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Clarinda woman arrested in Montgomery County

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September 3rd, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Sheriff’s Deputies in Montgomery County arrested a Clarinda woman Sunday evening. 19-year old Sydney Nicole Sanders was arrested in Villisca at around 5:45-p.m., on a charge of Providing False Information. Sanders was being held in the Montgomery County Jail on a $300 bond.

Cass County Democratic Party HQ is open

News

September 3rd, 2018 by Ric Hanson

The Cass County Democratic Party Headquarters is again open at 511 Chestnut in Atlantic. Party Chair Sherry Toelle says a Grand Opening to which all Democratic candidates on the Cass County ballot have been invited, is a Meet & Greet as well as a chance to discuss their candidacy and their views on the issues. The event will begin at 6-p.m. Monday, September 10th, with a light supper will be provided.

The Cass County Democratic Part HQ actually opened on August 27th, according to Toelle, and provides campaign literature, signs, and other campaign materials on all the Democratic candidates. A waiting list for campaign yard signs is being prepared. Open Monday thru Friday from 11-a.m. to 4-p.m., Saturdays from 10-a.m. to 1-p.m., and Sundays from noon to 4-p.m., the HQ also provides voter registration and absentee ballot/early voting information and forms. The HQ phone number is 712-243-8683.

Toelle said that the HQ has been in the same location for years. The public is welcome to attend the Grand Opening and to stop by during the hours of operation to review the information available.

Child suffers minor injuries after being hit by a vehicle in C. Bluffs

News

September 3rd, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Police in Council Bluffs say a 9-year old boy suffered only minor injuries after he rode a bicycle between two-parked vehicles, into the path of moving vehicle. The accident happened at around 6:19-p.m. Sunday, in the 2600 block of Avenue G.

An investigation determined the boy had attempted to cross Avenue G, when the driver of a vehicle traveling in the westbound traffic lane, who was unable to see the boy until it was too late,  struck him. The child was not wearing a helmet, and suffered a laceration to his head. He was transported to Nebraska Medicine by CBFD for treatment of his injuries.

The Traffic Unit fully investigated this crash and no citations will be issued. Avenue G traffic was closed for approximately thirty minutes during this incident. Council Bluffs Police remind cyclists to check for oncoming traffic before entering a roadway and to wear a bicycle helmet.

Iowa early News Headlines: 9/3/18

News

September 3rd, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Here is the latest Iowa news from The Associated Press at 4:10 a.m. CDT

BROOKLYN, Iowa (AP) — The father of slain Iowa college student Mollie Tibbetts says his daughter’s death should not be used to promote political agendas. A Mexican farmworker suspected of being in the U.S. illegally has been charged in Tibbetts’ death. Rob Tibbetts in an opinion piece in The Des Moines Register spoke out against using “Mollie’s soul in advancing views she believed were profoundly racist.”

ST. LOUIS (AP) — Supporters of a mentally challenged woman convicted in two states in the 1994 kidnapping and killing of two elderly women say she was actually a victim of the men involved in the crime and are pushing for her release. They’ve persuaded Missouri to grant Angel Stewart parole. But things are more complicated in Iowa, where Stewart is serving a life-in-prison sentence that does not include the option for parole.

BETTENDORF, Iowa (AP) — Iowa Department of Transportation officials are giving tours of the new $322 million bridge being built to connect Bettendorf to Moline, Illinois. Danielle Alvarez is the project manager of the new Interstate 74 bridge. Alvarez tells the Quad-City Times that she recently led a tour aboard a ferryboat on the Mississippi River for residents interested in the bridge construction. Alvarez covered the planning, design and ongoing buildout of the bridge featuring two four-lane spans.

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — A popular, elderly sea lion known has died at the Blank Park Zoo in Des Moines. The Des Moines Register reports that Pupper died Thursday. She was 29. Preliminary results of a necropsy show she suffered a chronic health condition. The zoo says in a statement that Pupper received care related to her age, but did not display any symptoms of pain.

Windshield impaled by 10-foot long board in Fremont County

News

September 2nd, 2018 by Ric Hanson

The driver of a vehicle in Fremont County that left the road and struck several mailboxes before leaving the scene with a 10-foot long, 1-x-4 board penetrating his windshield, is believed to have suffered from a medical condition that caused the accident Saturday evening. The Fremont County Sheriff’s Office says 63-year old Michael Dillon, of Bartlett, was transported to the hospital in Hamburg for treatment of an unknown medical condition.

