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Coronavirus update

Five people in Iowa have been reported to have died from coronavirus.  The Iowa Department of Public Health says as of Thursday (5/20), the state’s death total is 6018.  Meanwhile, there have been another 233 positive tests for COVID-19, making the pandemic total 370,154.  Two new positive tests were reported in Wapello, Jasper and Marion Counties, with one in Keokuk County and no new positive tests in Mahaska, Poweshiek and Monroe Counties.

Jury shown surveillance videos

Jurors at the trial of the man charged with fatally stabbing a University of Iowa student in 2018 were shown surveillance videos Thursday (5/20) of a woman running and a vehicle later tied to the defendant driving by her seconds later.

Investigators testified about how the video became a significant lead in the massive month-long search for Mollie Tibbetts, who disappeared while running on July 18, 2018, in Brooklyn, Iowa. Within days of obtaining the video, they had recovered Tibbetts’ body from a cornfield and arrested Cristhian Bahena Rivera, a local farmhand.

The testimony came on the second day of Bahena Rivera’s first-degree murder trial at the Scott County Courthouse in Davenport. Prosecutors say the surveillance video, blood found in the vehicle’s trunk that was later a match for Tibbetts’ DNA and a partial confession by the defendant will be key to proving his guilt.

Bahena Rivera’s defense team tried Thursday to cast suspicion on others who had initially come under scrutiny, including Tibbetts’ boyfriend and local residents who had been investigated because of their past behavior toward women.

Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation agent Derek Riessen testified that he collected the surveillance video from homeowner Logan Collins on Aug. 14 as part of a citywide canvass of Brooklyn, and immediately began reviewing it with other agents. He said the next day a fellow agent said he believed he saw something significant, and Riessen thought he was kidding.

But additional review showed a person appearing to run through the neighborhood in the distance, entering and leaving the video frame in a split second. Riessen said he determined it was a runner who appeared to have a ponytail and was passing by at 7:45 p.m.

About 20 seconds later, a black Chevy Malibu with distinctive chrome rims, door handles and a mirror drove past. Riessen said that vehicle is on surveillance several times over the next 20 minutes, ultimately going back toward the direction of the runner at a higher rate of speed at 8:07 p.m. He said that Tibbetts, 20, is suspected to have been abducted on a rural road about 2 miles (3.2 kilometers) away around 8:20 p.m.

Jurors were shown several videos and photos of the runner and the Malibu, including some that were enhanced in size. Riessen said neither the driver nor the license plate could be identified on the video.

Poweshiek County Deputy Steve Kivi said he reviewed the video lead on Aug. 15, 2018, after spending a month looking into what happened to Tibbetts, who was living in her hometown over a summer break. The next day, Kivi said he spotted the vehicle just outside of Brooklyn getting off of Interstate 80 and followed the driver, who turned out to be Bahena Rivera.

Kivi said that Bahena Rivera was cooperative during their initial discussion that day, calmly denying knowing anything about what happened to Tibbetts. The deputy recounted driving with Bahena Rivera and other law enforcement officials just days later to the cornfield where Tibbetts’ remains were discovered.

Police say that Bahena Rivera led them to the body after a lengthy interrogation that began Aug. 20, although a judge ruled that those statements cannot be used at the trial because an officer failed to read him his Miranda rights.

Bahena Rivera allegedly made additional incriminating statements at the scene that can be used, including that he had approached Tibbetts while she ran, fought with her after she threatened to call police, and remembered driving to the field where he left her bloody body.

Kivi acknowledged that investigators never found a murder weapon. An autopsy found that Tibbetts had died of stab wounds.

Kivi said several other county residents had come under scrutiny, but that no evidence was found linking anyone else to Tibbetts’ death.

DeYarman Ford Donates $25,000 to Miracle League Project

Waukee is launching plans to build a Miracle League baseball field, and an all-inclusive playground at the Youth Sports Complex being built in the city. Miracle League fields remove the barriers that keep children with mental and physical disabilities off the baseball field. Games are played on a custom-designed, rubberized turf field that accommodates wheelchairs and other assertive devices. The Waukee Betterment Foundation is raising $3 million for the project, which will be located in the new Waukee Community Park and Youth Sports Complex. The complex is expected to open in 2021 with the all-inclusive amenities to follow in 2022.

