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Arrest warrant issued in Council Bluffs cutting incident

News

March 13th, 2026 by Ric Hanson

(Council Bluffs, IA) – Officials with the Council Bluffs Police Department said Friday (March 13h) an arrest warrant has been issued for a suspect in a cutting incident that occurred Thursday evening. A Pottawattamie County warrant was
issued for 43-year-old Christopher D. Harper, of Omaha, NE, charging him with one count of Willful Injury – Causing Serious Injury, a Class “C” Felony. Anyone with information on HARPER’S whereabouts is encouraged to call 911.

The public is reminded that the charges are not evidence against the defendants, and the defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law.

Original story:

Police in Council Bluffs are investigation a cutting incident that occurred Wednesday evening, and resulted in one-person being treated at a local hospital.

Authorities say a little after 5-p.m., Officers in Council Bluffs along with rescue personnel responded to a report of a cutting in the 10 block of Bluff Street. Investigating officers learned that a male riding a bicycle cut in front of a vehicle, which resulted in the male and the driver exchanging words. A passenger in the vehicle, 45-year-old Alan Vanheusen, of Council Bluffs, exited the vehicle. He and an unidentified male suspect began fighting.

During the fight, Vanheusen was cut on the right leg by the male suspect, who then fled the area and has yet to be located by
officers, as of the latest report. Vanheusen was being treated for non-life-threatening injuries at the hospital. The investigation is ongoing.

Anyone who witnessed this incident or has information that could assist in this investigation is encouraged to contact the Council Bluffs Police Department’s Criminal Investigation Division at 712-328- 4728 or to remain anonymous, they may call CrimeStoppers at 712-328-7867. On-line tips can be submitted at: https://www.councilbluffs-ia.gov/FormCenter/Police-Department-2/Online-CrimeStoppers-Tip-70.

Iowa health officials release eastern Iowa locations linked to potential measles exposures

News

March 13th, 2026 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa – The Iowa Department of Health and Human Services (Iowa HHS) was notified by the Illinois Department of Public Health that an Illinois resident with confirmed measles traveled to Iowa during their infectious period. Iowa HHS is notifying the public of potential exposure locations. As of March 5, a total of 1,281 confirmed measles cases have been reported in the United States in 2026. Of these, 1,191 (93)% were unvaccinated. In Iowa, nine measles cases were identified in 2025. To date, no measles cases have been identified among Iowa residents in 2026.

Measles is a highly contagious viral illness that is spread through the air when an infectious person coughs, sneezes, or breathes, and can stay in the air for up to two hours after a person with measles leaves the room. Iowa and Illinois health officials have identified a location visited by the individual while contagious, where the public might have been exposed to measles. Anyone who visited the following location within the listed timeframe should closely monitor for symptoms of measles (e.g., fever, cough, red/watery eyes, runny nose, and a rash). Anyone born in or after 1957 who visited the following locations and is unvaccinated or unsure of their immune status is at higher risk. If you think you have been exposed to measles and have symptoms, call your medical provider or nearest emergency room ahead of time and tell them that you have been exposed to measles and have symptoms before arriving.


Measles exposure locations, dates, and times:

Location: 

Comfort Inn and Suites

2100 Swan Lake Blvd, Independence, IA 50644

Date/Time:

Wednesday, March 4, 2026 at 5:30pm through Thursday, March 5, 2026 at 9:00am


“With ongoing measles transmission in the United States, Iowans should make sure they’ve received a measles-containing vaccine and should consider an accelerated measles vaccination schedule for their children,” said Dr. Robert Kruse, State Medical Director.

