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Tama County Officer-Involved Shooting Investigation

News

October 29th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Chelsea, Iowa) — The Iowa Department of Public Safety reports an investigation is underway with regard to an officer-involved shooting that took place Thursday night, in Tama County. Authorities say at around 7:27-p.m., the Tama County Sheriff’s Office received calls of shots being fired near 1001 Station Street, in Chelsea.  Several law enforcement agencies from the surrounding area responded and upon arrival, observed 28-year-old Dewey Dale Wilfong, III, walking around with a handgun.  A Tama County Deputy fired one round striking Wilfong in the upper torso. The man was transported to UnityPoint Health-St. Luke’s Hospital in Cedar Rapids, where he was pronounced dead.

The Iowa Department of Public Safety’s Division of Criminal Investigation was called in to conduct an independent investigation into the shooting. The Tama County Deputy has been placed on paid administrative leave pending the outcome of the investigation. The name of the deputy isl not being released at this time. An autopsy will be conducted at The Office of the State Medical Examiner in Ankeny, Iowa.

Officials say no additional information will be released at this time.

3 arrested in Des Moines’ 10th homicide

News

October 29th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Des Moines, Iowa/KCCI) — Officials with the Des Moines Police Department have released the name of a man who died after being stabbed Thursday morning. They also said three men were arrested early this (Friday) morning, in connection with the incident.  As reported earlier, early Thursday morning, officers were called to a home in the 1400 block of Searle Street, just east of Interstate 235. First responders found 19-year-old Cory Elifritz suffering from serious stab wounds. He was transported to a local hospital where he later died.

Authorities say three men are charged with first-degree murder and first-degree burglary in the case: 20-year-old Tyrone Glen Davis and 20-year old Taylor Scott Austin, both of Des Moines, along with 18-year-old Daniel Fletcher Jackson, of DeSoto. All three were being held in the Polk County Jail. In a news release, police said “Through the course of the investigation, detectives discovered evidence that indicates Davis, Austin, and Jackson had planned to commit a burglary of the home where the murder occurred,” Des Moines police said through a news release. “Detectives also learned that Jackson had recently threatened the residents of the home, blaming them for the recent arrest of his brother. After Davis, Austin, and Jackson entered the home, Elifritz was stabbed multiple times, resulting in his death. Additional evidence indicates that prior to fleeing, Davis, Austin, and Jackson stole two gaming systems from the home.”

Authorities say the investigation continues. Thursday’s incident resulted in the 10th homicide for Des Moines, in 2021. There were 21 homicides in Des Moines in 2020.

Iowa’s pheasant hunting season opens this weekend & it’ll be busy

Ag/Outdoor, Sports

October 29th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Pheasant hunters will hit Iowa’s forests and fields starting tomorrow (Saturday) morning at 8 o’clock, shortly after sunrise. Todd Bogenshutz, a wildlife biologist with the D-N-R in Boone, is predicting a busy morning as the forecast calls for a sunny fall day for much of the state. “We’re expecting a lot of hunters out. We had the highest numbers we’ve had in several years last year, partly due to COVID,” Bogenshutz says. “We’re expecting the same this year as (pheasant) counts are basically unchanged from a year ago.” Based on the agency’s roadside counts, northwest Iowa looks particularly promising for pheasant populations this year, while southeast Iowa may be lesser, though he says “they average out.”

Iowa’s growing seasons are wrapping up just as hunting season begins, which Bogenshutz says is ideal. “Crop harvest is well underway,” he says. “Last I saw, like 80-90 percent of the beans are out statewide and corn is up over 50, maybe 60 percent. When the crops are out when the season opens, that usually makes the birds easier to find, they don’t have as many places to hide.” Bogenshutz says there are some key rules to always follow during the hunt.

“The requirements of your pheasant and quail hunting is that you have to have at least one article of 50% or more blaze orange on your person,” Bogenshutz says. “That could be a hat, a vest, a coat or sweatshirt, anything that’s at least 50% blaze orange because we want everybody to be safe.” When hunting in groups, he says it’s vital to make a plan and follow it. Iowa’s pheasant season runs through January 10th. Learn more at www.iowadnr.gov.

