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James Brickey, president of the Roadrunner Curling Club right teaches Tammany Peters how to throw the stone. (Adolphe Pierre-Louis/Journal)
Looking for a safe and fun sports activity that the entire family can enjoy together, Tammy Peters thinks she found just the thing.
But it requires a little thinking outside the box.
After going through an instructional session Peters, and her daughter, 11-year-old Tammany Peters, are thinking of joining the Roadrunner Curling Club at the Outpost Ice Arenas in the northeast heights. The RCC hosts several different curling leagues.
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“One of my friends is in the league,” Tammy Peters said. “She had invited us to check it out and it looked like a lot of fun so we thought we’d try it out.”
NOTABLE TRANSACTIONS: Undeveloped ground sold in Dallas County Wednesday, April 21, 2021 8:00 AM IRHC LLC, based in Davenport, paid Stratford Crossing LLC $999,600 for 8.33 acres in northwest Waukee, Dallas County real estate records show. The undeveloped land is north of Hickman Road and west of U Avenue. The transaction was recorded April 8.
The Scott Crandell Revocable Trust paid Bent Creek Ridge Custom Homes LLC $1.35 million for property at 14803 Brookview Drive in Urbandale, records show. The 3,250-square-foot single-story house was constructed in 2019. The transaction was recorded April 12.
The city of Waukee paid Phillips Hamilton Inc. $2.8 million for undeveloped land on the southwest corner of University and Ute avenues. The transaction was recorded April 15.
Lawyer For Texas Attorney Generalâs Office Repeatedly Tries To Block Testimony And Evidence At Whistleblower Hearing
A Travis County judge opted to move forward with Monday’s hearing without ruling on the motion to dismiss the whistleblower lawsuit. Late Monday night, an appeals court halted the second day of proceedings at the request of the agency’s attorney.
March 3, 2021, 7:24 AM
A judge refused Monday to immediately grant a motion to dismiss a lawsuit brought by four former aides fired from Attorney General Ken Paxton s office after they joined other agency employees last year in accusing the attorney general of abusing the use of office and bribery.
Texas AG Ken Paxton s Office Says Whistleblower Protections Don t Extend to His Accusers
On 3/2/21 at 6:47 PM EST
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton s office says whistleblower claims against him should be thrown out because he s technically not a state employee, but rather an elected official.
The embattled attorney general stands accused of widespread bribery and corruption claims from eight former staffers in his office. Four of them say they were fired after reporting Paxton s numerous illegal activities to the FBI and Texas Rangers last year a move which is illegal under the protections of the Texas Whistleblower Act.
But Paxton s office on Monday unsuccessfully tried to convince a Travis County judge that Paxton is not actually an employee of the Office of the Attorney General. Instead, lawyer William Helfand argued Paxton is an elected official whose alleged bribes of a campaign donor should not be subject to a whistleblower lawsuit.