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Keep up-to-date with Fox News Radio, Radio Iowa, Brownfield & the Iowa Agribusiness Networks!
(Radio Iowa) – An Iowa State University student who’s graduating with a psychology degree this weekend is also leaving Ames with a new title, Steak Cookoff Association World Champion. Marissa Ouverson grew up in Kansas City, Missouri, where barbecuing meat is something of an art form. During the pandemic, she decided to try her own skills at the grill, going on the road for six months and entering 54 competitions. “I got four first place, I had 26 or 24 Top 10s, and I finished 12th in the world in the points chase, and then I had the 2022 Worlds and I won the whole thing!” Ouverson says. “So, I was the youngest to ever win it and then I was also the first female. Knowing that I made history in multiple ways is awesome.”
When she was younger, Ouverson accompanied her father and older brother as they traveled to barbecue competitions, so she was a natural. Ouverson says her mother took time off from her flight attendant job to accompany her to steak grilling competitions across the country, all the while staying current with her I-S-U studies. “Her and I pretty much just packed up the car and we were on the road for six months,” Ouverson says. “It was because I was able to do everything online. I had her and my dad to really take me around everywhere and go with me so that I wasn’t alone the whole time. I got so close to my family. We have always been super close, but I mean, we got to do everything together.”
Her victory at the world competition in Texas led to sponsorships, prize money, and even her own online cooking class. “Here we are now and I haul a giant trailer around everywhere now,” she says. “What it turned into was wild. It’s mind blowing.” As she preps for graduation, Ourverson is focusing on the next stage of her life, using her degree to help people struggling with mental health. “I wanted to do psychology,” she says. “I wanted to help people and so I am focusing on suicide counseling, specifically for teens, and then I might end up actually going over to veterans.”
While the competition circuit may be on the back burner, Ouverson says she wants to continue improving her grilling craft — even though she’s already tops in the world and has a trophy and a ring to prove it.
A man from Harlan was struck by a vehicle Thursday evening in Montgomery County, and later died. The accident occurred at around 6:45-p.m. in a construction area. . The Sheriff’s Office reports Brian Kelly Parker was treated by First Responders at the scene of the incident on Highway 34 at Evergreen Avenue. After being treated, Parker was transported to the Montgomery County Memorial Hospital, where he died from his injuries.
The vehicle that struck Parker was traveling east on Highway 34 and approaching the lane transition area in the construction zone. Shawn Dale Kammerer, of Red Oak, failed to obey the traffic control sign before the accident occurred. The incident remains under investigation.
The Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office was assisted by Red Oak Police, Red Oak Fire & EMS, the Montgomery County Emergency Management Agency, Montgomery County Dispatch, Mills County Sheriff’s Office, and the Iowa State Patrol.
A report of a suspicious person walking on Highway 71 in Montgomery County at around 6:50-a.m., Thursday, resulted the suspect taken into custody after he fled on foot into a field. The Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office says 25-year-old Dylan J, Hanson, of Red Oak, was being approached for questioning by a Deputy, when he took off. Hanson was apprehended without further incident and transported to the Montgomery County Jail, where he was charged with Possession of Methamphetamine with intent to deliver, and Interference with Official Acts. He was being held without bond, pending an initial appearance before a magistrate.
The Sheriff’s Office was assisted at the scene by personnel with the Iowa State Patrol and Montgomery County Emergency Management.
(Radio Iowa) – Protestors marched throughout Sioux City Thursday to bring attention to cases of missing and murdered women in the local Native American community. As they walked, many held signs in remembrance of Terri McCauley, who was found murdered in Sioux City in 1983. Her brother, Mike McCauley, says not enough was done to solve her murder.
“We expected more and it’s not happening today. I, for one, need help,” he said. “I want to close this case, I want closure — 39 years she’s been laying on top of the hill.” Terri McCauley was 18 years old when she shot to death. Josh Taylor is McCauley’s nephew. He wants to build more trust between Native Americans and law enforcement.
“Look, they’re not an enemy,” he says. “They are here to support and although it may not be as fast as we want, but they are there to support.” Taylor says the general public doesn’t realize how many Native American women have been murdered. Homicide is the third-leading cause of death among Native American women, according to the Urban Indian Health Institute.
(Reporting by Iowa Public Radio’s Kendall Crawford)
(Des Moines, Iowa) – Officers with Oskaloosa Police Department and agents with the Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation (DCI), Thursday, arrested 41-year-old Dustin Flaherty, and 40-year-old Sara Flaherty, at their Oskaloosa home. The arrests come after the Oskaloosa Police Department and the DCI conducted a joint investigation into allegations of sexual assaults committed by Dustin and Sara Flaherty, who are husband and wife.
The charges against Dustin include a single charge, each, of Conspiracy to Commit Sexual Abuse (706.3; Class C Felony) and Sexual Abuse in the Third Degree (709.4; Class C Felony), and two counts of Sexual Abuse in the Second Degree (709.3; Class B Felony).
The charges against Sara include a single charge, each, of Conspiracy to Commit Sexual Abuse (706.3, Class C Felony) and Sexual Abuse in the Third Degree (709.4; Class C Felony), and two counts, each, of Sexual Abuse in the Second Degree (709.3; Class B Felony) and Drug Distribution to a Person Under the Age of Eighteen (124.406; Class B Felony).
Dustin and Sara Flaherty were processed into the Mahaska County Jail, where they remain. This is an on-going investigation. Anyone with information is asked to contact the Oskaloosa Police Department at (641) 672-2557.
(Des Moines, IA) In Iowa and nationwide, infant formula is in short supply. The Iowa Departments of Public Health and Human Services are working to provide information and resources to Iowans who are impacted by the shortage.
