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Omaha man sentenced in Fentanyl trafficking case

News

March 2nd, 2018 by Ric Hanson

The U-S Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Iowa reports that on February 27, 2018, 35-year old Walter J. O’Donohue, III, of Omaha,  Neb., was sentenced to 15 years in prison, fined $50,000, and ordered to serve five-years of supervised release following his prison term, for Conspiracy to Distribute a Fentanyl Analogue that caused death or serious bodily injury.  United States District Court Senior Judge James Gritzner handed down the sentence.

O’Donohue was part of a drug trafficking organization responsible for receiving and  distributing fentanyl analogues obtained from a source in China to individuals in Western Iowa and Eastern Nebraska. The investigation began on June 28, 2015, when law enforcement  officers were called to a Carter Lake, Iowa, residence regarding an unresponsive male. Law enforcement found the body of a 20-year old deceased male at the home. Law enforcement also discovered a second male had been transported to a local hospital, and placed on life support, from the same location prior to law enforcement’s arrival.

A subsequent investigation revealed co-defendant Charles Beuterbaugh provided acetyl fentanyl to both victims, which was determined to be the cause of death and the reason for the hospitalization. Beuterbaugh had obtained the acetyl fentanyl through an organization that began distributing fentanyl, or an analogue of fentanyl, in November of 2014 and continued to distribute into April of 2016. Further investigation into the overdose death revealed O’Donohue was responsible for the importation of the acetyl fentanyl ultimately distributed by co-defendant Beuterbaugh.

All members involved in the distribution of the acetyl fentanyl have entered guilty pleas. On October 26, 2017, Senior Judge Gritzner sentenced O’Donohue’s co-defendants, 27-year old Dustin C. Sullivan, of Council Bluffs, to 162 months and 31-year old Cody Lanus, of Omaha, Neb., to a term of imprisonment of 144 months. Michael David Redmond, Jr., who joined the conspiracy in December of 2015, was previously sentenced by Senior Judge Gritzner to 120 months in prison. Amalia N. Pandis is pending sentencing at a future date.

The investigation was conducted by the Carter Lake Police Department, Pottawattamie County Sheriff’s Office, Council Bluffs Police Department, Southwest Iowa Narcotics Task Force, Omaha Police Department, Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation, Iowa Division of Narcotic Enforcement, United States Postal Inspection Service and United States Drug Enforcement Administration-Nebraska. The case was prosecuted by the United States Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Iowa.

Treynor falls short in Semifinals to Grundy Center

Sports

March 2nd, 2018 by admin

(From Iowa Girls High School Athletic Union)

No seniors in the starting lineup? No problem. At least it’s not for Grundy Center.

The eighth-ranked Spartans bottled up No. 2 Treynor with sticky defense and Hailey Wallis made some key plays down the stretch in a 42-39 victory that sends Grundy Center to the Class 2A championship game.

With an all-junior starting lineup, Grundy Center will try to win its second title at 5 p.m. Saturday. The Spartans won their first championship in 2005, taking the 2A crown in the last year the tournament was played at Veterans Memorial Auditorium.

Wallis led Grundy Center with 18 points, including the go-ahead basket with 37 seconds left. She also grabbed six rebounds and her lone assist was a big one.

Sarah Lindeman added seven points for the Spartans, Kylie Willis scored six and Brooke Flater pulled down nine rebounds to go with five points.

Grundy Center kept Treynor from getting the ball inside to Madelyn Deitchler and the Cardinals didn’t make enough perimeter shots to force the Spartans to change their defense. Deitchler managed only three points on 1-for-5 shooting and fouled out. She had been averaging 18 a game.

Konnor Sudmann led Treynor with 16 points and Kayla Chapman scored 14.

Treynor trailed by as many as nine points before Chapman scored seven points in an 11-0 third quarter run that got the Cardinals back in it and the game stayed close the rest of the way.

Treynor was leading 33-32 when Wallis got the ball in the lane and passed it out to Lindeman at the top of the key. Lindeman drilled a 3-pointer and Wallis followed with two free throws after being fouled on a drive, putting Grundy up 37-33.

