Cedar Rapids Iowa Newspapers

you sound like a very bitter person who wouldnt hesitate to push your brother under a bus! If you read up fully on the case reports and listen to his defense team I have one question for you - have you NEVER EVER done one crooked move in your life - always been 100% honest on EVERY application (including ticking the NO INTERNET IN THE HOME box on your child's school application) because if you have take a packet of potato chips and if I ask you what you have in your hand do you have ONE PACKAGE or 45 chips - because in this instance of the rubashkin case they took ONE PACKAGE and broke it down to 98 chips in a crazy way!!
He is not 100% innocent and neither are YOU and neither are millions of others out there, but if he is NOT a danger to society, he has not raped, killed, burgled, attacked another person he should pose no danger to anyone being out on bail until sentencing.
It is important for your own sake to go back and analyze your level of yiddishkeit and what makes YOU so bitter to talk the way you do
I wish Reb Sholom a speedy Yeshua and let us here of this entire case being quashed in no time!!!!
Gut voch to everyone!
A couple of days later, Goebel started reading in newspapers what a lousy guy he was for shooting the mountain lion. But the land owner thanked him.
“I’ll shoot every one I can,” said Kinzenbaw, 61. “I didn’t buy this farm to raise mountain lions.”
He said a mountain lion had prowled his land for three years and attacked a horse on the 250 acres, half in timber and creek. His four grandchildren live and play on the property.
“They are awful mean,” he said of mountain lions.
The fear is unfounded, said DeArmond, founder of the nonprofit group Pella Wildlife Company.
In 150 years, 19 people have died from mountain lion attacks in the western United States, the lion’s modern-day range. Before settlement, they roamed the entire United States, including Iowa.
“More people die from bee stings in one year than cougar attacks in a century,” DeArmond said. “It’s important that people have scientific facts versus the stories passed on from generation to generation.”
Mountain lions will only attack if surprised or threatened, DeArmond said. “You could take kids out there supervised and not have a problem.”
The DNR’s Andrews has studied wildlife for 40 years in Iowa and has never seen a mountain lion. But he dearly would love it.
The animal was increasingly protected in recent years in the West so the population increased. Usually young males started to drift east to find their own turf.
They typically flee when humans are around, instead hunting for small mammals or deer. They are often the scapegoat for livestock deaths caused by feral dogs or coyotes, Andrews said.
He has spent a lot of time since the first killing in 2003 debunking reports from citizens claiming they have seen a cougar.
Despite their rarity, he said, it’s an uphill battle in an agricultural state to change laws to protect them.
Landowner Kinzenbaw scoffs at the wildlife experts.
“Next time, I’ll tranquilize it and string it up in his backyard,” he said. “See how he likes it.”

