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Think Safety Before Opening Day of Pheasant Season

DES MOINES — Hunters heading to the field for the opening weekend of pheasant season are encouraged to review safe hunting practices before they head out.

Jamie Cook, hunter education coordinator with the Iowa Department of Natural Resources, said hunters should get reacquainted with the techniques used to hunt pheasants – be sure to walk in a straight line and know where members of the hunting party are at all times, especially in low visibility areas like terraces, tall switch grass and standing corn.

“Go through the safe zones of fire with each member of the hunting party, talk about avoiding target fixation and swinging on game,” Cook said. “Wear plenty of blaze orange especially on the upper one third of your body. We are encouraging hunters to wear more blaze orange than the minimum required.  The goal is to be seen by other hunters.

“The top pheasant hunting incidents all are related to not being seen. The shooter swings on a rooster, the victim is out of sight of the shooter or the rooster flew between the shooter and the victim.”

Cook said safety also extends to the canine companions.

“Avoid low shots to prevent injuring your hunting dog,” he said.

“The hunting plan and safety practices are all part of a responsible hunt. The goal at the end of the day is for everyone to return home safely.”

Tips for a Safe Hunt

  • Iowa law requires hunters to wear at least one of the following articles of visible, external apparel with at least 50 percent of its surface area solid blaze orange: hat, cap, vest, coat, jacket, sweatshirt, shirt or coveralls.
  • Hunters should stay in communication with each other and to stay in a straight line while pushing a field.
  • Discuss the hunting plan that spells out how the hunt will take place, each person’s role in the hunt and where each person will be at all times.
  • Know exactly where standers will be located, especially when hunting standing corn or tall switch grass to avoid having the standers get shot by the pushers as they near the end of the field and the birds begin to flush.
  • Make sure to unload the gun when crossing a fence or other obstacle to avoid it accidentally discharging.
  • Properly identify the target and what is beyond it especially if hunting in fields that still have standing corn.
  • If hunting with a dog, never lay a loaded gun against a fence. Hunting dogs are usually excited to be in the field and could knock the gun over causing it to discharge.
  • Hunters bringing dogs into Iowa must have in their possession a health certificate verifying rabies and other vaccinations of their dogs.
  • Share the hunt. Take someone new along to help keep Iowa’s great hunting tradition alive.

Iowa Department of Education releases new state school performance ratings and federal designations

DES MOINES – The Iowa Department of Education today released the new Iowa School Performance Profiles, which includes new state school performance ratings and federal designations.

The website shows:

  • Schools that have been identified for additional support and improvement based on their performance to meet requirements of the federal Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA).
    • Of the 468 total schools currently identified in need of targeted assistance and support, nearly half of all were identified because their students with disabilities performed below the level of the lowest 5 percent of all schools.
  • Updated scores and state school performance ratings for all public schools in Iowa based on how they performed on multiple measures, including student proficiency and growth, in the 2022-23 school year.
    • Ratings range from exceptional (highest performing), high performing, commendable, acceptable, needs improvement, and priority (lowest performing).
  • Additional data beyond that included in the school performance ratings, including educator effectiveness and per pupil expenditures.

“Our performance profiles provide critical information for families, educators, and communities on how our schools are serving all students,” said Iowa Department of Education Director McKenzie Snow. “We celebrate the hard work of schools to accelerate student learning and improve their ratings, while focusing on what we need to do to best serve students most in need of support, especially students with disabilities. Together with our school partners, the department is targeting resources to support school improvement achieved through high-quality instruction and interventions.”

This year, 134 additional schools were identified as in need of targeted assistance and support (targeted schools) based on the performance of and achievement gaps experienced by a subgroup of their students (students who are eligible for free and reduced-price meals, English learners, students with disabilities or students by racial/ethnic group). Targeted schools are identified annually and are part of a three-year cycle during which they implement a plan for improvement with the support of the Department of Education.

Schools are identified for comprehensive support (comprehensive schools) once every three years. No new comprehensive schools were identified since the 32 schools identified last year are in their second year of state support and assistance. These schools represent the lowest five percent of all Title 1 public schools, as well as schools with graduation rates lower than 66 percent, based on the overall performance of their students. Title 1 schools typically serve high numbers or percentages of children from low-income backgrounds.

