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3 vehicle accident in Atlantic w/unknown injuries

News

November 11th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

Cass EMS along with Atlantic Fire and Rescue were dispatched at around 7:34-a.m. to a three-vehicle injury accident in Atlantic. The collision occurred at 7th and Walnut Streets. Additional information is not available.

U-I Public Safety director says Kinnick Alcohol sales have positive results

News

November 11th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The director of the University of Iowa Public Safety Department says the introduction of alcohol sales in Kinnick Stadium has led to some positive changes. Director Mark Bullock told the Board of Regents he didn’t anticipate that happening. “I was personally, I think, like many others, not skeptical, but curious about how that was gonna turn out. And I saw a study that was done by our emergency department that actually showed what I believe is a 40 percent decrease in hospital admissions on game days since the sale of alcohol started,” Bullock says. Some 70-thousand people turn out on Saturdays, and he says there appears to be less drinking in the parking lots before the game.

“One of the things that you notice that I think is just an interesting indicator is the amount of trash at the entrances, at the gates, people aren’t taking alcohol with them to the gates because they can get it inside,” he says. Bullock says that cuts some of the excessive drinking before the game. “We’re seeing less people come through the gates heavily intoxicated than we did before — and it’s making for from our perspective a better game day experience,” Bullock says.

Mark Bullock (Board of Regents photo)

Alcohol sales at Kinnick Stadium were first allowed in the 2021 season. A report by the U-I evaluating that first season found while alcohol-related offenses were the leading cause of arrests, there was a significant decrease in the total number of alcohol-related arrests and alcohol-related medical emergencies during football games at Kinnick. A U-I report shows net sales at Kinnick Stadium were two-point-four million dollars in the first year.

Sleepy driver takes out bridge guard rail near Afton

News

November 11th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Afton, Iowa) – The Union County Sheriff’s Office says no one was injured and no citations were issued, following an accident Thursday morning, near Afton. Authorities say 35-year-old Jacob R. Ashby, of Lorimor, was driving a 1999 Chevy Blazer southbound on Grand River Drive, when he fell asleep at the wheel.

The SUV veered off the road onto the west shoulder and crashed into a guard rail. The accident happened at around 8:30-a.m. Ashby told authorities he was on his way to work, closed his eyes and the next thing he knew his vehicle was in the ditch. He was unable to call law enforcement, due to his cell phone being broken.

County crews replaced the guardrail, which cost and estimated $2,500. The Blazer sustained about $5,000 damage, and was towed from the scene.

Bohannan urges Iowa Democrats to avoid ‘defeatist attitude’

News

November 11th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – For the first time in 66 years, every member of Iowa’s federal delegation in D.C. will be a Republican when congress convenes in January. Christina Bohannan is the Democrat in Iowa’s first congressional district who lost to Republican Congresswoman Mariannette Miller-Meeks. “There’s going to have to be a lot of soul searching about where the Democrats invest,” Bohannan says. “My opinion is that we have for some time now in the national Democratic Party focused way too much on the coasts and the big cities and way too little on the Midwest, small towns and rural counties like we have in Iowa.”

In 2020, Bohannan, a University of Iowa law professor, was elected to a two-year term in the state legislature that will end in early January. Bohannan says running for federal office is far different and Democratic candidates for congress in Iowa were at a competitive disadvantage because they were massively out-spent by Republicans and their allies. “We did not have any significant investment from the national Democrats — not in the senate race, not in the congressional races except some for Cindy Axne and, in my opinion, not enough for her either,” Bohannan says, “and we saw the results.”

Congresswoman Axne, a Democrat from West Des Moines, lost to Republican Zach Nunn by seven-tenths of a percent. Bohannan lost to Miller-Meeks by seven points. Democrat Liz Mathis lost to Republican Congresswoman Ashley Hinson by 18 points. Bohannan says President Biden’s low approval rating in Iowa and concerns about inflation were a factor in those losses, but she says Democrats facing the same headwinds won in other states – because those candidates had party resources to be competitive.

