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Final plea reached in poaching case involving 10 from Iowa and Nebraska

Ag/Outdoor, News

October 12th, 2016 by Ric Hanson

A Fort Dodge man who is the last of 10 people from Iowa and Nebraska charged in a nine-month poaching investigation by the Iowa Department of Natural Resources has pleaded guilty. Twenty-three-year-old Kyle Alstott of Fort Dodge pleaded guilty to numerous charges. Iowa conservation officer Matt Bruner says the investigation started when he noticed online videos from Fort Dodge-based hunting and filming company A-T-M Outdoors. Bruner recognized Alstott from a previous encounter.

“He’d been charged in the past with a deer-hunting violation and it peaked my interest and we dug into it a little bit deeper,” Bruner says. Alstott co-owns the company with 22-year-old Roman Thompson of Omaha, Nebraska and they had several photos and videos of deer, deer hunts, fishing and other outdoor activities on their website. “We started comparing pictures and stories and hunts with licenses that were issued with the Iowa and some of the surrounding states to match up whether…these hunts had been done legally,” Bruner explains. “We discovered that there were some discrepancies and the fueled our investigation…to get several search warrants for that information.” The search warrants led to the eventual charges.

He says the search open up a treasure trove of other information on illegal hunting activities. Bruner says the investigation led to the 10 people being charged with numerous violations. “Hunting deer, hunting turkeys without valid licenses…or using licenses issued to other hunters who were not there. We had issues of the illegal use of bait to attract the animals in illegally, also using a spotlighting to lure them in at night, using illegal weapons and those types of violations,” Bruner says. He says it appeared they wanted to show the hunts online and sell videos of them.

He says the end goal would have been to sell the videos of the hunt, but they never got that far as things stopped with the investigation. Officers collected phones, computers, video equipment, deer and turkey mounts, meat and equipment used to harvest the game animals when they executed the search warrants. The 10 individuals were charged in December 2015 and plea deals began in January.

Kyle Alstott pleaded guilty to unlawful possession of illegally killed whitetail buck deer, hunting deer with aid of bait, hunting with the aid of artificial light, unlawful use of two-way radio transmitter while hunting, making false claim for hunting license/tag by non-resident, failure to tag harvested deer, failure to report harvested deer, hunting deer without a valid deer tag, taking whitetail buck without a valid tag, unlawful possession of illegally killed whitetail buck deer in 2014 season and unlawful possession of illegally killed wild turkey in 2014 season. He was fined 19-hundred dollars and assessed four-thousand dollars ($4,000) in liquidated damages and restitution.

Roman Thompson pleaded guilty to hunting without a nonresident hunting license and habitat fee, hunting without a nonresident antlered deer tag, unlawful use of another’s deer tag, unlawful use of two-way radio transmitter while hunting, and unlawful possession of illegally killed whitetail buck deer in 2014 season. Thompson was fined 17-hundred-60 dollars and assessed two-thousand dollars ($2,000) in liquidated damages plus 80 hours of community service.

Forty-four-year-old Michael Alstott of Fort Dodge pleaded guilty to making a false report, hunting deer without a valid license or tag, unlawful use of two-way radio transmitter while hunting, unlawful tagging of illegally killed buck deer, unlawful transportation of deer without tag, taking doe deer without valid license or tag, and unlawful use of out of county deer tag. Michael Alstott was fined 15-hundred-57 dollars.

Fifty-three-year-old Randy Vaught of Algona, pleaded guilty to hunting with aid of artificial light, shooting/discharging rifle over highway, and failure to report harvested deer. Vaught was fined 369 dollars and assessed two-thousand dollars ($2,000) in liquidated damages plus 80 hours of community service.

Twenty-year-old Tanner Dawson of Fort Dodge, pleaded guilty to unlawful taking and possession of whitetail doe deer and failure to report harvested deer. Dawson was fined 282 dollars and assessed 15-hundred dollars in liquidated damages. Twenty-two-year-old Mariah Thompson of Omaha, Nebraska pleaded guilty to hunting deer without a valid non-resident license or tag. Mariah Thompson was fined 667 dollars. Forty-four-year-old Matthew Alstott of Fort Dodge, pleaded guilty to aiding and abetting a non-resident taking deer unlawfully and unlawful use of deer tag by another and was fined 390 dollars. Forty-five-year-old Travis Miller of Monroe pleaded guilty to hunting with the aid of artificial light and unlawful transportation of illegally taken deer and was fined 390 dollars. Thirty-one-year-old Brendon Nicholas of Fort Dodge, pleaded guilty to unlawful tagging of whitetail buck deer and failure to report harvested deer and was fined 282 dollars. Thirty-six-year-old Mike Kenyon of Clare, pleaded guilty to failure to report harvested deer and was fined 87 dollars.