In addition to the federal ESSA accountability designations, state school performance ratings provide an overall score and performance rating for all Iowa schools across a number of performance measures. The overall distribution of schools by rating category changed only slightly from last year, with 94.2 percent of schools remaining unchanged or only shifted by one category. The Commendable category saw the highest increase (2.9 percentage points), while the High Performing and Exceptional categories changed by less than a percentage point. The share of schools in the bottom two rating categories (Needs Improvement and Priority) decreased by 0.3 percentage points combined. More schools moved into the upper half of the rating system (53%) compared to the prior year (51%).

The Iowa School Performance Profiles, launched in 2018, meets state and federal requirements to publish report cards reflecting the performance of all public schools.

For more information, visit iaschoolperformance.gov.

Ottumwa Man Charged with Murder in Connection to Stabbing

OTTUMWA — On October 16, 2023, at approximately10:46 p.m., officers from the Ottumwa Police Department were dispatched to 301 S. Ward Street on a report of a stabbing.  The victim was identified as Samuel Gallegos-Ramirez, age 34, of Ottumwa.  Gallegos was transported to the Ottumwa Regional Health Center where he was pronounced deceased.  

On October 26, 2023, at approximately 11:12 a.m., Gary Lewis Scott, age 60, of Ottumwa, was arrested in relation to this incident and charged with the following crimes:  

  • Murder in the 1st Degree, a Class “A” Felony
  • Willful Injury, a Class “C” Felony
  • Assault While Participating in a Felony, a Class “C” Felony
  • Going Armed With Intent, a Class “D” Felony

From the onset of the investigation, the Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation assisted the Ottumwa Police Department.  Preliminary information at the scene of the incident did not immediately identify all of the circumstances that led to the death of the victim.  Investigators were eventually able to identify that an altercation took place between the victim and the suspect which resulted in the filing of the criminal charges.  

At least 16 dead in Maine mass killing and police hunt for the shooter as residents take shelter

LEWISTON, Maine (AP) — A man shot and killed at least 16 people at a restaurant and a bowling alley in Lewiston, Maine, on Wednesday and then fled into the night, sparking a massive search by hundreds of officers while frightened residents stayed locked in their homes.

A police bulletin identified Robert Card, 40, as a person of interest in the attack that sent panicked bowlers scrambling behind pins when shots rang out around 7 p.m. Card was described as a firearms instructor believed to be in the Army Reserve and assigned to a training facility in Saco, Maine.

The document, circulated to law enforcement officials, said Card had been committed to a mental health facility for two weeks in the summer of 2023. It did not provide details about his treatment or condition but said Card had reported “hearing voices and threats to shoot up” the military base. A telephone number listed for Card in public records was not in service.

Lewiston Police said in an earlier Facebook post that they were dealing with an active shooter incident at Schemengees Bar and Grille and at Sparetime Recreation, a bowling alley about 4 miles (6.4 kilometers) away.

One bowler, who identified himself only as Brandon, said he heard about 10 shots, thinking the first was a balloon popping.

“I had my back turned to the door. And as soon as I turned and saw it was not a balloon — he was holding a weapon — I just booked it,” he told The Associated Press.

Brandon said he scrambled down the length of the alley, sliding into the pin area and climbing up to hide in the machinery. He was among a busload of survivors who were driven to a middle school in the neighboring city of Auburn to be reunited with family and friends.

“I was putting on my bowling shoes when when it started. I’ve been barefoot for five hours,” he said.

Melinda Small, the owner of Legends Sports Bar and Grill, said her staff immediately locked their doors and moved all 25 customers and employees away from the doors after a customer reported hearing about the shooting at the bowling alley less than a quarter-mile away. Soon, the police flooded the roadway and a police officer eventually escorted everyone out of the building.

“I am honestly in a state of shock. I am blessed that my team responded quickly and everyone is safe,” Small said. “But at the same time, my heart is broken for this area and for what everyone is dealing with. I just feel numb.”

After the shooting, police, many armed with rifles, took up positions while the city descended into eerie quiet — punctuated by occasional sirens — as people hunkered down at home. Schools were closed Thursday in Lewiston, Lisbon and Auburn, as well as municipal offices in Lewiston.

The Androscoggin County Sheriff’s Office released two photos of the suspect on its Facebook page that showed the shooter walking into an establishment with a weapon raised to his shoulder.

