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Tag: davenport

  • Fire damages home in Davenport

    A fire damaged a home in Davenport on Friday afternoon, Polk County Fire told WESH 2. The family was able to escape and no injuries were reported. It’s unclear how the fire started. Chopper 2 video shows a hole in the home and heavy damage to the vehicle in front. >> This is a developing story and will be updated as more information is released.

    A fire damaged a home in Davenport on Friday afternoon, Polk County Fire told WESH 2.

    The family was able to escape and no injuries were reported.

    It’s unclear how the fire started.

    Chopper 2 video shows a hole in the home and heavy damage to the vehicle in front.

    fire damages home in davenport

    fire damages home in davenport

    fire damages home in davenport

    >> This is a developing story and will be updated as more information is released.

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  • Friday Night Hits: Week 3 Scoreboard and Recaps

    RIGHT TO THE CHOPPER LAKE MARY PUT TOGETHER BACK TO BACK COMEBACK WINS TO START THE SEASON TONIGHT. THEY WERE ON THE ROAD IN LAKELAND LAKE MARY DOWN 13 SEVEN. FINAL DRIVE OF THE SECOND QUARTER. LOOK AT THIS THROW FROM NOAH GRUBBS. THAT’S A DART. HELPS KEEP THE DRIVE ALIVE. SETS UP A FIELD GOAL BEFORE THE HALF LUCAS PARKER WILL PUT IT THROUGH FROM 38 YARDS OUT. RAMS WERE DOWN BY THREE AT THE HALF. THEY TIE IT UP AT 13 HEADING INTO THE FOURTH QUARTER. BUT THAT’S WHEN THE DREADNAUGHTS JUST GO NUTS. FOR THE FIRST TIME THIS SEASON. LAKE MARY FALLS 32 TO 13. OSCEOLA WAS TRYING TO BOUNCE BACK FROM A LOSS AT HOME TO LAKE MARY. THEY WENT ON THE ROAD TO WINTER HAVEN TO OUR CHOPPER. TWO WAS HANGING OUT. SECOND QUARTER DRIVING AMARI RUTLAND ROLLING TO HIS RIGHT, KEEPING IT RUNNING IT DOWN THE SIDELINE BUT FINALLY SHOVED OUT RIGHT AROUND THE FIVE YARD LINE LATER IN THE DRIVE. NICE DESIGN HERE. JAKARI WATSON IN MOTION. TAKES THE HANDOFF AND JUST DRAGS A SLEW OF BLUE DEVILS INTO THE ENDZONE. IT WAS ALL COWBOYS WITH A K TONIGHT. THEY HAND WINTER HAVEN THEIR FIRST LOSS OF THE SEASON. 46 TO 6. THE FINAL SCORE FREEDOM WAS HOSTING EDGEWATER TONIGHT IN DOWNTOWN ORLANDO AND THE PATRIOTS WELL THEY STRUGGLED TO GET MUCH OF ANYTHING GOING TONIGHT. DOWN THREE SCORES HERE. SCREEN PASS IS JUMPED. THAT IS. LEMOINE MONSANTO. HE IS ALL OVER IT. AND HE IS THROUGH THE FOG INTO THE END ZONE. 28 NOTHING AT THE BREAK. THE EAGLES WITH EASE OVER FREEDOM. THEY ARE UNBEATEN STILL 48 TO NOTHING. THE FINAL SCORE. WELL IT WAS AN EMOTIONAL NIGHT UP IN SANFORD AS THE SEMINOLES RALLIED AROUND THEIR FORMER TEAMMATE ETHAN PRICHARD, NOW AN FSU SEMINOLE, SHOT SUNDAY SERIOUSLY INJURED, AS WE TOLD YOU EARLIER IN THE