CYNTHIA R. BATES, 63, of Audubon (Graveside services 11/2/21)

Obituaries

October 29th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

CYNTHIA R. BATES, 63, of Audubon, died Wed., Oct. 27th, at the Audubon County Memorial Hospital. Graveside services for CYNTHIA BATES will be held 2-p.m. Tue., Nov. 2nd, at the Iowa Veterans Cemetery (34024 Veterans Memorial Dr.) near Adel. Kessler Funeral Home in Audubon has the arrangements.

Friends may call at the funeral home, where the family visitation is from 5-until 8-p.m. Monday, Nov. 1st.

CYNTHIA BATES is survived by:

Her husband – Roger Bates, of Audubon.

Her sons – Allen (Ashley) Newell, of Aston, IA; and Chris Newell, of Woodbine.

Her sister – Sanda Joppe (& friend Wynn Logue), of Audubon.

other relatives and many friends.

Skyscan Forecast for Atlantic & the area: Friday, 10/29/21

Weather

October 29th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

Today: Mostly cloudy w/drizzle possible this morning; P/Cldy this afternoon. High 57. NW @ 15-25.

Tonight: Mostly clear. Low 31. Winds light & variable.

Tomorrow: Mostly sunny. High 62. SW @ 10.

Sunday: P/Cldy. High 51.

Monday: Mo. Cldy. High 45.

Thursday’s High in Atlantic was 49. Our Low this morning, 45. Rainfall in Atlantic, from 7-a.m. Thursday to 7-a.m. today, amounted to .60″.  Last year on this date, the High was 45 and the Low was 25. The Record High was 91 in 1937, and the Record Low was 8 in 1895.

No. 10 Newell-Fonda visits No. 7 Lenox in 8-player Friday night

Sports

October 29th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

Tenth ranked Newell-Fonda visits number seven Lenox tonight (Friday night), in the second round of the playoffs in 8-player. Newell-Fonda coach Brian Wilken says the key for the defense will be slowing down Lenox running back Isaac Grundman who has rushed for more than 15 hundred yards.

The Mustangs have won three straight since a loss to number four Remsen St. Mary’s.

Lenox co-coach Cole Bonde says the Tiger defense faces a tough challenge.

Bonde says a veteran offensive line paves the way for Grundman.

Congresswoman Hinson: administration doesn’t want to answer to its actions

News

October 29th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Iowa Congresswoman, Ashley Hinson, a Republican from Marion, says the Biden Administration and Democrats keep pushing forward with their plans, while the president isn’t taking any questions on the issues.

Hinson, a former reporter, says the American people are questioning the way the administration operates. “What are they hiding? I think really what they are hiding is intent. They want to grow government, they want these big socialist government spending programs to go through — and they don’t want to have to answer for it,” she says.

Rep. Ashley Hinson. (RI photo)

Hinson says the situation at the southern border and immigration overall is a good example.”It’s why I called for Secretary Mayorkas’ resignation. Because we’ve been deliberately stonewalled at every turn from the Department of Homeland Security,” Hinson says. “We need new leadership there because we are out of time. these border crossings increase compound without a single answer from the Biden administration,” Hinson says.

Hinson says the administration has doubled down on its “out of sight, out of mind” approach to the border.

Miller-Meeks may move into new first district (and what all 4 US Reps are doing)

News

October 29th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The three Republicans representing Iowa in the U.S. House of Representatives are seeking re-election, but one may be moving into another district after the new redistricting plan is signed into law. Republican Randy Feenstra of Hull lives in the new fourth district and announced last week he’s seeking reelection. Congresswoman Ashley Hinson of Marion announced in August that she intends to seek a second term in the House and last night she announced she’ll run in the new second district, where she lives.

Congresswoman Mariannette Miller-Meeks lives in the new third district, but that’s also where Democratic Congresswoman Cindy Axne of West Des Moines lives. Miller-Meeks, who announced her bid for reelection in August, last night announced she’s evaluating her options — which means she might move into the new first congressional district and seek to represent it instead. There’s no incumbent living in the district now.

Congresswoman Axne has not announced whether she’s seeking reelection to the House — or running for governor in 2022.