This Friday, Doug DeYarman and his wife Tammy, are making a donation of $25,000.00 to the Waukee Betterment Foundation for the new Miracle League Field. It’s a very expensive project to make happen and the foundation is always looking for more donations and would be a great project to be involved with. Doug and Tammy are putting Tucker Swanson’s name on the donation as well, as his dad worked for Doug in Waukee for 12 years. Tucker, who has down syndrome, will also be presenting the check along with Doug and Tammy on Friday. This will be a very special moment for everyone and we would all love to see as many people there to support this great project as possible. The check for the Waukee Betterment Foundation will be presented this Friday, May 21st, 2021 at 2:00pm at the Waukee Townhall.

When do I still need to wear a mask?

By MIKE STOBBE

NEW YORK (AP) — When do I still need to wear a mask?

It depends, mostly on whether or not you’re vaccinated.

If you’re fully vaccinated, the latest guidance from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says you no longer need to wear a mask or physically distance in most situations. That includes when you’re outside and in many indoor spaces like restaurants, though you still need to follow any local or business rules.

Americans also still need a mask when traveling, including on buses, subways and planes and at airports. The guidance on masks will differ by country.

Some experts say the CDC is relaxing its recommendations too soon.

Part of the concern is that there’s no way to tell who’s vaccinated, so unvaccinated people could claim they got the shots and go maskless, said David Holtgrave, dean of the School of Public Health at University at Albany. That could cause cases to rise.

“A central mistake in public health is easing up infectious disease control efforts just before crossing the finish line,” he said.

Vaccinated people might also prefer to continue wearing their masks. Though chances are low, it’s still possible to get infected, even if symptoms are likely to be mild or nonexistent.

That’s why the CDC’s guidance says vaccinated people should put their masks back on and get tested if they end up developing symptoms.

There are other exceptions. Masks are still needed in select settings including hospitals and nursing homes. And if you have a weakened immune system because of a health condition or medications, the agency says to talk to your doctor before shedding your mask, since vaccines generally don’t work as well in people with weak immune systems.

People are considered fully vaccinated two weeks after their last required shot.

If you’re not yet fully vaccinated, the CDC still recommends masks in most places outside your home. That includes indoor public spaces, crowded outdoor events like concerts and small outdoor gatherings that include other unvaccinated people.

When you’re outdoors alone or with people from your household, the agency says unvaccinated people don’t need masks.

Since children younger than 12 aren’t yet eligible for COVID-19 shots, they should continue to wear masks indoors outside the home and in most public places like other unvaccinated people.

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The AP is answering your questions about the coronavirus in this series. Submit them at: FactCheck@AP.org. Read more here:

Can COVID-19 vaccines affect my period?

Is it safe to go to big sporting events during the pandemic?

How long does protection from COVID-19 vaccines last?

Iowa legislative session ends

The Iowa Legislature ended the 2021 session nearly three weeks later than expected after Republican lawmakers completed negotiations over a complex tax plan that they approved to add to a host of other conservative priorities they passed, ranging from restricting voting rights to expanding gun access.

On the final day of the session that ended late Wednesday night, Republicans passed a proposed constitutional amendment on abortion that must pass again before the measure can go before Iowa voters. They also approved a last-minute measure that prohibits counties, cities or school boards from imposing face-covering requirements more strict than those ordered by the state. Republican Gov. Kim Reynolds signed the mask restriction into law early Thursday and it take effect immediately.

The Senate adjourned at 11:41 p.m. Wednesday and the House followed at 11:46 p.m.

Senate Democratic Leader Zach Wahls called this year’s Republican priorities “the most radical cultural divisive agenda” since the GOP took control of all of state government in 2017.

House Speaker Pat Grassley said Republican leadership in the House for 10 years is proof that Iowans support the party’s leadership.

“If you think those things are a radical agenda or don’t fit with what Iowans expect of us, I think Iowans would disagree for over a decade now,” he said.

Republicans used their large majorities in the House and Senate to push through many bills with little or no Democratic support. Throughout the session, Democrats also complained that Republicans refused to require masks or require reporting of coronavirus infections.

People working in the Capitol acknowledged numerous COVID-19 infections, including Rep. Amy Nielsen, D-North Liberty, who was infected in late January and remained sick for weeks. Nielsen said she was infected at the Capitol.

