News you can use

state news


Sorted by date  Results 1756 - 1780 of 2803

Page Up

  • Montana mail ballot bill fails amid racism allegation

    MATT GOURAS Associated Press

    HELENA, Mont. (AP) — A plan to use only mail-in ballots for the state's main elections, which haltingly moved forward with fragile bipartisan cooperation, failed Friday after allegations of racism from a Native American lawmaker and defensive counter-accusations. The simmering tensions between Republicans and Democrats erupted, somewhat surprisingly, over a bill that modifies the way elections are run. The House had abruptly changed its mind on the proposal after endorsing the proposal a day earlier. The bill failed after man...

  • Parents sue over Glacier football team bus assault

    Tristan

    KALISPEL (AP) — A state judge has denied a request for a temporary restraining order to prevent a student charged with assaulting teammates on a freshman football bus from returning to classes at Glacier High School on Monday. Attorney Sean Frampton, of Whitefish, filed a petition Wednesday on behalf of the parents of three Glacier High students who reported being sexually assaulted last month. District Judge David M. Ortley denied the request for the restraining order Thursday and set a Nov. 14 hearing, Frampton said F...

  • Montana lays out riverbed case to US Supreme Court

    Matt Gouras

    HELENA — Montana is asking the U.S. Supreme Court to stick with a lower court ruling that the state owns the riverbeds where hydroelectric dams sit and can charge power companies rent for their usage. PPL Montana has gone to the nation's high court, asking it to reverse a 2010 ruling by the Montana Supreme Court that declared the riverbeds were state property. The U.S. Supreme Court is scheduled to hear the case in December. Montana Attorney General Steve Bullock argued in a Thursday filing that state title to the r...

  • Baucus backs Rocky Mountain Front wilderness bill

    Matt Gouras

    HELENA — U.S. Sen. Max Baucus says he will sponsor a bill to expand the wilderness on the Rocky Mountain Front. AP Photos/Susan Walsh, File Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont., speaks during a news conference on Jan. 24, 2008, on the economy on Capitol Hill in Washington. Baucus is expected to throw his support behind the proposed Rocky Mountain Front Heritage Act, and will propose the measure to Congress that expands wilderness. Conservationists who have been working on the Rocky Mountain Front Heritage Act tout the proposal as a c...

  • Trooper lied about job, military experience

    BILLINGS (AP) — A trooper who resigned last month rather than being fired was investigated several times during his 17-year career with the Montana Highway Patrol, according to a report obtained by a newspaper. The Billings Gazette reported Thursday the investigations included allegations that Steve Wisniewski pointed a gun at a motorist and repeatedly struck a man with a baton while probing a traffic crash. Patrol commanders assigned an officer to examine Wisniewski's past after learning Wisniewski had lied about his previou...

  • Indian lands may hold future to energy security

    MATTHEW DALY Associated Press

    Indian leader: Unleash energy on tribal lands WASHINGTON — To achieve energy independence, the United States should focus on tribal lands with vast untapped supplies of coal, natural gas, oil and wind, the leader of the nation's largest Indian organization said Thursday. Jefferson Keel, president of the National Congress of American Indians, said tribal lands contain about 10 percent of U.S. energy resources, but provide less than 5 percent of national energy production. He blamed bureaucratic obstacles that prevent tribes f...

  • Several US states weigh in on cigarette label suit

    MICHAEL FELBERBAUM, AP Tobacco Writer

    RICHMOND, Va. — Several states and U.S. territories are weighing in on a lawsuit over proposed graphic cigarette warning labels that include a sewn-up corpse of a smoker and a picture of diseased lungs, saying the federal government should be allowed to require the labels for the "lethal and addictive" products. The 24 attorneys general filed a friend of the court brief on Friday in the U.S. Court of Appeals in Washington in support of the Food and Drug Administration's challenge of a lower court ruling in the case. Last m...

  • High court rules for newspaper in Billings police records case

    Tristan

    BILLINGS (AP) — The Montana Supreme Court ruled Wednesday that an internal document related to the investigation of a Billings police department employee suspected of misconduct should be made public. The Billings Gazette reports that in a 4-3 decision, the high court upheld a district judge's December ruling that the information should be released. The newspaper sued the city seeking its findings in an internal investigation of credit card purchases made by Deanna Anthony, a senior administrative coordinator with the d...