The Cardinals weren’t finished, though and tied it at 39 on Sudmann’s long 3 with 50 seconds left. Wallis quickly broke the tie with a runner in the lane and Flater sank a free throw for the final point after rebounding a Treynor miss. Sudmann’s contested 3 fell short just before the buzzer.

Grundy Center, which has lost only to state tournament qualifier AGWSR, takes a 24-1 record to the finals. Treynor, last year’s state runner-up, finishes 23-2.

Girls State Basketball Scoreboard Friday 03/02/2018

Sports

March 2nd, 2018 by admin

Class 2A Semifinals

Grundy Center 42, Treynor 39
Cascade 62, North Union 53 3OT

Class 1A Semifinals

Springville 57, Exira-EHK 41
Newell-Fonda 61, Central Decatur 49

Class 5A Championship

Iowa City West 56, Iowa City High 45

Class 4A Championship

Marion 69, Grinnell 48

IA DCI updated Cresco shooting incident

News

March 2nd, 2018 by Ric Hanson

The Iowa Division of Investigation today (Friday) identified the subjects involved in Thursday’s shooting incident in Cresco.  Officers had responded to a 911 call at around 1:30-a.m. to a reported shooting at 700 South Elm Street #32 in Cresco.  Upon arrival, officers were confronted by 24-year old Brian Fullhart, at the residence who was uncooperative with officers and threatening to shoot officers. Local schools were asked to delay classes for two-hours, as a precaution. Fullhart was taken into cutody at 6:45 am., after a SWAT Team successfully negotiated his surrender.  Officers then entered the residence and located the body of a deceased female.  That female was later identified as Fullhart’s wife, 34-year old Zoanne Fullhart, of Decorah.

Brian Fullhart was arrested and charged with Murder in the First Degree and Going Armed with Intent.  He is currently in custody at the Winneshiek County Sheriff’s Department, in Decorah.

Iowa dad gets 10 years for fatal beating of 38-year-old son

News

March 2nd, 2018 by Ric Hanson

CLINTON, Iowa (AP) — An eastern Iowa man has been given 10 years in prison for fatally beating his 38-year-old son. The Clinton Herald reports that Glenn Plummer III, of Camanche, was sentenced Thursday. He’d pleaded guilty to voluntary manslaughter after prosecutors lowered the charge from second-degree murder and dropped a domestic abuse count.

Court records say a police officer found Plummer and his son, 38-year-old Joseph Plummer, the night of May 30 at a Camanche apartment. Joseph Plummer told investigators that his father had beaten him.
Police say Joseph Plummer died June 1 at a hospital. An autopsy was performed, and Joseph Plummer’s death was ruled a homicide.

Volunteer precipitation observers needed for collaborative rain/hail/snow network

Weather

March 2nd, 2018 by Ric Hanson

The Iowa Department of Agriculture and Land Stewardship’s State Climatology Office and the National Weather Service are recruiting volunteer precipitation observers across Iowa to participate in the Community Collaborative Rain, Hail and Snow network, known as “CoCoRaHS” (pronounced “KO-ko-rozz”). All that is needed to participate is an interest in the weather, a four inch diameter rain gage, a suitable location to set up the gauge and access to the internet.  All data collected are immediately available for free online and are routinely used for flood forecasting, drought assessment, news media stories, scientific research and general weather interest. Weather observers are needed everywhere but the most critical needs (locally) are in Shelby, Adair, and Adams counties.

Much more information about the network is available on the CoCoRaHS web site at www.cocorahs.org. The website includes information on how to join, where to obtain your rain gauge and how to accurately measure and report rain and snow.  There is no cost involved in joining or participating in the CoCoRaHS network other than the need for the four inch diameter rain gauge. State Climatologist Harry Hillaker says “In 2017 Iowa recorded its driest year since the drought of 2012.   Severe drought gripped much of south central and southeast Iowa for the second consecutive year where rainfall has been as much as 25 inches less than normal over the past 24 months. Meanwhile, above normal rain amounts were restricted to relatively small areas of northeast and west central Iowa.  The past few weeks have seen frequent precipitation with snowfall exceeding two feet at Fort Dodge during February. Whatever comes our way in 2018, the weather observations obtained by this network can be of great benefit in obtaining a clearer picture of Iowa’s weather.”

