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Council Bluffs Man Sentenced for a Child Sexual Exploitation Offense

News

April 3rd, 2023 by Ric Hanson

COUNCIL BLUFFS, IA – A Council Bluffs man was sentenced on March 16, 2023, to 295 months in prison following his plea of guilty to sexual exploitation of a child. The investigation into Brandon Scott Holmes, 43, started in 2021 after law enforcement found evidence that an IP address linked to Holmes was receiving child pornography from a peer-to-peer program.

In October 2021, FBI executed a search warrant at Holmes’ residence. Forensic analysis of several seized devices identified thousands of images and videos of child pornography. Holmes also produced images and videos of child pornography. Holmes must serve a 10-year term of supervised release after the prison term. There is no parole in the federal system.

United States Attorney Richard D. Westphal of the Southern District of Iowa made the announcement. The Federal Bureau of Investigation investigated the case.

This case was prosecuted by the United States Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Iowa as part of the U.S. Department of Justice’s “Project Safe Childhood” initiative, which was started in 2006 as a nationwide effort to combine law enforcement investigations and prosecutions, community action, and public awareness in order to reduce the incidence of sexual exploitation of children. For more information about Internet safety education, please visit https://www.justice.gov/psc and click on the resources tab.

MRS. SHANNON ELAINE BILLHEIMER, 45, of Adair (Celebration of Life 4/8/23)

Obituaries

April 3rd, 2023 by Ric Hanson

MRS. SHANNON ELAINE BILLHEIMER, 45, of Adair, died Saturday, April 1, 2023. A Celebration of Life service for SHANNON ELAINE BILLHEIMER will take place at 11:00, on Saturday, April 8, 2023, at the Schafer Barn on the Hill (1459 White Pole Road, Adair, IA 50002).  Schmidt Family Funeral Home, in Adair has the arrangements.

Immediately following the service will be the opportunity to enjoy food and beverages while visiting with family and friends.

Memorials may be directed to the Billheimer Family in honor of Shannon. They may be mailed to the Schmidt Family Funeral Home P.O. Box 523, Atlantic, IA 50022.

A burial will be held at the Lorimor cemetery at a later date.

SHANNON ILLHEIMER is survived by:

Her husband – Ryan.

Her sons – Cale, Clay, and Finn.

Her parents – Dave (Norma) Decker.

Her brothers – Matt Cornelison, of Guthrie Center; Josh Decker, and Cole Decker, of Kansas City

Her Grandmother – Deloma (Murray) Shell, and many other relatives and friends.

Mills County Sheriff’s report, 4/3/23

News

April 3rd, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Glenwood, Iowa) – Sheriff’s officials in Mills County report two recent arrests: At around 1:23-a.m. today (April 3). 45-year-old Andy Charles Andrews, of Council Bluffs, was arrested for Driving Under Suspension ($300 bond). And, 53-year-old Troy Richard Rehfeldt, of Council Bluffs, was arrested for OWI/3rd offense, following an investigation into a property damage accident and fire.

Authorities say Rehfeldt was driving a 2004 Dodge westbound on Brothers Avenue at around 5:35-a.m., Sunday, when his vehicle entered the north ditch, what initially was described as “Reasons unknown.” The vehicle struck a guy wire connected to a power pole, causing the power line to come loose and fall to the ground. That caused a large field fire. Rehfeldt fled the scene but was later found “Crashed out,” in a ditch not far from the scene of the accident. He was subsequently arrested for OWI.

Adair County Sheriff’s report, 4/3/23: Stuart man arrested for shooting at a vehicle

News

April 3rd, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Greenfield, Iowa) – The Adair County Sheriff’s Office reports Stuart Police arrested 36-year-old David Spencer Reeves, of Stuart, on March 26th. He was taken into custody in Stuart at around 9:15-p.m. on charges from incidents that occurred on Feb. 26th, March 24th and 26th. The charges include four-counts of Harassment in the 1st Degree, and two-counts of Domestic Abuse Assault-3rd or subsequent offense. Reeves was being held at the Adair County Jail on a $10,000 cash or surety bond.

On March 29th, 21-year-old Logan Wynn Gist, of Creston, was arrested following a traffic stop, for Possession of Drug Paraphernalia (THC Vape pipe). He was cited and released at the scene.  On March 31st, Adair Police arrested 47-year-old Erin Nicole Shaw, of Creston, at the I-80 eastbound rest area. Shaw was charged with Public Intoxication. She was released from the Adair County Jail the following day on her Own Recognizance.