SHOW. BUT THE BOOSTER CLUB BACK HOME DECIDED TO SELL T SHIRTS WITH HIS NUMBER NINE ON IT TO HELP RAISE MONEY TO SUPPORT HIM AND HIS FAMILY. AT $20 A POP SOLD MORE THAN 100 BEFORE KICKOFF EVEN BEGAN. YET BOCA, STRONG NUMBER NINE ON THE MINDS AS CARL CALHOUN AND THE NOLES PLAYED SOME INSPIRED FOOTBALL TONIGHT AGAINST THE LYMAN GREYHOUNDS, ALREADY UP A SCORE IN THE FIRST, ANTHONY GAVE THE THIRD IN FOR THE TOUCHDOWN. THE NOLES IN CONTROL STILL IN THE FIRST, GO BACK TO ANTHONY, GAVE THE THIRD FOR THE SECOND TIME IN LIKE 10S ON YOUR SCREEN, SEMINOLE SCORES AND IT’S THE SAME GUY THEY’RE CRUISING. SECOND QUARTER MORE ON THE GROUND. KHAMANI FREEMAN WILL MAKE IT 28 TO NOTHING. THE GROUND GAME WAS GREAT AGAINST THE GREYHOUNDS TONIGHT. ALL NOLES TONIGHT 55 NOTHING. THE FINAL SCORE IN WINTER GARDEN. THE TITUSVILLE TERRIERS WERE IN TOWN. WEST ORANGE. THEY WERE NOT MESSING AROUND. PICK IT UP LATE. SECOND QUARTER ALREADY 42 SEVEN WEST ORANGE. THAT’S EDISON DELGADO GETS TAKEN DOWN AT THE ONE. IT JUST DELAYS THE INEVITABLE 48 SEVEN AT THE HALF. THIRD QUARTER. IT DOESN’T TAKE LONG FOR THEM TO SCORE AGAIN. YOUTUBE KAMERON JOHNSON IN ON THE OPTION. BREAKS LOOSE FOR A 79 YARD TOUCHDOWN. TERRIERS STILL FIGHTING LATE. LADARIUS FAISON WITH THE PICK SIX HERE. GOOD FOR THEM. FIGHT TO THE END. BUT IT IS WEST ORANGE WINNING THIS ONE 5421. THE FINAL SCORE NOT TOO FAR FROM THERE AT DOCTOR PHILLIPS. CAMERON WESTON, THE PANTHERS HOSTING THE APOPKA BLUE DARTERS. APOPKA STILL IN SEARCH OF THEIR FIRST WIN OF THE SEASON. NICE PITCH AND CATCH HERE FROM WEST OVER TO THE RIGHT SIDE. IN FOR THE SCORE. DEEP IN FRONT. EARLY SECOND QUARTER. WEST THIS TIME TO TORREY SCOTT. LOOK AT THE CONCENTRATION BALL TIPPED. HE REELS IT IN. TOUCHDOWN DARTERS TRYING TO GET BACK IN IT. BUT RAY TAYLOR WILL RIP DOWN THE INTERCEPTION HERE. APOPKA THE WOES CONTINUE. DOCTOR PHILLIPS BACK TO BACK. BIG TIME WINS 45 SEVEN. THE FINAL SCORE. LET’S GET BACK UP IN CHOPPER TWO TO THE AIR LIONS OF LAKE NONA LURING THE OCOEE KNIGHTS INTO A CLASH OF UNBEATENS TONIGHT. CHECK OUT MAYBE THE PLAY OF THE NIGHT ACROSS CENTRAL FLORIDA KNIGHTS DRIVING DEEP IN THE RED ZONE. PHILLIPS GETS TO THE QUARTERBACK, KNOCKS IT FREE. AND LOOK AT CHARLES WOODSON. JUNIOR. YEAH SON OF HIS HALL OF FAMER. HE REELS IN THE LOOSE BALL. TAKES IT ALL THE WAY TO THE HOUSE MAKING DAD PROUD. IT’S NOT ENOUGH THOUGH. OCOEE ESCAPES THE ONE POINT WIN 1413. THE FINAL SCORE. OCOEE HEADED TO DOCTOR PHILLIPS NEXT WEEK. SCORES FROM AROUND CENTRAL FLORIDA. LET’S TAKE A LOOK. SOME BIG SCORES ON THAT BOARD TONIGHT. BOONE TOPS OLYMPIA 42 TO 6. TIMBER CREEK SHUTS OUT EAST RIVER ON THE ROAD. 35 TO NOTHING MORE. SCORES FROM AROUND CENTRAL FLORIDA. THE VILLAGES TAKES DOWN SOUTH LAKE 3426 AND LAKE BUENA VISTA GETS A BIG WIN.

