families and comfortable because of the actions of law enforcement that day.”

“So I don’t understand why they would resist getting to the bottom of what happened that day and fully understanding how to prevent it. Just boggles my mind,” she said.

Video of the rioting shows two men spraying Sicknick and another officer with a chemical, but the Washington medical examiner said he suffered a stroke and died from natural causes.

Garza attended the meetings with Sicknick’s mother, Gladys Sicknick. In a statement Wednesday, Mrs. Sicknick suggested the opponents of the commission “visit my son’s grave in Arlington National Cemetery and, while there, think about what their hurtful decisions will do to those officers who will be there for them going forward.”

Dozens of other police officers were injured as the rioters pushed past them, breaking through windows and doors and hunting for lawmakers. The protesters constructed a mock gallows in front of the Capitol and called for the hanging of Vice President Mike Pence, who was overseeing the certification of the presidential vote.

“We have a mob overtake the Capitol, and we can’t get the Republicans to join us in making historic record of that event? That is sad,” said Sen. Dick Durbin of Illinois, the No. 2 Senate Democrat. “That tells you what’s wrong with the Senate and what’s wrong with the filibuster.”

Many Democrats are warning that if Republicans are willing to use the filibuster to stop an arguably popular measure, it shows the limits of trying to broker compromises, particularly on bills related to election reforms or other aspects of the Democrats’ agenda.

For now, though, Democrats don’t have the votes to change the rule. West Virginia Sen. Joe Manchin and Arizona Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, both moderate Democrats, have said they want to preserve the filibuster.

Biden, asked about the commission at a stop in Cleveland, said Thursday, “I can’t imagine anyone voting against” it.

Republican Texas Sen. John Cornyn, who once supported the idea of the commission, said he now believes Democrats are trying to use it as a political tool.

“I don’t think this is the only way to get to the bottom of what happened,” Cornyn said, noting that Senate committees are also looking at the siege.

___

Associated Press writers Alan Fram, Colleen Long and Padmananda Rama contributed to this report.

Two teens killed, two injured after their pickup was hit by a train

Two teenagers were killed and two more were hospitalized with life-threatening injuries after their pickup truck was hit by a freight train in rural south-central Iowa.

The crash happened around 4:30 p.m. Thursday (5/27) in Clarke County, when the eastbound pickup collided with a BNSF Railway train at a crossing east of Murray, the Iowa State Patrol said.

Investigators said four teens were in the truck at the time of the crash, and two died at the scene. The two others suffered life-threatening injuries and were flown by medical helicopter to a hospital.

Authorities had not released the teens’ identities by Friday morning.

BNSF officials said the crossing where the crash occurred is equipped with gate arms, flashing lights and bells. The patrol and the Clarke County Sheriff’s Office are investigating the crash.

Man who left threatening voicemail to Gov. Reynolds pleads guilty to harassment

An Iowa man who left a threatening voicemail telling Gov. Kim Reynolds she should be hanged or shot “for treason” for imposing COVID-19 restrictions has pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor harassment charge.

Harvey Hunter Jr., 48, pleaded guilty Thursday to second-degree harassment, accepting a plea agreement offered by Polk County prosecutors. In a written guilty plea, he said that he “did threaten to commit bodily injury to a government official” in his Jan. 5 voicemail.

Prosecutors will recommend that Hunter serve a one-year term of probation, pay a fine, have no contact with the governor and undergo a mental health evaluation. A judge will not be bound by the recommendation when Hunter is sentenced next week, and could impose stricter penalties.

Hunter left the voicemail on a governor’s office phone line set up to gather input on the partial statewide mask mandate. He called the governor a dictator and said “every single one of you needs to be hanged for treason for pushing this COVID scam.” He also called Reynolds two derogatory names for women and said “you need to be put in front of a firing squad.”

Hunter had defended his comments as free speech in April interviews with The Associated Press, saying he was expressing opposition to what he considered “tyrannical” COVID-19 restrictions.

The Iowa Department of Public Safety said last month that Reynolds and other elected officials have faced “widespread and alarming” threats, announcing a long-discussed $400,000 plan to erect a security fence around the governor’s residence, Terrace Hill. A spokesman referenced Hunter’s case when asked for specifics.

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