Separately, Adair County Deputies arrested 35-year-old Lee Delmar Goll, of Stuart, March 31st, after he allegedly shot at a vehicle and threatened a female over the phone. A Deputy saw Goll leave the scene in a Chevy S-10 pickup, and conducted a traffic stop.  at 1380 Stuart Road. A .22-caliber rifle and open container of alcohol were observed in Goll’s vehicle on the passenger seat. An investigation showed bullet holes were found in a GMC Yukon, owned by Goll’s girlfriend, at the scene of the incident in the 1300 block of Stuart Road. Bullet casings from the .22 were found as well. Goll allegedly sent text messages threatening her life and those of two other adults and three children at the residence. He was charged with: six-counts of Harassment in the 1st Degree; Going Armed with Intent; Reckless Use of a Firearm – Damaging property; Criminal Mischief in the 2nd Degree; Driving Under Suspension, and Open Container – Driver, 21 & older.

Lee Goll was being held in the Adair County Jail on a $10,000 cash or surety bond. On April 1st at around 2:50-a.m., Police in Greenfield arrested 26-year-old Carolina Ibarra-Aguirre, of Creston, for Disorderly Conduct – Loud/Raucous Noise. She was released several hours later on her Own Recognizance. And, 40-year-old Dustin Brian Benge, of Greenfield, was arrested at around 9:47-p.m. Saturday by the Iowa State Patrol. He was taken into custody following a traffic stop on Highway 92, and charged with Driving while Denied or Revoked. He had been denied for OWI Test Refusal. He was also given warnings for headlight and window violations, and expired registration. Benge was released a short time later on a $1,000 cash or surety bond.

 

Atlantic alum McCreedy will continue running career at Northwest Missouri State

Sports

April 3rd, 2023 by admin

Atlantic alum and current Iowa Central runner Taylor McCreedy announced via social media on Monday that she will continue her academic and athletic pursuits at Northwest Missouri State Univeristy.

McCreedy has been an eight-time Junior College All-American with the Tritons. A 3x All-American in cross country/half marathon, 4x All-American indoors, and 1x outdoors.

This season McCreedy has qualified for the 2023 National Outdoor Meet in the 5K and steeplechase. She was also voted the team’s hardest worker by her teammates.

 

Secretary Mike Naig, IEDA Led Trade Mission to Vietnam, Philippines

Ag/Outdoor

April 3rd, 2023 by Ric Hanson

April 3, 2023 (DES MOINES) – Iowa Secretary of Agriculture Mike Naig and a 15-member delegation have just returned from a trade mission to Vietnam and the Philippines. The mission, coordinated by the Iowa Economic Development Authority (IEDA), included representation from Iowa’s livestock and grain organizations as well as other agricultural associations. The purpose of the mission was to encourage trade development, bolster partnerships and identify opportunities to expand export markets.

In 2022, Iowa companies exported $227 million in agricultural goods to Vietnam and $273 million to the Philippines. Southeast Asia has considerable trade potential, and Vietnam, as one of the fastest growing feed markets in the world, and the Philippines, as the region’s second most populous country with a need for consistent food access, both offer trade and industry development opportunities.

Vietnam and the Philippines both ranked in the top 10 U.S. agricultural export markets in 2022. Vietnam was the second largest soybean meal market for U.S. exports in 2022, and the Philippines had become the major U.S. ethanol importer for the region as the ninth largest market in 2021. Beef and pork exports are also a key market while the region’s animal protein consumption is expected to increase by 20% over the next five years.

“Vietnam and the Philippines are already important trading partners for Iowa, but we have an opportunity to increase our market share because of their growing populations and our longstanding reputation as a dependable, proven, and consistent supplier of high-quality products,” said Secretary Naig. “Our global customers welcome the opportunity to meet with Iowa farmers, and these relationships will benefit us long-term as we seek to sell more Iowa corn, pork, soybeans, beef, biofuels and many other products.”