Among topics where lawmakers approved measures:

TAXES

The tax bill passed in the final days phases out the state inheritance tax, moves up implementation of a previous income tax break and moves the cost of mental health care from county property taxes to the state general fund. In the bill, lawmakers end promised payments to cities, counties and school districts to offset property tax revenue lost from a 2013 business and industry tax break. Democrats contend the decision will ultimately lead local governments to cut services or raise property taxes.

SCHOOLS

Republicans pushed ahead with Reynolds’ proposals to expand charter schools in Iowa amid Democratic objections that such schools would not be as accountable to school boards as public schools and would allow public money to be shifted away from public schools to fund the charters. Reynolds signed the bill Wednesday, and the law is effective July 1.

GUNS

Republicans continued their longstanding push to make it easier to buy and carry guns with a law that allows people to buy firearms and carry a concealed handgun without first obtaining a state permit. The law eliminates current state permit requirements and the accompanying background checks that ensure the person obtaining or carrying a gun isn’t disqualified from ownership due to past felonies or abuses. The bill also eliminates firearms training now required to obtain a gun permit. It was signed by Reynolds in April and becomes effective on July 1.

VOTING

Iowa Republicans, like those in dozens of other states where the GOP has majorities, approved a bill that makes it harder to vote early, potentially eroding a key aspect of Democratic campaigns. Reynolds signed the bill.

The law, which became effective in March, makes numerous changes, including shortening the early voting period to 20 days from the current 29. It also requires most mail ballots to be received by Election Day, rather than counting votes postmarked by Election Day that arrive by noon on the Monday following the election. Voting sites will close at 8 p.m. rather than 9 p.m. and voters will be removed from active voting lists if they miss a single general election and don’t report a change in address or register as a voter again. A lawsuit has been filed to challenge portions of the law as unconstitutional.

POLICE

Republicans passed a bill that offers extensive new rights to law enforcement officers in Iowa. The measure goes to Reynolds, who proposed much of it in her “Back the Blue” proposal announced earlier this year. While Reynolds and lawmakers promised Iowans last summer that they would work on substantial criminal justice reform measures this year, Republicans instead drafted a bill that protects officers by giving them immunity from prosecution and makes rioting a felony. Republicans refused to support Reynolds’ proposed ban on racial profiling by law enforcement. Democrats claim the bill is an attack on those who protested against racial injustice for months last summer. Democrats also opposed a portion of the bill that requires motorists to pull over for plain-clothed police officers in unmarked police cars or face enhanced criminal eluding charges.

Mask mandates banned in Iowa

Republicans in the Iowa legislature have voted to ban mask mandates in all Iowa schools, as well as in cities and counties. Governor Reynolds signed the bill early Thursday morning (5/20) and it took effect immediately. It means mask mandates are no longer allowed in any Iowa school when school starts Thursday morning. Representative Dustin Hite, a Republican from New Sharon, says he’s been fielding complaints about mask mandates since the pandemic began.  “You want to talk about something that’s grassroots, this is something I’ve heard about — I’ve lost count.”

Representative Marti Anderson, a Democrat from Des Moines, says face coverings are a part of the public health response to the pandemic.  “Don’t we have a responsibility to protect the health of the people around us?”
Representative Eric Gjerdes, a Democrat from Cedar Rapids, says banning mask mandates isn’t based on science; it’s based on perception.  “Masks make sense right now make sense for folks that are not vaccinated. The majority of students in Iowa schools have not been doubly vaccinated.”
Representative Steven Holt, a Republican from Denison, says numerous/many parents in his district have had enough and they don’t want their children wearing a mask in school.  “If we believe the vaccines work, if we believe that masks work, then fine. Get the vaccine. Wear the mask and don’t worry about what other people are doing. You be you and you let them be them. This is about freedom.”
Senator Joe Bolkcom, a Democrat from Iowa City, was among those who said the ban could prevent local governments from responding to future public health emergencies.  “Masks work,” Bolkcom says. “They have worked and it’s a good thing that local governments and school districts have taken it upon themselves to encourage the use of masks.”
Senator Chris Cournoyer, a Republican from LeClaire, says it’s time to learn from the lessons of the pandemic.  “Kids do get Covid. My children have had Covid. Kids get colds, kids get cancer and kids get the flu. “We cannot continue to live in an entire bubble.”
The bill passed both the Senate and House early Wednesday evening (5/19). Any city or county ordinances requiring mask wearing in private businesses was immediately overturned when the Governor signed the bill Thursday morning.

