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2nd suspect arrested in deadly Iowa nightclub shooting

CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa (AP) — A second suspect in a shooting at an Iowa nightclub that killed two people and injured 10 others was arrested Monday in a Chicago suburb, the U.S. Marshals Service said.

Dimione Jamal Walker, 29, was wanted in Linn County, Iowa, on charges of first-degree murder and other counts in the April 10 shooting during a crowded party inside the Taboo Nightclub and Lounge in Cedar Rapids, Iowa.

He was also wanted in Illinois on a parole violation and by the U.S. Marshals on a bail warrant.

Law enforcement officers in Iowa determined Walker had left the state on the day after the shooting, the U.S. Marshals Service said in a news release.

Last week, the Marshals Service received information that Walker was in the Chicago area and he was arrested by the Great Lakes Task Force Monday in the Chicago suburb of Matteson. He’s currently being held by Chicago police.

Timothy Rush, 32, has been charged with second-degree murder and other counts in the shooting, which killed 35-year-old Nicole Owens and 25-year-old Michael Valentine, both of Cedar Rapids.

City and county approve grant application for connector road in Oskaloosa

The Mahaska County Board and City of Oskaloosa are both authorizing an application for a state grant to build a road to connect US Highway 63 and State Highway 23 on Oskaloosa’s south side.  At their respective meetings Monday (4/18), the Mahaska County Board and Oskaloosa City Council both voted to support the application for a $7.3 million RISE grant—that’s Revitalize Iowa’s Sound Economy—to go toward building a road linking the two highways.  The new road is still years in the making, but the idea is to direct truck traffic coming from the south toward the industrial area along Highway 23 without going through residential neighborhoods.  The overall project is expected to cost about $11.2 million. Mahaska County and the City of Oskaloosa will split the remainder of the cost.

CIS online art auction

Crisis Intervention Services in Oskaloosa is holding an online art auction to raise money.  Sarah Champoux, executive director of CIS, says the auction will be Wednesday, April 20.

“People can go online at 32auctions.com/CIS and from there, all day (Wednesday) from 8am to 7pm they can bid on items.  We have different artwork from some local artists.  Some of them are paintings, we have quilts, some of them are embroidery.  We have different bundles that include gift certificates for different shops.”

There’s more information on the Crisis Intervention Services Facebook page, and by calling 641-673-0336.

Southern Iowa Speedway Season Opener Delayed One Week

By Jerry Mackey

The racing season opener at the Southern Iowa Speedway has been rescheduled to take place on Wednesday, April 27th. The cold wet conditions coupled with a miserable forecast has forced the officials of the Southern Iowa Speedway to delay the season opener.

Wednesday, April 27th will be College night sponsored by KBOE Radio, hot laps will take to the track at 7:15 with racing to follow in five classes on the Mahaska County Monster ½ mile dirt track located on the Mahaska County Fairgrounds in Oskaloosa.

US rocked by 3 mass shootings during Easter weekend; 2 dead

HAMPTON, S.C. (AP) — Authorities in South Carolina are investigating a shooting at a nightclub early Sunday that wounded at least nine people. It was the second mass shooting in the state and the third in the nation during the Easter holiday weekend.

The shootings in South Carolina and one in Pittsburgh, in which two minors were killed early Sunday, also left at least 31 people wounded.

No one was reported killed in the violence at Cara’s Lounge in Hampton County, roughly 80 miles (130 kilometers) west of Charleston, according to an email from South Carolina’s State Law Enforcement Division, which is investigating the shooting. A phone call to the nightclub was not answered.

In Pittsburgh, two male youths were killed and at least eight people wounded when shots were fired during a party at a short-term rental property. The “vast majority” of the hundreds of people at the party were underage, the city’s Police Chief Scott Schubert told reporters. The Allegheny County Medical Examiner’s Office identified the two victims as Jaiden Brown and Mathew Steffy-Ross, both 17.

Investigators believe there were multiple shooters, and Schubert said police were processing evidence at as many as eight separate crime scenes spanning a few blocks around the rental home.

The two shootings come just a day after gunfire erupted at a busy mall in the South Carolina state capital of Columbia, about 90 miles (145 kilometers) north of Sunday’s nightclub shooting. Nine people were shot, and five people sustained other kinds of injuries while trying to flee the scene at the Columbiana Centre, Columbia Police Chief W.H. “Skip” Holbrook said Saturday. The victims ranged in age from 15 to 73. None faced life-threatening injuries.

“We don’t believe this was random,” Holbrook said. “We believe they knew each other and something led to the gunfire.”