The Iowa ag delegation visited areas in and around Ho Chi Minh, Vietnam and Manila, Philippines, from March 24 – April 1. The business meetings included trade policy updates, information sessions on Iowa’s agricultural industry and business development discussions. The delegation included Iowa companies from the ag processing industry and representatives from the Iowa Beef Industry Council, Iowa Corn, Iowa Farm Bureau Federation, Iowa Pork Producers Association and the Iowa Soybean Association. IEDA worked with the U.S. Grains Council, U.S. Meat Export Federation and U.S. Soybean Export Council to identify business prospects for the mission.

IEDA’s International Trade Office connects Iowa companies with markets for their products and services, educates Iowa businesses on exporting and assists global companies wishing to establish or expand operations in Iowa. To find out more about these services or other trade missions, visit iowaeda.com.

House and Senate GOP have yet to decide on a property tax plan

News

April 3rd, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Republicans in the House and Senate have yet to agree on a property tax reduction plan as the 2023 Iowa legislature enters its 13th week. Senator Dan Dawson, a Republican from Council, is chairman of the Senate Ways and Means Committee. He’s sponsored three different bills on the subject. “I believe something will get done this session…While we have different bills, we hit the same topics,” Dawson says. “The House is looking at debt, how cities put stuff on debt and we’re looking at assessments. We know that assessments are going to be an issue this year.”

Assessments are naturally going up because the sale prices of homes and farmland has gone up over the past few years, but lawmakers are discussing ways to limit how much city and county property tax collections may grow annually. Senate Republican Leader Jack Whitver said “There’s nothing wrong with an assessment going up, it’s when that assessment results in higher property taxes,” Whitver says, “and so looking at that formula and the rollbacks and just making sure that cities are taxing only what they need to.”

One of Dawson’s proposals would consolidate most local government operations under one general property tax levy, getting rid of special levies. Dawson cites the example of civic center levies, which he says were built long ago and the ongoing operation of those facilities should be part of the general city or county budget. “That’s just one example of how we’ve siloed out all these operations, and we need people to be responsible for their overall budget in the end,” Dawson says, “and that’s the value, I think, of our proposal of consolidating these levies and giving locals more responsibility and more accountability in how they budget.”

Senator Pam Jochum of Dubuque is the top Democrat on the senate’s tax policy committee. Jochum says she’s optimistic Republicans and Democrats can find common ground on a property tax reduction plan.  “I would hope we can figure out how we can unravel a very complex tax system, because the property tax system is probably the most complicated of all the tax systems we have in Iowa, and really get our arms around how it works and making sure we aren’t shifting the tax burden onto somebody else.”

Jochum and Dawson made their comments this weekend on Iowa Press on Iowa P-B-S. House Republicans have introduced a bill that would lower the property tax levy for state school funding and have the state cover a larger share of local public school budgets. It also would require schools to use cash reserves or other sources to come up with 10 percent of a construction project’s cost before asking voters to approve a borrowing money for the project. House Speaker Pat Grassley says House and Senate Republicans are not close to agreeing on a common approach to property tax adjustments.

Atlantic City Council to act on several matters, Wednesday

News

April 3rd, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Atlantic, Iowa) – The City Council in Atlantic will meet 5:30-p.m. Wednesday, in their chambers at City Hall. First-off, they’ll act on two Orders: Engineering Agreements with Snyder and Associates, for the Soccer Field Project, and Splashpad Project. City Administrator John Lund says both have been endorsed by the Parks and Recreation Board. The Splashpad Project itself is not included in the City’s 10-year Capital Improvement Plan, and will be financed by fundraising.

Along that same line, the Council will discuss and act on a number of issues pertaining to the Fundraising Committee. City Auditors Gronewold, Bell, Kyhnn & Co., P.C., have raised questions about the fundraising process, including those pertaining to checks and balances.

  • Website Ownership: Who owns the (fundraising) website? Who is going to pay for the domain name? Will it come from donated funds? If the City owns the website, it cannot accept donations made through Venmo and PayPal. If SHIFT ATL owns the website, are there going to be fees associated with using either of the aforementioned payment methods? Who is going to absorb those fees?
  • Fees charged for the service. The Auditors say the agreement needs to outline the fees that SHIFT will charge for the use of their services. If there is no charge, that needs to be stated as well.
  • No cash withdrawals allowed from bank account.
  • Checks drawn on the bank account shall only be made out to the City – No checks to vendors or individuals.
  • Bank statements will be provided to the City Clerk/Treasurer, not the Park Board.
  • The biggest concern of the Auditor’s according to John Lund, is that SHIFT is an unaudited organization. While they do have a CPA, they are still unaudited.

