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Oklahoma man arrested in Creston

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April 21st, 2025 by Ric Hanson

(Creston, Iowa) – Officials with the Creston Police Department report a man from Oklahoma was arrested Friday evening, following a traffic stop. Authorities say 41-year-old Patrick Gorman Michael, of Ardmore, OK, was arrested near Highway 34 and Osage, for Driving While Suspended. Michael was cited and released from the scene on a promise to appear in court.

Accident under investigation in Guthrie County

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April 21st, 2025 by Ric Hanson

(Guthrie Center, Iowa) – Sheriff’s officials in Guthrie County say one person suffered possible/unknown injuries during a collision Sunday afternoon. According to the sheriff’s report, a 2013 Chevy Tahoe driven by 27-year-old Seth Ashby, of Guthrie Center, was traveling south on Jaguar Trail at around 1:50-p.m., Sunday, when the vehicle crossed into the northbound side of the gravel road. The SUV struck a 2014 Chevy Silverado pickup, driven by 26-year-old Tiffany Ashby, of Guthrie Center.

She complained of pain and was checked out by local EMS providers but was not transported to a hospital. The accident remains under investigation. Damage from the collision amounted to $20,000 altogether.

Council Bluffs Volunteer Receives Outstanding New Volunteer of the Year Award from Alzheimer’s Association Iowa Chapter

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April 21st, 2025 by Ric Hanson

COUNCIL BLUFFS, IA, April 21, 2025 – The Alzheimer’s Association Iowa Chapter has awarded Maria Torres of Council Bluffs the 2025 Outstanding New Volunteer of the Year award for her dedication to the mission to end Alzheimer’s and dementia.

Torres, Health Equity Coordinator for the Pottawattamie County Public Health Department, stepped up to be a Spanish-speaking translator for the Alzheimer’s Association’s BOLD work across the state and has helped connect the Association with new DEI partners and community organizations like the Iowa Dept. of Public Health Conference and Women of Color Leadership Team. She was instrumental in organizing the inaugural Women’s History Month event in Council Bluffs as well.

The Alzheimer’s Association Iowa Chapter thanks Maria Torres for her service, passion, and dedication as a volunteer. All Alzheimer’s Association volunteers are passionate, inspired and want to make a difference in the fight to end Alzheimer’s. Visit alz.org/iowa/volunteer to learn about volunteer opportunities and how to become a volunteer.

There are 7 million Americans living with Alzheimer’s disease – a leading cause of death in the United States. Additionally, more than 11 million family members and friends provide care to people living with Alzheimer’s and other dementias. In Iowa alone, there are over 62,000 people living with the disease and nearly 100,000 caregivers.

Red Oak woman arrested on a Burglary charge

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April 21st, 2025 by Ric Hanson

(Red Oak, Iowa)- A Red Oak woman was arrested on burglary charges over the weekend. Police in Red Oak report 42-year-old Tuesday Ann Straw was arrested for 3rd degree burglary–a class D felony. Authorities say the arrest occurred in the 700 block of Sunset Avenue in Red Oak.

Straw was taken to the Montgomery County Jail and held on $5,000 bond.

Red Oak man arrested for Eluding

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April 21st, 2025 by Ric Hanson

(Red Oak, Iowa) – Police in Red Oak report the arrest at around 8:20-p.m., Sunday, of 18-year-old Ayden Jose Olivas, of Red Oak, on a charge of Eluding. Olivas was taken into custody in the 200 block of E. Grimes Street. He was transported to the Montgomery County Jail and held on a $5,000 bond.

Semis collide and are engulfed in flames on I-80 in Dallas County

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April 21st, 2025 by Ric Hanson

(Dexter, Iowa) – Officials with Earlham Fire and Rescue reported on social media over the weekend, that two semi-tractors collided on Interstate-80 near Dexter, Saturday morning, and became fully engulfed in flames. Both semis were a total loss. There was no word on any injuries. (Photos from the Earlham Fire & Rescue Facebook page)

According to the Iowa Department of Transportation, the westbound lanes on I-80 between exits 104 and 100, or three miles west of the Dexter area, were closed until Saturday afternoon.