The only person arrested in the mall shooting so far is Jewayne M. Price, 22, one of three people initially detained by law enforcement as a person of interest. Price’s attorney, Todd Rutherford, told news outlets Sunday that his client fired a gun at the mall, but in self-defense. Rutherford said Price faces a charge of unlawfully carrying a pistol because he legally owned his gun but did not have a permit to carry a weapon.

Columbia police said on Twitter that a judge agreed Sunday to let Price leave jail on a $25,000 surety bond. He was to be on house arrest with an ankle monitor, police said.

“It was unprovoked by him. He called the police, turned himself in, turned over the firearm that was used in this, and gave a statement to the Columbia Police Department,” Rutherford said, according to WMBF-TV. “That is why he got a $25,000 bond.”

Police said the judge will allow Price to travel from home to work during certain hours each day. Price is forbidden from contacting the victims and anyone else involved in the shooting.

South Carolina residents age 21 or older can get a weapons permit, which as of last year allows them to carry weapons openly or concealed. They must have eight hours of gun training and pass a background check that includes fingerprinting.

The three Easter weekend mass shootings are in addition to other gun violence in recent days. Last week, a gunman opened fire in a New York subway car, wounding 10 people. A suspect was arrested the next day. Earlier this month, six people were killed and 12 others wounded in Sacramento, California, during a gunfight between rival gangs as bars closed in a busy downtown area just blocks from the state Capitol.

One week ago, a shooting inside a crowded nightclub in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, left a man and a woman dead and 10 people wounded. And last month, 10 people were shot at a spring break party in Dallas and several others were injured as they tried to escape the gunfire.

Iowa Supreme Court rules Finkenauer’s name may be printed on Primary ballots

BY 

RADIO IOWA – The Iowa Supreme Court has reversed a district court ruling — and U.S. Senate candidate Abby Finkenauer’s  name will be listed on the June Primary ballot.

The Iowa Supreme Court has rejected the challenge two Republicans filed to three signatures on Finkenauer’s nominating petitions. The proper date was not listed on the signature lines. If the Supreme Court had ruled the three signatures were invalid, Finkenauer would not have had enough signatures to qualify for the Primary ballot.

In its ruling, the Supreme Court said just last year the legislature passed a law outlining the specific reasons for rejecting signatures on nominating petitions, but that law did not address missing or incorrect dates on the subject line.

Iowa election officials must mail absentee ballots to overseas voters by April 23. The secretary of state’s office indicated Monday at 5 p.m. was the deadline for printing the ballots. If the Supreme Court’s decision had been delayed, the district court judge’s ruling would have prevented Finkenauer’s name from being listed on ballots.

The Iowa Supreme Court justices just heard arguments from attorneys representing the two sides in this case on Wednesday.

Finkenauer issued a written statement, saying today’s unanimous decision from the Iowa Supreme Court shows she “met every requirement” to be on the Democratic Primary ballot. Finkenauer called the decision a victory over an attack “orchestrated by Washington Republicans and allies of Senator Grassley.” Finkenauer is one of three Democrats vying for a spot on the General Election ballot to challenge Grassley’s bid for reelection.

Finkenauer said the “Washington elite” tried to “undermine the democratic process to save Grassley from having to face (her)” in November.

Alan Ostergren, the attorney who represented Republicans challenging three signatures on Finkenauer’s nominating petition, said in a statement posted on Twitter that the only reason the issues were litigated is because Finkenauer barely turned in enough signatures. Ostergren said the Iowa legislature needs to pass a law making it clear what must be on a nominating petition and “what the consequences are for failing to have that information present.”

The communications director for Grassley’s campaign says Finkenauer “thumbed her nose” at Iowa election law and has never admitted fault.

Oskaloosa City Council meets Monday

At Monday’s (4/18) regular meeting, the Oskaloosa City Council will consider reducing the days that Edmundson Pool will be open this summer.  According to city council documents, there’s a shortage of lifeguards this summer.  So to accommodate that, the plan is to have the pool closed on Mondays and open Tuesday through Sunday.  Also at Monday’s Oskaloosa City Council meeting, the Council will go into closed session to discuss strategy in a legal matter.  Monday’s Oskaloosa City Council meeting starts at 6 at Oskaloosa City Hall.

Scammers pretend to be law enforcement

The Iowa State Police Association says there is a growing number of calls from people claiming to be police officers…telling you either your identity has been stolen or there’s an arrest warrant out for you.  The “officer” says if you send money by wire transfer or pre-paid gift card, everything can be cleared up. And the phone number that shows up on caller ID is that of a local law enforcement agency.  The State Police Association says law enforcement never telephones anyone about arrest warrants, nor do they ask for wire transfers or gift cards.  If you have a question, call the law enforcement agency.  And you’re reminded to never give out personal or credit card information to someone that calls you.

