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Heartbeat Today 6-28-2018

Heartbeat Today, Podcasts

June 28th, 2018 by Jim Field

Jim Field talks driving and boating safety, especially when it comes to alcoholo use, this July 4th holiday.

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Judge rules for trooper suing to get job back after drowning

News

June 28th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) — A judge in Missouri has found that the head of the Missouri State Highway Patrol went too far in firing a trooper after he was convicted of a misdemeanor in the drowning death of a handcuffed Iowa man. The Kansas City Star reports that Cole County Judge Patricia Joyce ruled Wednesday that the patrol’s superintendent can’t go beyond the recommendation of a disciplinary review board that found Anthony Piercy should be reinstated as a trooper and relocated. Joyce sent the case back to the patrol for consideration of a new, lesser punishment.

Piercy was taking 20-year-old Brandon Ellingson for a breath test when the Arizona State University student tumbled into the Lake of the Ozarks wearing an improperly secured life vest and drowned. Ellingson was from the Des Moines suburb of Clive.

(Podcast) KJAN Morning Sports report, 6/28/2018

Podcasts, Sports

June 28th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

The 7:20-a.m. Sportscast w/Jim Field.

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Bluffs man arrested on drug charge at Fremont County truck stop

News

June 28th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Deputies with the Fremont County Sheriff’s Department K-9 Unit arrested a Pottawattamie County man early this (Thursday) morning, following a narcotics investigation. Sheriff Kevin Aistrope says the K-9 Unit had been conducting an investigation on 40-year old Richard Lee Lang, of Council Bluffs, for the delivery of methamphetamine at Sapp Brothers truck stop in Percival, and the Caseys General Store, in Tabor.

Deputies were able to apprehend Lang while he was delivering more methamphetamine at the truck stop this morning. Lang was transported to the Fremont County Law Enforcement Center where he was being charged with two counts of Delivery of methamphetamine. His bond was set at $200,000.

Richard Lee Lang (Photo courtesy Fremont Co. S/O)

Creston man arrested for Domestic Assault; Pitbull mix stolen

News

June 28th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Police in Creston report 25-year old Conner Doege, of Creston, was arrested Tuesday afternoon at the Union County Law Enforcement Center, for simple Domestic Assault. Doege was subsequently released on a promise to appear in court. And, a woman residing in the 400 block of N. Oak Street, in Creston, reported to police Wednesday morning, that someone had stolen her pitbull-mix dog from the woman’s yard. The incident happened sometime between 11-and 11:20-a.m., Wednesday. The animal was described as being a female, white with black spots, and wearing a pink collar. The loss was estimated at $1,000.

(Podcast) KJAN Morning News & funeral report, 6/28/2018

News, Podcasts

June 28th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

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

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Two Iowans on president’s list of potential picks for Supreme Court

News

June 28th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Iowa’s senior senator will play a major role in the selection of a new U.S. Supreme Court Justice and two Iowans are on the list of potential picks for the court that the White House released last year.  Iowa Supreme Court Justice Edward Mansfield and Iowa City native Steven Colloton, who’s a federal judge, are on list of potential U.S. Supreme Court nominees for Trump’s second choice for the Supreme court. Iowa Senator Chuck Grassley chairs the Senate committee that conducts hearings on the president’s judicial nominees. Grassley says he expects Trump to act “soon” and a hearing will be held “in the weeks ahead.”

Grassley was involved in denying a senate hearing to President Obama’s third nominee to the court, back in 2016 after a Supreme Court justice died. The Republican leader in the U.S. Senate says there will be a vote “this fall” on Trump’s second Supreme Court nominee. The Senate’s Democratic leader says voters should have a say and the decision should be delayed until after the November election.

Caretaker charged with sexual abuse of 2 clients

News

June 28th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

MASON CITY, Iowa (AP) — A Mason City caretaker is accused of sexually assaulting two of his clients. Cerro Gordo County Court records say 19-year-old Wasfie Alshara is charged with two felony counts of sexual abuse. He remained in jail Thursday morning. The records say Alshara raped one of his clients on Nov. 21 and sexually assaulted the other in a group home on June 8.

