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IRS Phone scam circulating in Shelby County

News

April 27th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Officials with the Harlan Police Department and the Shelby County Sheriff’s Office say they have received numerous calls from citizens regarding phone calls claiming to be from the Internal Revenue Service. A caller will tell you that money is owed to the IRS and that you can be arrested if the call is not returned and/or money sent. Authorities warn “These are scam calls. The IRS will NEVER contact anyone by phone regarding their tax status.  Ignore these calls. Do not call them back or give out any personal information. If a voicemail has been left with you, simply delete the message.”

Pottawattamie County Sheriff’s report (4/27)

News

April 27th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

The Pottawattamie County Sheriff’s Office has released a report on recent arrests and other activities. Authorities say a man who was getting ready to bond-out of the Pott. County Jail, was served with a warrant Thursday morning, for Violation of Parole. 42-year old Anthony Cortez Francis, of Council Bluffs, was advised of the warrant and returned to the custody of Corrections Staff. Late Thursday morning, a Pott. County Sheriff’s Deputy appeared at a residence in Neola, to locate a woman who had a valid warrant for Probation Violation. He spoke with 36-year old Staci Lynn Ashley, of Neola, the person wanted on the warrant. She acknowledged the warrant and asked to make some phone calls to arrange for bail. She was permitted to do so, then taken into custody and booked into the Pottawattamie County Jail without incident.

At around 11-p.m. Thursday, an eastern Iowa man was arrested by a Pott. County Deputy, at the Love’s Truck Stop, in Shelby. 42-year old Jason Asa Grulkey, of Cedar Rapids, was loitering at the Truck Stop and was asked to leave the area, but refused to so. A Deputy located Grulkey and ran a license check on him. Dispatch advised Grulkey had warrants for his arrest out of Linn County.  He was into custody and transported to Pott. County Corrections to be held on the Linn County warrant until their deputies could pick him up and transport him back to Linn County.

A man from Council Bluffs was arrested early this (Friday) morning, after 52-year old Vernon Atkinson, of Glenmora, LA., called the Sheriff’s Office at around 1:10-a.m.  Atkinson reported to authorities someone had tried to break into his truck while he was sleeping on the side of the road on Interstate 80 at the 17 mile marker. When Atkinson confronted the suspect, 31-year old Jestin Michael Hambright, Hambright fled east on Interstate 80. Atkinson followed the suspect vehicle to the 23 mile marker, where law enforcement was able to make contact and stop the suspect vehicle on 298th Street just east of Neola.

The driver of the suspect vehicle was identified as Hambright, who was taken into custody for burglary 2nd degree. Hambright was also charged with a restraining order violation due to his sister 18-year old Shaylee Elizabeth Hambright being in the vehicle. There is currently a no contact order in place between Jestin and Shaylee Hambright, with Shaylee Hambright being the protected party. A third passenger in the suspect vehicle identified as Zachary Michael Digilio was taken into custody for having outstanding warrant for Theft and Violation of Probation, in Pottawattamie County.

I-29 Construction Update (Sioux City area)

News

April 27th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Officials with the Iowa Department of Transportation report construction work on Interstate 29 in Sioux City, will require closing the inside lane of northbound I-29 from the Floyd River to Hamilton Boulevard nightly, from 6-p.m. until 6-a.m. Sunday nights through Friday mornings, weather permitting, from this Sunday, April 29, until Friday, May 11th. Motorists should expect to encounter road construction crews and slow down…it’s the law.

Meterologist says change from La Nina to El Nino creates spring issues

Ag/Outdoor, News, Weather

April 27th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Warm spring weather has been slow to spread across Iowa and the rest of the Northern Plains, causing costly delays for planting, construction and other outdoor activities. Meteorologist Dennis Todey, director of the U-S-D-A’s Midwest Climate Hub, says changes are underway in the major climate drivers. “We are transitioning between La Nina and potential El Nino, so, a large part of what you’re seeing here is trapped,” Todey says. “There is this noted warming hole over the middle part of the country in the middle part of summer, so that’s what is coming into play here.”

La Nina patterns often bring cooler temperatures along with more storms in some areas and droughts elsewhere. El Nino patterns typically do the opposite. Due to the extended cold weather, many Iowa farmers are a couple of weeks behind in planting and Todey says it will take quite a while to get back to normal growing conditions.  “The catching up cannot happen during the early part of the summer,” he says. “Above-average temperatures, middle part of the summer don’t do much to catch us up in the way of growing degree days.”

Todey says there is no single cause for the prolonged winter we’ve seen across much of the region in recent weeks. “There is a little bit of La Nina influence still because we still are in La Nina,” he says, “but there’s not one indicator. There’s a combination of several different things that has locked into it.”

Many areas in the region have set all-time April records for snow and cold temperatures. The Midwest Climate Hub is based in Ames.