Lund said a number of the issues appear to be indirectly addressed in the agreement, while others may yet be addressed by the Fundraising Committee or SHIFT representatives, during Wednesday’s meeting. In other the Council will receive a presentation by John Lund on the FY 2024 Budget, 10-year Budget Projections, and 10-year Capital Improvement Plan (CIP). Afterward, there will be a Public Hearing on the FY 24 Maximum Property Tax Dollars for certain levies, followed by action on approving a Resolution for the same. Lund says “Due to the extreme chaos of the implementation of the new Business Property Tax Credit/Commercial Rollback and the late adjustment of the residential rollback, the final property tax dollars for FY 24 is not yet known. That will be published in the paper prior to the levy vote.”

Here are the levies and property tax dollars for the FY 23 and expected levies FY 24, for comparison (Click on the image to make full-size):

The Council will act on Resolutions setting April 19, 2023, as the date for Adopting the FY 2024 Budget, and Proposed FY 2024 10-year CIP, followed by a the setting of a Public Hearing on setting the date for the sale of City-owned property at 1310 Chestnut. The Council has previously accepted a bid of $1 from Jay & Kelsi Eden, who intend to completely renovate and flip a home on the property. Other Council business includes setting Public Hearings on April 19th for dissolving the Community Promotion Commission and Cable TV Committee. And, the Council will hold the second reading of an Ordinance with regard to Mobile Food Vendors (Food trucks) being required to have a permit, purchased no less than 10-days in advance of an event they plan on attending, in order for Atlantic Police to complete a background check and so they City Clerk may prepare the necessary paperwork. The permit does not apply to “Brick-and-mortar” businesses within the corporate limits of Atlantic, and vendors that are catering private events not otherwise open to the public.

TED D. SCHROEDER, 68, OF MCKINLEYVILLE, CA, formerly of Atlantic (Svcs 4/8/2023)

Obituaries

April 3rd, 2023 by Lori Murphy

TED D. SCHROEDER, 68, of McKinleyville, California, formerly of Atlantic, died February 6, 2023 in McKinleyville. Graveside services for TED D. SCHROEDER will be held on Saturday, April 8, 2023 from 10-11 am at the Marne Cemetery in Marne. A Remembrance Service will be held from 11 am-12 pm at the Marne Methodist Church in Marne following the graveside service. A time of fellowship and food will take place at 12 pm at Derailed in Marne.

TED D. SCHROEDER is survived by:

His wife: Melody of McKinleyville, CA

His sons: Jason of Stuart, Fla.; Matthew of McKinleyville, CA

His daughter: Taylor of McKinleyville, CA

Cass Supervisors to act on Wellness Coordinator ARPA funding request & changes in County Employee benefits

News

April 3rd, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Atlantic, Iowa) – The Cass County Board of Supervisors will act on several matters during their 9-a.m. meeting Tuesday, at the Courthouse in Atlantic. According to the agenda provided by Auditor Kathy Somers, that includes…

  • Discuss/Approve Resolution 2023-06, Approval of Cass County Secondary Roads Five-Year Construction Program, FY 24-29
  • Discuss/Approve Resolution 2023-07, Amendment to Cass County Five-Year Construction Program, FY23-28
  • Presentation/Acceptance of the FY 2022 annual audit by Gronewold, Bell, Kyhnn & Co. P.C.
  • Approve tax sale of county-held certificate 2021-03. 445.16 Abatement or compromise of tax
  • Discuss/Approve Resolution 2023-08, Approving Allocation of ARPA Funds to Temporarily Expand the Role of the Cass County Wellness Coordinator to Address Local Public Health Priorities and Assist in Long-Term Pandemic Recovery Efforts
  • Discuss/Approve changes in employee benefits effective July 1, 2023:
    • Leave ISAC and elect a stand-alone health insurance plan with Wellmark, saving the county approximately $143,000 from the current premiums. The partial self-fund claims should be between $200,000 and $300,000.
    • Pay to keep the wellness program (approximately $20,000-$25,000), EAP program (approximately $4,000-$5,000) and Accident & Dismemberment Plan (approximately $10,000-$12,000).

The Board will receive reports from County Engineer Trent Wolken, and Cass County Community Services/Judicial Mental Health Director, Deb Schuler, and act on two township positions IF there is a candidate for either or both positions.