“As a party, that is something that we’re really going to have to think about,” Bohannan says. The worst enemy for Iowa Democrats in the future will be a defeatist attitude, according to Bohannan. “We have to recognize we can win in Iowa,” Bohannan says. “We have to be more organized and assertive than we’ve been in the past.” Bohannan says she has no regrets about running for congress. She describes it as an incredible experience.

“I also gained a lot of insight about Iowans,” Bohannan says. “People are very tired of the fighting. They really don’t like all of the anger. They want to get back to being able to talk with one another regardless of political party, but there are people, groups, parties in this country who are trying to divide people because they think that serves their political interest to gain power.” Bohannan says Democrats need to — in her words “not take the bait” and “disagree without being disagreeable.”

(UPDATE) State Auditor Sand ahead of Halbur by 2614 votes; Halbur to SEEK RECOUNT

News

November 10th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The final batch of votes from two counties are in and Rob Sand appears to have narrowly won re-election as state auditor. About two-thousand votes from Warren County and around 800 votes from Des Moines County were added to the statewide tally on Thursday afternoon. Those unofficial results show Sand ahead of Republican challenger Todd Halbur by 26-hundred-14 votes. Halbur will ask for a recount.

“We have seen human error, technical errors and maybe even some blatant, egregious errors that have happened to our votes across the state, so therefore I will ask for a recount of the state auditor’s race,” Halbur says. Under state law, Halbur could ask for recounts in all 99 counties or ask for recounts in specific counties. He has until the end of next week to make the call.

“We will follow the process of the recount according to the rule of law outlines and after the recount, I believe myself and the voters of Iowa will feel confident in these results,” Halbur says. “I don’t feel confident in the results I’m seeing now in the unofficial results.” Because Halbur’s vote tally is currently less than one percent behind Sand’s, all recounts would be paid for by taxpayers.

If Sand is confirmed as the winner, he would be the only Democrat to win a statewide race in this year’s General Election. Sand is an attorney. He previously worked in the Iowa Attorney General’s office as the lead prosecutor in public corruption cases. He handled the prosecution of Tommy Tipton, the former Multistate Lottery I-T specialist found guilty of rigging Hot Lotto jackpots.

Halbur, Sand’s opponent, recently won a one million dollar jury verdict in his lawsuit against the State of Iowa. Halbur claims he was fired as comptroller of the Iowa Alcoholic Beverages Division after telling his bosses the agency was overcharging restaurants and retailers for liquor. Agency managers have said Halbur was fired for other reasons and lawyers for the state are reviewing whether to appeal the one million dollar verdict.

Halbur ran a low-budget campaign. He was not among the Republican candidates who appeared at the bus tour events Governor Kim Reynolds hosted during the final weeks of the campaign.

Taylor County man missing since Nov. 4th, found deceased

News

November 10th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Bedford, Iowa) – The Taylor County Sheriff’s Office Thursday evening, reported a man missing from Blockton since around 8-a.m. last Friday, November 4th, was found deceased in his vehicle at around 5-p.m., today (Thursday).

The 2014 Ford Escape 81-year-old Junior Lee Rusco was driving, was located in a field on the southwest edge of Redding, Iowa. Taylor County Deputies were assisted by an Iowa State Patrol Aircraft in locating the vehicle. Mr. Rusco’s body was taken to the State Medical Examiner’s Office for autopsy.

Junior Lee Rusco

Previously, the Taylor County Sheriff’s Office had reported Mr. Rusco was enroute to Grant City, Missouri, where he purchased fuel there at the Casey’s store, around 6:35 a.m. on November 4th. Witnesses also say he was in Redding at around 6:45 a.m. and seemed very confused.
An air search by the Iowa State Patrol was conducted in the Blockton/Grant City area earlier in the week, but Rusco’s vehicle was not located. There had been no activity on any of his known bank accounts since the purchase at Casey’s.
The Taylor County Sheriff’s Office thanks the following agencies for their assistance: Iowa State Patrol; Iowa Dept. of Public Safety; the Ringgold, Worth and Nodaway County Sheriff’s Offices, and the Ringgold County EMS.

Supreme Court rules on trailer hitch that blocked a license plate

News

November 10th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – A ruling on an obstructed license plate will stand after a split vote in the Iowa Supreme Court on the issue. Prince Payne was stopped by an Altoona police officer who said the ball in the trailer hitch of his pickup was blocking the view of the third letter on the license plate. Payne was convicted of driving while barred, but appealed, saying the stop was illegal because the hitch ball did not violate the requirement that license plates be clearly visible.

The district court ruled against Payne, but the Court of Appeals ruled in his favor. Three Supreme Court justices favored the appeals court decision, and three favored the district court, with one justice not taking part. The high court split means the district court decision of a legal stop stands.

House, Senate GOP legislators meet, elect leaders

News

November 10th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Republican Senator Amy Sinclair of Allerton will be president of the Iowa Senate when the 2023 legislature convenes. “I view the role of the president as stepping up and being the face of the people who’ve been elected to serve Iowa,” Sinclair says. “Being an arbiter of the law and the rules that we have in place for the Senate is a really important job and I will do it with fidelity.”

The 34 Republicans who’ll be serving in the Senate next year met this morning and elected Sinclair to this new role — replacing current Senate President Jake Chapman of Adel was defeated in this week’s election. Jack Whitver of Grimes was re-elected by his colleagues to be Senate Majority Leader — so Senate Republicans will have leaders from urban central Iowa and rural southern Iowa.

“Having leadership in the Iowa Senate that reflects the face of Iowa is really important and I come from one of the most rural parts of the state,” Sinclair says. “I have all or part of nine different counties, which may well be the largest district in the state.” Sinclair’s district includes the town of Clio, which has around 70 residents.

Amy Sinclair. (IA Legislature photo)

“My largest towns are in the 5000 to 6000 to 7000 range and those are our urban centers and so having a voice for people who are coming from a place where it’s not uncommon to put 40,000 miles on your car in a given year just going to work and taking your kids to school,” Sinclair says, “so being able to bring that voice to a leadership role to our caucus I think will be a phenomenal improvement for our state and the folks that I represent.”

Sinclair says the GOP’s 2023 legislative agenda will be centered around families and their jobs, “and do those things that just make the lives of Iowans better and that tax reform, that is a solid education system and just regulation and rule of law that makes sense and advances the family unit.”

Sinclair has been chair of the Iowa Senate Education Committee. She’s also guided several major pieces of legislation through senate debate since she was first elected in 2012.

House Republicans also met today and reelected Pat Grassley as Speaker and Matt Windschitl as Majority Leader.

Roland Story student charged with assault

News

November 10th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The Story County Sheriff’s Office has charged a 17-year-old Roland-Story student and wrestler with one count of felony assault for stripping off the victim’s clothes assaulting him with a pencil. Roland Story senior Kade Blume was charged with from an incident that occurred on New Year’s Day. The Story County Sheriff’s Office has said that multiple wrestlers were a part of the hazing, and a second person has been charged in juvenile court.

Roland Story School District Superintendent Matt Payton released a statement that said that the district has continued to cooperate with local police and since the alleged incident did not occur on school property. We’re at a school event it has become a law enforcement matter.

Peyton has also said that the district is considering appropriate disciplinary actions for the students allegedly involved in the incident — but due to the legal obligation to protect student confidentiality, they cannot publicly share details about what the actions will be at this time

Dorsey Trial continued until 2023

News

November 10th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Council Bluffs, Iowa) – A District Court Judge has granted a request from an attorney for a Cass County woman, to continue her 1st Degree Murder and Child Endangerment trial until May 1, 2023. The trial for 39-year-old Alison Dorsey, of Anita, was set last June, to take place on Dec. 5th of this year, in Pottawattamie County District Court. The charges against Dorsey stem from the October 2019 death of an infant in her care, at a home daycare facility in Massena.

According to online court records, Dorsey’s pre-trial conference (PTC) will now take place March 24, 2023 with the jury trial beginning at 9:30-a.m., on May 1st. The trial remains to be held in Council Bluffs. Dorsey’s Cass County trial in the fall of 2021 ended after six-days, when the jury in her case deadlocked. A Judge declared a mistrial.