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Prosecutor in father’s trial: Baby ‘died of diaper rash’

News

October 30th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

MOUNT PLEASANT, Iowa (AP) — A prosecutor in the trial of an Iowa father whose infant son was found dead and maggot-infested in a baby swing last year has told a jury the child “died of diaper rash.” Assistant Iowa Attorney General Coleman McAllister told jurors Tuesday that 4-month-old Sterling Koehn had been in the same diaper for nine to 14 days when his body was found in the swing Aug. 30, 2017, at his parents’ Alta Vista apartment, the Courier reported .

The baby’s father, 29-year-old Zachary Paul Koehn, is charged with murder and child endangerment. The boy’s mother, Cheyanne Harris, is also charged and faces a separate trial at a later date.
McAllister said Tuesday in opening statements that the baby’s heavily soiled diaper had attracted bugs that had laid eggs, which had hatched into maggots. The resulting diaper rash led to ruptured skin, and e.Coli bacteria set in. “He died of diaper rash. That’s right, diaper rash,” McAllister said.

A coroner’s report showed the baby died of malnutrition, dehydration and the infection.
In opening statements Tuesday, Koehn’s attorney said the baby’s death was a tragedy, but not a crime. McAllister denied the defense’s claims, saying Koehn was an experienced parent. He noted that Koehn’s 2-year-old daughter was also in the apartment and was healthy, and that Koehn had money to buy food and baby supplies. He stated Koehn was a drug user.

Nurse and county rescue squad EMT Toni Friedrich testified Tuesday that she was the first to arrive at the apartment after Koehn called 911 to report the baby had died. Friedrich said Koehn showed no emotion when he led her to the dark, hot bedroom where the baby’s body was.

The baby’s “eyes were open, and it was a blank stare,” she said. Friedrich said when she touched the baby’s chest, his clothing was crusty. When she moved his blanket, gnats flew up, she said. Koehn’s trial was moved from Chickasaw County to Henry County to counter pretrial publicity.

Backers distance themselves from Iowa GOP Rep. Steve King

News

October 30th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

WASHINGTON (AP) — Conservative Rep. Steve King is coming under fire ahead of the midterm election as top Republican officials and campaign donors balk at standing with a Republican congressman who regularly espouses extreme views on race and immigration.

King is still favored to win another term representing his rural Iowa district in next week’s election. But in the aftermath of the synagogue shooting in Pittsburgh, the congressman’s latest comments in support of a neo-Nazi party in Europe sparked a strong rebuke Tuesday from the House Republicans’ campaign chairman, Rep. Steve Stivers of Ohio.

“Congressman Steve King’s recent comments, actions, and retweets are completely inappropriate,” said Stivers. “We must stand up against white supremacy and hate in all forms, and I strongly condemn this behavior.” The Land O’ Lakes Inc. PAC said Tuesday it “will no longer support Rep. Steve King.” The political action committee, based in neighboring Minnesota, said it wants its contributions “to be a positive force for good” and tries to ensure that “recipients of our contributions uphold our company’s values.”

Technology giant Intel Corp. also said it would no longer support King, according to reports.
King on Tuesday posted a tweet denouncing the attacks against him as “orchestrated by the nasty, desperate and dishonest fake news. Their ultimate goal is to flip the House and impeach Donald Trump.”

The Iowa congressman has long tested the limits of the Republican Party’s tolerance for fringe views, notably his harsh anti-immigration rhetoric. On Saturday, the day of the deadly Pittsburgh shooting, he defended the groups he associated with, including Austria’s Freedom Party, which was founded by former Nazis. “If they were in America pushing the platform that they push, they would be Republicans,” King told The Washington Post.

King has represented the Sioux City-area congressional district for eight terms, and was so widely expected to win again that the National Republican Congressional Committee has not been spending any resources on the race. NRCC spokesman Matt Gorman said that after the accumulation of King’s “bigoted words and actions, the time had come for Chairman Stivers to speak out.”

A Democratic challenger, former pro baseball player J.D. Scholten, has been pummeling King with ads, and an outside group has been airing one that suggests the congressman is approved by white supremacists, according to Dave Wasserman, an analyst at the Cook Political Report. That election forecaster on Tuesday shifted King’s race slightly toward the Democrat, while reporting it is still “likely” to be won by the Republican.

Still, Wasserman tweeted that King’s campaign is “virtually broke” and “with a week left, it’s unclear who’s going to bail him out.”

Harlan Police report (10/30)

News

October 30th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

The Harlan Police Department reports two recent arrests. On Friday, 36-year old Kera Dlynn Bomer, of Harlan, was arrested following a call for service in the 1300 block of Victoria St. Bomer was transported to the Shelby County Jail where she was charged with domestic abuse assault.

Saturday, 24-year old Johnathan Lee Jay Behrens, of Harlan, was arrested following a short pursuit. Behrens was transported to the Shelby County Jail where he was charged with eluding, possession of stolen property, driving while barred, and reckless driving. And, 62-year old Gary Lyn McCoy, of Harlan, was cited Saturday for trespassing in the 400 block of Durant Street

SHIRLEY ANN HOFFMANN, 81, of Oakland (11-2-2018)

Obituaries

October 30th, 2018 by Jim Field

SHIRLEY ANN HOFFMANN, 81, of Oakland died Tuesday, October 30th at Oakland Manor Nursing Home.  Services for SHIRLEY ANN HOFFMANN will be held on Friday, November 2nd at 10:30 am at the United Church of Avoca.  Pauley-Jones Funeral Home in Avoca has the arrangements.