Supply chain constraints have been affecting product availability since January. The formula recall issued in February and closure of the Abbott production facility in Michigan has exacerbated this issue. Given those constraints, we encourage Iowans to purchase what they need for the short term. This will ensure that all Iowans are able to access what they need, given the limited supply we are seeing nationwide.
The FDA is responsible for taking steps to ensure the safety of infant formula while also ensuring that supply can be met when these steps are taken. Yesterday, the FDA published a press release highlighting actions it is taking to address formula supply shortages including working with major infant formula manufacturers to increase supply and helping to ensure that Abbott’s Sturgis facility can safely resume production.
“The Biden Administration must address the national shortage of infant formula immediately, increasing production and expediting distribution to the states,” said Governor Reynolds. “Parents need the assurance that they can provide the basic necessities for their family and nothing is more critical than infant formula.”
Because of the shortage, WIC enrolled families may need to visit a different location than they are used to or use alternate brands. The WIC program has made many brands and container sizes available for WIC families.
Iowans are urged not to use homemade infant formula or other alternatives as they do not contain the vitamins and minerals that a growing infant requires. Here is a helpful resource about the risks of using homemade formula.
WIC enrolled families who need assistance finding formula should contact their local WIC clinic, find a complete list here. If they are unable to contact their community clinic, they can call 1-800-532-1579.
Any Iowan seeking breastfeeding support can contact the WIC clinic in their community or contact their infant’s health care provider.
(Radio Iowa) – U-S Senate candidate Abby Finkenauer says the federal government must do more to address the critical shortage of baby formula. Finkenauer says as a 33 year old, she has a lot of friends who have babies and she began hearing about the shortage weeks ago. At the end of April, Finkenauer called on President Biden to invoke the Defense Production Act.
“This is a crisis in our country,” Finkenauer says. “…When something like this happens where you’ve got parents across the country trying desperately to get the nutrients for their children that they need and they can’t find it, that’s a national emergency and it needs to be addressed.”
Finkenauer is one of three Democrats competing to run against Republican Senator Chuck Grassley in the General Election. Grassley yesterday (Wednesday) wrote a letter to the Food and Drug Administration to demand answers on what they’re doing to make sure families have access to the baby formula they need.
“There’s more that can be done and should be done,” Finkenauer says. “…When it comes to our parents trying to feed their kids, all he’s doing is sending a strongly worded letter to the FDA.” A firm that tracks baby formula sales nationwide found 43 percent of the most popular brands were sold out last week.
Republican Congressman Randy Feenstra is co-sponsoring legislation to change F-D-A regulations of baby formula and it could let more baby formula made in other countries be sold in the U.S.
(Radio Iowa/updated) – The prosecution wrapped up its case around noon today (Thursday) against the Grundy Center man accused of killing State Trooper Jim Smith during a standoff last April. In coverage streamed by K-C-R-G T-V, the lawyer for Michael Lang asked the judge to dismiss the charges for lack of evidence. But Judge Joel Dalrymple declined.
“The court does find that there is a question of fact regarding the defendant of having acted with malice aforethought and that the defendant acted willfully deliberately with premeditation and with the specific intent to kill serve as Smith. And so as it relates to count one, the motion is denied,” he says. That count is first-degree murder, and the judge also denied the request to dismiss charges of attempted murder and assault on a police officer in connection with the case.
The prosecution rested after calling a ballistics expert from the D-C-I and the State Medical Examiner to testify. The defense lawyer then said they would not call any witnesses. They also said Lang would not testify in his own defense and the judge confirmed it with him. “Would you like any additional time to discuss that matter with your attorneys before that is a final decision,” Dalrymple said. Lang replied “no sir.”
Prosecutors asked that the trial not be resumed until Monday to allow Sergeant Smith’s family can fly to Washington, D-C for the National Peace Officer Memorial ceremony Friday. The defense attorney said he had a concern about the long weekend and jurors possible discussing the case. The judge addressed the issue with the jury before ending the session for the day. “The court obviously always has concerns, heightened concerns when we take a break for a weekend because that opportunity for things that might create issues and problems for all of us are just that much more prevalent over the course of a weekend,” he said.
The judge then reminded the jury they have not gotten the case yet and should not discuss it during the next three days. “Stray away from whether it be the barbecue, and the neighbor who’s a well aware of the fact that you’re on this jury wants to come over — particularly after a couple of beers and start chirping in your ear — about their opinion of jury service or this case or whatever the case may be. That you walk away and you make it clear to them that you want no part of that and that they shouldn’t be talking to you about that,” Dalrymple said.
He also reminded jurors to not discuss the case with family members during the weekend. The trial will resume Monday at the Hamilton County Courthouse in Webster City where the case was moved on a change of venue.
The Mills County Sheriff’s Office say one person was injured during a dump truck rollover accident this (Thursday) morning. The incident occurred at around 7:23-a.m. on westbound Highway 34, near mile marker 2. Authorities say 24-year-old Tuwane English, of Omaha, was driving a 2018 Freightliner dump truck and en route to a work site.
As the vehicle was traversing a curve to the right, it went off the road to the left, and came into contact with the shoulder. English over-corrected caused the truck to lose traction and cross both lanes of traffic before losing more traction and skidded back across the lanes to the median. The truck skidded sideways while entering the median and flipped over before coming to rest on its wheels.
The driver was transported by Glenwood Rescue to the UNMC in Omaha. He was cited for Failure to Maintain Control, and for not wearing a seat belt. The dump truck was a total loss.
(Glenwood, Iowa) – The Mills County Sheriff’s Office reports four arrests took place Wednesday: