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Iowa early News Headlines: Thursday, March 7, 2019

News

March 7th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

Here is the latest Iowa news from The Associated Press at 3:50 a.m. CST

SIOUX CITY, Iowa (AP) — A Storm Lake man has pleaded guilty to one count of receiving child pornography. Federal prosecutors say 49-year-old James Gailey was convicted after pleading guilty on Monday to the single count. At his plea hearing in Sioux City, Gailey admitted that in October 2017 and January 2018, he received child pornography online. Prosecutors say the images included victims as young as infants and toddlers.

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Federal prosecutors in Iowa have announced the indictments of six people suspected of having stolen various opioids from nursing homes where they had worked. The indictments were announced in a news release Wednesday. All are charged with acquiring a controlled substance by misrepresentation, fraud, deception, and subterfuge.

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — An Iowa lawmaker is accusing the administration of Gov. Kim Reynolds and the director of the state’s human resources agency of “fostering a culture of secrecy in state government” for refusing to release information on the number of sexual harassment cases filed within state agencies in recent years. Democratic Rep. Amy Nielsen said she’s received a bureaucratic runaround in her attempts to get data on the number of cases from Department of Administrative Services Director Janet Phipps.

FORT DODGE, Iowa (AP) — Authorities in north-central Iowa say a Fort Dodge police officer was found unresponsive in his squad car after handling a suspected opioid and had to be revived. The Fort Dodge Police Department has released police body camera video of the officer being pulled from the squad car on Sunday, placed on a gurney and loaded into the back of an ambulance. Police believe the substance the officer handled was a form of fentanyl, a powerful opioid that is fueling a national epidemic of fatal overdoses.

Casinos in Jefferson and Sioux City fined by IRGC

News

March 6th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — Casinos in Sioux City and Jefferson agreed to fines of 20-thousand dollars each at the Iowa Racing and Gaming Commission meeting Tuesday for violations of rules. Iowa Racing and Gaming administrator, Brian Ohorilko, says the Hard Rock Casino in Sioux City agreed to a 20-thousand dollar fine after they experienced outages in security camera coverage between December of 2017 and August of 2018.

“Rules require different types of surveillance coverage for different areas. The particular situation at Hard Rock, there were multiple cameras that were down,” Ohorilko explains. “In some instances, that’s not necessarily a problem, and in other cases it could be.” Ohorilko says the large number of outages figured into the amount of the fine along with the lag in reporting the problem.

“It was a situation where it wasn’t immediately reported to the commission staff….a large part of compliance is about voluntary reporting,” he says. Hard Rock general manager Jim Franke, apologized to the commission. “As a company we do take great pride in how train our staff to follow the rules and regulations set forth by the I-R-G-C and to fully cooperate with I-R-G-C and D-C-I personnel,” Franke say. “Actions that negatively impact the culture of compliance are not and will not be tolerated.”

He says the supervisors knew the procedures and it was frustrating to find they were not followed. “During the same period of time when the cables were causing these camera failures, we experienced three other equipment malfunctions that were all reported and addressed appropriately. We have no indication why they would, and can’t understand why these weren’t disclosed in the same manner,” Franke says.

Franke says they have taken steps to ensure the surveillance video is handled properly. He says they have hired a surveillance manager with 22 years of experience who is respected and has a good working relationship with the I-R-G-C and the D-C-I. Franke says that manager has “re-established a culture of compliance through retraining of the Iowa administrative code, I-R-G-C rules and regulations, our system of internal controls, and our standard operating procedures.”

The fine against the Hard Rock could have been as high as 25-thousand dollars. The other violation involved the Wild Rose casino in Jefferson, which was fined 20-thousand dollars for allowing a minor onto the gambling floor in November. She gambled and was on the floor for 40 minutes before staff identified her. General manager Travis Dvorak spoke to the commission.