While the routine measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) vaccine schedule is one dose at 12–15 months and a second dose at 4–6 years, Iowans should consider:

  • An early extra dose of MMR between 6 and 11 months of age (“dose 0”); this dose does NOT count toward the routine series
  • The first routine dose (dose 1) can be given after 12 months of age, at least 28 days after dose 0
  • The second routine dose (dose 2) can be given at least 28 days after dose 1, instead of waiting until age 4–6 years

For the latest information on measles in Iowa, visit the Iowa HHS Center for Acute Disease Epidemiology disease information page. This page is updated weekly, on Fridays, with current case counts and public health guidance.  Iowa HHS will issue a press release when there is a confirmed public exposure that may pose a risk to others. When possible, individuals identified as close contacts will also be notified directly by public health officials.

Supreme court calls for re-sentencing in probation involving a house

News

March 13th, 2026 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) The Iowa Supreme Court has ordered re-sentencing for a Dallas County man who was required to buy a house to avoid jail time. Christopher Hidlebaugh agreed to a plea deal for failing to comply with the sex offender registry rules that would give him a suspended sentence if he bought a house. He had 70 days before the sentencing, but couldn’t buy a house, and was sentenced to prison.

Hidlebaugh appealed, saying his efforts to buy the house should be considered in the sentencing. The Iowa Supreme Court agreed, saying fairness demands that the court conduct an inquiry to determine whether Hidlebaugh willfully failed to satisfy the obligation to buy a house before it sentences him to prison.

Inmate serving time for crimes in western IA dies at the State Penitentiary

News

March 13th, 2026 by Ric Hanson

FORT MADISON, Iowa – Officials with the Iowa Department of Corrections, Friday (Today) reported that a man serving time in prison for crimes out of Pottawattamie County, died last month due to natural causes. 82-year-old Thomas M. Kane was pronounced dead at 10:17 a.m. on Friday, Feb. 27, 2026.

His sentence began on Jan. 27, 1981.

Searching for Iowa’s Best Burger – Top 10 finalists

News

March 13th, 2026 by Ric Hanson

(Des Moines, IA) – For those searching for the best burger in Iowa, the Iowa Beef Industry Council and the Iowa Cattlemen’s Association are making the quest easier as they announce the top 10 finalists in the 17th annual Iowa’s Best Burger Contest. More than 350 restaurants were nominated this year, and 5,400 burger aficionados cast their votes to determine the finalists. There are a handful of restaurants returning to the coveted list, and many new contenders making it for the first time.

The Top Ten finalists for 2026 (in alphabetical order) are:

Arcadia, Polk City*B52 Bar & Grill, Bennett
Dixie’s Biergarten, Decorah
Northside Diner, Washington
Prairie Canary, Grinnell

Salsa Guy Café, Cedar Rapids*
Scooters On Main, Alta
Smash & Grab Burger Co., Knoxville*
TCI Bar & Grill, Polk City
The Landmark Bistro, Grundy Center

* Returning Top 10 Finalist

“We know Iowans love beef, especially burgers,” said Kylie Peterson, Director of Marketing for the Iowa Beef Industry Council. “The Iowa’s Best Burger Contest celebrates that passion, along with the commitment of our state’s cattle farmers who raise the high-quality beef served on menus.” To qualify, the burger must feature a 100% real beef patty served on a bun or bread product. Toppings, condiments, sauces, and cheese are left to the creativity of the restaurant.

The final phase of the contest begins soon, as a panel of anonymous judges will visit each Top Ten restaurant to evaluate the burgers based on taste, appearance, and proper doneness (160°F). The 2026 Iowa’s Best Burger winner will be announced on May 1 to kick off May Beef Month.

Lahn files paperwork to run for governor

News

March 13th, 2026 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Republican Zach Lahn of Belle Plaine — a candidate for governor — has submitted petition signatures from over 61-hundred Iowans to qualify for the June 2nd Primary ballot.  “We were the last people to get into the race and so spinning up a field team like that that can handle crossing the whole state was a feat,” Lahn said. “I’m just really thankful for the people on the team.” Lahn, a businessman and farmer who worked for Americans for Prosperity in other states, has run campaigns, too, but this is the first time he’s put his own name on the ballot. “What I see is that Iowans are maybe getting tired of the typical politics and, as a matter of fact, I’m tired of the typical politics,” Lahn said. “I think that throughout this campaign we’ve been doing things a little bit differently.”

