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Keep up-to-date with Fox News Radio, Radio Iowa, Brownfield & the Iowa Agribusiness Networks!
(Stanton,Iowa) – A man from Clarke County was arrested northwest of Stanton early this (Sunday) morning, following a traffic stop. 20-year-old Deng Bulis, of Osceola, was taken into custody at around 3:45-a.m., for OWI/1st offense, after his BAC test registered .113%. Bulis was booked into the Montgomery County Jail on a $1,000 bond.
And, Red Oak Police report an arrest occurred at around 8:50-p.m. Saturday, following a traffic stop in the 2400 block of N. Broadway Street. 32-year-old Tyler Eldon Buckner, of Emerson, was arrested for Driving Under Suspension. He was transported to the Montgomery County Jail and held on $491.25 bond.
(Percival, Iowa) – A collision between a car and and an SUV Saturday evening in FREMONT County, left two people in an SUV dead and three injured. All five victims were from Nebraska. According to the Iowa State Patrol, a 2021 Dodge Charger and a 2020 Jeep Wrangler, were both northbound on I-29 near mile marker 16, when the car went out of control and struck the SUV. The accident happened at around 7:38-p.m.
After the impact, the vehicles entered the ditch ditch and rolled over. The car came to rest on its top . The Jeep came to rest upright, in a field east of I-29. All of the occupants in the Jeep were ejected or partially ejected. Two of the occupants, a 14-year-old male and a 16-year-old female from Gretna, NE, died at the scene.
The remaining three SUV occupants were transported to the UNMC by LifeNet 1-1 helicopter, Glenwood Rescue, and Audubon LifeNet. They were identified as (the driver) 20-year-old Garrett Grossman, and 18-year old Hannah Devitt, both of Omaha, and a 15-year-old female, also from Omaha. The driver of the Dodge Charger, 26-year-old Rodelio Martinez, of Columbus, NE, was not injured. The names of the juveniles were not released. The Patrol says the juveniles were not wearing a seat belt. Grossman and Devitt were properly belted-in.
While the crash remains under investigation, alcohol is believed to have been a contributing factor.
(Union County, Iowa) – A woman from Adair County escaped injury Friday night, after she swerved to avoid a deer on the road and instead drove into a ditch. The Union County Sheriff’s Office reports 22-year-old Tyreesha Lynn Turner, of Greenfield, was driving a 2006 Buick Lucerne northbound on Highway 25 at around 11:40-p.m., Friday, when she swerved for the deer. The car left the road to the west before entering the ditch. Damage to the vehicle was estimated at $2,500.
(Red Oak, Iowa) – Sheriff’s officials in Montgomery County report that a little after 12-p.m. Saturday, Deputies arrested 63-year-old Keith D. Hansen, of Stanton, for Driving While Barred. Authorities say Hansen was observed driving a Dodge Dakota pickup truck eastbound on 250th Street, near the intersection with Highway 71. He was located after the Sheriff’s Dept. received a complaint that Hansen was seen leaving his residence in Stanton, and was known not to have a valid driver’s license.
He was arrested without incident and transported to the Montgomery County Jail, where his bond was set at $2,000.
(Red Oak, Iowa) — Police in Red Oak arrested a local man Friday evening on a warrant charging him with Assault causing bodily injury or mental illness. Authorities say 32-year-old Dylan Thomas Griffeth, of Red Oak, was arrested at around 4:53-p.m., in the 100 block of S. 2nd Street. Griffeth was transported to the Montgomery County Jail and held on a $1,000 bond.
(Radio Iowa) – Iowa is now part of an international network of radio receiver stations, stretching from Canada to South America, tracking long-distance migration patterns of birds, bats and insects. Anna Buckardt Thomas, an avian ecologist with the Iowa Department of Natural Resources, says it’s called the Motus Wildlife Tracking System, “motus” being the Latin word for movement.
“The focus of this system is to track small animals with large movements,” Buckardt Thomas says. “So it focuses on birds and bats, dragonflies, they’ve also been put on monarch butterflies before, so the size of the animal will determine the size of the tag it can receive and how long that tag will be emitting a radio signal.” Iowa now has seven of the receiving stations scattered statewide, with an eighth going online this fall, and plans to add four or five more.