“We take responsible gaming seriously, we take underage gaming very seriously,” according to Dvorak. “In the three-and-a-half years that we’ve been operation, we’ve had one-point-six milion admissions — and this is our first and only violation of this nature.” He says they have worked with employees to ensure this doesn’t happen again. “We have taken this opportunity, I have readdressed and reemphasized this importance of this issue with our staff. We increased our training time for our security officers — we extended from a two week to a three-week period — and we are reemphasizing the importance of challenging our patrons when they walk in,” Dvorak says.

He says they are getting everyone at the facility involved. “We held meetings with our entire staff and we re-emphasized the need for all employees to be diligent and observant of all potential underage patrons. We also re-emphasized that is the responsibility of every employee to look for minors and to check identification,” Dvorak says.

The fines for underage gambling violations are based on the number of violations in a 365 day period, and increase with each violation.

Panel votes to provide state grants for some private school parents in Iowa

News

March 6th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — Eight Republicans on a senate committee have endorsed a plan to send state grants to the parents of special needs students who want to enroll their children in a private rather than a public school. Republican Senator Brad Zaun of Urbandale says “I think this is a big first step of empowering the parents to pick the best school, not defined by their zip code.” Republican Senator Jerry Behn from Boone would have preferred giving state grants to EVERY parent of a school-aged child in Iowa, but he says this set of students can be a proving ground.

“If you take some of the most difficult children to work with and start with that, if it works with that, it ought to be easy to move on,” Behn says. Two Republicans on the Senate Education Committee joined the five Democrats on the panel to oppose the bill. Senator Clair Celsi, a Democrat from Des Moines, says starting with the most fragile students who need the most help is wrong.

“Make no mistake, this is a fundamental rewriting of the way we do public education here in the state of Iowa,” Celsi says. Senator Herman Quirmbach, a Democrat from Ames, says the consolidation of rural schools will accelerate if parents are given state money to pay for private schooling. “We will wind up bleeding both students and dollars out of our smaller school districts,” Quirmbach said. Bill backers estimate there are about 60-thousand special needs students in Iowa.

Opponents say it would shift hundreds of millions of tax dollars from public to private schools if each of those students transferred. However, the bill does not require private schools to accept students with an individual education plan because of special circumstances, like a disability or behavior issues.

Storm Lake man pleads guilty to child porn count

News

March 6th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

SIOUX CITY, Iowa (AP) — A Storm Lake man has pleaded guilty to one count of receiving child pornography. Federal prosecutors say 49-year-old James Gailey was convicted after pleading guilty on Monday to the single count. At his plea hearing in Sioux City, Gailey admitted that in October 2017, he used an online image account to receive child pornography.

He also admitted that in January 2018, he did the same thing. Prosecutors say the images included victims as young as infants and toddlers.

Gailey remains in custody until he’s sentenced at a later date. He faces up to 20 years in prison.

Boys State Basketball Scores from 3/6/19

Sports

March 6th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

Class 1A State Semifinals

Alburnett 39, St. Mary’s, Remsen 37

Grand View Christian 59, Montezuma 36

Class 2A State Semifinals

Boyden-Hull 62, South Hamilton, Jewell 59

North Linn, Troy Mills 54, Van Meter 47

Class 4A State Quarterfinals

Dubuque, Senior 39, Iowa City West 36

Waukee 48, Dowling Catholic, West Des Moines 35

Iowa State guard Carleton is Big 12 women’s player of year

Sports

March 6th, 2019 by admin

IRVING, Texas (AP) — Iowa State senior guard Bridget Carleton has been named the Big 12 women’s basketball player of the year.

Carleton, the league’s leading scorer at 21.9 points a game, won the award voted on by the Big 12’s 10 head coaches and announced Wednesday. The first Cyclone to win the award, Carleton is fourth in the league with 8.7 rebounds per game and fifth in assists at 4.2 per game.

Baylor’s Kim Mulkey was selected as the top coach for the second year in a row, and the seventh time since 2005. The top-ranked Lady Bears just won their ninth consecutive regular season title, and have won their last 41 regular-season Big 12 games.