    Scores across Central Florida Game of the WeekDeLand 57, Merritt Island 51You Pick 2 Poll GameLake Brantley 47, Oviedo 37Other scores: Oasis Christian 44, Legacy Charter 0 Edgewater 48, Freedom 0 West Orange 54, Titusville 21 St. Cloud 41, Poinciana 12 Hagerty 49, Tohopekaliga 20Windermere 61, Colonial 0 East Ridge 51, Davenport 6 Dr. Phillips 45, Apopka 7 Ocoee 14, Lake Nona 13 Osceola 46, Winter Haven 6 Lakeland 32, Lake Mary 13Lake Region 8, Celebration 7 Haines City 19, Lake Minneola 12Bishop Moore 34, Bartow 25Matanzas 40, Deltona 14 Eau Gallie 16, Heritage 12 Vero Beach 38, Cocoa 3Melbourne 34, Orange City University 16Mainland 28, Flagler Palm Coast 7 Horizon 52, Wekiva 0Innovation 10, Leesburg 3

    Scores across Central Florida

    Game of the Week

    DeLand 57, Merritt Island 51

    You Pick 2 Poll Game

    Lake Brantley 47, Oviedo 37

    Other scores:


    Oasis Christian 44, Legacy Charter 0

    Edgewater 48, Freedom 0

    West Orange 54, Titusville 21

    St. Cloud 41, Poinciana 12

    Hagerty 49, Tohopekaliga 20

    Windermere 61, Colonial 0

    East Ridge 51, Davenport 6

    Dr. Phillips 45, Apopka 7

    Ocoee 14, Lake Nona 13

    Osceola 46, Winter Haven 6

    Lakeland 32, Lake Mary 13

    Lake Region 8, Celebration 7

    Haines City 19, Lake Minneola 12

    Bishop Moore 34, Bartow 25

    Matanzas 40, Deltona 14

    Eau Gallie 16, Heritage 12

    Vero Beach 38, Cocoa 3

    Melbourne 34, Orange City University 16

    Mainland 28, Flagler Palm Coast 7

    Horizon 52, Wekiva 0

    Innovation 10, Leesburg 3


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  • L.A. County to buy downtown skyscraper for new HQ despite a ‘hell no’ from Hahn

    The Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors on Wednesday approved the county’s purchase of the Gas Company Tower, one of downtown L.A.’s most prominent skyscrapers, paving the way for the transfer of thousands of workers and public services out of the city’s civic center.

    With a 4-1 vote, the supervisors gave county officials the final green light to move ahead with buying the tower for $200 million.

    The approval came over vehement objections from Supervisor Janice Hahn, who warned that the purchase would sound the death knell for downtown’s civic heart and shunt the county’s workforce to a “souless” office tower on Bunker Hill.

    “None of you here are going to convince me that this is a good idea,” Hahn said before casting her vote against the purchase with a “hell no.”

    County employees are currently based inside the Kenneth Hahn Hall of Administration, a 1960 building named after Hahn’s father, a longtime county supervisor.

    The building is one of several county-owned properties considered vulnerable to collapse in a major earthquake. Officials have estimated that it will cost hundreds of millions to upgrade the buildings, making a new, presumably safer skyscraper an appealing alternative to some on the board.

    “If we know this building is not seismically safe, then we have an obligation and a responsibility to take action,” Supervisor Holly Mitchell said from the room inside Hahn Hall where the board holds its weekly meetings.

    County Chief Executive Fesia Davenport, whose office spearheaded the sale, promised the purchase “will save the county hundreds of millions of dollars” compared with the cost of upgrading the Hall of Administration and other county buildings.

    No supervisors have toured the building themselves, according to a county spokesperson, though several of their staff members have visited.

    The 52-story tower at 555 W. 5th St. was widely considered one of the city’s most prestigious office buildings when it was completed in 1991. It has nearly 1.5 million square feet of space on a 1.4-acre site at the base of Bunker Hill.

    The price is a deep discount from the building’s appraised value of $632 million in 2020, underscoring how much downtown office values have fallen in recent years.

    At $200 million, the county would get the Gas Company Tower for about $137 a square foot, a bargain by historical standards. The county also agreed to pay as much as an additional $5 million in closing costs on the transaction.

    “This opportunity will not last forever,” Davenport warned, adding that the county could finance the purchase in part from money set aside for capital projects.

    Hahn said the transaction was akin to “robbing Peter to pay Paul.”

    “The money being used to pay for this purchase is being stolen from the funds that were meant to keep this building alive,” she said from Hahn Hall.

    Richard Keating, the architect who designed the Gas Company Tower to appeal to corporate America, said it makes sense for a public entity to take ownership now.

