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Keep up-to-date with Fox News Radio, Radio Iowa, Brownfield & the Iowa Agribusiness Networks!
The Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office reports 21-year old Emily Darrow, of Omaha, was arrested at around 2:30-p.m. Tuesday (today), on a Montgomery County warrant. Darrow was arrested for Probation Violation, and was being held in the Montgomery County Jail on a $2,000 cash bond.
COUNCIL BLUFFS, Iowa – United States Attorney Marc Krickbaum announced on July 16, 2019, Swann Michelle Thomas, age 37, was sentenced by United States District Court Chief Judge John A. Jarvey for Possession with Intent to Distribute Methamphetamine. Thomas was sentenced to 100 months in prison to be followed by a term of supervised release of four years.
On September 5, 2018, a Council Bluffs police officer on patrol saw Thomas in a vehicle and knew she had an active warrant for a parole violation. The officer approached the car and observed a Crown Royal bag on the driver’s side of the vehicle that contained a pipe and approximately 21.5 grams of methamphetamine.
The case was investigated by the Council Bluffs Police Department and the Southwest Iowa Narcotics Enforcement Task Force. The case was prosecuted by the United States Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Iowa.
COUNCIL BLUFFS, Iowa – United States Attorney Marc Krickbaum announced on July 16, 2019, Devin Lee Graham, age 25, was sentenced by United States District Court Chief Judge John A. Jarvey for Prohibited Person in Possession of a Firearm. Graham was sentenced to ten years in prison to be followed by a term of supervised release of three years.
On September 13, 2018, Devin Graham was a passenger in a vehicle stopped for traffic violations. The officer smelled marijuana and performed a search of the vehicle. Officers located a backpack containing a small amount of controlled substances, drug paraphernalia and a loaded firearm. Graham admitted the backpack belonged to him. Graham is prohibited from possessing firearms as he has two prior felony convictions for possession with intent to deliver marijuana in Pottawattamie County, Iowa District Court.
The case was investigated by the Council Bluffs Police Department and Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives. The case was prosecuted by the United States Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Iowa.
The case is part of Project Safe Neighborhoods (PSN), a Department of Justice program bringing together all levels of law enforcement and the communities they serve to reduce violent crime and make our neighborhoods safer for everyone.
Atlantic, IA – The July session of Healthy U will be held Tuesday, July 23, 2019, at Cass County Health System. The program, Fad Diet Dilemma will be presented by Beth Olsen, MS, RD, LD, Director of Public Health. Olsen will cover popular fad diets and tips to develop a healthy lifestyle.
Healthy U will be offered at noon on Tuesday, July 23. Healthy U is a free educational series at Cass County Health System held monthly in Conference Room 2. The public is invited and welcome to attend, but reservations are required as a meal is provided for all attendees. Call 712-243-7479 to reserve your seat.
IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — Emails show that the director of the Iowa Department of Human Services had an obsession with the late rapper Tupac Shakur during a 2-year tenure before the governor requested his resignation last month. Jerry Foxhoven hosted weekly “Tupac Fridays” to listen to music in his office. He sent Tupac lyrics about love and change to inspire employees and he marked his own 65th birthday with Tupac-themed cookies.
While some employees praised his Tupac fixation, one complained to lawmakers last year. Reynolds surprised Foxhoven by telling him to resign one day after Foxhoven had emailed his employees asking them to celebrate Tupac’s birthday.
A Reynolds spokesman says “a lot of factors” went into the decision to seek Foxhoven’s resignation.
BURLINGTON, Iowa (AP) — A July 30 trial starting date has been scheduled for two men accused of beating to death a man at a Burlington apartment complex. Des Moines County District Court records say Majestic Malone and Markell Price have pleaded not guilty to charges of first-degree murder and kidnapping. They’re accused of killing Edward Breuer on March 17.
A trial date has not yet been set for a third defendant, Stanley Baldwin, who’s charged with willful injury.
Court documents say Malone and Price forced Breuer inside an apartment after Baldwin accused Breuer of breaking into it. Neighbors in the same complex said Breuer had been visiting them earlier that evening. The documents say Malone and Price carried Breuer back out of the apartment several minutes later and laid him face down in the dirt before Price poured a can of soda over Breuer’s head.
DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — A group of nurses working at Iowa prisons and other state-run facilities who have not been paid overtime for two years have sued the state and Gov. Kim Reynolds.
The five women filing suit say the state is violating federal and state laws. They are seeking class-action status on behalf of as many as 700 registered nurses working for state agencies.
The state court lawsuit filed June 28 seeks an order requiring the state to pay overtime going forward, past unpaid compensation and other damages and costs.
The women said Monday the state refuses to pay registered nurses for overtime even though their jobs require them to work beyond 40 hours a week and other nurses working with them are paid overtime. A spokesman says the governor declines to comment.
