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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!
Here is the latest Iowa news from The Associated Press at 5:25 a.m. CST
COUNCIL BLUFFS, Iowa (AP) — A Sioux City man has been found guilty of second-degree murder. The Daily Nonpareil reports that a Pottawattamie County jury found 48-year-old Elias Wanatee, of Sioux City, guilty Friday after eight hours of deliberation. It was the second trial for Wanatee in the case. His first trial ended in a mistrial in December after jurors couldn’t reach a unanimous verdict.
MASON CITY, Iowa (AP) — An Iowa church has sued a railway company, alleging it built a rail line on its property without permission. The Globe Gazette reports that Christian Fellowship Church’s lawsuit accuses Iowa Traction Railway of installing the line after negotiations for the railroad to acquire a portion of the church’s land were unsuccessful. The railroad says in a reply to the lawsuit that it gained ownership of the land through adverse possession, a legal term akin to squatter’s rights.
COUNCIL BLUFFS, Iowa (AP) — Council Bluffs officials hope a $36 million redevelopment of a key thoroughfare will spark economic development and brighten a busy area. The Omaha World-Herald reports work will start this month on a five-year overhaul of West Broadway, which connects Council Bluffs and Omaha, Nebraska. The work will include colored pavers, new street lights and decorative pillars. Crews also will install new sewers, which should lessen cracking caused by pooling water that freezes and thaws.
DENISON, Iowa (AP) — A man accused of crashing his car into a river in western Iowa, killing a teenager, has pleaded not guilty to all nine charges against him in the case. The Council Bluffs Daily Nonpareil reports that 24-year-old Ramon Hernandez remains jailed in Crawford County. Authorities say Hernandez crashed his car into the Boyer River on Jan. 19. He and three of the others reached safety. The body of 15-year-old Yoana Acosta was found Jan. 26.
COUNCIL BLUFFS, Iowa (AP) — A Sioux City man has been found guilty of second-degree murder. The Daily Nonpareil reports a Pottawattamie County jury found 48-year-old Elias Wanatee, of Sioux City, guilty Friday after eight hours of deliberation.
It was the second trial for Wanatee in the case. His first trial ended in a mistrial in December after Woodbury County jurors couldn’t reach a unanimous verdict. Wanatee’s second trial was moved to Council Bluffs to avoid pretrial publicity.
Authorities say Wanatee stabbed to death 50-year-old Vernon Mace in Sioux on Feb. 17, 2016. Wanatee’s defense attorney had argued that Wanatee acted in self-defense because Mace had threatened him with a firearm weeks before.
DENISON, Iowa (AP) — A man accused of crashing his car into a river in western Iowa, killing a teenager, has pleaded not guilty to all nine charges against him in the case. The Council Bluffs Daily Nonpareil reports 24-year-old Ramon Hernandez remains jailed in Crawford County. He is charged with vehicular homicide and eight drug and alcohol counts.
Authorities say Hernandez drove through a farm field with four teenagers in his car before it plunged into the Boyer River on Jan. 19. He and three of the others reached safety. The body of 15-year-old Yoana Acosta was found a week later on Jan. 26.
Cass County Democratic Party Chair Sherry Toelle has announced the Cass County Democrats will hold their 2017 Off-Year Caucus on Tuesday, March 21st, at the Cass County Court House, second floor Court Room, in Atlantic. The Caucus will be called to order at 6-p.m., but Democrats are advised to arrive between 5:30-and 6-p.m., in order to register. For those who are not currently registered as Democrats, voter registration forms will be available to allow as many voters to participate as want to. One must be a registered Democrat in order to participate in the Caucus.
Toelle said that it would be a great opportunity for Democrats to discuss the issues they feel are important to them, whether those be local, state, or national concerns. Those issues will then be forwarded to the Iowa Democratic Party for candidates who decide to run for office in 2018. In a statement she said “We hope to bring even more passionate Democrats into the Central Committee, filling vacancies that currently exist. We also will be advocating for Democrats to run for local and state offices in 2018. Democrats who are considering a run for political office should contact me to further discuss that possibility.”
Following the Caucus, the Cass County Central Committee will hold its biennial organizational meeting at which time committee officers will be elected. Snacks and beverages will be served since the meetings fall over the dinner hour. All Democrats are encouraged to attend the Caucus.
