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Rapid City Journal from Rapid City, South Dakota • A1

Location:
Rapid City, South Dakota
Issue Date:
Page:
A1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

00 1 CLASSIFIEDS B6 MARKETS B5 NATION WORLD B5 OBITUARIES A4 OPINION B4 SPORTS B1 WEATHER A8 ASSOCIATED PRESS NEW TOWN, N.D. The family of an American Indian woman whose body was found in a lake nine months after she went missing wants to help de- velop a missing-person protocol for tribes. Olivia Lone Bear, 32, of New Town, disappeared from the Fort Berthold Reservation in October. Her body was found this month in a pickup pulled from Lake Saka- kawea. The FBI is investigating what happened to the mother of ve children.

Her brother, Matthew Lone Bear, said dif- cult in Indian Country to get a missing person search started. a lot of red tape and hoops you have to jump through to even get (an investigation) he said. want to kind of streamline that so not so di The North Dakota Indian Af- fairs Commission plans to dis- cuss drafting missing person guidelines for tribes and other $2.00 Issue 45517 A Lee Enterprises Newspaper Copyright 2018 Want to subscribe or have a question? Call 605-394-8383 Have news tip? Call 605-394-8416 CONTACT US SUNNY 91 65 FORECAST, A8 SATURDAY, AUGUST 11, 2018 rapidcityjournal.com Central Plains Regional Hardhats hold on to stay alive SPORTS, PAGE B1 Canada gun violence 2 police ocers among the dead NATION WORLD, PAGE B5 SAMUEL BLACKSTONE Journal sta John Osburn has patrolled the streets of Sturgis and haunts of the hills during the rally for the past dozen years to ensure a roadside hoagie lled with, among other things, regret. With close to half a million people invading the Black Hills for the rally each August, the mouths to feed are plentiful. So, too, are the food vendors, who set up shop from Main Street in Sturgis to Boxelder Forks Road in Nemo.

Osburn and his Depart- ment of Health coworkers do their best to keep them all in line. This year, Osburn estimates his team of between three and eight Department of Health in- spectors it varies each day have completed more than 300 inspections. On average, each inspection results in one or two violations. Though they have the ability to shut down a vendor, they have yet to do so this year and only go to such lengths when there is an imminent health risk such as chemicals being mixed in food, contaminated food being T.D. GRIFFITH Journal correspondent DEADWOOD As the Black Hills fade in the rearview mirrors of thousands of motorcyclists this weekend, signaling the end of the 78th Sturgis Rally, more than 100 historical enthusiasts are preparing to embark on a journey straight out of the Wild West.

As the sun peaks above the ponderosa pines at the Hook Ranch in extreme eastern Wy- oming early Monday morning, as many as 40 wagons and 150 horseback riders will set out on the Cheyenne to Deadwood Wagon Train and Trail Ride, re- tracing the route of the fabled stagecoach line and some of the trails the 1874 Custer Expedition established in its long-ago sur- vey of the Black Hills. Unlike their two-wheeled counterparts roaring down con- crete ribbons at 85 mph, this so- journ into the past will be decid- edly slower with a pace of travel marked by feeling every rut in the road and hearing every horse and mule whinny as they carry their cargo through the highest reaches of this ancient mountain range. going along at 3 mph, there too much you said Jon Mattson, one of the wagon organizers. experience the country- side, pretty mountain meadows, deer, elk and wild turkeys, quiet forests, mountain streams, wild- owers and all the beauty of this region. And we always make new In large measure, the wagon train will leave civilization be- hind for six days as it makes its way from Buckhorn, 85 miles east to its nal rendezvous Aug.

18 at the Days of Mu- seum in Deadwood. on this trip, Wagon train will retrace Custer route SETH TUPPER Journal sta Lance attempt to be his own replacement candidate is facing a legal challenge. Hot Springs resident and reg- istered Republican voter Heather Boche led paperwork Wednesday in Hughes County Circuit Court asking for a writ of prohibition to stop Secretary of State Shantel Krebs from certi- fying Russell as a candidate for the state Senate. Russell won a June Republican primary to run for state Senate, then withdrew to seek the Repub- lican nomination for attorney general which he lost and then convinced party cials to nominate him as his own replacement candidate for the state Senate. That angered Boche, who spoke Friday to the Rapid City Journal by phone.

were telling me Lance is a powerful person in she said, referring to the capital city, I really care. What he did was Russell, of Hot Springs, is the incumbent state senator in Legis- lative District 30. The southwest- ern South Dakota district includes Custer and Fall River counties, and a portion of Pennington County. In the June 5 primary election, Russell was nominated by Re- publican voters in District 30 to run for re-election. He received 61 percent of the votes to beat former legislator Bruce Rampel- berg, of Rapid City (26 percent), and Patricia Shiery, of Hot Springs (13 percent).

But Russell was also campaign- ing at the time for the Republican nomination to run for attorney general of South Dakota, which was to be decided June 20-23 at the Republican state con- vention in Pierre. Russell faced a dilemma be- cause of South Dakota ed Law 12-6-3, which says no per- son may be a candidate for more than one public ce, unless one of the ces is president or vice president. The law prohibited Russell from being nominated for attorney general if he was already a candidate for the state Senate, so he withdrew his Senate candidacy Voter challenges bid RYAN HERMENS PHOTOS, JOURNAL STAFF John Farrar, a state inspector, checks the temperatures of dishes while conducting a food-service inspection Friday at Filipino Food in Sturgis. Food patrol keeps stomachs safe Family wants missing person protocol Lone Bear Court asked to decide whether senator can run after withdrawing Russell State inspectors keep close eye on rally vendors Food being out of the mandated temperature range is the most common violation. That food is then discarded.

AN INTEGRAL PART OF STURGIS RALLY Please see RUSSELL, Page A3 Please see HEALTH, Page A4 Please see WAGON TRAIN, Page A4 Please see MISSING, Page A4.

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Pages Available:
1,175,049
Years Available:
1886-2024