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Keep up-to-date with Fox News Radio, Radio Iowa, Brownfield & the Iowa Agribusiness Networks!
(Sidney, Iowa) – Fremont County Sheriff Kevin Aistrope reports the arrest on Friday, of a man wanted on a warrant. 37-year-old Nathaniel Fengel, of Riverton, Iowa, was taken into custody on an active Fremont County warrant. Fengel faces seven counts of Harassment in the 1st Degree, each of which is an Aggravated Misdemeanor. He was released after posting a $10,000 cash bond.
His arrest followed a report on Sept. 29, 2022, of suspected harassment. A search warrant was conducted in early October and as a result of the investigation. Authorities allege Fengel disseminated photographs or film of another person in a state of nudity without their consent.
Separately, on Monday, Dec. 5, 2022, the Fremont County Sheriff’s Office received a report of a stolen 2021 Dodge Ram Rebel that was taken from inside a farm building near Bartlett, Iowa. The vehicle was valued at over $58,000. The following day, Dec. 6th, the vehicle was located near Modale, Iowa, after being involved in a motor vehicle accident. Authorities advised the driver fled the scene prior to law enforcement arrival. The vehicle was a total loss.
On Thursday, Dec. 8th, Officers with the Omaha Police Department arrested 45-year-old Sherry Young, of Shenandoah, Iowa, on an active Fremont County warrant on this case. Today (Saturday), Young was transported to the Fremont County Jail. She is charged with Burglary 2nd Degree and Theft 1st Degree, with additional charges pending. Young is being held on a $20,000 cash bond.
Disclaimer: A criminal charge is merely an accusation, and the defendant is presumed innocent until and unless proven guilty.
(Clarinda, Iowa) – The Page County Sheriff’s Office, Saturday (Dec. 10) issued a report on arrests conducted from November 26, 2022 through December 9, 2022. Those arrested are as follows:
“A charge is merely an accusation and that the defendant is presumed innocent until and unless proven guilty.”
There was also one accident noted in the Sheriff’s report:
12/02/2022 – Todd William Bashaw was traveling east on 190th Street in his John Deere combine. Ryan James Leporte was traveling west on 190th street. Bashaw and Leporte collided causing damage to Leporte’s vehicle.
(Atlantic, Iowa) – The City of Atlantic’s Planning and Zoning Commission will meet 5:30-p.m. Tuesday, Dec. 13, in the Council’s Chambers at City Hall. During their session, the Commission will note the resignation and service of Chair Roger Herring, and welcome to the Commission, Kyle Steffens.
Nominations will then take place for the Chair’s position, followed by the appointment of a new P&Z Chairperson, nominations for Vice-Chair, and an Order to appoint a new P&Z Commission Vice-Chair. In other business, the Commission will review and act on a recommendation with regard to the Prairie Hills Development Final Plat. The site is located on the City’s southeast side. During their meeting last month, the Atlantic Planning and Zoning Commission approved and recommended to the City Council, adoption of the Prairie Hills Subdivision Preliminary Plat.
Earlier this year, the Atlantic City Council approved the purchase of 41.54 acres of farmland for $830,000 from Jim Comes. The property became known as the Prairie Hill housing development project. The City is financing the project through a general obligation debt. The revenue sources toward the debt payments would be lot sales and farmland leases as the city sells lots for the construction of new homes and leases on the unused portions of the subdivision for farm use.
DES MOINES – Iowa Secretary of State Paul Pate hosted a ceremony with members of the Legislature and the Iowa Firearms Coalition to commemorate the ratification of the 49th Amendment to the Constitution of the State of Iowa on Friday. The event was held in the Secretary of State’s Office in the Iowa Capitol building.
The ‘Right to Keep and Bear Arms’ Amendment to the Constitution of the State of Iowa was proposed by the 88th General Assembly in 2019 and was readopted by the 89th General Assembly in 2021. On November 8, 2022, the citizens of the State of Iowa voted 748,363 to 399,959 in favor of the amendment’s adoption.
The election was certified by the State Board of Canvassers on December 1, 2022. This marks the 49th amendment to the Iowa’s 1857 constitution. Complimentary copies of the Iowa Constitution were handed out to those in attendance.
(A digital copy of the updated 1857 Iowa Constitution can be found at this link)
(Radio Iowa) – A Spirit Lake been found guilty of first-degree murder in the shooting death of a woman. The trial for Christian Goyne-Yarns, the man accused of shooting Shelby Woizeschke outside GrapeTree Medical Staffing in February, began on Tuesday with the prosecution spending parts of three days providing witness testimony and evidence that included the 911 call made by the victim just minutes after being shot where she identified the defendant as the shooter.
The defense claimed Goyne-Yarns was not feeling well on the morning in question and was in the restroom at his workplace in Spirit Lake at the time of the incident, but co-workers testified he was not able to be located and his pick-up was missing, which was seen on surveillance video parking at the scene and waiting for the victim to arrive.
The case was moved to Buena Vista County after a change of venue was granted by the defense. Sentencing will take place in January.