The records also say Alshara worked for an unidentified company that provides caretaking services.

Council Bluffs and Pottawattamie County Officials Ready for High Water

News

June 28th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

COUNCIL BLUFFS – The rising Missouri River is anticipated to crest near 29.2-feet’ by 1:00 p.m. today (Thursday), prompting local officials to implement preparedness actions. Since Monday, officials with the City of Council Bluffs and Pottawattamie County have implemented actions to monitor, assess, and respond to any conditions or emergencies prompted by any flooding along the Missouri River. The National Weather Service has placed the county under a flood warning along the Missouri River. Minor flooding is anticipated with the forecast crest creeping just above flood stage.

Doug Reed, Pottawattamie County Emergency Management Director, said Wednesday “The latest trends have shown a decrease in the expected crest and we’re hopeful that trend will continue, but we are prepared if things should change.” Several agencies from the City of Council Bluffs and Pottawattamie County are actively engaged and coordinating preparedness efforts as we monitor the event, said Reed. Gifford Road and the Tom Hanafan River’s Edge Park are closed in the city with the Narrows River Park closed and Goosehaven Loop in rural Pottawattamie County covered in water after surveys were conducted early Wednesday.

City and County crews are continually surveying areas along the river, preparing for additional road closures should they become necessary, and are prepared to take emergency actions should conditions worsen. There has been a significant amount of time dedicated to flood and levee emergency planning and exercising since the 2011 flood event.  Residents should monitor conditions and prepare now should a change in the forecast occur. If you live on or near the river, especially in areas not protected by the federal levee system, remain vigilant and be prepared to evacuate if necessary. If you know your property or access to your property will be impacted, emergency management would always encourage you to error on the side of caution and stay with friends or family for a day or two until the river levels begin to drop.

All residents should sign up for emergency alerts from Pottawattamie Alert, part of the Alert Iowa Network. This will be the primary means of distributing emergency evacuation orders, critical public information, and other important messaged before, during, and after an emergency or disaster. To register and to stay up to date with flooding information, visit the county website at www.pottcounty-ia.gov.

King urged no vote on bill he called ‘instant amnesty’

News

June 28th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Congressman Steve King was among those urging his Republican colleagues to vote against a bill in the U.S. House that King says is “instant amnesty” for more than five million people living in the country illegally. The bill failed to clear the Republican-led House early Wednesday afternoon. “Since Ronald Reagan signed the amnesty act in 1986…it set up the sign again that said: ‘If you can get enough people into America that have broken our immigration laws, sooner or later there’ll be another amnesty,’ there have been six other lesser amnesties since 1986, but this one would be the biggest one in the United States of America.”

King discussed the bill during a recent appearance on C-SPAN’s Washington Journal. “We’ve got to secure the border,” King said.”We’ve got to restore the respect for the rule of law or we’ll never be a sovereign nation again and we’ve gone through a lot of damage.” King says President Trump’s recent executive order stopping the separation of children from parents who crossed the border illegally was “the best temporary solution” given the public reaction, but King says a permanent fix is needed. “This doesn’t turn down the magnet for people to come to America,” King says. “We’ve got to shut that magnet off.”

King also has addressed questions about his re-tweet of a Nazi sympathizer’s views on immigration issues. King says he retweeted a Breitbart headline without researching the article’s author because the headline indicates Europe is waking up to the danger of unlimited immigration.  “If we destroy the nation-state with globalism, then you merge all these cultures and we’re back to being scrambled again,” King says. “And I think we’ve got to respect all people in the world, but let’s respect ourselves enough to know that we’ve built something in America that has never been matched in the history of the world. Let’s not destroy it over some myopic idea that all cultures are equal. They’re not.”

During his appearance on C-SPAN, King said people who’ve criticized him for his tweet either “don’t understand the English language” or are “willfully” trying to mislead the public.

(Radio Iowa)