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Nebraska woman pleads not guilty to stealing from Iowa store

News

March 28th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

SIOUX CITY, Iowa (AP) — A Nebraska woman has pleaded not guilty to stealing from a now-closed Sears store in western Iowa. Woodbury County court records show 39-year-old Sandra Martinez, of South Sioux City, Nebraska, entered a written plea last week to the theft charge. The records don’t show that a trial has been scheduled. The records say Martinez stole $400 on the first day she worked at the Sioux City store and stole $1,000 on the last day she worked there. The store closed earlier this month — one of 80 closings the troubled retailer announced in late December.

Roads & bridges closed by flood damage are vital to Iowa ag

Ag/Outdoor, News

March 28th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — Closed interstate highways and submerged train tracks are creating challenges for moving grain and livestock. But Mike Steenhoek of the Soy Transportation Coalition says washed-out county bridges and impassable gravel roads are equally important because local infrastructure connects farms to global markets. “And it’s also the system that is largely the responsibility of local and county government and these are entities that are not flush with money,” Steenhoek says.

Iowa State University livestock economist Lee Schulz says some livestock trucks early on had to take longer routes or go to different meatpacking plants. But Schulz says businesses worked together to keep up with meat processing and it may never be clear whether the flooding affected consumer prices. “It likely won’t be one that we can really isolate here is the impact — and it was a rather large impact,” Schulz says. “I think it’s something that over time we may realize a little bit but overall I don’t think it’s going to be too much of an impact on prices.”

He says prices for meat are volatile thanks to ongoing tariffs and animal diseases, so it may never be possible to tease out whether flooding affected consumer prices. Schulz says prices, especially for pork, are pretty good and demand for meat is high, despite the considerable impact on individual farms.

On 42-6 vote, Iowa Senate endorses birth control access at pharmacy counter

News

March 28th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — The Iowa Senate has passed a bill that would let adult women in Iowa skip the requirement of a prescription and be able to buy birth control at the pharmacy counter. Republican Governor Kim Reynolds expressed support for this concept last fall and Senator Liz Mathis — a Democrat from Cedar Rapids — praised the senate’s bipartisan 42-to-six vote. “This is really quite a big day for the state of Iowa to do this,” Mathis said. “…I’m not excluding men here, but I think women understand intimately the issues surrounding access to birth control.”

Three first-term senators — all women — urged their colleagues to vote for the bill. Republican Senator Carrie Koelker of Dyersville was one of them. “As the mother of a daughter, I think that this is another layer of options for our women in our state,” Koelker said. “It helps with family planning and unwanted pregnancies.” Chris Cournoyer of LeClaire — another Republican who was just elected to the senate last November — says the bill will give Iowa women access to affordable birth control. “It is responsible,” she said. “It is under the supervision of a pharmacist and it has been an established, proven method of birth control that has worked for women all across this country for many, many years.”

Republican Senator Tom Greene of Burlington, a retired pharmacist, says Iowa pharmacists have had six years of intense training about proper dosage levels and will recommend a women seek a doctor’s advice if there are any concerns. “It behooves all of us to make sure that young women of today have access to proper care,” Green said. First-term Senator Claire Celsi of Des Moines, a Democrat, voted for the bill, but expressed “deep reservations” about it, partly because she had an adverse reaction to birth control. “No offense to Senator Greene, but pharmacists are not doctors,” Celsi said. “Pharmacists can refuse a woman birth control — did you know that? — if they’re ethically opposed to it.”

First-term Republican Senator Mariannette Miller-Meeks, an eye doctor from Ottumwa who’s a former nurse AND the former director of the Iowa Department of Public Health, guided the bill through the senate. She urged her colleagues to trust women to make this decision. “I’m going to rely upon my experience with women and caring for women,” she said, “that we’re intelligent, that we’re capable and we’re knowledgable.” The bill now goes to the Republican-led House for consideration.

Skyscan Forecast for Atlantic & the area – Thursday, March 28, 2019

Weather

March 28th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

Today: Partly cloudy to cloudy w/light rain. High 55. NE @ 10-20.

Tonight: Mostly cloud w/light rain. Low 40. N @ 10.

Tomorrow: Mostly cloudy w/light rain. High 46. N @ 10-20.

Saturday: P/Cldy. High 48.

Sunday: P/Cldy. High 50.

Yesterday’s High in Atlantic was 72. Our Low this morning, 41. Last year on this date our High was 53 and the Low was 24. The record High in Atlantic on this date was 84 in 1910 & 1986. The Record Low was 11 in 1898.

Midwest Sports Headlines: 3/28/19

Sports

March 28th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

Here is the latest Mid-America sports news from The Associated Press

UNDATED (AP) — Christian Yelich and the Milwaukee Brewers host Paul Goldschmidt and the St. Louis Cardinals on opening day. Miles Mikolas pitches for St. Louis and Jhoulys Chacin gets the ball for Milwaukee in a matchup of NL Central teams with postseason aspirations. Goldschmidt is making his Cardinals debut after he was acquired in an offseason trade with Arizona. (Listen for the game today beginning at 12:15-p.m. on KJAN)

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The consensus among prognosticators is that the Chicago White Sox or Kansas City Royals will finish in the bottom of the AL Central, and whichever team avoids the cellar won’t fare a whole lot better. Well, one of them will start the season with a win. The White Sox visit the Royals for opening day Thursday.

IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — Iowa reached the Sweet Sixteen in large part because of the spectacular play of Megan Gustafson. If the Hawkeyes want to go further, they’ll need Gustafson’s teammates to give her some help.