  • Judge grants Beach a new trial

    Tristan

    BILLINGS (AP) — The man convicted in the 1979 killing of a Poplar girl is getting a new trial. KULR-TV reports (http://bit.ly/rrj5q1 ) a District Court judge in Fergus County ruled Tuesday that new evidence could convince a jury to acquit Barry Beach. The 49-year-old was convicted in 1984 in the beating death of 17-year-old Kimberly Nees largely based on his own confession. Beach, who has spent 28 years in prison, argues that he was coerced into the confession by out-of-state police. His attorneys have argued a group of g...

  • Woman behind Indian trust case remembered for grit

    Matt Volz

    BROWNING — Elouise Cobell was remembered on Saturday as a warrior whose compassion and grit drove her to dedicate the last 16 years of her life to holding the U.S. government accountable for billions lost or stolen from her fellow Native Americans. Friends, family and American Indian leaders gathered in the Browning High School gymnasium on the Blackfeet Indian Reservation for a funeral Mass for Cobell, who died last Sunday of cancer. She was 65. "She proved that with hard work and determination, the impossible is p...

  • Woman behind Indian trust case remembered for grit

    Matt Volz

    BROWNING — Elouise Cobell was remembered on Saturday as a warrior whose compassion and grit drove her to dedicate the last 16 years of her life to holding the U.S. government accountable for billions lost or stolen from her fellow Native Americans. Friends, family and American Indian leaders gathered in the Browning High School gymnasium on the Blackfeet Indian Reservation for a funeral Mass for Cobell, who died last Sunday of cancer. She was 65. "She proved that with hard work and determination, the impossible is p...

  • Former Sen. Burns speaks to tea party group

    Tristan

    BILLINGS (AP) — Former U.S. Sen. Conrad Burns told tea party supporters Thursday that President Barack Obama wants the "whole country to become like an Indian reservation." Burns spoke at a small rally organized by Americans for Prosperity, an advocacy group founded with support from billionaire brothers Charles and David Koch that lobbies for lower taxes and less government. The Billings Gazette reported (http://bit.ly/r24i1S ) that a group of more than 40 responded approvingly to the former senator's remarks, which i...

  • Governors at odds over Missouri River management

    GRANT SCHULTE, MATT GOURAS - Associated Press

    OMAHA, Neb. — A meeting of Missouri River governors Monday revealed significant disagreement between Montana and states further downstream over flood control, even as federal officials warned the group that damage from this year's high water may make their states even more vulnerable next year. Montana Gov. Brian Schweitzer fought against a developing notion that flood control for states further down the river should dominate how reservoirs are managed upstream. He told governors of the downstream states that such a plan w...

  • Cobell remembered as a 'warrior for justice'

    Tristan

    HELENA (AP) — Remembrances of Elouise Cobell are coming in from across the nation as news spread of the Native American leader's death. Cobell, who had cancer, died Sunday in Great Falls. She was 65. The Blackfeet woman from Browning was best known for leading a long legal fight over misspent Native American land royalties that resulted in a $3.4 billion settlement with the U.S. government. President Barack Obama says Cobell helped hundreds of thousands of Native Americans and strengthened the government's relationship w...

  • Wounded grizzly kills hunter in remote Montana

    The Associated Press

    BONNERS FERRY, Idaho — A grizzly bear wounded by a hunter later attacked and killed the hunter's partner Friday after the two men tracked the animal in a remote area along the Idaho-Montana boarder, authorities said. Steve Stevenson, 39, and Ty Bell, 21, members of a hunting party from Winnemucca, Nev., were going after black bears when the attacked occurred about 10 a.m. PDT in a mountainous, heavily forested region in Lincoln County, Mont., near the Canadian border. AP Photo/The Bonner Daily Bee, Julie Golder Boundary C...

  • State asks court to lift hold on medical pot law

    Matt Volz

    HELENA (AP) — Montana prosecutors are asking the state Supreme Court to lift a district judge's block of portions of a new state law meant to restrict the sale of medical marijuana. Judge James Reynolds in June issued an injunction that prevented key parts of the bill from becoming law, including a ban on marijuana providers from making a profit. He also blocked a ban on medical marijuana advertising, unannounced searches of providers and investigations into doctors who recommend marijuana for more than 25 patients in a y...