(Radio Iowa)

Democratic candidates for governor decry ‘toxic’ state gov’t workplace

News

April 27th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

The half dozen Democrats who are running for governor say it’s time to address the “scourge” of sexual harassment in our culture. Their comments came last (Thursday) night — a few hours after Republican Governor Kim Reynolds publicly released the letter she received in March from a state employee who alleged the Iowa Finance Authority’s boss was harassing women in the agency. Reynolds fired the man a month ago. Fred Hubble, a retired businessman from Des Moines, says if there’s a lawsuit over a state official or state employee’s conduct, that person — not the taxpayers — should pay any damages. “There is no room for sexual assault or sexual harassment in our state, period,” Hubbell says. “Not just state government, but in our state, in our communities, on our sidewalks. We’ve got to stop that.”

All six Democratic gubernatorial candidates were in Adel last (Thursday) night for a Dallas County Democrats’ fundraiser. Nate Boulton, a state senator from Des Moines, says the female employee’s letter revealed a “toxic culture” where a state official abused his power in the work environment. “The statehouse, state government, should lead by example and not be — unfortunately — a bad example,” Boulton says. Andy McGuire, a medical doctor who is a former Iowa Democratic Party chairwoman, says harassment is a cultural issue that must be addressed. “I want to make sure when I’m in office that we value every state employee, that we value everyone in Iowa,” she says, “so that we make sure we don’t have this anymore.”

Cathy Glasson, a nurse and union organizer from Coralville, says Reynolds “could have led” on the issue after a state senate employee who complained of harassment won a two-million dollar jury verdict last July. “She sort of deferred it to that chamber, to the senate, like it’s just their problem, when obviously there’s a much bigger problem affecting the work environment in state government in Iowa,” Glasson says. Ross Wilburn, a former Iowa City mayor and current employee of Iowa State University Extension, says Reynolds needs to ensure state workers know where they can safely go to air these kind of complaints. “The governor does set the tone for the values and expectations on behavior,” Wilburn says.

John Norris, who served as Democratic Governor Tom Vilsack’s chief of staff, calls the allegations in the woman’s letter “reprehensible.” “Now you know why they tried to bury it,” Norris says. According to Reynolds, it was up to the woman who wrote the letter to decide whether the graphic details of the alleged misconduct should be publicly revealed. During a W-H-O T-V interview yesterday (Thursday), Reynolds said she felt she had the right to keep the document confidential, to protect the identity of a woman in a small state agency who filed the complaint. Reynolds also referred to Iowa Finance Director Dave Jamison’s alleged actions as “pathetic” and the governor said Jamison was “absolutely done” once she read the woman’s letter. Reynolds has often said while she can’t dictate morality, her administration has a “zero tolerance” policy towards sexual harassment that seeks to change the culture in state government.

(Radio Iowa)

(Podcast) KJAN 8-a.m. News, 4/27/2018

News, Podcasts

April 27th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

More area and State news from KJAN News Director Ric Hanson.

Professor accused of sexually exploiting students

News

April 27th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — A newspaper has reported that a Drake University professor accused of sexually exploiting female students has been allowed to resign effective June 1. The Des Moines Register reports that a November internal investigation found that Mahmoud Hamad “physically, sexually and verbally intimidated” female students and “did exploit the power differential that existed between him and his female students.”

The report found that Hamad violated university policies through “unwelcome advances and unwelcome verbal and physical conduct and intimidation aimed at female students because of their sex.” The case hasn’t been referred to police. In the report Hamad denied the student accusations. He’s declined to otherwise comment. Drake administrator Sue Mattison won’t say whether Hamad was asked to resign. She says he’s on a leave of absence.

(Podcast) KJAN Morning News & funeral report, 4/27/2018

News, Podcasts

April 27th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

The area’s latest and/or top news stories at 7:06-a.m., w/KJAN News Director Ric Hanson

Convicted sex offender allowed to volunteer at Iowa schools

News

April 27th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

WELLMAN, Iowa (AP) — A former Iowa teacher purged from the state’s sex offender list has been allowed to volunteer at an eastern Iowa school district. The Des Moines Register reports that Trent Yoder has been helping out in the Mid-Prairie schools district, which is based in Wellman. The district granted him special permission to volunteer, after receiving letters of support. Superintendent Mark Schneider says he has informed school principals that Yoder must be with another adult at all times.

Yoder had pleaded guilty to exploiting a minor at an Anita school by videotaping a high school athlete changing her clothes in 1998. Court records say he served a few weeks behind bars and then four years of probation. He was removed from the sex offender registry after 10 years. He told the Register that he hates that he “caused so much pain to that community.”

Details released in Wed. morning ISP Trooper accident

News

April 27th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

The Iowa State Patrol, Thursday, released additional details about an accident Wednesday morning involving a Trooper. Authorities report Trooper Dillon Malone, of Council Bluffs, was driving his patrol vehicle, a 2014 Dodge Charger, in Emergency status, while enroute to assist with a vehicle eluding law enforcement. As the Trooper was traveling south on Highway 275 at around 4:20-a.m., and entering the town of Hamburg, his vehicle entered a curve and went out of control. The cruiser went off the road to the left and into a residential yard where it hit a tree before going airborne off an embankment. The vehicle struck a parked 2017 Freightliner semi trailer in the residents’ driveway, and afterward spun around before coming to rest.

Trooper Malone, who was wearing his seat belt, was transported by LifeNet helicopter to the University of Nebraska Medical Center (UNMC), where he was being treated for serious, but non-life threatening injuries.