Winning $768M Powerball ticket sold in Wisconsin

News

March 28th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

(Update) NEW BERLIN, Wis. (AP) — The Wisconsin Lottery says a single ticket that matched all six Powerball numbers to win the third-largest jackpot in U.S. lottery history was sold in a Milwaukee suburb. The ticket worth an estimated $768.4 million, or a cash option of $477 million, was sold in New Berlin. The city of about 40,000 people is roughly 14 miles (22.5 kilometers) southwest of Milwaukee.

Lottery officials didn’t immediately identify the retailer that sold the ticket for Wednesday night’s drawing. The retailer will receive $100,000. The win comes almost exactly two years after Wisconsin hit its last Powerball jackpot, when a Milwaukee resident won $156.2 million on March 22, 2017. The winning numbers are 16, 20, 37, 44 and 62. The Powerball number is 12. Powerball lists the odds for winning the grand prize as 1 in 292,201,338.00.

Iowa early News Headlines: Thursday, March 28th 2019

News

March 28th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

Here is the latest Iowa news from The Associated Press at 3:30 a.m. CDT
MEAD, Neb. (AP) — The Environmental Protection Agency says that there were no releases of hazardous contaminants at any of eight toxic waste sites in flooded parts of Missouri, Nebraska and Iowa. The EPA on Wednesday identified the Nebraska Ordnance Plant in Mead, Nebraska, and the Conservation Chemical Corporation site in Kansas City, Missouri as heavily flooded Superfund sites that required the agency to take immediate action to prevent the spread of contaminated groundwater.

MONTEZUMA, Iowa (AP) — A former farmhand charged with first-degree murder in the abduction and killing of 20-year-old University of Iowa student Mollie Tibbetts will have his trial moved about 250 miles away to Woodbury County. The Des Moines Register reports that a judge on Wednesday approved a motion filed earlier this month to have Cristhian Bahena Rivera’s first-degree murder trial moved out of Poweshiek County. Rivera’s trial is now set to be held in Sioux City on Sept. 3.

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — As former Vice President Joe Biden prepares for a potential White House campaign, his associates increasingly see a strong showing in the Iowa caucuses as crucial to his ability to win the Democratic presidential nomination. He needs to do well in Iowa in hopes of charging into the South Carolina primary, where Biden’s national security profile and enduring popularity among African-Americans would pose a challenge for newer faces trying to break through.

IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — County treasurers in Iowa have canceled a college scholarship program that benefited their relatives and employees amid criticism the vendor-funded awards were illegal under state ethics law. The Iowa State County Treasurers Association’s executive board voted to end the program Wednesday ahead of a previously announced application deadline for high school seniors. A 2015 opinion by Iowa’s ethics board found the program violated a law barring public employees from accepting contractors’ money.

Man seeks new trial in case of child’s death

News

March 27th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

COUNCIL BLUFFS, Iowa (AP) — A man found guilty last month of manslaughter — but acquitted of a more serious murder charge — in the death of a toddler is seeking a new trial. The Council Bluffs Daily Nonpareil reports that an attorney for 22-year-old Javon Jennings filed the motion Saturday.

A jury found Jennings guilty on Feb. 15 of manslaughter and child endangerment in the April death 16-month-old Jazlynn Harshbarger. An autopsy showed had suffered numerous injuries and died of blunt force trauma. Prosecutors say Jennings was supposed to be babysitting the girl, who was the daughter of his live-in girlfriend.

Jennings’ attorney, Christopher Roth, said in the motion that Jennings’ trial was unfair and that there was insufficient evidence to convict him.

Suspected Des Moines gang leaders arrested in major FBI case

News

March 27th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Federal agents have arrested the suspected leaders of a Des Moines street gang after a three-year investigation into violent crime and drug dealing. Court records show a dozen men were arrested Wednesday after the FBI served several search warrants around Des Moines. The suspects are in federal custody, mostly on charges of conspiring to distribute cocaine.

Those arrested include twin brothers Daeron and Marshaun Merrett, whom the FBI calls leaders of the C-Block gang that operates in central Des Moines and is affiliated with the Crips.

The FBI and U.S. Attorney Marc Krickbaum have scheduled a news conference Thursday to discuss what they’re calling a “significant” law enforcement action.
Court documents say members of the gang are responsible for shootings, killings, robberies and other crimes. A 75-page FBI affidavit outlines how gang members allegedly obtained cocaine from the Chicago area on a frequent basis to distribute throughout Des Moines.

The document says investigators intercepted phone calls and text messages and used surveillance and informants to penetrate the group.

Murder trial in killing of Iowa student moved to Sioux City

News

March 27th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

MONTEZUMA, Iowa (AP) — A former farmhand charged with first-degree murder in the abduction and killing of 20-year-old University of Iowa student Mollie Tibbetts will have his trial moved about 250 miles away to Woodbury County.

The Des Moines Register reports that a judge on Wednesday approved a motion filed earlier this month to have Cristhian Bahena Rivera’s first-degree murder trial moved out of Poweshiek County. Rivera’s trial is now set to be held in Sioux City on Sept. 3. His attorneys had argued the trial should be moved to allow for more minority representation in the jury pool.

Rivera is accused of killing Tibbetts, who disappeared while out for a run July 18 in Brooklyn, Iowa. Investigators recovered her body a month later in a cornfield. Officials say she was stabbed to death. Rivera, a Mexican national, also is accused of being in the country illegally. He worked at a dairy farm a few miles from where Tibbetts disappeared.