Reynolds to sign bill to aid workers who may be fired over vaccination status

News

October 29th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Governor Kim Reynolds will sign a bill that outlines how workers may claim a religious or medical exemption from a private employer’s Covid vaccination mandate, without a doctor or cleric signing off on the document. The bill that passed the House and Senate yesterday with bipartisan support also says workers are eligible for unemployment if they’re fired for failing to get vaccinated, including those whose exemption claims are denied. Senator Jason Schultz, a Republican from Schleswig, said it’s “a partial answer” to looming federal vaccination mandates.

“I don’t want to have to do this. Nobody does,” he said. “We’re reacting to authoritarianism.” Representative Henry Stone, a Republican from Forest City, said there are fast-approaching deadlines for Iowans faced with taking a vaccination “they don’t agree with” or getting fired. “We needed to take this action now,” Stone said. “January will be too late for Iowans. That’s why we have to act today.”

Democrats who voted for the bill said they did so to ensure Iowans who lose their jobs get unemployment. But Senator Tony Bisignano, a Democrat from Des Moines, voted for the bill, but he accused Republicans of trying to “buy off” Iowans who don’t want to get a Covid shot. “All this bill says if you lose your job — which you’re going to, because you’re not dealing with the mandate,” Bisignano said, “you’re going to give them their measly weekly unemployment check.”

Business groups say the bill puts Iowa employers “in the terrible position” of trying to figure out if they must follow state or federal regulations when it comes to Covid vaccinations among employees. Representative Steve Hanson, a Democrat from Sioux City, said Republicans had months to craft a bill, but would up with one that leaves too many questions unanswered. “Rather sloppy legislation,” he said. “…It’s very loosey goosey.”

Opponents of vaccine mandates who rallied at the Capitol today called the bill unacceptable. Representative Jeff Shipley, a Republican from Fairfield, said while there is “more work to do on” the issue, the bill is a good first step. “There are people in Illinois, in New York and in every other Democratic cesspool in the United States that would love to have these legal protections,” Shipley said.

Governor Reynolds said in a statement that she’s “committed to doing more” on the topic. Last week the governor said she may join a lawsuit challenging federal Covid vaccine mandates.

Plan 2 for redistricting will become law

News

October 29th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The Iowa legislature has overwhelmingly approved the second plan for reconfiguring the boundaries for Iowa’s congressional and legislative districts.  Redistricting happens once a decade, after population changes are identified in the Census. Senate Republicans rejected the first redistricting plan October 5th, but Republicans say the non-partisan Legislative Services Agency developed a second plan that had more compact districts and districts that were closer to equal in population. The plan passed the Senate on a 48-to-one vote.

Senate Republican Leader Jack Whitver of Ankeny says he started making calls last night to recruit candidates to run in open senate seats. “Now that the map has passed, we’re really six to eight months behind in the typical cycle,” Whitver says, “and both sides, both parties are going to have to work really hard to get caught up and find recruits.” Senator Pam Jochum of Dubuque, a Democrat, says redistricting has an immense impact. “It influences who wins elections, who is at the table when laws are considered,” she says, “and what laws actually pass.”

Redistricting Plan 2

Early Thursday evening, the plan passed the House on a 93-to-two vote. House Minority Leader Jennifer Konfrst of Windsor Height says Democrats were ready to approve the maps, sight unseen, because they were drawn by a non-partisan agency and without consideration for where incumbents live. “I’ve spent a lot of time learning about redistricting processes in other states. I’ve learned that the cliche of Iowa’s redistricting process being the ‘gold standard’ is well earned,” Konfrst says. “The way we do it here is right.”

Representative Bobby Kaufmann, a Republican from Wilton, blasted other Democrats who accused the G-O-P of intending to draft a redistricting plan to favor Republican candidates. “I have seen countless Tweets and Facebook posts and delusions,” Kaufmann said. “…I want to make it crystal clear: Republicans were never going to gerrymander.” Neither the House nor the Senate spent long debating the plan and Governor Kim Reynolds has indicated she’ll quickly sign it into law.

The legislators who opposed the bill were Senator Ken Rozenboom, a Republican from Oskaloosa, who lives in the same senate district as Republican Senator Dickey of Packwood. Representatives Jon Jacobsen, a Republican from Council Bluffs, and Tom Jeneary, a Republican from Le Mars, voted no in the House. All three live in districts with another Republican incumbent, setting up the possibility of G-O-P Primaries in 2022.