Photo’s Courtesy Fremont County Sheriff’s Office

The Fremont County Sheriff’s Department says Deputies located the vehicle at a residence in the 2200 block of Waubonsie Ave. The board that penetrated the windshield became lodged just a few inches from the front seat passenger. Two minor children, including one seated in the front passenger seat escaped injury.

The Tabor Police Department, Tabor Rescue and Thurman Fire Departments assisted the Fremont County Sheriff’s Office with the call.

Access bridge to Mississippi River span at Sabula reopens

News

September 2nd, 2018 by Ric Hanson

SABULA, Iowa (AP) — Motorists can again get across the Mississippi River at Sabula.
The Telegraph Herald reports that a short bridge just outside the Sabula city limits reopened Friday, restoring access to the U.S. 52/Illinois 64 bridge that spans the river.

The February closure of the bridge at Sabula for safety concerns stopped access to the bigger bridge over the river to Savanna, Illinois. Drivers had to instead make a 36-mile detour or taking a free ferry.

The $8.5 million replacement bridge was originally set to be opened by Labor Day, but officials this summer said it would likely open several weeks later because of high river levels. Officials say now that it has reopened on schedule, the ferry service will close down.

Popular, elderly sea lion Pupper dies at Des Moines zoo

News

September 2nd, 2018 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — A popular, elderly sea lion known has died at the Blank Park Zoo in Des Moines. The Des Moines Register reports that Pupper died Thursday. She was 29. Preliminary results of a necropsy show she suffered a chronic health condition. The zoo says in a statement that Pupper received care related to her age, but did not display any symptoms of pain.

Born at the zoo in 1989, Pupper exceeded the median life expectancy for sea lions in human care by six years. She was the oldest sea lion in the zoo’s Hub Harbor Seal and Sea Lion Pool.

Tours show off $322M Iowa-Illinois bridge construction

News

September 2nd, 2018 by Ric Hanson

BETTENDORF, Iowa (AP) — Iowa Department of Transportation officials are giving tours of the new $322 million bridge being built to connect Bettendorf to Moline, Illinois.

Danielle Alvarez, project manager of the new Interstate 74 bridge, told the Quad-City Times that she recently led a tour aboard a ferryboat on the Mississippi River for residents interested in the bridge construction. Alvarez covered the planning, design and ongoing buildout of the bridge, which will feature two four-lane spans.
The bridge is a primary piece of the $1.2 billion Interstate 74 corridor project.

Residents reserved their seats months in advance for the tour organized by River Action Inc., which has become a popular local attraction. River Action Program Manager Laura Morris said the group added four additional outings in September, which sold out in about a week. The group plans to offer additional guided tours of the water-based construction site next year.

The Iowa Department of Transportation awarded a contract last year to Wisconsin-based Lunda Construction to build the bridge. Construction started last summer and is expected to complete at the end of 2020. Construction crews are working at the site six days a week to stay on schedule. “We will work every day we can,” Alvarez said. “We don’t have a choice when we only have three-and-a-half years to get the project done.”

Until then, residents traveling from Illinois to Iowa for work or school can expect longer commute times, particularly next year. The Iowa-bound span of the existing bridge connecting the cities will be reduced to a single lane next year. Bettendorf resident Joyce Holland learned about all of the new changes on a tour with Alvarez in June. “I just think it’s interesting we have a bridge being built in three-and-a-half years, and this gal can give us all the answers about it,” Holland said. “It’s great for our area.”

Father of slain Iowa student decries using her as ‘pawn’

News

September 2nd, 2018 by Ric Hanson

BROOKLYN, Iowa (AP) — The father of slain Iowa college student Mollie Tibbetts in an opinion piece spoke out against using his daughter’s death in support of “views she believed were profoundly racist,” a call that comes after President Donald Trump and others seized on the suspected killer’s immigration status to argue for changes in U.S. immigration laws.

Authorities have said the University of Iowa student was abducted while she was out for an evening run in Brooklyn, Iowa, on July 18. The man charged in her death, 24-year-old Cristhian Bahena Rivera, is also suspected of being in the U.S. illegally. Trump and other politicians quickly noted that element of the case and called for changes to immigration law .

Rob Tibbetts wrote in the opinion piece published online by The Des Moines Register on Saturday that while he supports debate on immigration, some politicians and pundits went too far in using his daughter’s death to promote political agendas. He said his stepdaughter is Latina and argued that the suspected killer “is no more a reflection of the Hispanic community as white supremacists are of all white people.”