The Dexter Fire Department assisted Earlham Fire at the scene, along with the Iowa State Patrol.

The crash remained under investigation.

Iowa rights activists plan to fight social service cuts

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April 21st, 2025 by Ric Hanson

(Iowa News Service) – Groups working for human rights causes in Iowa warn proposed cuts being debated in Congress would trickle down to the people least able to sustain them.  The Trump administration has proposed $880 billion in cuts over the next decade to Medicaid and other services, including the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program.

Progress Iowa Executive Director Mazie Stillwell said those cuts would fall most squarely on average Iowans, many of them kids, who don’t have a voice in the process. “There is so much fear right now, and it’s fear from everyday working Iowans who know there’s no one fighting for them,” said Stillwell. “It’s the Iowans who know that when push comes to shove, and when programs are put on the chopping block, they’re the ones who are going to suffer.”

The Trump administration has said it is working to downsize the federal government and cut expenses.  About 270,000 Iowans receive SNAP or federal food assistance, and more than 700,000 get their health coverage from Medicaid. Stillwell contended that Iowans aren’t the only ones afraid of potential social service cuts, but politicians are too.

She said she suspects that’s one reason they aren’t showing up at town hall meetings, that have long been the hallmark of grassroots democracy in the state. “What we’ve seen is these members of Congress running away from their constituents,” said Stillwell. “They are refusing to answer their questions. They are trying to make a mockery of their constituents and their efforts.”

Stillwell said in light of the just-passed income tax filing deadline, Iowans want to know their money is being used to represent their interests – and not to fund tax cuts or corporate interests.

UI professor’s concern about civics education leads to formation of non-profit

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April 21st, 2025 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – University of Iowa law professor Josephine Gittler has founded the “Alliance for Civic Education of Iowa” to address what she sees as a very big problem. “There are many young people here in Iowa who do not have a basic knowledge of American government and American history and the rights and responsibilities of American citizenship that they need to be informed and responsible citizens,” Gittler says.

Gittler was at the Iowa Capitol last week to lobby for the bill that would make passing the U-S Citizenship test a requirement for high school graduation. The bill won approval in the House and Senate, but Gittler says it’s just a first step on what’s needed. “There are many polls and surveys that show ignorance about basic facts,” Gittler says. “For example, one recent poll showed 36% of adults could not name all three branches of government — legislative, executive and judicial. What could be a more basic fact than that?”

Gittler founded the non-profit “Alliance for Civic Education of Iowa” last summer to promote civics education in Iowa’s public and private K-through-12 schools as well as colleges and universities. Gittler says the alliance will provide curriculum for teachers to use in their classrooms and it will host events. One of her goals is to start a civics competition for Iowa high school students.

“Every person that graduates from high school who is a U.S. citizen is going to have the rights and responsibilities of citizenship for their whole life, ” she said. “They may or may not use the other things they learn in school and they’re going to have to know what to do to be good citizens.” In 1973, Gittler became the first woman faculty member in the University of Iowa College of Law. One of her heroines is Sandra Day O’Connor, the first woman appointed to the U-S Supreme Court.

“When she stepped down from the Supreme Court, she devoted herself to promoting civics education,” Gittler says, “and founded a center at the University of Arizona which is called iCivics, to promote civics education.” Forty-four years ago, Gittler was the co-founder of a national think tank that still provides education about maternal and child health. Gittler is also a professor of pediatrics in the University of Iowa College of Medicine and a professor of nursing at the university.

Iowa Senate passes anti-SLAPP bill providing free speech, press protections

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April 20th, 2025 by Ric Hanson

(Des Moines, Iowa) – The Iowa Senate unanimously passed a bill last week, that would provide protection against lawsuits aimed at limiting constitutional freedoms of speech and press. The Iowa Capital Dispatch reports the legislation, House File 472, is known as an anti-SLAPP bill — referring to a measure intended to combat “strategic lawsuits against public participation,” or SLAPP lawsuits. Those are civil lawsuits filed by organizations or individuals against entities such as news organizations or activists not with the expectation of winning the case, but to discourage them from publishing articles or speaking publicly on an issue by engaging them in a long, expensive legal battle.

