712 Digital Group - top

Oklahoma man arrested in Stanton Tue. night

News

June 12th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Red Oak, Iowa) – The Montgomery County Sheriff’s Department reports a man from Oklahoma was arrested Tuesday night, in Stanton. Authorities say after a brief investigation, 54-year-old Michael A. McKay, of Sand Springs, OK, was taken into custody at around 9:20-p.m. in the 600 block of Halland Street, in Stanton. McKay was transported to the Montgomery County Jail, where his Breath Alcohol Content (BAC) registered .148 %.

McKay was booked into the jail on a charge of Public Intoxication/1st offense. His bond was set at $300.

Former SE IA animal breeder pleads guilty to animal neglect charges

News

June 12th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

RIVERSIDE, Iowa (KCRG) – A former southeast Iowa commercial dog breeding facility owner has pled guilty in connection to an animal neglect case from last year. In August 2023, Iowa City Animal Services assisted law enforcement with taking in 131 dogs as they investigated animal welfare concerns in the 3000 block of 540th Street SW in Riverside. Experts say physical exams showed that the dogs had developed conditions caused by failure of adequate care.

Owner Loren Yoder surrendered his commercial breeding license shortly after the animal welfare inspection. As part of the plea agreement, Yoder pled guilty to 5 counts of Animal Neglect with Injury. He was sentenced 1 year of self-supervised probation. If Yoder violates that probation, he will then be sent to prison for 1 year.

Yoder will also be unable to obtain a canine breeding license as part of the agreement.

[UPDATED] Orient-Macksburg residents uncertain of future after school district decides to fold

News

June 12th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

For the first time in nearly a decade, a school district in Iowa is closing its doors for good. The Orient-Macksburg School Board voted Monday night to dissolve the district. During the school board meeting, officials said low enrollment, staffing issues and financial shortfalls all led up to the decision.

It’s still not clear where the 160 Orient-Macksburg students will attend in the fall of 2025. Moving forward the school board will have to form a committee to figure out how the school district will be divvied up and consumed by the surrounding districts.

The next step for students will be up to voters. Once officials come up with a proposal, people in each impacted school district will vote on the plan in a special election. If the proposal is voted down, the director at the Iowa Department of Education will make the decision.

The O-M District issued this statement late Wednesday morning on social media:

“While this was a difficult and emotional decision to make, during the regular school board meeting on June 10, the Orient-Macksburg Board of Education unanimously approved a motion to begin the process for dissolution. A dissolution committee consisting of seven members has been established as required by the dissolution process. Two election options are available for district patrons to vote on the dissolution question: September, 2024 and March, 2025. It is likely the vote would occur in March, 2025 because of the amount of decisions that need to be made prior to an election. If approved by voters, dissolution would become effective on June 30, 2025. In addition, the board is considering the creation of committees for memorabilia and the district facilities. As more information is available, additional communication will be provided. The next regular board meeting is scheduled for Monday, July 15, beginning at 5:30 p.m.”

Greenfield will still host large bike event despite May tornado

News

June 12th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

The Adair County community of Greenfield will host still RAGBRAI® riders in July as planned despite last month’s deadly tornado, according to event organizers. The 2024 route announced earlier this spring starts in Glenwood and ends in Burlington. Day three included Greenfield as the meeting town between Atlantic and Winterset.

That plan came into question after multiple tornadoes swept through Iowa this spring, including a May 21 tornado that destroyed more than 100 homes and killed four people in Greenfield. On Tuesday, organizers in a press release clarified the community’s status ahead of the ride, saying in-part:

“After careful consideration and many conversations with local officials and partners, we have decided to welcome the RAGBRAI community on this year’s ride,” RAGBRAI Greenfield committee co-chair Gina School said in a news release. “We have changed our theme for the day to Greenfield Strong, Rising After the Storm.” (read the full statement below)

RAGBRAI LI is scheduled to begin Sunday, July 21 and end Saturday, July 27. It’s among the shortest routes in ride history, but with 18,737 feet of climb, it’s the hilliest ride ever.

Skyscan Forecast for Atlantic & the Nishna Valley: Wed., June 12, 2024

Weather

June 12th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

Today: Sunny & breezy. High near 92. S/SW winds 10-20 mph gusting to around 30 this afternoon
Tonight: Mostly clear & breezy. Just a slight chance of showers and thunderstorms through midnight. Low around 69.
Tomorrow: Mostly sunny, w/a slight chance of afternoon showers & thunderstorms. High near 90. SW winds @  5-10 mph becoming N/NE by afternoon, & gusting to near 20 mph.
Friday: Sunny, with a high near 84.
Saturday: Partly sunny & breezy w/a 40% chance of showers & thunderstorms. High near 89.
Sunday: Mostly sunny & breezy, with a high near 94.

