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KJAN News can be heard at five minutes after every hour right after Fox News 24 hours a day!
Keep up-to-date with Fox News Radio, Radio Iowa, Brownfield & the Iowa Agribusiness Networks!
The Pottawattamie County Sheriff’s Office reports three recent arrests. Saturday night, 35-year old Tyler Blake McCreary was arrested in Council Bluffs, following a reported disturbance. McCreary booked into the Pott. County Jail for Interference with Official Acts and later released. At around 12:10-a.m., Saturday, 22-year old Brittnee Marie Chase was arrested following a traffic stop at Highway 92 and 220th Street, near Council Bluffs. Chase was pulled over for failure to have her vehicles’ rear license plate lamp illuminated. She was arrested for Driving While Barred/Habitual Offender, and later released from custody.
And, at around 10:40-p.m. on March 4th, 21-year old Wyatt Dean Baldwin, of Council Bluffs, was arrested for a Sex Offender Registry Violation, stemming from an incident on March 3rd. Baldwin remained in the Pott. County Jail at last report.
The Ringgold County Sheriff’s Office reports 56-year old Thomas Scott Kinton, from Ellston, was arrested Friday night after authorities received a 9-1-1 call about a man with a gun at Mount Ayr High School. Deputies arrived at the school shortly after the call.

Baylee Stark

Thomas Kinton
Kinton was subsequently arrested for carrying weapons on school grounds, possession of a dangerous weapon while intoxicated, and consumption of alcohol in a public place. He was being held at the Ringgold County Jail until seen by the magistrate.
And, a woman from Kellerton was arrested Friday night for Domestic Abuse Assault-1st Offense. 23-year old Baylee Kolene Stark was booked into the Ringgold County Jail and held without bond until seen by a magistrate.
IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — The former top judge at Iowa Workforce Development says he’s pleased to settle a long-running lawsuit alleging that his 2013 layoff was retaliatory and unlawful. Joseph Walsh said the $99,000 payment recently approved by the state to settle his lawsuit could have been higher had he not been able to return to state employment shortly after his layoff. Iowa Workforce Development eliminated Walsh’s job shortly after he opposed an attempt to make his position a political appointment.
Walsh contended, correctly, that federal law required his position to be merit-based and insulated from politics. The agency’s then-director Teresa Wahlert withdrew that plan but then abruptly laid him Walsh weeks later.
Auditor of State Rob Sand today (Monday) released an agreed-upon procedures report on the City of Griswold, for the period covering July 1, 2018 through June 30, 2019. The agreed-upon procedures engagement was performed pursuant to the Code of Iowa. Sand reported eight findings related to the receipt and disbursement of taxpayer funds. The findings address issues such as a lack of segregation of duties, the Fire Department bank account held outside of the City’s control, Fire Department questionable disbursements and moneys provided to non-profit corporations in violation of Article III, Section 31 of the Constitution of Iowa.
Sand provided the City with recommendations to address each of the findings. Six of the eight findings discussed above are repeated from the prior year. The report noted the City Council has a fiduciary responsibility to provide oversight of the City’s operations and financial transactions. Oversight is typically defined as the “watchful and responsible care” a governing body exercises in its fiduciary capacity.
A copy of the agreed-upon procedures report is available for review on the Auditor of State’s web site at https://auditor.iowa.gov/audit-reports/
(Radio Iowa) — Many Iowans will get cards from the U.S. Census Bureau in their mailboxes this week, urging them to take part in this year’s population count. The results will be used to redraw political boundaries and distribute federal funding for everything from roads to health care. Gary Krob, coordinator of the State Data Center of Iowa, says this is the first time most people will be asked to report the information online. “The Census Bureau is really pushing the online response if at all possible because it saves the federal government a lot of money,” Krob says. “That’s gonna be the big push for the next month or two, really just getting people to participate.”
Krob says the online form will not be the only way to respond. People can also provide information over the phone and paper forms will be sent out in April to anyone who hasn’t responded by then. Krob says census figures are used in redistricting and play a role in federal appropriations. Krob says, “In 2016 alone, Iowa received $8.7 billion based on federal funds based on that population number.”
Most census invitations will be in English but will include messages in 12 other languages about how to participate. Areas with a high numbers of Spanish-speaking residents will receive bilingual cards.
(Reporting by Grant Gerlock, Iowa Public Radio)
More State and area news from KJAN News Director Ric Hanson.
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MAQUOKETA, Iowa (Telegraph Herald) — Federal authorities are taking over monitoring of contamination from a carcinogenic chemical that’s spread from a factory site in the eastern Iowa city of Maquoketa. The Telegraph Herald reported that the contamination stems from the operations of Clinton Machine Co., which built small engines in Maquoketa from 1950 into the 1990s. The factory used trichloroethene, commonly known as TCE, as a degreasing agent.
Federal authorities have since determined that TCE is carcinogenic. Authorities have said TCE in groundwater also creates the potential for indoor contamination.
Three people were arrested on separate charges, Saturday, in Creston. Authorities say 28-year old Christopher Keller, of Creston, was arrested Saturday afternoon at the Union County Law Enforcement Center (LEC), on the charges of Interference with Official Acts, Theft in the 4th Degree, and Driving While Barred. Keller was later released on $3,300 bond. 24-year old Shelby Fetters, of Altoona, was arrested at the Union County LEC Saturday afternoon, for Driving While Suspended and Theft in the 4th. She was later released on $1,300 bond.
And, late Saturday night, 43-year old Jeffery Johnson, of Creston, was arrested at the LEC for Criminal Mischief in the 5th Degree. He was later released on a $300 bond.
The area’s latest and/or top news stories at 7:06-a.m. From KJAN News Director Ric Hanson.
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Two students with the CAM School District are the 2020 winners of the Daughters of the American Revolution (DAR), American History Essay Contest. Sixth-grade student Collin Bower, and Seventh grader Sidney Amdor won for their essay “The Voyage of the Mayflower. Each student participant receives a certificate of participation from the chapter and the chapter winners receive bronze medals and certificates.

Sixth-grade student Collin Bower, and Seventh grader Sidney Amdor.
The DAR’s History Essay Contest was established to encourage young people to think creatively about our nation’s great history and learn about history in a new light. Essays are judged for historical accuracy, adherence to the topic, organization of materials, interest, originality, spelling, grammar, punctuation, and neatness.
2020 marks the 400th Anniversary of the voyage of the Mayflower and the founding of the Plymouth Colony. Imagine you are one of the passengers on the Mayflower. Knowing what materials were available in 1620, what would you have packed to prepare for the trip and starting a new life in the wilderness? After experiencing more than two months at sea then finally landing at Plymouth Colony on November 9, 1620, do you think you would have made different choices and why?