House backs commission on Jan. 6 riot over GOP objections

By MARY CLARE JALONICK

WASHINGTON (AP) — The House voted Wednesday to create an independent commission on the deadly Jan. 6 insurrection at the U.S. Capitol, sending the legislation to an uncertain future in the Senate as Republican leaders work to stop a bipartisan investigation that is opposed by former President Donald Trump.

Democrats say an independent investigation is crucial to reckoning what happened that day, when a violent mob of Trump’s supporters smashed into the Capitol to try and overturn President Joe Biden’s victory. Modeled after the investigation into the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, the legislation would establish an independent, 10-member commission that would make recommendations by the end of the year for securing the Capitol and preventing another insurrection.

The bill passed the House 252-175, with 35 Republicans voting with Democrats in support of the commission, defying Trump and House Republican leader Kevin McCarthy. Trump issued a statement urging Republicans to vote against it, calling the legislation a “Democrat trap.”

Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell is trying to prevent defections among his own ranks, echoing McCarthy’s opposition in a Senate floor speech Wednesday morning. Both men claimed the bill was partisan, even though membership of the proposed commission would be evenly split between the parties.

The January insurrection has become an increasingly fraught topic for Republicans, with a growing number in the party downplaying the severity of the worst attack on the Capitol in more than 200 years. While most Republicans voted against forming the commission, only a few spoke on the floor against it. And the handful of Republicans who backed the commission spoke forcefully.

“This is about facts — it’s not partisan politics,” said New York Rep. John Katko, the top Republican on the House Homeland Security Committee who negotiated the legislation with Democrats. He said “the American people and the Capitol Police deserve answers, and action as soon as possible to ensure that nothing like this ever happens again.”

Rep. Fred Upton, R-Mich., said that Jan. 6 “is going to haunt this institution for a long, long time” and that a commission is necessary to find the truth about what happened. He recalled that he “heard the shouts, saw the flash-bangs, smelled the gas on that sorry day.”

Democrats grew angry as some Republicans suggested the commission was only intended to smear Trump. Several shared their own memories of the insurrection, when rioters brutally beat police, broke in through windows and doors and sent lawmakers running. Four of the rioters died, including a woman who was shot and killed by police as she tried to break into the House chamber. A Capitol Police officer collapsed and died after engaging with the protesters, and two officers took their own lives in the days after.

“We have people scaling the Capitol, hitting the Capitol Police with lead pipes across the head, and we can’t get bipartisanship? What else has to happen in this country?” shouted Rep. Tim Ryan, D-Ohio, on the floor just before the vote. He said the GOP opposition is “a slap in the face to every rank and file cop in the United States.”

The vote was yet another test of Republican loyalty to Trump, whose grip on the party remains strong despite his election defeat. House Republicans booted Wyoming Rep. Liz Cheney from their leadership last week for her criticism of Trump’s false claims, installing a Trump loyalist in her place. Cheney, in turn, suggested to ABC News that a commission could subpoena McCarthy because he spoke to Trump during the insurrection.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., called McCarthy’s opposition to the commission “cowardice.” She released a February letter from the GOP leader in which he asked for an even split of Democrats and Republican commissioners, equal subpoena power and no predetermined findings or conclusions. The bipartisan legislation accommodates all three of those requests, she said.

“Leader McCarthy won’t take yes for an answer,” she said.

In the Senate, McConnell’s announcement dimmed the prospects for passage, as Democrats would need at least ten Republicans to vote with them. But Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., vowed to force a vote on the bill, charging that Republicans are “caving” to Trump.

Schumer said that Republicans are trying to “sabotage the commission” and are “drunk” off Trump’s baseless claim that the election was stolen from him. That false assertion, repeated by the mob as the rioters broke into the Capitol, has been rebuked by numerous courts, bipartisan election officials across the country and Trump’s own attorney general.

Like in the House, some Senate Republicans have suggested they will support the legislation.

