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Keep up-to-date with Fox News Radio, Radio Iowa, Brownfield & the Iowa Agribusiness Networks!
(Creston, Iowa) – The Creston Police Department reports four arrests took place Tuesday (May 10). Early Tuesday morning, 18-year-old Damian Joseph Gibbons, of Creston, and 18-year-old Hunter James Tullis, of Corning, were arrested at 319 Sumner Street in Creston. Both men were charged with three counts of Burglary in the 3rd Degree, and Attempted Burglary in the 3rd Degree/1st offense. Gibbons was being held in the Adams County Jail on a $2,000 bond. Tullis was being held on bond amounting to $7,000.
Tuesday afternoon, 36-year-old Jackie Lee Marler, of Creston, was arrested for Domestic Abuse Assault/Strangulation. Marler was being held without bond in the Union County Jail, pending an appearance before the magistrate. And, Tuesday evening, 34-year-old Wesley Gene Keeler, Jr., of Creston, was arrested on two Union County warrants for: Possession of Drug Paraphernalia; Poss. of a Controlled Substance/2nd offense – Marijuana; and Poss. of a Controlled Substance/2nd offense – Methamphetamine. Bond was set at $2,300.
Creston Police said also, Monday afternoon, a woman residing in the 200 block of S. Peterson reported that sometime between 1-a.m. and 9-a.m., Monday, someone entered her son’s vehicle and took a P.Mauliat saxophone, and a large container of change. The loss was estimated at about $5,655.
(Radio Iowa) – The Iowa Department of Natural Resources says they’re receiving reports of moderate to severe winter burn damage to some trees across the state. Forestor Tivon Feeley, says they see the damage in the arborvitae, white pine, and a little bit in Scotch and Red Pine. “And what’s going on is, you know, we had kind of an unusual spring where the ground stayed frozen, but we got pretty warm outside and then would go right back to freezing. And then you couple that with the strong winds that we had — these trees have dried out — they couldn’t absorb the water because the ground was frozen, and strong winds dried them out even faster,” Feeley says. He says the damaged trees are easy to spot.
“Some of them are completely brown. It depends on the conifer, but some of the like the red pine of Scotch Pine, there are kind of bleached we call it bleaching where the needles are kind of a light, light, light tan to a mostly white color. And those trees mostly are dead,” He says. He says partially damaged trees may still be saved. ” If you get a few random branches the tree might pull out of it. If you looking at that top third dead, it’s gonna have to be kind of a wait and see if the buds are completely dead,” according to Feeley. “if the buds are alive, you might have a chance. This is really on the newly planted trees that are less than let’s say 10 years of age and younger, that we’re seeing the majority of the damage on.” Feeley says the dead trees might have been saved by mulching watering and around the base of the tree halfway through the frost. But, he says the conditions were really tough to overcome.
“I don’t think we’ve seen winds like this for quite some time. And that was a very unusual weather pattern — so I’m not sure would have solved it all,” he says. Feeley says many of these trees were brought into Iowa and that is part of the issue when this happens. “When we look at conifers native to Iowa, eastern red cedar to all 99 counties, eastern white pine, all the way down to Hardin County in the northeast quadrant of Iowa, and then balsam fir in Allamakee County,” he says, “and everything else is not native, and not well adapted or it’s planted out of its range. And so when you have these weather events, they’re just not used to it. ” Feeley says though, he has even seen some of the native conifers suffer this year too because of the unusual spring we’ve had.
(Radio Iowa) – Counterfeit medications are showing up in Iowa which federal authorities say are not only dangerous, they’re deadly. Mike Casele, a special agent with the U-S Drug Enforcement Administration’s Omaha office, says the fake pills are becoming all too common. “In these areas, as in many areas of the United States, we see a lot of meth,” Casele says. “We’re also seeing a lot of counterfeit pills. People are not getting these from lawful or legal means, through their doctor or pharmacy, and you just never know what you’re going to get with these.” Casele says most of the pills being found in Iowa originated across the southern U-S border.