The CoCoRaHS network was established by the Colorado Climate Center in 1998 and has now spread to all fifty states and Canada.  Iowa joined the volunteer network in 2007 and now has over 300 registered CoCoRaHS observers across the state.  However, more observers are needed to better document the amount and variability of rain and snow across Iowa.

Backyard & Beyond 3-2-2018

Backyard and Beyond, Podcasts

March 2nd, 2018 by Jim Field

LaVon Eblen visits with Janine Knop (Miss NiNi) about the Atlantic Garden Seminar.

Play

Union County Sheriff’s report (3/2)

News

March 2nd, 2018 by Ric Hanson

The Union County Sheriff’s Office reports 44-year old Patrick Albert Baker, of Lorimor, was arrested Thursday night at the Union County Law Enforcement Center. Baker was arrested on a Union County warrant for failure to appear. He was being held in the Union County Jail on a $5,000 bond.

Could higher court fees compensate for expected budget cuts?

News

March 2nd, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Legislators on the committee that drafts the budget for the state court system are asking if there’s a way to collect more court fees — to make up for expected budget cuts ahead. State Court Administrator Todd Nuccio says most people involved in criminal cases can’t afford the current fees.”You also have an access to justice issue on the civil side” he said. “There’s a tipping point where you are not making the bar too high for the public to gain access to the court.”

Nuccio is the top administrator in the state court system. He’s warning lawmakers of court delays and possible closures if they cut more from the court system’s current budget than the one-point-six million that’s been propoed. “We would not be closing courthouses or closing clerks of courts offices, to be more specific, with the $1.6 (million cut),” Nuccio says. “You go beyond that $1.6 (million), we start to have to look more seriously.”

At one point this year, Senate Republicans voted for a nearly five million dollar cut to the courts. Nuccio says he’s holding 134 jobs open in the court system, in anticipation of the current round of cuts to the current year’s budget.

(Radio Iowa)

Even the Tooth Fairy is feeling the economic bite

News

March 2nd, 2018 by Ric Hanson

A whimsical survey about how much money the Tooth Fairy leaves under pillows actually has a good track record with mirroring the real-world stock market’s S-and-P 500 index. Dr. Jeff Chaffin, a dentist and the dental director of Delta Dental of Iowa, says the latest survey finds the Tooth Fairy has tightened her money bag after an all-time high payout in 2016. “In the Midwest we’re seeing a little over $4, or $4.37 left per tooth by the Tooth Fairy,” Chaffin says. “It’s dropped a little bit and we’re a little lower than other areas. The western section of the U.S. tends to be the highest.”

That four-37 figure is the average payout for the all-important first tooth while remaining teeth drop to an average of three-44 per tooth, or about 20 percent below the national average. Over time, the Tooth Fairy Index shows that the value of a lost tooth is closely related to the nation’s economy.  “Traditionally, the reimbursement, if we call it reimbursement by the Tooth Fairy, has fallen in line with the S&P,” Chaffin says. “During good economic times, it seems like the Tooth Fairy leaves more money. This year it didn’t exactly track with that, but that’s been the trend over time.”

For 12 of the past 14 years, the trend in average Tooth Fairy giving has tracked with the movement of the S&P 500. While the money’s nice when you’re a kid, Chaffin reminds what’s more important is the condition of the teeth. “We hope those teeth are nice, healthy teeth when they fall out and we hope the teeth actually fall out as opposed to having had dental disease and having to be extracted,” Chaffin says. “These teeth naturally falling out are part of the natural process and we like to reward those good, healthy behaviors.”

There’s a clear tie, he says, between oral health and overall health. Chaffin says teaching good daily dental habits early could save the child from many dental and health issues later in life.

(Radio Iowa)