Utah Sen. Mitt Romney said Tuesday that given the violent attack, “we should understand what mistakes were made and how we could prevent them from happening again.” Louisiana Sen. Bill Cassidy said he doesn’t agree with McConnell that the bill is slanted toward Democrats and “I’m inclined to support it.”

Maine Sen. Susan Collins, a Republican, said that she supports the idea of a commission but that the House bill would need adjustments.

Others have pushed their colleagues to oppose the commission. Missouri Sen. Roy Blunt, the top Republican on the Senate Rules Committee, is working on a report with his Democratic colleagues that will include recommendations for security upgrades. He said an independent investigation would take too long and “frankly, I don’t think there are that many gaps to be filled in on what happened on Jan. 6, as it relates to building security.”

South Dakota Sen. John Thune, the No. 2 Republican in the Senate, cited concern in the caucus that the investigation could be “weaponized politically” in the 2022 election cycle.

“I want our midterm message to be about the kinds of issues that the American people are dealing with,” Thune said. “It’s jobs and wages and the economy, national security, safe streets, strong borders and those types of issues, and not relitigating the 2020 election.”

Separately Wednesday, aides to Rep. Jamie Raskin, D-Md., circulated a letter they said was from a group of around 40 to 50 anonymous U.S. Capitol Police officers who had been speaking with the congressman.

“It is inconceivable that some of the Members we protect would downplay the events of January 6th,” the letter reads. “It is a privileged assumption for Members to have the point of view that ‘it wasn’t that bad.’ That privilege exists because the brave men and women of the USCP protected you, the Members.”

The letter was quickly repudiated by Capitol Police leaders, who said the agency doesn’t take any position on legislative matters.

Raskin said in an interview Wednesday evening that the officers approached his office with the letter, and that they and their families have been traumatized about what happened on the 6th. Raskin said “they can’t believe there is dissension in the Congress” about the simple facts of the insurrection.

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Associated Press writers Michael Balsamo, Alan Fram, Lisa Mascaro and Nomaan Merchant contributed to this report.

Coronavirus update

A Marion County resident is among seven Iowans reported to have died Wednesday (5/19) from coronavirus.  That raises the state’s death total from the pandemic to 6013.  The Iowa Department of Public Health also reported another 284 positive tests for COVID-19 Wednesday, raising the pandemic total to 369,921.  Seven new positive tests were reported in Wapello County, four in Poweshiek County, three in both Jasper and Marion Counties, two in Keokuk, one new positive test in Monroe County and no new cases in Mahaska County.

Governor calls tax bill a win for Iowans

House Republicans have sent the governor a tax plan that ensures another round of income tax cuts go into effect in 2023. It gets rid of the state inheritance tax AND it shifts the responsibility for funding for mental health services from counties to the state. Representative Dustin Hite, a Republican from New Sharon, says that shift eliminates a property tax levy that has supported the mental health system. “That right there is something that I think we can all go home with and say: ‘This is something we’ve done for you.’ We’ve eliminated that burden on the Iowa property taxpayers.”

Nine Democrats joined 55 Republicans to pass the bill. Representative Timi  Brown-Powers, a Democrat from Waterloo, voted against the plan.  “In the long run, we’re probably not meeting the goal that we wanted to meet with child or adult mental health,” Brown-Powers said, “and I am afraid that we are going to see services cut instead of services expanded.”
The bill ends state payments to cities and counties to cover a commercial property tax cut the legislature ordered in 2013. Representative Sharon Steckman, a Democrat from Mason City, says the state is breaking a promise.
“You’re just playing a shell game,” Steckman says, “because eventually either the services in a city and county will be cut or they’ll have to raise property taxes.”
Republicans say the state payments are being phased out in the next five to eight years, giving city and county officials time to make budget adjustments. The bill has a host of other provisions, including more tax credits for housing developers and child care operators. It also ensures small businesses that got federal loans from the Paycheck Protection Program won’t have to pay state income taxes on that pandemic relief.

“This is an easy vote for me,” Hite says. “I’m going to vote for the Iowa taxpayer.”

Senate Republicans approved the tax package Monday (5/17). Republican Governor Kim Reynolds took to Twitter Tuesday night (5/18), calling the bill a win for Iowans. She says it will fully implement tax cuts approved in 2018 and address other priorities like providing equitable state funding of Iowa’s mental health system.

