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Wartburg Steve Johnson Invite 09/29/2018

Sports

September 29th, 2018 by admin

Nodaway Valley and Treynor competed at the Waverly Steve Johnson XC Meet on Saturday. The Wolverines finished 7th in the team race with 240 points. Treynor was 20th with 530. The Cardinals’ Jerry Jorgensen ran a personal best 15:46.1 to finish in 3rd place. The Wolverines’ Joshua Baudler finished 11th with a time of 16:15.0.

See the full results here.

8AM Sportscast 09/29/2018

Podcasts, Sports

September 29th, 2018 by admin

w/ Chris Parks

Play

7AM Newscast 09/29/2018

News, Podcasts

September 29th, 2018 by admin

w/ Chris Parks

Play

Motorcycle driver injured in Council Bluffs crash Friday

News

September 29th, 2018 by admin

The driver of a motorcycle was injured in a collision with the back of an SUV on Friday evening in Council Bluffs. The Council Bluffs Police Department responded to the accident at 5:32pm at the intersection of 7th Street and Kanesville. Preliminary investigations show the SUV was stopped at a red traffic light when the motorcycle ran into the rear of it.

The motorcyle driver was taken to UNMC with serious injuries. He was not wearing a helmet at the time of the accident. The name of the injured man is being withheld pending notification of family of the accident.

The driver of the SUV was not injured and his vehicle was driven away from the scene.

More details on Creston man arrested after fleeing Thursday

News

September 29th, 2018 by admin

The Union County Sheriff’s Office released more details on how a Creston man was apprehended on Thursday afternoon. 23-year-old Jameson Chase Cox of Creston was arrested after attempting to elude law enforcement. Cox was speeding away from officers in a 2001 Chrysler Sebring and attempted to make a turn at North Oak and West Townline Streets in Creston. Cox was traveling too fast to make the turn and lost control, running into a front brick pillar of a home at 303 West Townline Street.

Cox then attempted to flee on foot but was captured a short time later by a Union County Deputy. Nobody was injured as a result of the crash and damage to the brick on the home was estimated at $3,000. The vehicle sustained $2,500 disabling damage. Cox was arrested for Eluding and later charged by Creston PD for OWI 1st Offense.

Memorial for fallen Des Moines police officers approved

News

September 29th, 2018 by admin

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — A permanent memorial dedicated to fallen police officers will be built in Des Moines.

The Register reports the memorial will be dedicated to the 24 officers who’ve died in the line of duty, including officers Susan Farrell and Carlos Puente-Morales, who were killed in March 2016 when a drunken wrong-way driver crashed into their patrol car on Interstate 80.

On Monday, the City Council approved a $101,529 construction contract to build the structure outside the downtown police station.

The project will be funded in part by donations. The police department’s GoFundMe page has received $51,500 in donations for the project and Prairie Meadows Casino and Hotel has awarded it $10,000.

Fremont County Sheriff’s Office K-9 Roby receives body armor donation

News

September 29th, 2018 by admin

Fremont County Sheriff’s Office K9 Roby has received a bullet and stab protective vest thanks to a charitable donation from non-profit organization Vested Interest in K9s, Inc. The vest was embroidered with the sentiment “In memory of K9 Ty, California City Police Department”.

Vested Interest in K9s, Inc. is a 501c(3) charity located in East Taunton, MA whose mission is to provide bullet and stab protective vests and other assistance to dogs of law enforcement and related agencies throughout the United States. The non-profit was established in 2009 to assist law enforcement agencies with this potentially lifesaving body armor for their four-legged K9 officers. Since its inception, Vested Interest in K9s, Inc. provided over 3,100 protective vests in 50 states, through private and corporate donations, at a value of $5.7 million dollars.

The program is open to dogs actively employed in the U.S. with law enforcement or related agencies who are certified and at least 20 months of age. New K9 graduates, as well as K9s with expired vests, are eligible to participate.

The donation to provide one protective vest for a law enforcement K9 is $950.00. Each vest has a value between $1,744 – $2,283, and a five-year warranty and an average weight of 4-5 lbs. There is an estimated 30,000 law enforcement K9s throughout the United States. For more information or to learn about volunteer opportunities, please call 508-824-6978. Vested Interest in K9s, Inc. provides information, lists events, and accepts tax-deductible donations of any denomination at www.vik9s.org or mailed to P.O. Box 9 East Taunton, MA 02718.

K9 Roby is a 3-year-old Belgian Malinois, German Shepard mix, certified in patrol and narcotics detection.  K9 Roby has been with the department since December of 2016.  K9 Roby is assigned to Deputy Andrew Wake, who has been with the Fremont County Sheriff’s Office since 2010, and has been a K9 handler since 2014.

Gravity woman arrested for Driving Under Suspension

News

September 29th, 2018 by admin

Danielle Rene Bammer

The Page County Sheriff’s Office reports the arrest of a Gravity woman after a traffic stop on Thursday evening. At approximately 9:21pm the Page County Sheriff’s Office initiated a traffic stop on a 2002 Mazda in the 1600 block of Highway 2 for a traffic violation. This is approximately 4 miles east of Shenandoah.

During the traffic stop, the driver, 27-year-old Danielle Rene Bammer of Gravity was arrested for Driving Under Suspension. Bammer was transported to the Page County Jail where she was booked in as she was unable to post the $566.25 bond.