“Typically, we’re seeing a lot of these counterfeit pills coming up from Mexico,” Casele says. “From there, they just scattered throughout the United States. They are landing literally everywhere. I’ve worked in many offices throughout the country and talked to agents across the country and there doesn’t seem to be an area where we’re not seeing them at least at some level.” More often, Casele says, the pills they’re finding contain very hazardous ingredients.
“It’s incredibly dangerous,” he says. “Out of the pills that the DEA seizes and that we send to our labs for analysis, four out of every ten of those pills test positive for a potentially lethal dose of fentanyl, which is for an average person, about two milligrams.” Casele says the D-E-A is working with state and local law enforcement in an effort to slow the distribution of these illegal pills.
The Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office reports the arrest at around 8:30-p.m. Tuesday, of Kyla Smith, from Villisca. Smith was taken into custody in Villisca, on an active Montgomery County warrant for Violation of a No Contact Order. She was transported to the Montgomery County Jail, and later posted a $300 cash bond before being released.
PERRY, Iowa – Officials with the Iowa Department of Public Safety have released a report on a shooting incident that took place early Tuesday morning. Authorities say at 4:47 a.m., officers with the Perry Police Department were dispatched to the 1800 block of 5th Street on the report of shots fired in the area. Officers found multiple bullet holes in an unoccupied vehicle. The suspect was identified as 30-year-old Jeremiah Messner.
At 6:27 a.m., near West 8th Street and Saint Paul Street, law enforcement officers from the Perry Police Department, Dallas County Sheriff’s Office and the Iowa State Patrol located Messner, who was armed with a handgun. Officers negotiated with Messner and persuaded him to place the handgun on the ground. As officers attempted to take Messner into custody, he was able to regain possession of the handgun. During the struggle with officers, Messner fired his handgun striking Perry Police Chief Eric Vaughn in the upper leg.
Law enforcement officers took Messner into custody and rendered emergency care to Chief Vaughn. Messner was transported to the Dallas County Hospital; he has since been released to the custody of the Dallas County Sheriff’s Office. Chief Vaughn, a 28-year law enforcement veteran who has served as the Perry Police Chief since 2013, was airlifted to a Des Moines hospital where he remains. His injuries are non-life threatening and he is expected to make a full recovery.
At the request of the Perry Police Department and the Dallas County Sheriff’s Office, the Division of Criminal Investigation (DCI) is conducting an investigation into the shooting of Chief Vaughn. As a result of the investigation, DCI agents have charged Jeremiah Messner with four felonies: Attempted Murder (707.11; Class B), Possession of Firearm by a Prohibited Person (724.26; Class D), Going Armed with Intent (708.8; Class D), and Trafficking Stolen Weapons (724.14A(b), Class C).
(Radio Iowa) – Opening arguments began Tuesday afternoon, in the murder trial of Michael Lang of Grundy Center in the shooting death of Iowa State Patrol Sergeant Jim Smith last April. During opening arguments streamed by K-C-R-G T-V, prosecutor Douglas Hammerand described how Smith and other officers entered Lang’s garage to arrest him. He says that’s when Lang turned on Smith with a shotgun.
“By the time Sergeant Smith saw him, he yelled ‘gun, gun’ and then you hear bang, bang,” Hammerand says. He says Lang fired again before Smith could be pulled to safety. “Then as he’s laying on the ground, we hear another bang. The defendant shot him again with the slug through his leg — it went through his back calf,” he says. He says another officer pulled Smith away but he died. Hammerand told the jury they will lay out why this is first-degree murder.
“The evidence will show the defendant acted with malice aforethought. The evidence will show the defendant acted willfully deliberately, and premeditatedly and with the specific intent to kill Sergeant Smith,” Hammerand says. Lang’s defense plans to use the state’s Stand Your Ground law and will argue Lang shot Smith in self-defense.