Two law enforcement officials told The AP that at least 16 people were killed and the toll was expected to rise. However, Michael Sauschuck, commissioner of the Maine Department of Public Safety, declined to provide a specific estimate at a news conference, calling it a “fluid situation.” State police planned to hold a mid-morning news conference Thursday.

The two law enforcement officials said dozens of people also had been wounded. The officials were not authorized to publicly discuss details of the ongoing investigation and spoke to AP on condition of anonymity.

On its website, Central Maine Medical Center said staff were “reacting to a mass casualty, mass shooter event” and were coordinating with area hospitals to take in patients. The hospital was locked down and police, some armed with rifles, stood by the entrances.

Meanwhile, hospitals as far away as Portland, about 35 miles (56 kilometers) to the south, were on alert to potentially receive victims.

An order for residents and business owners to stay inside and off the streets of the city of 37,000 was extended Wednesday night from Lewiston to Lisbon, about 8 miles (13 kilometers) away, after a “vehicle of interest” was found there, authorities said.

Gov. Janet Mills released a statement echoing instructions for people to shelter. She said she had been briefed on the situation and will remain in close contact with public safety officials.

President Joe Biden spoke by phone to Mills and the state’s Senate and House members, offering “full federal support in the wake of this horrific attack,” a White House statement said.

Maine Sen. Angus King, an independent, said he was “deeply sad for the city of Lewiston and all those worried about their family, friends and neighbors” and was monitoring the situation. King’s office said the senator would be headed directly home to Maine on the first flight possible.

Local schools will be closed Thursday and people should shelter in place or seek safety, Superintendent Jake Langlais said, adding: “Stay close to your loved ones. Embrace them.”

Wednesday’s death toll was staggering for a state that in 2022 had 29 homicides the entire year.

Maine doesn’t require permits to carry guns, and the state has a longstanding culture of gun ownership that is tied to its traditions of hunting and sport shooting.

Some recent attempts by gun control advocates to tighten the state’s gun laws have failed. Proposals to require background checks for private gun sales and create a 72-hour waiting period for gun purchases failed earlier this year. Proposals that focused on school security and banning bump stocks failed in 2019.

State residents have also voted down some attempts to tighten gun laws in Maine. A proposal to require background checks for gun sales failed in a 2016 public vote.

Governor wholeheartedly backs investigation of UI, ISU athletes accused of illegal gambling

By O. Kay Henderson (Radio Iowa)

Governor Kim Reynolds is suggesting it was a tip that led state agents to investigate whether there was illegal gambling among male athletes at the University of Iowa and Iowa State University.

“They did their job. They received inquiries about an issue and they do what they do,” Reynolds said Wednesday in her first public comments about the probe. “They responded to that and I think they were surprised at some of the results that they found.”

The state’s investigation of sports wagering led to misdemeanor charges against several student athletes at Iowa and Iowa State and the NCAA sanctions that followed have sidelined players. During a news conference in Des Moines yesterday, Reynolds said no one in state government “checked in” with her about the investigation. “But I support wholeheartedly the department and the decisions that were made,” Reynolds said. “…They received some concerns. They looked into it, like they do with other issues, and I think they were surprised at some of the results that they actually uncovered.”

On August 15, 2019, it became legal in Iowa to place bets on sporting events, although people originally had to go to one of the 19 state-licensed casinos to register. Since 2021, registration can be done online, but you still must be at least 21 to place sports bets. Reynolds calls the gambling by Iowa and Iowa State athletes that’s been revealed is “a wake up call.

“We just have to do better education, make sure that these kids understand the consequences of doing this. This is preventable,” Reynolds said. “…Just because it’s so available and it’s so easy, we might need to double down on our efforts to make sure they understand the consequences that are involved going forward.”

Under current NCAA rules, college athletes of any age cannot bet on any sport in which the NCAA hosts a championship.

Secretary Naig Announces New Phase, Expanded Area for Southeast Iowa Water Quality Project

DES MOINES — Iowa Secretary of Agriculture Mike Naig announced today that a successful Water Quality Initiative (WQI) project in Mahaska County is expanding into Jasper and Marion Counties while also adding a new phase that focuses on edge-of-field conservation practices.