Kyle Alstott, Roman Thompson, Michael Alstott, Randy Vaught and Tanner Dawson all face license suspension in Iowa and 44 other states that are part of the wildlife violator compact. Roman and Mariah Thompson are also facing charges in Nebraska.

The Iowa D-N-R worked in conjunction with the Webster County Attorney’s Office, Boone County Attorney’s Office, Nebraska Game and Parks, Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism, South Dakota Game, Fish and Parks, Missouri Department of Conservation, Minnesota Department of Natural Resources, and the U-S Fish and Wildlife Service.

(Radio Iowa)

FREEZE Warning expanded to west central/central Iowa

Weather

October 12th, 2016 by Ric Hanson

FREEZE WARNING IN EFFECT FROM 1 AM TO 9 AM CDT THURSDAY

THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE IN DES MOINES EXPANDED A FREEZE
WARNING FOR THE KJAN LISTENING AREA. THE WARNING IS IN EFFECT FROM 1 AM TO 9 AM CDT THURSDAY FOR SAC-CRAWFORD-CARROLL-AUDUBON-GUTHRIE-DALLAS-CASS-ADAIR-MADISON-ADAMS-UNION-TAYLOR-RINGGOLD COUNTIES, AND FROM 1-AM UNTIL 10-AM THURSDAY FOR MONONA-HARRISON-SHELBY-POTTAWATTAMIE-MILLS-MONTGOMERY-FREMONT- PAGE COUNTIES.

* TEMPERATURE…26 TO 32.

Freeze Warning for Counties in purple, Frost Advisory for those in light blue.

Freeze Warning for Counties in purple, Frost Advisory for those in light blue.

A FEW URBAN AREAS INCLUDING THE DES MOINES METRO MAY REMAIN ABOVE 32 HOWEVER FROST WILL OCCUR.

* IMPACTS…IN ADDITION TO THE FREEZING TEMPERATURES WIDESPREAD
FROST WILL OCCUR. SENSITIVE VEGETATION WILL NOT SURVIVE IF LEFT
UNPROTECTED.

PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS…

A FREEZE WARNING MEANS SUB-FREEZING TEMPERATURES ARE IMMINENT OR HIGHLY LIKELY. THESE CONDITIONS WILL KILL CROPS AND OTHER SENSITIVE VEGETATION.

SALLY JO COULTHARD, 73, of Tucson, AZ & formerly of Audubon (Svcs. 10/15/16)

Obituaries

October 12th, 2016 by Ric Hanson

SALLY JO COULTHARD, 73, of Tucson, AZ (& formerly of Audubon), died Sept. 3rd, in Tucson. Celebration of Life Memorial services for SALLY JO COULTHARD will be held 10:30-a.m. Sat., Oct. 15th, at Our Saviour’s Lutheran Church, in Audubon. Kessler Funeral Home in Audubon has the arrangements.

SALLY JO COULTHARD is survived by:

Her husband – Dr. Stanley Coulthard, of Tucson, AZ.

Her sons – Jason (Ann) Coulthard, and Jordan Coulthard.

Her brother – Curtis Frederiksen, of Audubon.

Her sister – Ardys Albertsen, of Carroll.

Her sister-in-law: Gwendolyn Frederiksen, of Atlantic

3 grandchildren, other relatives, and friends.