Tuesday’s High in Atlantic was 90. The Low was 61. Last year on this date, the High in Atlantic was 77 and the Low was 47. The record High for June 12th was 95 in 1892. The record Low was 38 in 1903. Sunrise: 5:45. Sunset: 8:54.

Briar Cliff University trustees introduce school’s next president

News

June 12th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – A former biology professor who’s been a college administrator for over two decades will become president of Briar Cliff University in Sioux City in July. Matthew Draud has been the vice president of academic affairs at McMurray University in Abilene, Texas, since 2020.

“With the advent and the rapid evolution of artificial intelligence…what our students are going to be doing in the very near future is really transforming, at a pace that’s actually kind of spectacular,” Draud said. “And what that’s going to call all of us to do (at) every institution is sort of re-imagine what we’re doing to prepare our students for that future.”

Draud, one of four finalists for the job, says his interview was capped off by a dinner with students — and that’s what convinced him to take the job. “And then, they said: ‘Hey, this has been nice, but we have some questions,'” Draud said, laughing. “I didn’t expect that, but let me tell you, I got the best questions that I had gotten all day – absolutely no doubt about it — the most probing, honest questions I had gotten the whole day.”

Briar Cliff’s website shows 941 students were enrolled at the school last fall. Draud says Briar Cliff, like every college and university in the country, is heading into the next academic year behind the eight ball due to the revamped and delayed federal financial aid application process. “Financial value transparency coming up is something every institution is going to have to deal with,” Draud says. Federal rules that go into effect later this year require colleges to show students and parents how much they’ll be paying for college and the financial outcomes they can expect to achieve after graduation.

Briar Cliff was founded by the Sisters of Saint Francis and started as a women’s college in 1934. Men were admitted in 1965. Draud will be Briar Cliff’s 13th president when he takes over July 1st. The university’s 12th president resigned in January to become the chief financial officer at a small Catholic college in Kansas City, Kansas.

Iowa Hunger Coalition pushes back on SNAP cuts in Farm Bill

News

June 12th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Iowa News Service) – One version of the Farm Bill being debated in Congress would cut billions of dollars in SNAP benefits from agriculture-dependent states, including Iowa. Groups fighting hunger in the state are pushing back. The version of the Farm Bill released by House Agriculture Committee Chair Glenn Thompson would cut nearly 30-billion dollars in SNAP benefits over the next decade – 170-million in Iowa, according to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. Iowa Hunger Coalition Board Chair Luke Elzinga says based on those projections, the cuts would have a big impact on the most vulnerable people in the state.

The so-called Thrifty Food Plan, which creates funding formulas for SNAP and other food assistance programs, would also freeze future benefits. Thompson (R-Penn.) and others have argued this version of the Farm Bill amounts to responsible budgeting and future planning.

Elzinga’s coalition has provided numbers showing SNAP benefits are already not enough to keep up with providing the lowest-cost meals in the state, and come in about 20-percent below what it takes to make ends meet at the dinner table.

This isn’t the final version of the Farm Bill to be debated, but Elzinga argues releasing a measure with such major cuts to SNAP benefits isn’t a good starting point for negotiations. In his view, it creates the perception that for Congress, low-income people are not high on the priority list.

Lady Vikes Softball complete comeback against Riverside

Sports

June 11th, 2024 by Asa Lucas

The AHSTW Lady Vikes softball team had a well-earned 7-4 victory against the Riverside Bulldogs on Tuesday night. Tuesday’s matchup started as a stalemate as neither team was able to get past second through 2 innings of softball. Then in the top of the third Riverside had 3 straight hits and a 2 RBI Double from Kayden Schnack who went 1-4 on the night to take a 3-0 lead. Madison Kelley would tack on one more run with an RBI grounder towards third base to make the game 4-0. AHSTW would respond in the bottom of the third with an RBI triple from Bella Lamp chipping into the lead at 4-1.