Since the Mahaska County South Skunk and Cedar Creek Headwaters Watershed Project started in 2020, nearly 20,000 acres of cover crops have been seeded in the project area. The next phase of this project will continue to emphasize the use of in-field conservation practices like cover crops. However, the project will also now include an added focus on the installation of edge-of-field practices such as saturated buffers, bioreactors and wetlands on an even larger territory. These proven practices help to filter the water and remove nutrients before they enter our waterways. Depending on the landscape, grade stabilization structures will also be implemented.

“Not only are we adding more conservation and water quality practices to this successful project, but we are also increasing the territory size to positively impact even more acres and accelerate our water quality progress,” said Iowa Secretary of Agriculture Mike Naig. “These practices have been proven to work and if you are a farmer or landowner in this project area, we invite you to work with us to get them installed.”

Through the WQI, the Iowa Department of Agriculture and Land Stewardship is investing approximately $388,017 in the next phase of this project. Partners on the project include the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) Natural Resource Conservation Service (NRCS), Iowa State University Extension and Outreach, City of Oskaloosa, William Penn University, Mahaska County Farm Bureau, Pheasants Forever, Iowa Department of Natural Resources (DNR), Agriland FS, Key Cooperative, Nutrien Ag Solutions, H&S Feed and Country Store, McKim Tractor Service, Van Wall Equipment, Ozinga Feed Service, Van Maanen Seed and Chemical, Cargill, Huffman Feed and Supply, McGriff’s of New Sharon, Two Rivers Cooperative, Pella Feed Service, Titan Machinery, Vision Ag, Fremont Elevator, Herr Brother’s Equipment, Hoksey Native Seeds, Pathfinders Resource Conservation and Development (RC&D), Practical Farmers of Iowa, Iowa Corn Growers Association, Jasper County Soil and Water Conservation District, Marion County Soil and Water Conservation District and Mahaska County Soil and Water Conservation District.

About the Water Quality Initiative

The Iowa Water Quality Initiative was established in 2013 to help implement the Nutrient Reduction Strategy, which is a science and technology-based approach to protecting and improving our water quality. The strategy brings together both point sources, such as municipal wastewater treatment plants and industrial facilities, and nonpoint sources, including farm fields and urban stormwater runoff, to address these issues. The Initiative seeks to harness the collective ability of both private and public resources and organizations to deliver a clear and consistent message to stakeholders to reduce nutrient loss and improve water quality.

Bridge View Center Receiving 2023 Facilities & Destinations Prime Site Award

OTTUMWA — Five VenuWorks-managed venues, including Ottumwa’s Bridge View Center, received the prestigious 2023 Prime Site Award presented by Facilities and Destinations magazine. This award is given annually to the top convention and exposition centers in the United States.

Facilities & Destinations is a quarterly trade publication for the meetings and events industry. The award recognizes that these venues and organizations are exceptional in the highly competitive industry.  Prime Site Awards have been bestowed annually since 1994. 

This year’s Prime Site honored VenuWorks-managed convention and expo centers are:

  • Bridge View Center, Ottumwa, IA
  • Chesapeake Conference Center, Chesapeake, VA
  • RiverCenter, Davenport, IA
  • Three Rivers Convention Center, Kennewick, WA
  • Vicksburg Convention Cetner, Vicksburg, MS

“We are very proud of the teams at each of these award-winning venues. Our teams take exceptional pride in exceeding the expectations of our guests and clients,” said Steve Peters, VenuWorks President.

“We are proud to be recognized by Facilities & Destinations as a 2023 Prime Site Award Winner.  Our core philosophy is Delivering Outstanding Experiences, and our Bridge View Center team has worked super hard to deliver on our core philosophy with every event we host and ensure all those we serve have an outstanding experience.  This award recognizes the many hours of hard work and the dedication and commitment our Bridge View Center team members have to our guests we serve and events we host throughout the year.  We are grateful for the opportunity and honored to serve our Ottumwa community and SE Iowa region”  says Scott Hallgren, Executive Director for VenuWorks at Bridge View Center.

Longshot World Series: Diamondbacks vs Rangers is a Fall Classic few saw coming

ARLINGTON, TX (AP) — Tell the truth: How many people picked Arizona and Texas to meet in the World Series?

A Rangers-Diamondbacks matchup had 1,750 to 1 odds when wagering opened last fall.

But in an era when 12 teams make the playoffs, sustained excellence over the six-month regular season has become a boarding pass, not the journey, leading to a Longshot Series that opens Friday night at Globe Life Field.