Bahena Rivera Trial Update

The boyfriend of a University of Iowa student testified Wednesday that he had nothing to do with her 2018 abduction and stabbing death, saying he had been out of town for work and heartbroken by her slaying.

Dalton Jack, the longtime boyfriend of Mollie Tibbetts, was a key witness on the first day of the first-degree murder trial of Cristhian Bahena Rivera, the Mexican national charged in her killing.

Prosecutor Bart Klaver said in his opening statement Wednesday that video evidence, DNA analysis and a partial confession by Bahena Rivera, a dairy farm worker, will be crucial to proving his guilt. Tibbetts, 20, disappeared while out for a run in Brooklyn, Iowa, on July 18, 2018. Her body was recovered a month later in a cornfield.

During cross examination, defense lawyers for Bahena Rivera worked to try to cast suspicion on Jack, painting him as an angry young man who had a tumultuous relationship with Tibbetts and had cheated on her with at least one other woman.

But Klaver said a homeowner’s surveillance video will show Bahena Rivera’s black Chevy Malibu appearing to circle Tibbets as she ran. Bahena Rivera, now 26, told police that he drove past Tibbetts and turned around to get a second look because he thought she was “hot,” Klaver said.

Bahena Rivera admitted to investigators that he got out of his car and ran to catch up with her, and became angry and fought with her after she threatened to call police, Klaver said. Bahena Rivera said the next thing he remembered was driving his Malibu with her bloody body in the trunk, which he then carried over his shoulder and hid beneath stalks in a cornfield, the prosecutor said.

Klaver said blood found in the trunk matched Tibbetts’ DNA. He said an autopsy found that she had been stabbed from seven to 12 times in the chest, ribs, neck, and skull, and that she died from sharp force injuries.

Jack, 23 and now an Army sergeant stationed at Fort Bragg in North Carolina, testified that he met Tibbetts at high school and had been dating her for three years. He described her as “happy, bubbly, goofy,” saying she liked to have fun and that she would would go for a run most days.

On the day she disappeared, Tibbetts was staying at the Brooklyn home where Jack and his older brother Blake Jack lived. She had been asked to watch Blake Jack’s dogs while the brothers were out of town that week for work.

The brothers testified that they became concerned after learning on July 19 that Tibbetts had not shown up for work at a daycare, and she was not answering her phone. Both returned to Brooklyn to help search for her, before calling police.

Dalton Jack testified that he had been part of a crew building a bridge in Dubuque, about 140 miles from Brooklyn. He worked 12 hours on July 18 then drank beer and played yard games with the crew before going to sleep at a hotel, adding that he never returned to Brooklyn that night.

On cross-examination, Jack acknowledged he used to have a “short fuse” and would get into fights. He said that he had “screwed up” and cheated on Tibbetts once, and that she discovered the relationship after looking through his phone.

Jack said the two worked through the problem and never broke up but acknowledged Tibbetts told him three days before she disappeared that she remained sad and upset about his infidelity. On the day before she went missing, she had discussed one of his previous relationships with a second woman, Jack admitted.

With friends and police searching for Tibbetts, a woman with whom Jack has previously had a relationship sent him a text message asking, “Dalton, is Mollie alive?” defense lawyer Chad Frese said, calling the question “odd.”

Jack admitted that he initially told police that he was watching a movie in his hotel room on the night she disappeared and that he withheld information about his infidelity, calling it irrelevant. He also acknowledged that he told police his last communication with Tibbetts was a Snapchat he received at 10:30 p.m. that night, but phone records show it was after 1 a.m.

He also said he did not agree to voluntarily testify and required a subpoena because he didn’t want to be in “the same room” as Bahena Rivera.

“I am obviously not his biggest fan,” he said. “I wholeheartedly believe he’s guilty.”

Jack said he joined the Army three months after Tibbetts’ body was found because he was heartbroken and “wanted to pretty much leave” their hometown.

Bahena Rivera paid close attention to the testimony, listening through headphones to a Spanish-speaking interpreter. If convicted, he faces life in prison without parole.

The trial at the Scott County Courthouse in Davenport is being livestreamed by Court TV and expected to last through next week.

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