    “We’re looking at a decline in need for standard office use, meaning lawyers, architects and accountants are doing things differently” since the pandemic, Keating said. “City and county employees are still hard at work in their office spaces, but they’re tired, old, sometimes decrepit and oftentimes no longer up to code in terms of earthquake” safety requirements.

    “It’s a perfect time to take advantage of some of these more or less empty office buildings.”

    Moving hundreds of county workers into the Gas Company Tower also stands to lift shops, restaurants and other businesses in the nearby blocks by Pershing Square, he said. “I think it’s a good move all the way around.”

    In recent years, the downtown office market has turned against landlords as many tenants reduced their office footprint in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, when it became more common for employees to work remotely.

    Last year, the owner of the Gas Company Tower, an affiliate of Brookfield Asset Management, defaulted on its debt, and the property was put in receivership, in which a court-appointed representative took custody of the building to help creditors recover funds they lent to Brookfield. The building has about $465 million in outstanding loans.

    Other major tenants in the Gas Company Tower include law firm Latham & Watkins and accounting firm Deloitte. The county will assume the tenant leases as landlord.

    When the Gas Company Tower is formally owned by the county, it will be removed from the tax rolls. The building’s property tax bill last year was more than $7.1 million, according to real estate data provider CoStar.

    Tenants would, however, be required to contribute to the tax rolls by an unspecified amount through a “possessory interest tax” that can be levied on private companies leasing public buildings. Tenants in privately owned office buildings also commonly pay a share of the landlord’s property taxes.

    The building is in good condition with “a remaining useful life” of no less than 35 years, according to a recent property condition report prepared for the current owner that was obtained by The Times.

    The report also said the tower and the World Trade Center garage at 333 S. Flower St. included in the deal require about $1.3 million to address urgently needed repairs and deferred maintenance. Additional long-term costs to maintain and modernize the properties were estimated at about $48.7 million over 12 years. Projected costs include roof repairs, refurbishing air conditioning systems and updating the elevators.

    The county currently occupies about 16.5 million square feet of office space for 38 departments, which comprises 6.9 million square feet of leased office space and 9.6 million square feet of owned office space, Davenport said in a memo to the board recommending the purchase of the Gas Company Tower.

    The county spends about $195 million per year on the leased office space, and the property it owns “is in poor condition and old,” Davenport said. Nearly half of it is more than 50 years old.

    By moving staff from both leased office space and aging buildings in poor condition, the county avoids paying rent and the “significant” costs of seismic retrofits and other needed renovations to old buildings such as aging air conditioning, plumbing and electrical systems, the chief executive’s memo said. Funds earmarked for seismic retrofits and other renovations of old buildings will be included in the payment for the Gas Company Tower.

    The county inspected the building and will buy it “as-is,” Davenport said. The Department of Public Works reviewed a seismic report for the tower and agreed with its findings. A county spokesperson said the findings will remain confidential until the deal closes.

    If the county elects to complete a seismic retrofit and other improvements to the Gas Company Tower, it can realize a future return on its investment by selling the building when the market recovers, Davenport said.

    Southern California Gas Co. said in September that it is planning to move from its longtime headquarters in its namesake tower, where it has been a primary tenant since the building was completed, to another skyscraper a block north at 350 S. Grand Ave.

    The utility signed a long-term lease for nearly 200,000 square feet on eight floors in the Grand Avenue building on Bunker Hill often known as Two California Plaza, its new landlord said, and is expected to move by spring 2026 after building out the new offices. SoCalGas will also have an office on the ground floor to serve customers.

    Rebecca Ellis, Roger Vincent

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  • Landsea Homes Sells Out at Greenfield Village near Disney in Central Florida

    Landsea Homes Sells Out at Greenfield Village near Disney in Central Florida

    Landsea Homes Corporation announced it has sold all of its homes at Greenfield Village in Davenport near Disney in Central Florida.

    The Greenfield Village master-planned community is located just 12 miles from Walt Disney World and offers resort-style amenities like a zero-entry pool, splash pad, and playground.

    Greenfield Village is comprised of 136 single-family homes ranging from 1,517 square feet to 3,198 square feet.

    “Greenfield Village provided a vibrant lifestyle with vacation-like amenities while ensuring proximity to the region’s best entertainment, shopping, dining, and numerous golf courses,” said Megan Bakel, Vice President of Sales and Marketing, Florida Division, Landsea Homes. “Homebuyers were naturally drawn to the chance to own in this outstanding community, and eager to embrace Greenfield Village’s unique lifestyle. There are still other opportunities for homebuyers to own in the thriving Davenport area, with three outstanding communities currently available.”