“Once you get into the big dance, anything can happen,” Diamondbacks manager Torey Lovullo said before Tuesday night’s 4-2 win at Philadelphia advanced Arizona to its first World Series since 2001. “Throw it all out the window. The teams that get in deserve to be in.”

All the glamour teams are watching at home: the Los Angeles Dodgers and Atlanta Braves stumbled in the Division Series, defending champion Houston was ousted by Texas, and the New York Yankees didn’t even make it to the postseason.

Instead, Major League Baseball has its third all-wild card meeting, a Grand Canyon vs. Lone Star finale of second-place teams played in air-conditioned ballparks under retractable roofs — potentially the first all-indoor Fall Classic.

“I thought it would take a little more time,” Diamondbacks rookie outfielder Corbin Carroll said. “So to be able to do it in this first year just makes it all the more special.”

Both prior all-wild card matchups went seven games. The Los Angeles Angels beat the San Francisco Giants in 2002, and Bruce Bochy’s Giants defeated the Kansas City Royals in 2014 for their third title in five years.

Texas and the Diamondbacks are both two years removed from last-place finishes and 100-loss seasons. Arizona is a No. 6 seed and Texas a No. 5.

“Sometimes, one of the last hurdles to get over is that winning feeling, attitude, when you’ve been losing for a few seasons,” Bochy said.

Bochy, 68 and in his 26th year as a big league manager, joined the Rangers last October. He is going for his fourth title, which would tie Walter Alston and Joe Torre for fourth-most behind Joe McCarthy and Casey Stengel (seven each) and Connie Mack (five). All prior managers with three or more are in the Hall of Fame.

“I don’t think about me. I’m riding their backs, trust me,” Bochy said. “It’s unreal that I’m here, to be honest. Sitting at the house for three years, and think here I am going to a World Series. Yeah, that’s special. But it’s more about them and trying to find a way to get a ring for those guys.”

Texas started play as the expansion Washington Senators from 1961-71 and has played 10,028 games without a title (9,964 regular-season games, according to the Elias Sports Bureau, plus 64 in the postseason). That’s the second-longest drought behind Cleveland, which last won in 1948.

After losing in the World Series in 2010 and ’11, the Rangers are among six teams without a title, joined by Colorado, Milwaukee, San Diego, Seattle and Tampa Bay.

Arizona’s only title came on Luis Gonzalez’s ninth-inning single off Yankees closer Mariano Rivera in Game 7 in 2001.

Texas headed into the playoffs with the sixth-highest payroll at $228 million. Arizona was 20th at $127 million.

Both teams rallied and earned their World Series berths on the road. It was the first time road teams won Games 6 and 7 in both leagues since the LCS expanded to a best-of-seven format in 1985.

Without Jacob deGrom following a season-ending elbow injury, the Rangers acquired Max Scherzer and Jordan Montgomery to join a rotation that included Nathan Eovaldi and Andrew Heaney. Adolis García has seven homers and 20 RBIs in the playoffs, leading an offense also powered by 2020 World Series MVP Corey Seager, Marcus Semien, Mitch Garver and Josh Jung.

Arizona’s rotation is led by Zac Gallen, Merrill Kelly and Brandon Pfaadt, and its offense sparked by Carroll, Christian Walker, Ketel Marte, Lourdes Gurriel Jr. and Gabriel Moreno. Lovullo, 58, is in his seventh season as Diamondbacks manager and in the playoffs for the first time since his 2017 team was swept by the Dodgers in the Division Series.

Texas is 8-0 on the road in the postseason but has home-field advantage because it won 90 games to Arizona’s 84 — which could be the second-fewest for a World Series champion in a non-shortened season behind the St. Louis Cardinals’ 83 in 2006. The Diamondbacks split two games at Texas in May and swept a pair at home in August, including an 11-inning win on consecutive doubles by Geraldo Perdomo and Tommy Pham off Will Smith. The Rangers hold a 28-25 edge in regular-season matchups.

There are some common ties. Lovullo’s staff includes bench coach Jeff Banister, the Rangers’ manager from 2015-18.

Scherzer was drafted by the Diamondbacks and spent his first two seasons with Arizona in 2008-09 before he was dealt to Detroit.

