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Janklow and then
According to Banks, in early 1967 Jacinta Eagle Deer, then a 15-year-old Lakota schoolgirl at the Rosebud Boarding School on the Rosebud Indian Reservation, reported to her school principal that Janklow, for whom she was working as a babysitter, had raped her on January 13.
In 1986, after winning a bruising re-election primary campaign against then Governor Bill Janklow, Abdnor narrowly lost his Senate seat to then-Representative Tom Daschle.

Janklow and governor
South Dakota's longest serving governor was Bill Janklow.
Janklow is also the only person to serve non-consecutive terms as governor.
Bill Janklow served briefly in the United States House of Representatives following his second stint as governor.
* Bill Janklow, former governor and Representative of South Dakota
Janklow is the longest-serving governor in South Dakota history.
The superintendent of the state highway patrol reported that Janklow had 16 traffic stops by troopers during his last term as governor but was not ticketed, due to " respect for his authority ," and out of a " fear of retribution.

Janklow and South
* December 8: South Dakota Congressman Bill Janklow is convicted of manslaughter.
* Congressman William J. Janklow, the only Representative from the state of South Dakota, is charged with vehicular manslaughter for an accident on August 16 in which Janklow's speeding car ran a stop sign and hit and killed a motorcyclist.
William John " Bill " Janklow ( September 13, 1939January 12, 2012 ) served as the 25th Attorney General of South Dakota, before being elected as South Dakota's 27th and 30th Governor, as well as to the United States House of Representatives where he served for a little more than a year.
Janklow served as South Dakota's attorney general from 1975 to 1979.
In 1979 Janklow signed into law a bill reinstating capital punishment in South Dakota.
Janklow supported passage of legislation to remove South Dakota's limit on interest rates.
John B. Jones, United States District Judge for the District of South Dakota, that Newsweek magazine had not defamed Janklow.
Although controversial, Janklow is among the more electorally successful politicians in South Dakota's history.
In 2002, Janklow ran for the Republican nomination for South Dakota's only House seat.
Court records show Janklow received five citations in South Dakota after his probation ended in 2007 – four for speeding and one for clipping a car in a Sioux Falls parking lot.
After January 5, 2006 ( effective February 2006 ), when the South Dakota Supreme Court granted his petition for early reinstatement of his license to practice law ( Scott's family opposed the reinstatement ) Janklow worked as an attorney.
Janklow died shortly before 11 a. m. on January 12, 2012 at a hospice care facility in Sioux Falls, South Dakota.
Edwards hence joins the late George C. Wallace of Alabama, Jim Hunt of North Carolina, Bill Janklow of South Dakota, Terry Branstad of Iowa and Jim Rhodes of Ohio as 16-year governors.
* In South Dakota, Abdnor was challenged in the Republican primary by William J. Janklow.
Pressler attempted a political comeback in 2002 by running for South Dakota's open at-large House seat but he essentially discontinued his campaign when Republican Governor William J. Janklow unexpectedly entered the race.
In 1979 South Dakota Governor Bill Janklow appointed her to serve in the State Economic Opportunity Office.
In November 2002 Governor Janklow appointed her to the South Dakota Supreme Court, and she served until her retirement in June 2011.
Zinter also served as trustee of the South Dakota Retirement System and president of the South Dakota Judges Association. South Dakota Governor Bill Janklow appointed him to the state supreme court on April 2, 2002.

Janklow and Dakota
In 1984 South Dakota Governor Bill Janklow appointed Konenkamp a circuit court judge.
In 1986 South Dakota Governor Bill Janklow appointed Sabers to the state supreme court.

Janklow and sued
Scott's family sued Janklow for damages, but the court ruled that because Janklow was on official business at the time, he was protected from any monetary claims by the Federal Tort Claims Act, which ascribes liability to the government as opposed to the individual who is acting in a governmental capacity.

Janklow and author
In the 1980s, Janklow filed libel suits against the author Peter Matthiessen and Viking Press for a statement included in the book In the Spirit of Crazy Horse ( 1983 ), and another suit against Newsweek magazine for its coverage of the alleged rape.

Janklow and Press
The Associated Press, in conjunction with the Sioux Falls newspaper Argus Leader, filed a Freedom of Information Act request to obtain information on pardons granted by Janklow between 1995 and 2002.

Janklow and for
Janklow increased accessibility for the disabled to public and private facilities in state.
In February 1973, Janklow was arrested for drunk driving on a road on the Crow Creek Reservation at Fort Thompson by tribal police officer Roger C. Philbrick.
In 1974, a month before the election for state attorney general for which Janklow was a candidate, Jacinta Eagle Deer filed a petition through her attorney Larry Leventhal and tribal advocate Dennis Banks to disbar Janklow to keep him from practicing in tribal court.
At the request of Eagle Deer's attorneys, the tribal court " issued a misdemeanor arrest warrant for Janklow based on sworn testimony on Eagle Deer's behalf ( since it was generally believed at the time that tribal courts had jurisdiction over non-Indians )", but no arrest was made.
In 1975, Janklow was investigated by the FBI before being nominated as a candidate for appointment to the board of the Legal Services Corporation.
Janklow v. Newsweek Inc. ( 1986 ), was brought before the United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit en banc appealing the decision of the Hon.
During his time as majority leader, Rounds worked closely with Governor Bill Janklow and was respected for his effective leadership of the Senate.

Janklow and .
Janklow is the only person to complete two four-year terms, and he did it twice, serving from 1979 to 1987 and again from 1995 to 2003.
Janklow was elected to the United States House of Representatives in 2002.
Janklow was born in Chicago, Illinois.
When the Milwaukee Railroad went into bankruptcy, Janklow called a special session of the legislature on the issue.
Barred by state law from running again in 1986, Janklow challenged the incumbent U. S. Senator James Abdnor in the Republican primary.
Janklow lost, with Abdnor winning by a 55 % to 45 % margin.
Philbrick said Janklow insulted him and was not wearing pants.
Janklow reportedly resisted arrest and tried to elude the police, requiring backup to be called in.
Janklow was taken to the Fort Thompson jail.

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