    Homes are currently available at other Davenport communities by Landsea Homes including Legacy Landings, Preservation Pointe, and Horse Creek at Crosswinds.

    For more information about communities in Florida, visit Landsea Homes.

    Landsea Homes Corporation is a publicly traded residential homebuilder based in Dallas, Texas that designs and builds best-in-class homes and sustainable master-planned communities in some of the nation’s most desirable markets. The company has developed homes and communities in New York, Boston, New Jersey, Arizona, Colorado, Florida, Texas and throughout California in Silicon Valley, Los Angeles, and Orange County.

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  • Davenport man had marijuana near child, police allege – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

    Davenport man had marijuana near child, police allege – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

    A 25-year-old Davenport man was released on bond after police allege he had 7.2 pounds of marijuana in a home where a 3-year-old child lives.

    Elijah Gay faces felony charges of failure to affix a drug tax stamp and a controlled-substance violation, as well as an aggravated misdemeanor charge of child endangerment, court records show.

    Elijah Gay (Scott County Jail)

    Original Author Link click here to read complete story..

    MMP News Author

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  • The Top 10 Most Underrated U.S. Vacation Destinations

    The Top 10 Most Underrated U.S. Vacation Destinations

    While there are endless possibilities of trendy hotspots to visit in the U.S. during the summer vacation season, the country has plenty of smaller, lesser-known gems that are equally worth exploring. Here are The Onion’s top 10 most underrated vacation destinations in the United States.

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  • Officials Now Say There May Be 2 People In Partially Collapsed Iowa Building

    Officials Now Say There May Be 2 People In Partially Collapsed Iowa Building

    A day after stating there were no known people trapped in a partially collapsed apartment building in the eastern Iowa town of Davenport, officials said Tuesday there were five people unaccounted for, two of whom they believe are still in the building.

    The situation puts city officials in a tight spot, forcing them to choose between sending rescue crews into a six-story apartment building could come crashing down at any moment or demolishing the building knowing it’s possible there are survivors inside.

    Following the rescue of eight people after the building partially collapsed Sunday, officials were set to demolish the building Tuesday morning. But a ninth survivor, 52-year-old Lisa Brooks, managed to call for help once her phone started working again, and rescue crews retrieved her.

    A worker walks by the six-story Davenport, Iowa, apartment building after it collapsed.

    “The immediate question I know people are asking is, how did she get there? And why wasn’t she found earlier? I am totally transparent with you ― I do not know, we do not know, but understand, please, that I and the city is committed to finding out why,” Davenport Mayor Mike Matson said at a Tuesday news conference.

    Officials added that in evaluating the building for survivors, they used specially trained service animals, drones and thermal imaging to determine that no viable signs of life were in the building before Brooks was found.

    “We’re very sympathetic to the possibility that there’s two people … ,” Davenport Fire Marshal Jim Morris said before pausing to wipe tears from his eyes “… that there’s two people still left inside.”

    “We need to evaluate what we see between the structural engineer, our technical rescue teams and formulate the best possible way to strategically go in there,” he continued.

    Clothes still hang in a closet after a portion of the building collapsed.
    Clothes still hang in a closet after a portion of the building collapsed.

    Some present at the news conference shouted over Morris, calling for rescue efforts to continue. Others have gathered outside the damaged building holding signs reading: “Find them first” and “Demo = murder.”

    Ryan Hitchcock is among those unaccounted for. His cousin, Amy Anderson, spoke at Tuesday’s news conference in support of demolishing the building.

    “Ryan wouldn’t want anyone else to put their lives at risk to unfortunately [find] somebody who probably has not survived,” Anderson said. “I don’t discount that he could be trapped under there miraculously. We’ve seen some miraculous things, and our God is good, but we don’t want to see any more families lose their lives or anybody else be injured.”

    She added that she was “mortified” by the protests calling for the search to continue.

    “I plead with our community just to let the city do their job right now. It is an absolute no-win situation, but this is the best plan of attack,” she said.

    Officials have not yet determined what caused the building’s partial collapse.