“Do not appropriate Mollie’s soul in advancing views she believed were profoundly racist,” he wrote. “The act grievously extends the crime that stole Mollie from our family and is, to quote Donald Trump Jr., ‘heartless’ and ‘despicable.'”

The quote comes from a Friday opinion piece by Trump Jr . that criticized the media and Democrats for not playing up the suspect’s immigration status. “Despite what some Democrats may wish in the depths of their hearts, Mollie was murdered by an illegal alien and her murder would never have happened if we policed our southern border properly,” the president’s son wrote.

Recorded phone calls citing Mollie Tibbetts’ death in a push for white supremacist views began Tuesday, just days after her funeral. The robocalls cited comments Rob Tibbetts made in defense of Latinos during her funeral. The calls question whether his daughter would feel the same if she were still alive and describe Rivera as “an invader from Mexico.”

“She may not be able to speak for herself, but I can and will,” her father wrote in the opinion piece. “Please leave us out of your debate. Allow us to grieve in privacy and with dignity. At long last, show some decency. On behalf of my family and Mollie’s memory, I’m imploring you to stop.”

2-state effort aimed at freeing mentally challenged woman

News

September 2nd, 2018 by Ric Hanson

ST. LOUIS (AP) — Supporters of a mentally challenged woman convicted in two states in the 1994 kidnapping and killing of two elderly women say she was actually a victim of the men involved in the crime and are pushing for her release. They’ve persuaded one state — Missouri — to grant Angel Stewart parole. But things are more complicated in Iowa, where Stewart is serving a life-in-prison sentence that does not include the option for parole.

Stewart, now 45, was convicted in two states because one of the victims abducted in Des Moines, Iowa, was driven just across the state line to Missouri and killed. Two men, Steven Bradley and Garland Shaffer, were convicted of first-degree murder and are serving life terms in Iowa.

A suburban St. Louis-based advocacy group for women in need of legal assistance, the WILLOW Project, took up Stewart’s case, saying Stewart was abused and tortured by those men, was not directly involved in the crimes, and went along only out of fear. They also cite her IQ, estimated at 65, saying she was unable to defend herself to police after her 1994 arrest.

“She essentially lost her whole life for something she didn’t do because she couldn’t tell her own story in a way understandable to people,” Anne Geraghty-Rathert, director of the Webster University-based WILLOW Project, said. Advocates are now preparing a clemency request to Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds. A spokeswoman for the Republican governor said the request has not yet been received and declined further comment.

Stewart was 19 when she and her 1-year-old son began sharing a Des Moines apartment with Bradley, Shaffer and a 16-year-old runaway, Angel Chamberlain. Bradley was 32 at the time, and Shaffer was 68. It didn’t take long before the men became abusive, Geraghty-Rathert said. The young women were beaten and padlocked inside the apartment.

An 82-year-old woman who lived near the apartment, Phyllis King, grew concerned and contacted Stewart’s mother. Shaffer went to King’s house to confront her. When he did, another neighbor, 79-year-old Clara Baker, threatened to call police. Shaffer admitted that he abducted both women at gunpoint. He strangled Baker and dumped and her body was dumped along an Iowa interstate highway, hidden beneath an abandoned chair in a ravine.

Later, Shaffer drove King across the state line and beat her to death with a board, dumping the body in a wooded area near Kahoka, Missouri, court records show.
Bradley, Shaffer, Stewart and Chamberlain were arrested at a motel in Osceola, Iowa, in June 1994. Chamberlain was jailed briefly in a juvenile facility and later released.
Stewart said she went along with the men only out of fear for her life and her son’s life. But facing a potential murder charge and told that could mean the death penalty in Missouri, she agreed to plead guilty to kidnapping in both states.

John Sarcone has been county attorney in Iowa’s Polk County since 1991, and he prosecuted Stewart. He believes prison is “where she belongs.” “They were involved in the process,” Sarcone said of Stewart and Chamberlain. “They could have saved these women, and they didn’t. Years later it’s very easy to make the claim you were forced into it, but those poor ladies never had a chance.”

Geraghty-Rathert said she is hopeful Stewart will soon be freed based in part on the growing acceptance about how an abuser can coerce a victim. “The public is beginning to believe that there are stories like this out there,” Geraghty-Rathert said.