Tuesday’s Area Volleyball Scores 10/12/2016

Sports

October 12th, 2016 by Ric Hanson

Hawkeye Ten Conference

(3-0) Red Oak 25-25-25, Atlantic 11-9-19
(3-0) Red Oak 25-25-25, Shenandoah 9-17-10
(3-2) Shenandoah 15 Atlantic 7
(3-0) Harlan 25-25-25, Creston 14-16-12
(3-0) Kuemper Catholic, Carroll 25-25-25, Clarinda 11-22-12
(3-0) Lewis Central 25-25-25, Glenwood 11-10-13
(3-0) St. Albert, Council Bluffs 25-25-25, Denison-Schleswig 12-11-17

Western Iowa Conference Tournament-Semifinals

(3-2) Treynor 25-25-23-18-15, IKM-Manning 9-20-25-25-9
(3-0) Tri-Center, Neola 25-25-25, Audubon 14-23-15

Pride of Iowa Conference Tournament

Semifinals
(2-1) Southwest Valley 25-15-15, Central Decatur 20-25-4
(2-0) Mount Ayr 25-25, Interstate 35, Truro 20-13
Consolation
(2-0) Central Decatur def I-35
Championship
(3-0) Mount Ayr 25-25-25, Southwest Valley 12-11-20

Rolling Valley Conference

(3-2) Charter Oak-Ute 20-26-25-17-15, Woodbine 25-24-13-25-11
(3-0) Coon Rapids-Bayard 25-25-25, Paton-Churdan 13-18-19
(3-0) Exira-EHK 25-25-25, Boyer Valley 11-17-15

Other Scores

(3-1) ACGC 25-25-21-28, Madrid 13-14-25-26
(3-1) Essex 21-25-25-25, Fremont-Mills 25-21-22-18
(3-0) Sidney 25-25-25, Heartland Christian 5-6-7
(3-0) Stanton 25-25-25, Clarinda Academy 5-8-5


Arrest Warrant Issued in Connection with Iowa State Fair Stabbing

News

October 12th, 2016 by Ric Hanson

Officials with the Iowa Department of Public Safety said Tuesday, an arrest warrant has been issued in connection with a stabbing incident that took place this summer, during the Iowa State Fair, in Des Moines. Authorities say on August 21st, the last night of the Iowa State Fair, the Iowa State Patrol responded to a call of a stabbing that happened at the Iowa State Fairgrounds.  The stabbing occurred at approximately 10:22 pm near the southwest corner of the Midway.  Upon arriving at the scene, Iowa State Patrol Troopers found a victim that had been stabbed two times.  The victim was later identified as Darquan Jones.  Jones was transported to Mercy Medical Center for his injuries and has since been released.

The Iowa State Patrol then requested the assistance of the Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation to investigate the stabbing of Jones.  Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation Agents, the Iowa State Patrol, the Des Moines Police Department and the Des Moines Police Department Crime Scene Unit responded to the Iowa State Fairgrounds Midway to assist with the investigation.

Throughout the investigation, several interviews were conducted and a suspect was developed in the stabbing.

Stabbing suspect, Craig "C-Note" Hunt

Stabbing suspect, Craig “C-Note” Hunt

craighunt3 The suspect, Craig Hunt, also known as C-Note, was identified as being the person responsible for stabbing Jones.  Hunt is described as a 21 year old African American male, 5 foot 7 inches tall and weighs approximately 150 pounds.  After consultation with the Polk County Attorney’s office, an arrest warrant was issued for Craig Hunt for Attempted Murder.

Hunt is also currently under investigation for several shootings throughout the Des Moines area and should be considered armed and dangerous. If you see Hunt, do not approach him and immediately call 911.  If anyone knows the whereabouts of Craig Hunt please contact the Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation at 515-725-6010 or callers can remain anonymous by calling Polk County Crime Stoppers at 515-223-1400.

Big Ten coaches comment on early signing proposal

Sports

October 12th, 2016 by Ric Hanson

UNDATED (AP) — Big Ten coaches appear to be largely in favor of last week’s proposals by the Division I council that would create early signing periods in June and December, instead of in February. Iowa coach Kirk Ferentz says that to him, “it makes perfect sense.”

At least two coaches, Maryland’s DJ Durkin and Ash, though, don’t want an early signing period earlier than December. Ash says he doesn’t think it’s a “good path.”

 

Resilient Hawkeyes remain in Big Ten contention

Sports

October 12th, 2016 by Ric Hanson

IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — Iowa hasn’t looked like a Big Ten title contender in weeks. Yet with the season halfway over, that’s exactly what the Hawkeyes are. Iowa (4-2, 2-1 Big Ten) slogged its way through the first half of 2016, racking up ugly victories with a pair of defeats that were even uglier. But the Hawkeyes have already won twice on the road in league play, and West division favorites Wisconsin and Nebraska still have to play in Iowa City.