(Radio Iowa) – Three of the four Iowans serving in the U.S. House have voted for the bill that ensures same-sex marriages are recognized in all 50 states. Democratic Congresswoman Cindy Axne of West Des Moines says the Respect for Marriage Act “sends a clear signal that hate and bigotry don’t have a place in America.” Congresswoman Ashley Hinson, a Republican from Marion, says the bill preserves current law.
“It’s the full faith and credit clause of the U.S. Constitution where you look at birth certificates, death certificates (and) I believe concealed carry permits apply to this same standards,” Hinson says, “so I think that same standard should apply to marriage certificates in all states and that’s why I supported it.”
Hinson, though, says congress should be focusing on other more pressing issues. “I think my constituents are very concerned about other things,” Hinson says. “…We need to be focusing on fixing inflation. We need to be focusing on energy independence, securing our border.”
Hinson made her comments during taping of Iowa Press which airs tonight on Iowa PBS. Republican Congresswoman Mariannette Miller-Meeks of LeClaire also voted for the bill, which guarantees recognition of same-sex and interracial marriages. Republican Congressman Randy Feenstra of Hull was the only Iowa representative in the House to vote against it.
President Biden is expected to sign the bill into law soon.
(Neola, Iowa) – A truck driver from Florida died, and his passenger was injured, Friday, during a semi tractor-trailer rollover crash in Pottawattamie County. The Iowa State Patrol says the accident happened at around 9:36-a.m. on Interstate 80 westbound, near mile marker 28.
Authorities report a 2022 Freightliner semi driven by 42-year-old Alain Hernandez Rodriguez, of West Palm Beach, Florida, went out of control and entered the median, where it struck a light pole and rolled onto its side. Rodriguez died at the scene. He was not wearing a seat belt.
His passenger, 23-year-old Jose Armando Valdez, of Miami, FL, who was also not wearing a seat belt, was injured and transported by ambulance to Mercy Hospital.
(Radio Iowa) – Key backers of the gun rights amendment Iowa voters have just added to Iowa’s Constitution say they’ll introduce a series of gun-related proposals in the 2023 Iowa Legislature. House Republican Leader Matt Windschitl of Missouri Valley has been involved in gun-related issues since he was elected to the House in 2006.
“There are multiple different things we’ve been trying to get done to restore freedoms in Iowa and we’ve not been able to get across the finish line on some of those things,” Windschitl said this afternoon. “I’m not at a point right now where I’m going to discuss publicly what all of those items are, but you can expect us, after this victory, and restore freedoms to Iowans that never should have been taken away.”
Windschitl and others gathered in the statehouse this afternoon for a ceremony to mark passage of the amendment. “Iowans now have the best protections for their fundamental right to keep and bear arms of any state in the nation,” Windschitl said.
The amendment got a majority of votes in 97 of Iowa’s 99 counties. “Iowans have made their voice loud and clear,” Windschitl said. “Our liberties we prize and our rights we will maintain.”
That last sentence is the state motto, adopted in 1847, the year after Iowa was recognized as a state. Secretary of State Paul Pate said the gun rights amendment was added to the state constitution on December 1st when statewide election results were certified.
“On November 8, Iowans voted overwhelmingly to amend the Constitution, enshrining in it the right to bear arms,” Pate said. “In fact, 65% of Iowans supported the adoption. Congratulations to all of you for your hard work and the efforts to secure its passage.”
Richard Rogers of the Iowa Firearms Coalition lobbied for the amendment as well as recent state laws on the use of weapons and gun permits.
“However, each and every improvement in the law was subject to being reversed, or worse, by the next or any future legislature,” Rogers said during the ceremony. “Now, with the ratification of this freedom amendment, as we call it, such a course will be much more difficult.”
This is the 49th amendment added to Iowa’s Constitution. It goes beyond the wording of the Second Amendment to the U.S. Constitution and says Iowa courts must evaluate any lawsuits challenging Iowa gun laws by the toughest legal standard.
(Radio Iowa) – Sioux City firefighters remain on the scene today (Friday) of a fire that forced some 40 people out into the cold and rain last night. Deputy Fire Marshal, John Nelson says there are still several hot spots. “With the roof membrane falling down and on top of where the attic space was consumed by the fire — you know we have tendency to get flare ups,” he says. Some of the residents fled without coats or shoes and a city bus was used for a temporary shelter from the weather until a nearby church opened its doors.
Most residents may not be able to retrieve their belongings from the building, which is believed to be a total loss. “The building has been red tagged now deemed imminent danger to anyone who goes inside. There’s just been so much water poured on the building to suppress the fire and that it’s just not safe for us even as Sioux City Fire to enter the structure anymore,” Nelson says. “We don’t want residents going back in and trying to get their things unfortunately, I know they’ve lost a lot, but at this point we can’t risk them getting hurt or getting trapped inside.” Lieutenant Nelson says the fire may’ve started on the third floor in the attic, but an exact cause won’t be know for some time.
“Inspection services had their drone out and got some aerial coverage for us. We haven’t had time to really go analyze any of the photos quite yet — obviously we’re here trying to help the people that have been displaced,” he says. The Red Cross, Salvation Army and other local agencies are helping the residents left without a home by the fire.