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Family will greet friends on Thursday, November 1st from 6:00 pm to 8:00 pm.

Burial in the Graceland Cemetery in Avoca.

SHIRLEY ANN HOFFMANN is survived by:

Daughters:  Debra Flearl of Omaha; Diane (Lon) Jacobsen of Avoca.

Sons:  Dennis Hoffmann of Avoca; David (Amy) Hoffmann of Walnut.

Brothers:  Dennis (Carolyn) Piittmann of Avoca; Gerald (Diane) Piittmann of Waukon.

5 Grandchildren

1 Great-Grandchild

Mills County Sheriff’s report (10/30)

News

October 30th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

The Mills County Sheriff’s Office reports a Council Bluffs man, 58-year old Jeffery Wayne Joslin, was arrested Monday evening for Possession of Controlled Substance. Late Monday night, 50-year old  Darren Keith Brooks, of Council Bluffs, was arrested in Mills County for Violation of No Contact Order.

And, at around 8:35-a.m. today (Tuesday), 19-year old Chase Zachary Stewart, of Nebraska City, NE., was arrested at the Otoe County, NE. Jail, on Mills County on a warrant for Criminal Mischief in the 2nd degree.

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30th

Trading Post

October 30th, 2018 by Jim Field

FOR SALE:  Hewitt Boat Hoist, $2500, Hand crank and wheel driven, 114″ x 127” long x 120” OD, Like new condition.  Call 712-243-7739.

 

Farmers see first long dry spell, make harvest progress

Ag/Outdoor, News

October 30th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Farmers made a lot of progress in the harvest with a rare dry week to work in. The U-S-D-A crop report says farmers had nearly six good days for field work last week — which is the most dry days they’ve had in weeks. That allowed for a lot of combine time and the corn harvest is now 49 percent complete. That’s 20 percent more than last week — and corn is now three days ahead of last year and only three days behind the five-year average. The report shows 71 percent of the soybeans are now out of the fields — which is 34 percent more than last week. Things are still behind for beans, as this is the smallest percentage of the soybean crop harvested by October 28 since 2009.

I-35 school threat found to be not credible

News

October 30th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — A threat that prompted increased security at the I-35 school in Truro has been found to be not credible. Madison County Sheriff Jason Barnes says his department’s investigation found that an on-site construction worker at the school made a comment recent synagogue shooting that took place in Pittsburgh. The sheriff says a school employee heard parts of the conversation and reported what was heard to I-35 administration.
The administration called the sheriff’s office and deputies were sent to the school for added security. The sheriff says they spoke to additional witnesses, school personnel and employees of the construction company and it’s not believed that a credible threat exists. The sheriff says they will continue to have deputies at the school until it’s decided that it’s no longer needed and school personnel are comfortable.

Grassley backs US troop buildup on Mexican border

News

October 30th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — Iowa Senator Chuck Grassley says he supports the troop buildup on the U-S border with Mexico as a caravan of several thousand Central American migrants approaches. Initially, 800 active duty soldiers were going to be dispatched to the border. Now, the number is over five-thousand troops, combined with another two-thousand-plus National Guard members who were already assigned there. “One of the definitions of a sovereign nation is protecting its borders and, quite frankly, arresting 1,000 people every day, sometimes 1,700, to send them back because they entered the country illegally, we’re not doing a very good job of protecting our borders,” Grassley says. “We should protect our borders.”

More than 73-hundred troops should be at the border before Election Day, which is reportedly more American soldiers than are now deployed in Iraq and Syria combined. Grassley says the U-S would welcome these people — if they’d follow the rules. “Let’s say there’s 5,000 in this caravan. That’s a spit in the ocean compared to the million people that we take in every year legally,” Grassley says. “Why don’t they go back to their country and go to our embassies and try to enter our country legally?”

Grassley says he wouldn’t want anyone who’s already in the U-S legally to be “displaced,” but he believes there’s plenty of room — and opportunity — here for these migrants, should they choose to enter legally. “With our birth rate down the way it is and with seven-million jobs that we have vacant that we can’t find workers for, we could obviously use workers,” Grassley says. “We need them because we need people paying into the Social Security system and Medicare. More taxpayers is what we need.”

The troops are being deployed to three main staging areas in Texas, California and Mexico for what’s being called Operation Faithful Patriot. The armed troops include medical personnel, aviation units and engineering battalions, with one report saying they’re hauling 22 miles worth of barbed wire.

Fiery Iowa derailment caused by broken rail, poor repairs

News

October 30th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Federal investigators say a broken rail caused the fiery 2017 derailment in northwest Iowa that released 322,000 gallons of ethanol. The National Transportation Safety Board ruled Tuesday that Union Pacific’s maintenance was inadequate before the March 2017 derailment near Graettinger, Iowa, and Federal Railroad Administration inspectors didn’t do enough to identify flaws in the track.

No injuries were reported in connection with the derailment in a rural area about 160 miles northwest of Des Moines. Five of the 20 derailed tankers plunged into Jack Creek. The NTSB says the train in this derailment was carrying ethanol for export that had not been denatured by adding chemicals. The agency wants to study whether it’s safer to transport ethanol before it is denatured.