RNC keeping Iowa Caucuses first in 2024

RADIO IOWA – The Republican National Committee has unanimously voted to have the Iowa Republican Party’s Caucuses be the first voting event in the next presidential election.

“The Republican Party of Iowa has proven that they can handle this honor and I can tell you we are going to be ready to go for 2024,” Governor Kim Reynolds said in an online news conference organized by the Iowa GOP.

Iowa GOP chairman Jeff Kaufmann was chairman of a panel that made the recommendation that Iowa, followed by New Hampshire, Nevada and South Carolina retain their positions at the front of the G-O-P’s presidential selection process.

“If we want geographic diversity, if we want to make sure that we have a process by which all parts of the country are included,” Kaufmann said, “this was the route to go.”

This GOP decision comes as the Democratic National Committee launched a plan to have five states with racially diverse populations that may be toss ups states in the 2024 presidential election go first. Kaufmann told reporters Iowa Democrats have a chance to make the case that their party’s Caucuses should remain in the lead-off position,

“Look, I stand beside my Democratic colleagues — my Iowa Democratic colleagues,” Kaufmann said. “This resistance isn’t coming from Iowa Democrats. This resistance is coming from the national Democrats who don’t quite get that Iowa isn’t flyover country.”

Kaufmann has been arguing that Iowa, New Hampshire, South Carolina and Nevada represent geographic and racial diversity and feature face-to-face, retail campaigning rather than just a barrage of ads.

“If you want to look an elementary student in the eye and tell them they can become president some day, you cannot start in a large state,” Kaufmann said.

As he’s done in the past, Kaufmann mentioned Barack Obama’s 2008 Iowa Caucus victory in making the case Iowa’s predominantly white electorate has elevated a racially diverse set of candidates this century, including Cuban American Ted Cruz, who won the 2020 Iowa Caucuses.

Governor Reynolds told reporters the Iowa Caucus campaign isn’t about “influencers on the east or west coast” or big party donors.

“We’ve already been hosting candidates and we’re certainly ready to welcome a lot more,” Reynolds said.

Former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, a potential 2024 candidate, was in Council Bluffs today, endorsing a western Iowa congressman’s bid for reelection. President Biden, the presumptive nominee for Democrats in 2024, was in Iowa this past Tuesday for an event at an ethanol plant.

Russia loses warship, says attacks on Kyiv will increase

By ADAM SCHRECK

KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — A day after Moscow suffered a stinging symbolic defeat with the loss of the flagship of its Black Sea fleet, Russia’s Defense Ministry promised Friday to ramp up missile attacks on the Ukrainian capital in response to Ukraine’s alleged military “diversions on the Russian territory.”

The threat of intensified attacks on Kyiv came after Russian authorities accused Ukraine of wounding seven people and damaging about 100 residential buildings with airstrikes on Bryansk, a region that borders Ukraine. Authorities in another border region of Russia also reported Ukrainian shelling Thursday.

Kyiv has gradually displayed some signs of pre-war life after Russian troops failed to capture the city and retreated to focus on a concentrated assault in eastern Ukraine, leaving evidence of possible war crimes in their wake. A renewed bombardment could return the capital’s residents to sheltering in subway stations and the steady wail of air raid sirens.

Ukrainian officials have not confirmed striking targets in Russia, and the reports by Russian authorities could not be independently verified. However, Ukrainian officials claimed their forces struck a key Russian warship with missiles on Thursday. If true, the claim would represent an important victory.

The guided-missile cruiser Moskva, named for the Russian capital, sank while being towed to port Thursday after suffering heavy damage under circumstances that remained in dispute. Moscow acknowledged a fire on board but not any attack. U.S. and other Western officials could not confirm what caused the blaze.

The Moskva had the capacity to carry 16 long-range cruise missiles, and its removal reduces Russia’s firepower in the Black Sea. If Ukrainian forces took out the vessel, the Moskva likely represents the largest warship to be sunk in combat since the Falklands War. A British submarine torpedoed an Argentine navy cruiser called the ARA General Belgrano during the 1982 conflict, killing over 300 sailors on board.

The Russian warship’s loss in an invasion already widely seen as a historic blunder also was a symbolic defeat for Moscow as its troops regroup for an offensive in eastern Ukraine after retreating from the Kyiv region and much of the north.

In his nightly address Thursday, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said the people of his country should be proud of having survived 50 days under attack when the Russian invaders “gave us a maximum of five.”