RAGBRAI 2019 is just a few days away. Atlantic Police Chief Dave Erickson says his department has been working to prepare for the overflow of vehicle and bicycle traffic that will be visiting our town. He says “This will be a very busy 24 hours for our department and we will be working hard to keep traffic moving smoothly through town,” but warns that “Residents can expect delays all throughout town on Sunday July 21st and the morning of July 22nd. If you live along the official route through town, expect more delays. When possible try to back in to residential driveways ahead of time to make it easier and safer to access the street when needed.”
Erickson says “We will have officers or volunteers at many intersections on both days helping direct traffic. Our goal is to keep things moving through town as smoothly as we can. With 15 thousand+ extra people expected to be visiting our town, an expectation and understanding that travel will be congested and take longer than normal will be appreciated!”
Listed below are areas that citizens can expect road closures, no parking, and congested intersections.
No Parking:
1.) 10th street from 7th to Olive
2.) Ed Podolack Drive from Linn to Olive
3.) Linn Street from 10th to Ed Podolack Drive
4.) Palm, East Mahogany, & West Mahogany a few feet from stop signs at 9th & 10th streets for shuttle bus needs.
5.) 14th street by the Heritage house entry for shuttle bus pick up
6.) 10th/Olive Half a block in all directions for safe support vehicle turning
Street Closures:
1.) Saturday July 20th
a. 10 Block of West 6th street – Will be shut down once the beer tent is set up.
2.) Sunday July 21st – All Day
a. 7th Street – from Walnut to Poplar street
b. Chestnut – from 8th to 2nd street
c. 6th Street – from Walnut to Locust
d. Poplar Street – From 7th to 5th street
3.) Monday July 22nd – From 5:30 AM until the bulk of riders are out of town
a. 14th street – from Olive to Palm Street
HWY 71 & HWY 6th on Monday July 22nd
1.) The east lane of HWY 71 from 14th to 7th street will be coned off for riders only.
2.) The South lane of HWY 6 from HWY 71 intersection to Olsen’s outdoor Power will be coned off for riders only.
Where to expect congestion:
1.) Sunday July 21st – throughout the day with the heaviest bike traffic between 2PM & 7PM.
a. 2nd street & Sunnyside Lane
b. Sunnyside Lane & 6th Street
c. 6th street from Sunnyside Lane to Locust Street
d. 7th street and Sunnyside Lane
e. 10th street from SW 7th to Linn Street
f. 1000 through 1300 Block of Roosevelt
g. 14th street from Roosevelt to Palm Street
h. The downtown area
2.) Monday July 22nd – Mostly in the morning between 5AM & 10AM
a. 10th street from SW 7th to Linn Street
b. 1000 through 1300 Block of Roosevelt
c. 14th Street from Olive to HWY 71
d. HWY 71 from 14th to 7th street
e. HWY 6 from HWY 71 intersection to Olsen’s Outdoor Power.
f. 7th & Olive Street
g. Plum from 14th to 7th Street
h. The downtown area
Members of the Exira/EHK School Board, Monday, voted to share wrestling with Audubon, and the services of Transportation Director Steve Humphrey with IKM-Manning. The wrestling agreement has also been approved by the Audubon School Board. In other business, the Exira-EHK Board approved the appointments of Tami Jacobsen as Board Secretary, and Karli North, Treasurer/SBO. They also approved the hiring of social studies teacher Alex Hanson to replace Ian Hunt. Hunt resigned to return to his home school district.
(Radio Iowa) — Iowa Senator Chuck Grassley is doing his best to straddle a very thin line as to whether President Trump’s tweet on Sunday about four Democratic women in Congress was racist. Grassley was asked about the president’s tweet, which said the four black, Muslim or Hispanic women should “go back and help fix the totally broken and crime infested places from which they came.” Grassley did not specifically call the comment racist, but did address the topic. “Racism is wrong,” Grassley says. “I think the American people deserve more civility in their politics. I hope I promote civility. If I haven’t, I ought to be called out for it.”
Democrats in the U-S House say they’ll pass a resolution condemning the president’s tweet as racist. Grassley, a Republican, is remaining on the fence. “Democratic elected officials should avoid name-calling,” Grassley says. “Everybody ought to be treated respectfully. That’s true of these members of Congress and that’s true of the president.”
Reports say Iowa’s other U-S Senator, Republican Joni Ernst, when asked Monday if she thought Trump’s comment was racist, said, “Yeah, I do.” Later, Ernst was asked by a C-N-N reporter to repeat her statement as to whether the comment was racist. She responded, “Uh, yeah. They’re American citizens,” and called the president’s comment “not constructive” and “not helpful.” The president’s tweet targeted New York Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Minnesota Representative Ilhan Omar, Michigan Representative Rashida Tlaib and Representative Ayanna Pressley of Massachusetts. Omar is the only one of the four who was born outside the U-S. She came here as a refugee from Somalia as a child.