Iowa will look to extend the nation’s third-longest road winning streak to nine games with a visit to Purdue (3-2, 1-1) this weekend.

Iowa early News Headlines: Wed., Oct. 12th 2016

News

October 12th, 2016 by Ric Hanson

Here is the latest Iowa news from The Associated Press at 3:40 a.m. CDT

WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. (AP) — Purdue University this week is launching an effort to reduce food waste with a focus on developing countries. The school says it will formally start the Purdue Postharvest Initiative with an exhibit at the World Food Prize meeting that starts Wednesday and runs through Friday in Des Moines, Iowa. Purdue says it will work on reducing postharvest loss, improving nutrition and helping food entrepreneurs among other efforts.

STORM LAKE, Iowa (AP) — A federal judge has rejected Tyson Foods’ request for a new trial in a case that awarded $5.8 million to thousands of employees at the company’s pork plant in Storm Lake, Iowa. Storm Lake employees sued Tyson in 2007 to collect pay for the time they spent putting on and taking off protective work clothes. Tyson lawyers said a new trial was needed to ensure those included in the suit are entitled to a share of the award. A judge ruled Thursday that suitable safeguards are in place.

DUBUQUE, Iowa (AP) — A judge will decide the fate of a man charged with fatally stabbing his girlfriend in Dubuque. The Telegraph Herald reports that 27-year-old Eddie Hicks waived his right to a jury trial during a hearing Tuesday at the Dubuque County courthouse in Dubuque. Hicks has pleaded not guilty to a charge of first-degree murder in the June 2015 stabbing death of 21-year-old Kahdyesha Lemon.

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Iowa farmers are a little behind getting corn and soybeans out of fields because rain has caused soft ground and in some cases muddy conditions, slowing their progress. The U.S. Department of Agriculture says in its weekly crop update released Tuesday that 19 percent of the state’s corn is harvested, about three days behind last year and a week behind the five-year average.

Freeze Warning for western/southwest IA Thursday morning

Weather

October 12th, 2016 by Ric Hanson

MONONA-HARRISON-SHELBY-POTTAWATTAMIE-MILLS-MONTGOMERY-FREMONT- PAGE COUNTIES; 334 AM CDT WED OCT 12 2016

A FREEZE WARNING REMAINS IN EFFECT FROM 1 AM TO 10 AM CDT THURSDAY

Freeze Warning for Counties in purple, Thursday

Freeze Warning for Counties in purple, Thursday

* TEMPERATURE…WIDESPREAD TEMPERATURES OF 32 DEGREES OR COLDER ARE LIKELY ACROSS THE AREA. THE COLDEST TEMPERATURES ARE EXPECTED TO OCCUR IN NORTHEAST NEBRASKA AND NORTHWEST IOWA… WHERE TEMPERATURES MAY FALL INTO THE MID TO UPPER 20S. TEMPERATURES MAY FALL BELOW FREEZING FOR SEVERAL HOURS.

* IMPACTS…THIS WOULD BE THE FIRST FREEZE OF AUTUMN IN MANY LOCATIONS…AND WOULD MARK THE END OF THE GROWING SEASON FOR CROPS AND SENSITIVE VEGETATION. .

PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS… A FREEZE WARNING MEANS SUB-FREEZING TEMPERATURES ARE IMMINENT OR HIGHLY LIKELY. THESE CONDITIONS WILL KILL CROPS AND OTHER SENSITIVE VEGETATION.

Judge denies Tyson’s request for new trial in pay dispute

Ag/Outdoor, News

October 11th, 2016 by Ric Hanson

STORM LAKE, Iowa (AP) — A federal judge has rejected Tyson Foods’ request for a new trial in a case that awarded $5.8 million to thousands of employees at the company’s pork plant in Storm Lake, Iowa. The Sioux City Journal reports that Tyson lawyers filed a brief in June saying a new trial was necessary to address liability and damages issues and ensure workers included in the suit are entitled to a share of the award.

Storm Lake employees sued Tyson in 2007 to collect pay for the time they spent putting on and taking off protective work clothes and equipment before and after their shifts. U.S. District Judge John Jarvey said in his ruling Thursday that the payment method ensures workers not entitled to damages won’t receive a portion of the award.

The Supreme Court upheld the award in March. Tyson spokeswoman Caroline Ahn declined to comment.