Woman says she was victim, not enabler, of Iowa agency boss

News

September 29th, 2018 by admin

IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — An Iowa official who failed to report sexual misconduct by her powerful boss says she stayed quiet because she feared retaliation and didn’t want to share her experience as one of his victims.

Tara Lawrence, director of the Iowa Title Guaranty program, said she suffered “very uncomfortable” harassment by Iowa Finance Authority Director Dave Jamison. She told The Associated Press that Jamison showed her photographs of nude women, commented on her body and quizzed her about her sex life during meetings and work trips.

Lawrence criticized Gov. Kim Reynolds for commissioning a report that she says portrays her as an enabler of Jamison, one of the governor’s longtime friends and advisers, instead of a victim.

“My name has been run through the mud and I’ve been used as a pawn,” Lawrence said, tearing up as she became the first Jamison accuser to speak publicly.

She noted she is a Republican who supports Reynolds’ campaign and went to law school with Lt. Gov. Adam Gregg. “I support them. But I don’t support what’s being done to me. I’m not out to get the governor but I don’t think this is fair,” she said.

An investigation by a Des Moines law firm concluded that Lawrence and finance authority lobbyist Wes Peterson were aware of “egregious” wrongdoing by Jamison, including a December 2016 incident in which he grabbed a coworker’s breasts in front of them at a bar. The report concluded the two failed to report the assault and noted that Lawrence declined to speak with investigators, who found Jamison had harassed at least three other subordinates to different degrees.

Peterson was terminated Thursday, while Lawrence said she learned she will stay in her job without discipline. Peterson’s attorney, Patrick White, said the report contains unspecified “inaccuracies” that reflect poorly on his client and led to his termination.

Lawrence said nobody reported Jamison because his relationship with the governor made him seem untouchable politically and able to “get things done.”

“His behavior was so persistent and so pervasive,” she said. “There was a culture of accepting it.”

Jamison didn’t return messages seeking comment. He has generally denied harassment allegations.
Reynolds, who is seeking a four-year term in November against Democrat Fred Hubbell, has said the report backs her decision in March to fire Jamison once she received complaints. Democrats have accused her of empowering Jamison through their longtime friendship and failing to uncover his misconduct earlier.

Reynolds ordered the investigation amid questions about her handling of the case. She said Friday the investigation uncovered ambiguity in the procedures for reporting misconduct by agency directors, and that will be clarified.

Lawrence, 34, said she chose not to speak with investigator Mark Weinhardt because she wasn’t ready to describe her treatment by Jamison. She said she was stunned when her decision was portrayed as a lack of cooperation and evidence she was covering up wrongdoing.

“They’ve painted me as this monster,” she said. “I don’t have anything to hide. I am not protecting Dave Jamison.”

Through tears, the mother of two added: “I thought by not providing my personal experience, I could protect my family, my co-workers and my staff and not pile on IFA.”

Weinhardt said he told Lawrence when they met for a voluntary interview that she could share details of any harassment confidentially, but that he also wanted to ask her about Jamison’s behavior toward the two complainants. Weinhardt said Thursday that Lawrence declined to speak about any topic, saying she “anticipated litigation.”

Lawrence said she would consider legal action only if she were terminated, but she’s trying to avoid that. She said state officials assured her she will keep her job running Iowa Title Guaranty, which sells title insurance to property owners and lenders. The job paid $122,000 last year and she oversees 20 employees.

Lawrence said she attended meetings with state officials Wednesday and Friday where she answered questions and expressed frustration with the report. She said they are considering her request to reopen the investigation and revise the report, which she said “was defamatory toward me.”

Lawrence said she was “ashamed and embarrassed” that she drank too much on the night of the 2016 groping incident, but that she was harassed that evening as well. The report quotes a witness saying Lawrence could barely walk after she, Jamison and others were taking shots of liquor, and that Jamison had to walk Lawrence back to her hotel room.

Lawrence was hired by the program in 2012 and promoted by Jamison to interim director in 2015, then permanent director. Jamison’s behavior got progressively worse, she said.

Jamison, 60, showed her photos of topless women on his cellphone on multiple occasions while they were riding in a car, and she recalled trying to brush him off and change the subject. She said the most uncomfortable experiences came when he asked about her sexual preferences and history and commented on her body.

Employees told Weinhardt that Jamison made joking remarks about Lawrence’s sex life after she returned from her honeymoon.

Iowa fires lobbyist seen as ‘sidekick’ of disgraced director

News

September 29th, 2018 by admin

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — The Iowa Finance Authority has fired its lobbyist after an investigation alleged he failed to report sexual misconduct by its former director.

A lawyer representing Wes Peterson confirmed his client was terminated Thursday. Peterson had served as the authority’s director of government relations since 2011.

Attorney Patrick White says Peterson has been treated unfairly “and it was wrong for him to be terminated.”

The move came one week after the release of an investigation into misconduct by former authority director Dave Jamison.

The report portrayed Peterson as a “sidekick” who often joined Jamison at Des Moines bars. The report said Peterson witnessed Jamison grabbing a co-worker’s breasts at a bar in 2016 but didn’t report it. The report said Peterson yelled at the woman demanding to know whether she’d filed a complaint with Gov. Kim Reynolds after Jamison was fired in March.

White said that there were “inaccuracies” in the report, but declined to elaborate.