Baylor junior Lauren Cox, who has 72 blocked shots, was named the defensive player of the year for the second season in a row.

2018-19 Phillips 66 All-Big 12 Awards

Coach of the Year: Kim Mulkey, Baylor (19th season at Baylor, 19th overall)
Player of the Year: Bridget Carleton, Iowa State, G, 6-1, Sr., Chatham, Ontario, Canada
Defensive Player of the Year: Lauren Cox, Baylor, F, 6-4, Jr., Flower Mound, Texas
Newcomer of the Year: Vivian Gray, Oklahoma State, G, 6-1, So., Argyle, Texas
Freshman of the Year: Chrislyn Carr, Texas Tech, G, 5-5, Davenport, Iowa
Sixth Man Award: Kari Niblack, West Virginia, F, 6-1, Fr., Leesburg, Fla.

All-Big 12 First Team (honors listed alphabetical by school)

Player School Pos Ht Cl Hometown
Kalani Brown+^** Baylor C 6-7 Sr. Slidell, La.
Lauren Cox+** Baylor F 6-4 Jr. Flower Mound, Texas
Bridget Carleton+^** Iowa State G 6-1 Sr. Chatham, Ontario, Canada
Kayla Goth% Kansas State G 6-1 Sr. DeForest, Wis.
Peyton Williams Kansas State F 6-4 Jr. Topeka, Kan.
Vivian Gray** Oklahoma State G 6-1 So. Argyle, Texas
Jordan Moore TCU C 6-3 Sr. Round Rock, Texas
Sug Sutton Texas G 5-8 Jr. St. Louis, Mo.
Naomi Davenport% West Virginia G/F 6-0 Sr. Cincinnati, Ohio
Tynice Martin^** West Virginia G 5-11 R-Jr. Atlanta, Ga.

All-Big 12 Second Team

Player School Pos Ht Cl Hometown
Chloe Jackson Baylor G 5-8 Gr. Upper Marlboro, Md.
Juicy Landrum Baylor G 5-8 Jr. Waco, Texas
Kristin Scott Iowa State C 6-3 So. Kasson, Minn.
Ana Llanusa Oklahoma G 6-0 So. Choctaw, Okla.
Amy Okonkwo% TCU F 6-2 Sr. Rancho Cucamonga, Calif.


All-Big 12 Honorable Mention

Alexa Middleton (Iowa State), Kylee Kopatich (Kansas), Christalah Lyons (Kansas), Braxtin Miller (Oklahoma State), Joyner Holmes (Texas), Danni Williams (Texas), Brittany Brewer (Texas Tech), Chrislyn Carr (Texas Tech).

** Unanimous First Team Selection (coaches cannot vote for own players, unanimous denotes voted first team by other nine coaches)
+ 2017-18 All-Big 12 First Team Selection
% 2017-18 All-Big 12 Second Team Selection
^ 2016-17 All-Big 12 First Team
> 2016-17 All-Big 12 Second Team

Big 12 All-Defensive Team

Player School Pos Ht Cl Hometown
Kalani Brown Baylor C 6-7 Sr. Slidell, La.
Lauren Cox^** Baylor F 6-4 Jr. Flower Mound, Texas
DiDi Richards Baylor G 6-1 So. Cypress, Texas
Peyton Williams Kansas State F 6-4 Jr. Topeka, Kan.
Jordan Moore TCU C 6-3 Sr. Round Rock, Texas

** Unanimous Selection (coaches cannot vote for own players, unanimous denotes selected for team on other nine ballots)
^2017-18 Selection

Big 12 All-Freshman Team

Player School Pos Ht Hometown
Ashley Joens Iowa State G 6-0 Iowa City, Iowa
Christianna Carr Kansas State G 6-1 Manhattan, Kan.
Taylor Robertson Oklahoma G 5-7 McPherson, Kan.
Chrislyn Carr Texas Tech G 5-5 Davenport, Iowa
Madisen Smith West Virginia G 5-5 Greenville, S.C.