  • Tester's landmark ethics pledge put to the test

    Matt Gouras

    HELENA — Six year ago, farmer Jon Tester ran as an outsider fighting lobbyists and corruption in Washington D.C. — even promising a unique ethics platform that has since pushed other elected officials to publicly post meetings held with lobbyists and others. But after nearly five years in the U.S. Senate the Democrat's pledge is being tested amid one of the hottest Senate races in the country and the demands of raising millions in campaign money. AP Photo/Reed Saxon, File Democrat Jon Testercelebrates with family, inc...

  • Univ. of Montana investigating date-rape claim

    Tristan

    MISSOULA (AP) — The University of Montana brought in an outside investigator to review allegations that two female students may have been given a date-rape drug and sexually assaulted by male students, a campus official said. Former state Supreme Court Justice Diane Barz will begin the investigation Thursday, university Vice President Jim Foley told the Missoulian (http://bit.ly/uPPrvX ). Barz has been asked to complete her review by the end of the year. The allegations surfaced in the past few days, Foley said. "Through t...

  • Charge dropped after Helena police shooting

    Tristan

    HELENA (AP) — A state judge has dismissed a charge of felony assault on a peace officer filed against a Helena man who was shot by a police officer while allegedly driving his pickup truck toward the officer. District Judge James Reynolds made the decision after Brian John Temple's attorneys argued that investigators removed the windshield from the pickup before Temple's defense could run tests to determine where Sgt. Peter Callahan was standing in relation to the vehicle when he fired the shot. "What if Temple's own t...

  • Regents to ask campuses to set funding priorities

    Tristan

    BOZEMAN (AP) — Montana's Board of Regents plans to ask each campus in the state's university system to set funding priorities and suggest what they can do without to help the system save money, higher education leaders said. "Prioritization, we're very committed to," Commissioner of Higher Education Sheila Stearns said Thursday during a listening session with Montana State University professors and others. "The process will take a couple years. Every program will have to justify itself." Regent Stephen Barrett, of Bozeman, sa...

  • Former transportation director to run for governor

    Tristan

    HELENA (AP) — Former Montana Transportation Director Jim Lynch has announced plans to run for governor. Jim Lynch Lynch is the ninth Republican to join the 2012 governor's race along with two Democrats. Term limits prevent Gov. Brian Schweitzer from seeking re-election. Schweitzer asked Lynch to resign as transportation director in August after the administration confronted Lynch about that agency's hiring of Lynch's daughter about four years ago. Lynch has maintained that he did nothing wrong and was not involved in the h...

  • Political wrangling continues over legislative bjt

    The Associated Press

    HELENA — Minority Democrats in the state House opposed the bill that pays the Legislature's expenses as a protest to Republican moves to cut state spending elsewhere. Democrats argued Wednesday it is wrong for the controlling party to increase funding for legislative benefits after GOP moves a day earlier to start cutting state programs for the needy and elderly. Republicans said the Democrats are just trying to score political points by politicizing a normally routine bill. Gov. Brian Schweitzer has already taken issue with...

  • Lawmakers consider power line eminent domain issue

    MATT GOURAS A ssociated Press

    MATT GOURAS,Associated Press HELENA (AP) — Utilities and supporters of a high-voltage power line in north-central Montana asked the Legislature Wednesday to make sure eminent domain can be used to build such projects when private landowners won't let them. A Montana judge ruled last month that the Canadian developer building the Montana Alberta Tie Line does not have the authority to condemn private property for the project. State Sen. Ken Peterson said Wednesday in a legislative hearing that utilities had long believed t...

  • Barry Beach released from prison pending new trial

    Tristan

    LEWISTOWN — After spending nearly 29 years behind bars, convicted murderer Barry Beach was released on his own recognizance Wednesday to await a new trial in the 1979 death of a 17-year-old girl on the Fort Peck Indian Reservation. District Judge E. Wayne Phillips ordered Beach's release at a hearing in Lewistown just weeks after ordering a new trial for the 49-year-old man. AP Photo/Billings Gazette, Larry Mayer Surrounded by the media, Barry Beach hugs family members after his release by District Judge Wayne Phillips in L...

  • Prosecutor: Agency kept abuse complaint quiet

    Tristan

    BILLINGS (AP) — A Yellowstone County prosecuting attorney is questioning why a state agency didn't report a child molestation complaint to police. "It bothered me," Scott Twito told the Billings Gazette (http://bit.ly/u2i2Nh ). "It is clearly a criminal matter and should have been reported to law enforcement." He said the Yellowstone County Sheriff's Office received an anonymous tip in March that a 43-year-old man had molested a 9-year-old girl. He said investigators then learned that months earlier officials with the C...

Page Down