Anticipation is high for Iowa’s 2023 pheasant season

DES MOINES — Iowa’s pheasant population is up, the crop harvest is advancing quickly and the weekend weather forecast is setting up for an excellent opening weekend for Iowa’s pheasant season.

The annual August roadside survey found Iowa’s statewide pheasant population to be nearly 23 birds per route; a 15 percent increase over 2022. The biggest increases were in the southwest, northwest and northeast regions.

“We couldn’t ask for better opening weekend conditions,” said Todd Bogenschutz, upland wildlife biologist with the Iowa Department of Natural Resources. “Our bird population is highest since 2015, and much of the corn and soybeans will be harvested by the time the season opens. Combine those two factors, plus cooler weekend temperatures, we should see a lot of pheasants taken.”

Based on the August roadside survey, Iowa hunters can expect to harvest 300,000 to 400,000 roosters this year, which is similar to the past two years, when the harvest was the highest in more than a decade.

Bogenschutz estimates around 50,000 hunters will be out this weekend, but there is room for more.

“This would be a great time to invite a friend to spend a weekend in the field to experience pheasant hunting, or to take the kids and pass along our pheasant hunting tradition to the next generation,” he said.

Something to note, he said, is that portions of Iowa impacted by the drought were opened to haying CRP and it would be advised for hunters to scout the area they plan to hunt prior to the season.

Quail season also opens this weekend and fall covey counts indicate the population could be a little better than last year. Quail hunting is primarily across the southern two tiers of counties.

Iowa Pheasant Season

Iowa’s pheasant season is Oct. 28 to Jan. 10, 2024. Shooting hours are from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. daily. The daily bag limit is three roosters, with a possession limit of 12.

Iowa’s quail season is Oct. 28 to Jan. 31, 2024. Shooting hours are from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. daily. The daily bag limit is eight quail of either sex, with a possession limit of 16.

Hunters are required to wear at least one article of external clothing with at least 50 percent of its surface area solid blaze orange: hat, cap, vest, coat, jacket, sweatshirt, shirt or coveralls. The same blaze orange rule applies while hunting quail, gray partridge and ruffed grouse.

If hunting on public land that requires nontoxic shot, hunters are encouraged to plan ahead to pick up shells.

Online Hunting Atlas offers places to go

Iowa hunters have been using the interactive Iowa hunting atlas to find new places to go hunting. The hunting atlas features more than 680,000 acres of public hunting land that is owned by the state, county or federal governments. It’s available online at www.iowadnr.gov/hunting.

This tool allows hunters to see which zone the public area is in, type of shot allowed, wildlife likely to be found and get an overhead look at the terrain. The mobile version of the atlas will show hunter location on the area if granted permission.

The atlas view from above allows hunters to zoom in on an area, see how to get there, the lay of the land and where one parcel of public hunting land is in relation to others and print off maps.

 Information is updated as public hunting lands are acquired.

The hunting atlas also includes private land enrolled in the Iowa Habitat and Access Program (IHAP) where private landowners receive assistance to improve habitat on their land in exchange for opening the property for hunter access.

Site maps are available at www.iowadnr.gov/ihap showing boundaries and which species would be most likely attracted to the habitat. Walk-in public hunting through IHAP is available between September 1 and May 31.

Allegations of Impropriety Revealed in Ottumwa Chiropractor Case

By Clark Kauffman (Iowa Capital Dispatch)

The state of Iowa has now disclosed the allegations of impropriety it levied against an Ottumwa chiropractor seven months ago.

The records show the chiropractor faced disciplinary charges related to the same alleged conduct in 2022, resulting in his license being suspended and then reinstated. This time, the conduct resulted in the chiropractor agreeing to surrender his license.

The disclosure, made in response to a formal Open Records Law request from the Iowa Capital Dispatch, comes in the wake of the state asserting that specific allegations of misconduct made against licensed professionals are considered “investigative” information that must be kept confidential.

The newly disclosed information involves the board’s March 2023 allegation that on Feb. 16, 2022, Lindberg performed chiropractic adjustments on a 10-year-old male child without the consent of the child’s parents.

Lindberg allegedly kissed the child on the top of his head, hugged him, and commented on how cute he was while telling him he could “come back any time, that he did not have to bring his mom, and that he could bring his friends.”

According to the board, Lindberg “did not ask any medical history prior to the treatment and failed to keep adequate records that complied with the regulations for record keeping.”

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