Campaign finance records from 2025 indicate Congressman Randy Feenstra is the fundraising leader in the G-O-P race for governor and Feenstra is now spending at least a million dollars on campaign ads. Lahn says he has an outsider message that he’ll soon deliver in ads on radio, T-V and other media. “We fully intend to compete on both the grassroots level and on the media level,” Lahn said. “To me this is about the different vision for the state of Iowa moving forward that keeps our kids here, that saves our family farms, that makes education — including public education — number one in the nation and helps stop the cancer crisis in our state.” Lahn has been endorsed by the Make America Healthy Again PAC and he says the Republican Party’s nominee for governor has to be willing to address the systemic issues in agriculture.

“We have to be willing to confront the elephant in the room and that is that we’ve been lied to for a long time by large agricultural companies about the safety of their products,” Lahn said. “I think this is a bipartisan issue, I truly do, but also I am a conservative. I’m not ashamed to be a conservative. I’m proud to be a conservative, but I also think these issues are so important that we can’t ignore them anymore.” Lahn is the fourth of the five G-O-P candidates who’ve been campaigning for governor to submit his nominating paperwork for the June Primary.

The Republican and Democratic Party Primary Elections coming-up June 2nd.

Rural Roland man arrested in animal neglect case, 33 dogs seized

News

March 13th, 2026 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The Story County Sheriff’s Office has made an arrest in an animal neglect case. Sixty-nine-year-old Joseph Keller of rural Roland has been charged with five counts of animal neglect including three serious misdemeanors and two simple misdemeanors. The investigation by Story County sheriffs deputies, Story County Animal Control and the Animal Rescue League started last month. During the investigation, authorities observed multiple Samoyed dogs being housed outdoors without adequate shelter, bedding or access to water.

Due to the outdoor temperatures at the time, water bowls were found to be frozen. A total of 33 Samoyed dogs were removed from the property on February 12th and transported to the Animal Rescue League where they underwent veterinary evaluations and are currently receiving care. Keller was booked into the Story County Jail in Nevada on the charges filed this week.

5 recent arrests in Adams County

News

March 13th, 2026 by Ric Hanson

(Corning, IA) – Sheriff’s officials in Adams County today (Friday), reported five recent arrests:

  • On March 11th:
    • 48-year-old Starr Cure, of Afton, was arrested on an Adams County warrant for Operating While Intoxicated – Drug related.
    • 23-year-old Drake Donahoe, of Omaha, Nebraska, was arrested following a traffic stop. He was charged with Person Ineligible to Carry Weapons and transported to the Adams County Jail. The Sheriff’s Office says potential additional charges are pending.
  • On March 10th:
    • 48-year-old Terry Weeks, of Council Bluffs, was arrested on a Probation Violation Warrant.

On March 9th: 19-year-old Arabella Ives, of Council Bluffs, was cited for Driving While Suspended, following a traffic stop in Adams County.

On March 6th, Adams County Deputies arrested 55-year-old William Rehmeyer, of Prescott. Rehmeyer was taken into custody on active Adams County warrant. He was charged with Sexual Abuse 2nd and Invasion of Privacy. The Adams County Sheriff’s Office was assisted by the Union County Sheriff’s Office in conducting the arrest. And, March 5th, a 12-year-old juvenile from Corning was charged with Harassment 1st Degree (Threats). The juvenile was transported by Adams County Deputies to the Juvenile Detention Center in Council Bluffs.