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  • Davenport woman with 2 unsecured infants, marijuana, drove 100 mph, ISP alleges – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

    Davenport woman with 2 unsecured infants, marijuana, drove 100 mph, ISP alleges – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

    A 36-year-old Davenport woman faces multiple charges after an Iowa State Trooper alleges she was driving 100 mph with two unsecured infants in her SUV, where a trooper also found a bag of marijuana.

    Telisa Walker faces two felony charges of neglect or abandonment of a dependent person, and serious misdemeanor charges of operating while under the influence – first offense and possession of a controlled substance – marijuana – first offense, court records show.

    Telisa Walker (Scott County Jail)

    About 11:21 p.m. Sunday, an Iowa State Trooper saw a dark-colored SUV traveling at a fast rate of speed southbound on Highway 61 around Mile Marker 126, the officer alleges in arrest affidavits.

    Original Author Link click here to read complete story..

    MMP News Author

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  • DeSantis visits Iowa as interest in likely Trump rival rises

    DeSantis visits Iowa as interest in likely Trump rival rises

    DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Ahead of a widely expected presidential campaign, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis introduced himself to eager audiences of Iowa Republicans on Friday with a message that leaned into the antagonism toward the left that has made him a popular figure among conservatives.

    “We will never surrender to the woke mob,” DeSantis told an audience of more than 1,000 at the Rhythm City Casino Resort in the eastern Iowa city of Davenport, his first Iowa stop as he moves toward seeking the 2024 GOP presidential nomination. “Our state is where woke goes to die.”

    With the Iowa caucuses less than a year away, Republicans in the state are taking a harder look at DeSantis, who is emerging as a leading rival to Donald Trump. The former president, who is mounting his third bid for the White House, will be in Davenport on Monday as early signs warn that some Republicans may be looking for someone else to lead the party into the future.

    Trump mocked DeSantis’ trip on social media, asking “why would people show up?”

    And White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre took issue with the Florida governor’s threatening language that criticized young transgender people and their parents.

    “When … these MAGA Republicans don’t agree with an issue or with policy, they don’t bring forth something that’s either going to have a good faith conversation. They go to this conversation of ‘woke.’ … What that turns into is hate; what that turns into is despicable policy.”

    But show up they did, including more than 1,000 Friday evening in the capital city, Des Moines, where DeSantis ignited his biggest ovation by accusing schools of seeking to impose a leftist agenda on students on issues of gender and race.

    “I think we really have done a great job of drawing a line in the sand and saying the purpose of our schools is to educate kids, not indoctrinate them,” DeSantis said in the auditorium on the Iowa state fairgrounds. “Parents should be able to send their kids to school without having somebody’s agenda shoved down their throat.”

    DeSantis appeared alongside Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds in Davenport and Des Moines and met with a small contingent of GOP lawmakers in the capital city. He was also promoting his newly released book, “The Courage to be Free.”

    The visit is an early test of DeSantis’ support in the state that will kick off the contest for the Republican nomination next year. Trump remains widely popular among Iowa Republicans, though positive views of the former president have slipped somewhat since he left the White House. Now, 80% say they have a favorable rating of him, down slightly from 91% in September 2021, according to a Des Moines Register/Mediacom Iowa Poll released Friday. Eighteen percent have unfavorable views of Trump.

    The poll’s movement suggests Iowa Republicans are not singularly committed to Trump for 2024 and are open to considering other candidates. Though slightly behind the well-known Trump, DeSantis gets a rosy review from Iowa Republicans — 74% favorable rating. Notably, DeSantis has high name recognition in a state over 1,000 miles away from his own; just 20% say they aren’t sure how to rate him.

    Sandy Bodine said she was impressed with DeSantis as the ballroom emptied out after Friday’s morning event.

    “He’s very articulate, uses common sense it seems in governing,” the retired human resources worker for 3M Co. said.

    Bodine would consider attending the 2024 caucuses and supporting DeSantis, though she is registered to neither major political party and has never caucuses before. Regardless, Trump is out of the running for Bodine, who is from nearby Clinton.

    “I don’t like Trump,” she said. She “unfortunately” voted for Biden in 2020, she said. “He’s not a statesman and we need a statesman. I can see DeSantis as a statesman.”

    But others in the crowd suggested they would stick with the former president. Retiree Al Greenfield, of Davenport, said he came out of curiosity but “I don’t particularly care for” the Florida governor. “He doesn’t have the experience,” said Greenfield, who’s 70. “He doesn’t know the swamp.”

