Jim Field visits with Grammy-nominated TaDa Records artist Tom Wurth about his tour-opening appearance at the Corning Opera House this weekend.
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Jim Field visits with Grammy-nominated TaDa Records artist Tom Wurth about his tour-opening appearance at the Corning Opera House this weekend.
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The 7:20-a.m. Sportscast with Jim Field.
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(Radio Iowa) — A bill that would dramatically raise the fine for killing a bald eagle in Iowa has again soared past an initial hearing in the House. Backers say last year’s attempt to raise the state fine from 50 bucks all the way to 25-hundred dollars failed due to timing, not from lack of support. Kay Neumann of Saving Our Avian Resources — which stands for SOAR — says in January her non-profit received an eagle that was shot in Dallas County. “It destroyed a wing. We had to euthanize that bird,” Neumann says. “…This would be a wonderful deterrent.”
About eight percent of the eagles admitted to the Carroll County facility Newmann works in have been shot. Neumann says raising the state fine for shooting at an eagle should have been raised long ago. “We need to have some protection for eagles in the state of Iowa,” Neumann says, “and we need to give this to our conservation officers so that they can have a better opportunity to prevent this from happening.”
Dale Garner, a top administrator in the Iowa Department of Natural Resources, says it’s difficult to imagine someone accidentally shooting a bald eagle. “There’s not many birds that have a pure white head and a black body,” Garner says, “so it’s hard to mistake them.”
The number of eagles in Iowa swells from about 500 to three-thousand in the winter. Officials say about 40 eagles have been illegally killed IN IOWA over the past four years and all cases were forwarded to the feds. That’s because the federal penalty for capturing, killing or destroying an eagle is 25-hundred dollars. The bill to raise the fine to that level is now eligible for debate in the House Natural Resources Committee. The bald eagle became a federally-protected species in 1940. The Continental Congress chose the bald eagle as the national emblem in 1782.
COLFAX, Iowa (AP) — An Illinois man who bought a Mega Millions ticket in central Iowa’s Jasper County has claimed a $1 million prize. Iowa Lottery officials say 60-year-old Danny Lovett, of East Moline, Illinois, took his winning ticket Monday to lottery headquarters in Clive. The ticket matched the first five numbers in the Jan. 15 drawing but missed the Mega Ball number and the $55 million jackpot. A ticket bought in California for the Jan. 15 drawing also is worth $1 million.
Lovett drives a truck route from Davenport to Des Moines and often stops at a Kum & Go store in Colfax for coffee, a snack and a lottery ticket. He says he’ll use his winnings for a house, retirement and to buy his dream car: a 1972 Ford Mustang fastback. Lottery officials say Colfax resident George Dickerson claimed a $1 million Powerball prize in January 2018 with a ticket he bought at the same Kum & Go store in Colfax.
Creston Police report two arrests occurred Monday. 29-year old Caleb Benjamin Bensky Fredrickson, of Lorimor, was arrested in Creston on a Union County Warrant for 3rd Degree Theft. Frederickson was being held at the Union County Jail on a $2,000 bond. And, 38-year old Robert Benjamin Girard, of Lenox, was arrested at the Union County Law Center, on a Union County Warrant for Failure to Appear for an original charge of 5th Degree Theft. Girard was being held at the Union County Jail on a $300 bond.
The area’s latest and/or top news stories at 7:06-a.m. From KJAN News Director Ric Hanson
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COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) — In the first full month of her presidential campaign, Democratic Sen. Kamala Harris is planning a tour of the nation’s four early-voting states. Harris’ schedule announced Tuesday includes two days each in South Carolina, New Hampshire, Iowa and Nevada, states where support will be key to building momentum in a crowded 2020 Democratic field. The first-term senator from California will make her first visit to New Hampshire and then her first stop in Nevada since she officially declared her candidacy. She will be returning to Iowa and South Carolina, which she visited after launching her bid.
While the Harris campaign said specifics would be released later, the dates of her early-states tour are: South Carolina, Feb. 15-16; New Hampshire, Feb. 18-19; Iowa, Feb. 23-24; and Nevada, Feb. 28-March 1.
Harris, 54, announced her candidacy Jan. 21 during a national TV appearance, then appeared at an official kickoff rally Jan. 27 before thousands of people in downtown Oakland, California.
Harris’ campaign has already named Deidre DeJear as her campaign chair in Iowa and Will Dubbs as Iowa state director, signs of how the nascent campaign is growing in the state holding the first voting of the 2020 primary.
In New Hampshire, Harris has added Craig Brown as her campaign’s state director.
CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa (AP) — A jury has acquitted a 31-year-old man accused of punching to death a 2-year-old girl in Iowa County. Court records say Cody Stevenson was found not guilty Monday of first-degree murder. A criminal complaint said Stevenson struck the daughter of his live-in girlfriend three or four times in the abdomen on June 30, 2017, at a Williamsburg apartment. Authorities say the girl died three days later.
He testified Friday that he’d told authorities that he punched the girl but said so only to protect her mother. He says she punched her daughter. Court records don’t show the woman has been charged. The trial was moved to Cedar Rapids because of pretrial publicity.
The Audubon County Sheriff’s Office, Monday, posted a report on arrests dating back to early January. Most recently:
Other arrests in January:
Red Oak Police, Monday night, arrested a woman on an assault charge after officers responded to a residence in the 1300 block of Sunnyslope Drive, for a physical domestic assault in progress. Officers separated both parties and arrested 26-year old Bailey Anne Bostwick, of Red Oak, for Domestic Abuse Assault/1st offense. Bostwick was taken into custody at around 8:30-p.m. and transported to the Montgomery County Jail, where she was being held without bond, pending an appearance before the magistrate.