RICHARD “RICH” SWOLLEY JR., 55, of Atlantic (No svcs. at this time)

Obituaries

March 6th, 2019 by admin

RICHARD “RICH” SWOLLEY JR., 55, of Atlantic died Tuesday, March 5th at Cass County Memorial Hospital in Atlantic. No formal services for RICHARD “RICH” SWOLLEY JR. will be held at this time. Roland Funeral Home in Atlantic has the arrangements.

An Open Visitation will be held on Friday, March 8th from 12:00pm until the time of a Visitation with family from 5:00pm-7:00pm at Roland Funeral Home in Atlantic.

Online condolences may be left at www.RolandFuneralService.com

RICHARD “RICH” SWOLLEY JR. is survived by:

Mother: Virginia of Atlantic.

Siblings: Tina Waldron of Atlantic. Lisa (Don Boggs) Swolley of Atlantic. Dan Swolley of Streamwood, IL. Robert Swolley of Atlantic.

Officials announce Iowa nursing home employee indictments

News

March 6th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Federal prosecutors in Iowa have announced the indictments of six people suspected of having stolen various opioids from nursing homes where they had worked.

The indictments were announced in a news release Wednesday. Assistant U.S. Attorney Rachel Scherle says the cases are being prosecuted as part of the Department of Justice’s Elder Abuse Initiative. All are charged with acquiring a controlled substance by misrepresentation, fraud, deception, and subterfuge.

Those indicted are 36-year-old Arminda Cruickshank, of Osceola; 47-year-old Barbara Jean Tindall, of Keosauqua; 30-year-old Christine Renee Weilbrenner, of Ankeny; and 29-year-old Samantha Anne Mills and 32-year-old Alicia Danielle Swenson, both of Des Moines. They have all pleaded not guilty.

Prosecutors say 31-year-old Katie Christine Howard, of Des Moines, pleaded guilty to two counts on Feb. 11 and will be sentenced in July.

Lawmaker: State officials keeping sexual harassment secrets

News

March 6th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — An Iowa lawmaker is accusing the administration of Gov. Kim Reynolds and the director of the state’s human resources agency of “fostering a culture of secrecy in state government” for refusing to release information on the number of sexual harassment cases filed within state agencies in recent years.

Democratic Rep. Amy Nielsen said she’s received a bureaucratic runaround in her attempts to get data on the number of cases from Department of Administrative Services Director Janet Phipps. Nielsen said taxpayers have paid out more than $7.5 million in settlements in the past two years and deserve to know if there are other cases that could cost even more.

Nielsen wants to know the number of cases so they can be compared to future years to determine whether the state is improving its sexual harassment record. Nielsen sought the number of sexual harassment complaints under investigation, the number of cases closed in the last five fiscal years and the number of cases initiated.

She said DAS refused to provide the information, citing confidentiality, and the attorney general’s office told her to seek the data from the Legislative Services Agency, a nonpartisan state agency that provides the legislature research and data information to lawmakers.

The LSA, however, told Nielsen that even though DAS provided the information, the agency requested it not to be released to her. A Jan. 25 letter from Phipps to the Legislative Services Agency indicates even the general numbers she seeks are confidential. Nielsen said what she seeks is not traceable to any individual and should not be confidential, and she called Phipps’ decision not to turn over the information “beyond disappointing.” Nielsen filed a complaint Wednesday with the Iowa Public Information Board.

Page County Sheriff’s report (3/6/19)

News

March 6th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

Page County Sheriff Lyle Palmer reports two arrests. Today (Wednesday), 39-year old Michael Wayne England II, of Clarinda, was arrested for Driving while license is barred. England was transported to the Page County Jail where he is being held on $2,000 bond.

On March 2nd, 47-year old Jeff Harrison, of rural Clarinda, was arrested at the Page County Sheriff’s Office, on a Page County Warrant for theft 5th Degree. Harrison posted the $300 bond and was released pending further court proceedings.