The measure would provide protections for those facing such lawsuits by allowing expedited relief in court for cases related to First Amendment rights, including freedoms of speech and press. The House has passed anti-SLAPP bills in several previous legislative sessions with bipartisan support that have failed to advance in the Senate. During House debate on the bill, Rep. Steven Holt, R-Denison, said he has attempted to pass anti-SLAPP measures since 2018.  Anti-SLAPP

Those efforts were in response to a 2018 lawsuit against the Carroll Times Herald filed by a Carroll police officer who sued the newspaper after reporting that he had sexual relationships with teenagers, which the officer had admitted to. While the judge dismissed the case, the legal dispute “almost put them out of business,” Holt said. Though no senators but Reichman spoke on the bill Wednesday, the measure was unanimously approved by the chamber.

The Senate amended the legislation to state the protections only apply to civil actions filed on or after the bill’s enactment — removing a provision in the original House bill that expedited relief could also be granted to a “cause of action asserted in a civil action.” With the bill’s passage in the Senate, it moves back to the House for approval of the amendment before it can go to Gov. Kim Reynolds.

Health Care Justice Catholic hospital drops legal argument that a fetus is not a person

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April 20th, 2025 by Ric Hanson

(Des Moines, Iowa) – Catholic Health Initiatives-Iowa has dropped its argument in a medical malpractice case that the loss of an unborn child does not equate to the death of a “person” for the purpose of calculating damage awards. The nonprofit, tax-exempt entity is one of several defendants in a Polk County malpractice case involving the death of an unborn child.

The Iowa Capital Dispatch reported, last month, attorneys for CHI and MercyOne Des Moines Medical Center argued an unborn child should not be considered a “patient” for purposes of calculating damages in the case. They also argued that “finding an unborn child to be a ‘person’ would lead to serious implications in other areas of the law.” That position appeared to clash with CHI’s mission statement and ethics guidelines, both of which are based on the concept that human life begins at the moment of conception.

In Iowa, court-ordered awards for noneconomic losses stemming from medical malpractice are capped at $250,000, except in cases that entail the “loss or impairment of mind or body.” Initially, CHI and MercyOne argued the cap on damages applied in cases where the “loss” was that of a fetus or an unborn child. However, during a court hearing on Friday (April 18), an attorney for CHI and MercyOne, Christine Conover, informed the court it was withdrawing from the motion to cap damages in the case on that basis. “We are a Catholic hospital and obviously the Catholic faith believes that life begins at conception,” Conover told Polk County District Judge Scott J. Beattie.

“To be honest, I had wondered about that stance,” Beattie told Conover, referring to the hospital’s previously filed motion seeking to cap damages. “It seemed like kind of an odd stance,” he added, noting that it seemed to contradict the position that CHI had taken in other legal matters.

In a written statement issued Friday, Bob Ritz, president and CEO of MercyOne, stated “we are heartbroken that our belief that human personhood begins at conception would ever be called into question. As a Catholic health system, the sanctity of life is not just a belief we hold; it is the foundation of every action we take. “While the motion (to limit damages) was accurate from a purely legal standpoint, it has caused confusion and concern. That is why we have asked our counsel to withdraw the motion with respect to MercyOne. No courtroom argument should ever cast doubt on the deeply held Catholic values that guide MercyOne.”

The question of whether the cap on damages would apply in the case is still an issue for other defendants in the case, including Pella Regional Health Center. The lawsuit involves the treatment provided to Miranda Anderson of Poweshiek County.

The case is scheduled for trial on May 12, 2025. At Friday’s hearing, Beattie indicated he will rule on the question of damages, as well as other unresolved pretrial disputes, as quickly as possible.