The trial was moved to Webster City due to pre-trial publicity.
(Radio Iowa) – State officials plan to set up a booth at the Iowa State Fair to recruit people to work in Iowa’s prison system. Iowa Department of Corrections director Beth Skinner recently hired a recruitment and retention officer for the prison system. “We’re trying to be creative. We’re trying to get out there. We’re still doing job fairs,” Skinner says. “We’re doing internship programs with colleges, so we’re still keeping our foot on the gas, but it has still been a major challenge.” Skinner says she’s currently focused on recruiting efforts at the high school and college level.
“It’s a career. You’re a public servant, you know, you’re giving back to your communities,” Skinner says. “It’s public safety.” The agency had just over 300 vacancies at the end of April and 71 percent of them were for correctional officers. The department’s website shows the starting salary for a full-time correctional officer is at least 43-thousand dollars a year.
Last week, Skinner told the Iowa Board of Corrections the agency was making progress system-wide in hiring nurses and the Newton prison, for example, had no job openings for nurses last Friday.
Fremont County Sheriff Kevin Aistrope reports several arrests since the beginning of the month:
On May 1st: Chance Lucas, age 32 of Harlan, was arrested for Driving while Revoked and an active Harrison County, IA warrant. Lucas was arrested during a traffic stop.
On May 2nd: Lee Miles, age 45 of Tabor, IA was arrested for Possession of Controlled Substance (Marijuana, Possession of a Controlled Substance, (Methamphetamine), and Possession of Drug Paraphernalia. Miles was arrested during a traffic stop in Tabor. Fremont County was assisted by the Mills County K9 Unit.
On the 4th: Malik Kyle, age 21 of Sidney, IA was arrested for Possession of Drug Paraphernalia. Kyle was arrested during a traffic stop
On May 6th: Carson Cusick, age 43 of Sidney, IA was arrested for Theft 1st Degree. Cusick was arrested in connection to the theft of a fountain valued in excess of $75,000 from a residence in rural Sidney.
On the 9th: Brandon Bogard, age 21 of Sidney, IA, was arrested for Public Intoxication. Bogard was arrested in connection to a call for service of an unconscious male in a gas station parking lot in Sidney; Eric Hamilton, age 49 of Council Bluffs, IA, was arrested for OWI 1st Offense. Hamilton was arrested during a traffic stop.
On May 10th: Robert Watts, age 43 of Tabor, IA was arrested for Child Endangerment and Domestic Abuse. Watts was arrested during a call for service in Tabor; and, Kevin Wolford, age 66 of Tabor, IA, was arrested on an active warrant for Possession of Controlled Substance (Marijuana). During the course of the arrest he was found again in Possession of Marijuana and Drug Paraphernalia.
COUNCIL BLUFFS, IA – A Guthrie County man was sentenced in Council Bluffs federal court, Tuesday, for making a False Statement to the State of Iowa. 53-year-old Kendall Dean Kipp, of Yale, was sentenced to three years of probation. He was also ordered to pay a $9,500 fine and perform 180 hours of community service over a three-year period. According to court documents, Kendall pleaded guilty to the charge on December 16, 2021.
Kipp submitted falsified documents to the State of Iowa concerning the quality of water produced for the residents of the City of Yale. This violated the provisions of the Safe Drinking Water Act and, in turn, the False Statement statute. “As a certified drinking water operator, the defendant was entrusted not only with ensuring compliance with our environmental laws, but with the health and safety of the community,” said Acting Special Agent in Charge Cate Holston of EPA’s Criminal Investigation Division in Lenexa, KS. “His actions betrayed that trust, and today’s sentencing demonstrates that EPA will pursue and hold accountable those who intentionally violate the law.”
United States Attorney Richard D. Westphal of the Southern District of Iowa made the announcement. The Criminal Division of the Environmental Protection Agency and The Iowa Department of Natural Resources investigated the case. This case was prosecuted by the United States Attorney’s Offices for the Southern District of Iowa.