SIDNEY, Iowa (AP) — Authorities have ticketed a teen driver involved in the crash of a pickup and school bus in southwest Iowa last month, saying the boy was texting when the crash occurred. The Iowa State Patrol tells the Council Bluffs Daily Nonpareil that 18-year-old Drew Graham has been ticketed on suspicion of texting while driving, driving on the wrong side of the road and not wearing a seat belt.
Authorities Graham’s truck hit a bus leaving Sidney Junior-Senior High School grounds the morning of Feb. 22, causing minor injuries to the 60-year-old bus driver and two students on the bus. Graham was critically injured and was flown to Creighton University Medical Center in Omaha, Nebraska. He is expected to recover.
COUNCIL BLUFFS, Iowa (AP) — Council Bluffs officials hope a $36 million redevelopment of a key thoroughfare will spark economic development and brighten a busy area. The Omaha World-Herald reports work will start this month on a five-year overhaul of West Broadway, which connects Council Bluffs and Omaha, Nebraska.
The work will include colored pavers, new street lights and decorative pillars. Crews also will install new sewers, which should lessen cracking caused by pooling water that freezes and thaws. The three blocks closest to Omaha should be completed by this fall, providing a sense of what’s to follow.
Officials say the work follows city moves to buy and demolish a number of dilapidated buildings along Broadway, leaving grassy plots the city hopes to sell. The project is funded with public and private sources.
Clarinda Police Chief Keith Brothers reports a trio of drug-related arrests Friday evening into Friday night. At around 5:42-p.m. Clarinda Police arrested 38-year old Stacey Jean Garrigus , of Council Bluffs, for felony possession with intent to deliver more than five grams of methamphetamine. Garrigus was arrested after methamphetamine was located in a 1995 Dodge Dakota pickup she was operating in the vicinity of 9th and Chestnut. She had been pulled over for not wearing a seat belt. Garrigus was being held in the Page County Jail on $125,000 bail.
At around 10:45-p.m. Friday, officers with the Clarinda Police Department, Page County Sheriff’s Deputies and Montgomery County Sheriff’s Deputies executed a search warrant at a residence at 614 East Washington Street. Officers seized approximately 30 grams of methamphetamine, a small amount of marijuana, numerous items of drug paraphernalia and a small amount of cash. They arrested 42-year old Jay Dean Miles and 34-year old Cynthia Joanne Butler, of Clarinda who both reside at 614 East Washington Street. Miles and Butler are charged with felony possession with intent to deliver more than five grams of methamphetamine. Miles and Butler were being held in the Page County Jail on $125,000 bail.
Clarinda Emergency Medical Services provided stand by medical support functions during the execution of the search warrant. All police reports will be forwarded to the Page County Attorney’s Office for review and consideration of the filing of formal indictments in Page County District Court.
More area and State news from KJAN News Director Ric Hanson.
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Governor Terry Branstad says he’s not surprised his fellow Republicans in the legislature have been reluctant to embrace his regulatory reduction plans. “We knew this was going to be tough,” Branstad says. “You’re going up against all of the organized special-interest groups that want to protect their turf, but I’m still hopeful that we can get parts of it approved.”
Branstad’s bill that would have ended state licensing for barbershops, social workers, mental health counselors and other health care professionals was rejected by a three-member House panel. Republican Representative Bobby Kaufmann of Wilton suggests the move could “harm the public” by inviting pretenders into the state who would act as if they had legitimate training in the health care field. Branstad says there are too many state-licensed professions in Iowa.
“These licensing boards kind of look at it as something (like), ‘We’re there to protect the profession, not the public,’ and that’s my concern,” Branstad says. “In some cases we’ve gone into places where I really don’t think we need to be licensed and it drives up the costs and it keeps out the competition.”
Another proposal Branstad backed tried to change state regulations to make it easier for health care clinics that are for-profit to set up shop near already existing Iowa hospitals and clinics. That bill failed to advance in the Iowa House, too, because of opposition from Republicans. Branstad says these kinds of regulatory reforms will “never be easy” to get through the legislature.
“Every one of these groups is organized. A lot of ’em have lobbyists and they spend a lot of money and they always sell it on the idea, ‘Well, we’re going to protect the health, safety and well-being of Iowans,'” Branstad says. “But we have more licensed, regulated professions than anybody else.”
Branstad made his comments late Thursday during an interview with reporters from the Radio Iowa and The Cedar Rapids Gazette. Branstad was wearing a red lapel pin at the time. Kentucky’s Republican governor gave Branstad the pin — which featured a tiny pair of scissors. It’s a symbol of the Kentucky governor’s “red tape reduction” campaign.
(Radio Iowa)