Zelenskyy did not mention the Moskva by name, but while listing the ways Ukraine has defended against the onslaught, mentioned “those who showed that Russian warships can sail away, even if it’s to the bottom” of the sea. It was his only reference to the Moskva.

News about the flagship overshadowed Russian claims of advances in the southern port city of Mariupol, where Moscow’s forces have been battling the Ukrainians since the early days of the invasion in some of the heaviest fighting of the war — at a horrific cost to civilians.

Dwindling numbers of Ukrainian defenders in Mariupol are holding out against a siege that has trapped well over 100,000 civilians in desperate need of food, water and heating. David Beasley, executive director of the U.N. World Food Program, told The Associated Press in an interview Thursday that people were being “starved to death” in the besieged city.

Mariupol’s mayor said this week that more than 10,000 civilians had died and the death toll could surpass 20,000. Other Ukrainian officials have said they expect to find evidence of atrocities committed against civilians like the ones discovered in Bucha and other towns outside Kyiv once the Russians withdrew.

The Mariupol City Council said Friday that locals reported seeing Russian troops digging up bodies that were buried in residential courtyards and not allowing any new burials “of people killed by them.”

“Why the exhumation is being carried out and where the bodies will be taken is unknown,” the council said in a statement posted on the Telegram messaging app.

Mariupol’s capture is critical for Russia because it would allow its forces in the south, which came up through the annexed Crimean Peninsula, to fully link up with troops in the Donbas region, Ukraine’s eastern industrial heartland and the target of the looming offensive.

Moscow-backed separatists have fought Ukrainian forces in the Donbas since 2014, the same year Russia seized Crimea from Ukraine. Russia has recognized the independence of two rebel-held areas of the region.

Although it’s not certain when Russia will launch the full-scale campaign, a regional Ukrainian official said Friday that seven people died and 27 were injured after Russian forces opened fire on buses carrying civilians in the village of Borovaya, near the northeastern city of Kharkiv.

Ukrainian law enforcement agencies are working to establish the circumstances of the attack, Dmytro Chubenko, a spokesman for the regional prosecutor’s office, told Ukraine’s Suspilne news website.

Chubenko said that Ukrainian authorities had opened criminal proceedings in connection with a suspected “violation of the laws and customs of war, combined with premeditated murder.” The claims of an attack on civilian buses could not be independently verified.

The Russian Defense Ministry said Friday that Russian strikes in the Kharkiv region “liquidated a squad of mercenaries from a Polish private military company” of up to 30 people and “liberated” an iron and steel factor in Mariupol from “Ukrainian nationalists.” The claims could not be independently verified.

On Thursday, the Defense Ministry explained the damage to Russia’s Black Sea flagship by a fire had caused ammunition stowed on board to detonate. In addition to the cruise missiles, the warship also had air-defense missiles and other guns.

The ministry did not say what might have caused the blaze but reported that the “main missile weapons” were not damaged and the crew, which usually numbers about 500, abandoned the vessel. It wasn’t clear if there were any casualties.

Maksym Marchenko, the governor of Ukraine’s Black Sea region of Odesa, said Ukrainian forces struck the Moskva with two Neptune missiles and caused “serious damage.” The Neptune is an anti-ship missile that was recently developed by Ukraine based on an earlier Soviet design.

The missile’s launchers are mounted on trucks stationed near the coast, and, according to the Washington-based Center for Strategic and International Studies, can hit targets up to 280 kilometers (175 miles) away. That would have put the Moskva within range, based on where the ship was when the fire began.

Launched as the Slava in 1979, the cruiser saw service in the Cold War and during conflicts in Georgia and Syria, and helped conduct peacetime scientific research with the United States. During the Cold War, it carried nuclear weapons.

British defense officials said the Moskva’s loss would likely force Moscow to change how its naval forces operate in the Black Sea. In a social media post Friday, the U.K. Ministry of Defense said the ship, which returned to operational service last year after a major refit, “served a key role as both a command vessel and air defense node.”

Other Russian ships in the northern Black Sea moved farther south after the Moskva incident, a senior U.S. defense official said, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss internal military assessments.

Russia invaded Ukraine on Feb. 24 and has lsuffered thousands of military casualties. The conflict has killed untold numbers of Ukrainian civilians and forced millions more to flee.

It has also further inflated prices at grocery stores and gasoline pumps, while dragging on the global economy. The head of the International Monetary Fund said Thursday that the war helped push the organization to downgrade economic forecasts for 143 countries.

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Associated Press journalists around the world contributed to this report.

Follow the AP’s coverage of the war at https://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine

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