Trackers in Iowa have recently picked up signals from birds that are migrating from Jamaica and even as far away as Columbia. “The system is integrated with basically any other researcher in the hemisphere,” Buckardt Thomas says. “There’s folks in Central and South America all the way up to Canada and we’re all operating on the same frequencies. So anyone could put a tag on a bird or bat or an insect, and if it moves through Iowa, it would be detected.”
As yet, the Iowa D-N-R isn’t tagging any flying creatures, but that’s something that’s being planned for the near future. For now, experts in Iowa tracking stations are keeping an eye — or an ear — on many thousands of creatures that have been tagged elsewhere. While we may already know a lot about the big picture of migration patterns, Buckardt Thomas says these stations will help us to understand even more about where various species winter and threats they may face.
“Learning more about individual species and individual animals will tell us about how fitness plays into migration,” she says, “how different resource availability plays into migration, exact kind of flight speeds and patterns of migration on the finer scale, which can help us be more effective in our conservation of those species.” Iowa’s seven tracking stations are located in areas that met elevation requirements and were placed on buildings owned or leased by the Iowa D-N-R.
There’s one at Lewis and Clark State Park, with six more near the towns of Early, Boone, Swisher, McGregor, Wapello, and Burlington. The state started installing the stations in August of 2021.
(Radio Iowa) – Representatives from the A-C-L-U of Iowa and Planned Parenthood talked with reporters today (Friday) in reaction to the Supreme Court decision on abortion. A-C-L-U of Iowa legal director Rita Bettis Austen says the ruling that abortion is not a fundamental right under Iowa’s constitution is a devastating reversal of prior precedent. “The Iowa Supreme Court did not get rid of all constitutional protection for abortion rights today,” she says.
The ruling on the constitutional question came as the Supreme Court reviewed a lower court decision that said the 24-hour waiting period for abortion that was passed in 2020 was not legal. Austen says the ruling does impact abortion law review. “What the court held that abortion is not a fundamental right, and that means that strict scrutiny, or the highest level of protection under our Constitution doesn’t apply to abortion rights under the court’s test that it uses to look at laws that restrict abortion,” she says.
Bettis Austen says the lower standard of scrutiny known as the Undue Burden still holds. “Which means that laws that place a significant or substantial obstacle in the path of a woman seeking an abortion are unconstitutional,” Bettis Austen says. She says that is the level of protection that is in place at the FEDERAL. Bettis Austen and a representative from Planned Parenthood cited an Iowa Poll that showed a majority of Iowans supported keeping abortion legal.
Iowa Republicans who have pushed to end abortion in the state have control of both Houses of the Iowa Legislature and the governor’s office. Those on the conference call could not say why Republicans have such control if a majority of Iowans support abortion. “I wish we could answer it succinctly. But I think that’s beyond the scope of our press conference,” according to A-C-L-U of Iowa Communications Director Veronica Fowler.
Bettis Austen says the next step in this case is for them to go back to the district court and continue the challenge that the 24-hour waiting period for an abortion is an undue burden.
(Radio Iowa) – Pro-life advocates welcomed the Supreme Court ruling on abortion. Kristie McGregor has spent every Wednesday outside the Sioux City Planned Parenthood clinic for the last two years praying. She says since her miscarriage in 2017, she’s devoted herself completely to fighting for a ban on abortion. McGregor says she’s happy with today’s ruling – but she’s not celebrating yet. She says that won’t come until it’s outlawed completely.
“I think sometimes people get excited, and then they, then they give up the fervor in the fight. But we have a long road ahead of us. And we need to keep vigilant and keep pushing forward,” McGregor says.
She sees the court’s reversal as a step in the right direction. But until abortions in Iowa are banned, McGregor says she’ll keep showing up every Wednesday to pray.
(By Kendall Crawford, Iowa Public Radio)
SIOUX CITY, Iowa – June 17, 2022 – A concrete overlay project on Iowa 3, from Le Mars to Remsen in Plymouth County will require lane closures beginning on Monday, June 20, until July 1, weather permitting, according to the Iowa Department of Transportation’s District 3 Office.
Pilot cars will direct motorists through the work zone. Croell Inc., of New Hampton, was awarded the $7.9 million dollar project.
(Atlantic, Iowa) – The Cass County Sheriff’s Office reports the arrest on Wednesday, June 15th, of a man from Missouri Valley. 27-year-old Brandon Hansen, was taken into custody on warrants for OWI 1st Offense, Theft 5th and Unauthorized use of Credit Card.
Hansen was picked up and transported to the Cass County Jail where he was booked and held, pending his later release on his own recognizance.