    Greenfield is ardently for Trump and plans to caucus for him next year.

    Nearby stood Diana Otterman, of Bettendorf, who was still considering her options.

    “Gov. DeSantis is a wonderful man. I’m for DeSantis, but I’m also for Trump. I haven’t decided yet,” the 70-year-old retiree said. “So we’ll see how God works it out and how the people vote.”

    While DeSantis was making his presence known in Iowa, several prominent former Trump supporters called on him to take the next step and announce he’s running.

    “More than ever our country needs strong leadership, someone that gets things done & isn’t afraid to stand up for what’s right,” tweeted former Pennsylvania Rep. and Republican gubernatorial candidate Lou Barletta. “Come on, Ron, your country needs you!”

    Barletta had accused Trump of disloyalty after the former president endorsed a rival in his gubernatorial primary.

    DeSantis’ visit coincided with a trip to the state by former United Nations Ambassador Nikki Haley, who announced her 2024 candidacy last month. Trump’s stop on Monday will be his first visit to the state since launching his latest presidential bid.

    In recent weeks, DeSantis’ team has begun holding conversations with a handful of prospective campaign staffers in key states. Late last month, he gathered privately with donors, elected officials and national conservative activists to discuss his views, which include limiting how race and sexuality are taught in schools.

    DeSantis is expected to announce his candidacy in late spring or early summer, after the conclusion of the Florida legislative session in mid-May.

    The anticipation is reminiscent, to an extent, of the support in Iowa for George W. Bush ahead of the 2000 election, though with significant differences, said veteran Iowa GOP activist David Oman.

    DeSantis is seen, as Bush was, as a next-generation, big-state Republican governor who won reelection resoundingly, said Oman, who was among Iowa Republicans who helped recruit Bush to run.

    Bush swooped into Iowa amid fanfare in June 1999 and sailed to victory in the Iowa caucuses the following year en route to the 2000 GOP nomination and the White House. Not insignificantly, Bush enjoyed the hands-on campaign outreach in Iowa of his father, former President George H. W. Bush, who had built lasting relationships during his 1980 and 1988 Iowa caucus campaigns.

    “There’s another former president in this cycle. Only he is not interested in helping a first time candidate,” Oman said, referring to Trump. “W was the overwhelming favorite in Iowa. I believe there is not an overwhelming favorite this time.”

    ___

    AP writers Jill Colvin and Darlene Superville contributed from Washington.

    ___

    The second paragraph of this story has been corrected to make the quote “where woke goes to die,” not “where woke mob goes to die.”

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  • UPDATED: Dead subject identified, officers placed on leave after fatal officer-involved shooting early Sunday in Davenport

    UPDATED: Dead subject identified, officers placed on leave after fatal officer-involved shooting early Sunday in Davenport

    The Iowa Department of Public Safety’s (DPS) Division of Criminal Investigations (DCI) investigated a fatal officer-involved shooting early Sunday in Davenport and identified the individual involved as 24-year-old Davenport resident Kenneth Jamel Carrol Jr.






    Davenport Police investigate a shooting incident early Sunday in the 3100 block of East Kimberly Road. 



    Thomas Geyer



    Three Davenport Police officers, two Iowa State Troopers and one Bettendorf Police officer discharged their weapons during the encounter with Carrol, and all six officers have been placed on Critical Incident Leave while the case is being investigated, according to a DPS news release.

    An autopsy of Carrol will take place at the Office of the Iowa State Medical Examiner. No law enforcement personnel were injured. The release states: “Per protocol, their [law enforcement personnel] names will not be released prior to being interviewed by the Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation.”

    According to an earlier DPS news release, at 2:50 a.m. on Sunday, Oct. 30, 2022, multiple agencies were patrolling in the area of 5200 Grand Avenue when officers initiated a traffic stop and the driver failed to stop, which resulted in a pursuit.

    People are also reading…

    The pursuit ended after the vehicle became inoperable near Kimberly Road and Elmore Avenue — occupants then fled on foot. Officers exchanged gunfire with Carrol during the foot pursuit; as a result, Carrol was pronounced dead at the scene, according to the release.

    According to Scott County District Court and Iowa Department of Corrections electronic records, Carrol was discharged from probation on Oct. 2 for being a felon in possession of a firearm. At the time he was arrested for the gun charge he was on probation for convictions of theft, forgery and using a juvenile for an indictable offense.

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