The bottom of the fourth is when things turned around for the Lady Vikes thanks to an Addison Carroll sacrifice fly making the game 4-2 and a go ahead 3 RBI homer off of Kendra Hansen’s bat with AHSTW taking the lead at 5-4. Hansen would go 1-3 on the night with 4 RBI’s. The Bulldogs would manage to load the bases up in the top of the sixth with only out to try their turn at a comeback, but the Lady Vikes Etta Partlow stayed calm and retired the next two batters leaving three runners stranded. AHSTW scored two more runs in the bottom of the 6th making the game 7-4 and Riverside had no answer in the top of the 7th.  Etta Parlow secured the win pitching 7 innings, having 3 earned runs, 8 hits, 7 strikeouts, and 4 walks.

Lady Vikes Head Coach Kathleen Pace message to her players after the win was to carry this positive energy into the rest of the week.

The sharp pitching from Partlow caught coach Pace’s eye and she gave credit to her starting pitcher.

The win improves AHSTW to 7-7 on the year as they head to Treynor on Thursday. Coach Pace would like to see continual improvement throughout the year.

The Riverside Bulldogs now sit at 8-8 with the loss and will host Tri-Center on Thursday at home.

Former Iowa police chief could face prison for gun sales

News

June 11th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Iowa Capital Dispatch) – Text messages and emails from a fired Iowa police chief, recently convicted of illegally dealing in automatic weapons, indicate he knowingly used his position in law enforcement to acquire machine guns for himself and his for-profit business. The Iowa Capital Dispatch reports, according to court exhibits, former Adair Police Chief Bradley Wendt wrote to an associate in 2019, “This chief (of) police gig is awesome. Send machine guns to my own gun store. LOL.”

In February, a federal jury convicted the 47-year-old Wendt of conspiring to make false statements to the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, eight counts of making such false statements himself, and illegal possession of a machine gun.

Beginning in 2017, Wendt served as the chief of police in Adair while also working as the owner of BW Outfitters, a federally licensed firearms dealer with locations in Anita and Denison. Prosecutors allege that between July 2018 and August 2022, Wendt used his position as Adair’s chief of police to obtain machine guns for his own personal use and profit, acquiring weapons for concocted law enforcement purposes and then selling them to others through his private company.

Wendt was also accused of selling guns to the Adair Police Department at a profit and of renting out city-owned guns for his personal profit. Generally, machine guns made after May 1986 are illegal to transfer and possess – but an exemption exists for law enforcement agencies, which can buy machine guns for their official use. Dealers can also acquire machine guns to demonstrate to a police department for the department’s potential purchase. If a police department wants to purchase, or receive a demonstration of, a machine gun, it must submit a letter to the ATF, referred to as a “law letter,” expressing its need for and interest in the machine gun.

Exhibits in the criminal trial of former Adair Police Chief Bradley Wendt suggest he knowingly used his position as chief to sell machine guns through his for-profit business. (Gun photo and Facebook text messages from U,S. District Court files)

Between July 2018 and August 2022, Wendt wrote nearly 40 such law letters, requesting the purchase or demonstration of 90 machine guns for the Adair Police Department, which had a total staff of two full-time officers, Wendt included. In the law letters to purchase machine guns for his two-man department, Wendt claimed to be buying the machine guns for the official use of his department and asserted he was not acquiring them for resale.

At trial, prosecutors said the evidence showed Wendt purchased an M134 motor-driven Gatling gun — capable of firing 50 rounds per second and typically used on military helicopters — that he mounted to his personally owned, armored Humvee. In his initial efforts to facilitate that sale, Wendt allegedly wrote a letter, as chief of police, to himself as the owner of BW Outfitters, claiming the Adair Police Department was considering purchasing the weapon due to its ability to lay down “suppressive fire.”

In another instance, prosecutors alleged, Wendt purchased three machine guns for $2,000 each, then sold two of them to a Florida buyer for a total of $50,000. Those guns had been registered to the Adair Police Department.

Wendt now faces up to five years in prison on the conspiracy count, five years in prison for each of the eight false-statement charges, and up to 10 years’ prison for illegal possession of a machine gun. Sentencing is scheduled for July 1.

CCCB hosts Kids Book Club on June 25th

News

June 11th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Massena, Iowa) –  The Cass County Conservation Board (CCCB) and the Massena Public Library are holding a Kids Book Club Program on the book- Hatchet by Gary Paulsen. Kids are invited to read the book, discuss it, and learn more at the Massena Public Library in Massena, on Tuesday June 25th, 2024, beginning at 10:00-a.m.

The event is program is FREE, and geared to 3rd grade readers and up. If you need to borrow a copy of the book, both the Cass County Conservation Board and the Massena Public Library have additional copies.

The program on the 25th will feature activities that tie to the book besides discussing the book You DO NOT have to be a registered card holder to attend the program!