New Iowa cancer study shows rates of diagnosis, death still rising

News

March 13th, 2026 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Iowa’s cancer rate is the second worst in the nation for three years running, and a comprehensive study being released today (Friday) offers little optimism. The 2026 Cancer in Iowa Report predicts some 21-thousand-700 Iowans will be diagnosed with invasive cancers this year, and 64-hundred Iowans will die from cancer. Both figures are up from last year’s report. Mary Charlton is an epidemiology professor at the University of Iowa and director of the Iowa Cancer Registry. While many states are seeing cancer rates fall, Charlton couldn’t pinpoint why Iowa’s numbers are rising. “It’s hard to say because the risk factors that are causing the cancers now are things that could have happened 10, 15, 20 years ago,” Charlton says. “So it’s going to take a while to really turn things around and it’ll probably take some really strong new policies and new approaches in Iowa to turn things around.”

A symposium on cancer prevention and treatment this week at Drake University, featured an expert on nitrate poisoning in waterways, which has been a years-long battle in Iowa. Charlton says nitrates may be one cancer culprit. “It certainly could be a contributing factor. I think there’s a lot of things at play. Cancer is really complicated. It’s just a complex interplay of genetic, lifestyle, and environmental risk factors working all together,” Charlton says. “There’s not one thing causing it, but there’s probably lots of things contributing to it. Nitrate could certainly be one of those things.” One bright spot in the report deals with farm families. Iowa farmers in a recent study had 13-percent fewer cancers overall than expected compared to Iowa’s general population, and their spouses had ten-percent fewer.

“The farmers in the Agricultural Health Study had lower smoking and drinking rates compared to the rest of the general population in Iowa,” Charlton says. “They also talk about something called the healthy worker effect. So to be in their study, to be a farmer that was enrolled in the Agricultural Health Study, you have to be healthy enough to be a farmer — so those are a couple of things.” The report found the rate of new cancers in young adults in Iowa for 2018-2022 is higher than the rate for 2008-2012, and is the second highest in the nation. Also, compared to the 2025 edition of the report, Charlton says Iowa’s most common types of cancer haven’t changed.

“Same story, different year,” she says. “We still have breast, prostate, lung and colorectal cancers, followed by melanoma. They make up over half of our cancer cases in Iowa. Unfortunately, lung cancer continues to be the most common cause of cancer deaths, accounting for nearly one out of every four cancer deaths in Iowa, followed by colorectal and pancreatic cancers.” The report says the state’s number of cancer survivors is increasing, with an estimated 175,290 survivors now living in Iowa.

https://shri.public-health.uiowa.edu/cancer-data/iowa-cancer-reports/

First Iowa GOP ‘Legacy Tour’ stop for Reynolds

News

March 13th, 2026 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The Iowa G-O-P has hosted the first of six party fundraisers billed as a “Legacy Tour” for outgoing Governor Kim Reynolds. Reynolds — Iowa’s first female governor — was interviewed onstage in Cedar Rapids last (Thursday) night by Iowa Republican Party chairman Jeff Kaufmann.  “I’m not trying to create a legacy, Jeff. That’s just not what I’m doing, so I never think of it from that perspective,” Reynolds said. “I mean I am project driven.” One of her projects has been tax policy — eliminating the state tax on retirement income, cutting Iowa’s corporate tax rate and reducing the individual income tax to a flat rate of three-point-eight percent.

“When we took office we had the sixth highest individual income tax rate in the country and now we have the sixth lowest and we did it in six years,” Reynolds said, as the crowd applauded, The G-O-P hosted similar events in 2017 when then-Governor Terry Branstad was appointed U.S. Ambassador to China. The party’s other “Legacy Tour” events with Reynolds will be in Davenport, Dubuque, Clear Lake, Des Moines and Sioux Center. Reynolds took over as governor in May of 2017 and announced last spring that she would not seek re-election.

Last (Thursday) night, about three dozen protesters gathered in Cedar Rapids to criticize the governor’s record on water quality and for diverting state tax dollars into accounts that cover tuition costs for nearly all the students in Iowa’s private K-through-12 schools.