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Atlantic Police report, 8/31/23

News

August 31st, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Atlantic, Iowa) – Officials with the Atlantic Police Department has issued report the latest arrests and citations.

On August 17, 2023: 23-year-old Skyanne Christensen, of Atlantic, was arrested for Theft in the 5th Degree. She was cited into court and released from the scene. And, 52-year-old Gary Victor, of Bridgewater was arrested for Theft in the 5th (shoplifting) He was also cited into court and released at the scene.

On August 18th: 47-year-old Amanda Bashor, of Atlantic, was arrested for Domestic Abuse Assault (2nd Offense). Bashor was taken into custody and transported to the Cass County Jail where she was booked in and held.

On August 21st: Atlantic Police arrested 42-year-old Randy Venteicher, of Massena, for Harassment in the 3rd Degree. He was cited into court and released.

On the 26th, 33-year-old Tyler Mills, of Atlantic, was arrested for Violation of No Contact Order. He was taken into custody and transported to the Cass County Jail where he was booked in and held.

On August 27th, 20-year-old Myson Kovac, of Atlantic, was arrested on Cass County Warrants for Criminal Mischief 1st Degree, Theft 1st Degree, Operating While Under the Influence and Violation of Probation (2 counts). He was taken into custody and transported to the Cass County Jail where he was booked in and held.

This past Monday (August 28), Atlantic Police arrested 36-year-old Jeffery Knight, of Atlantic, for Public Intoxication. He was taken into custody and transported to the Cass County Jail where he was booked in and held. And, 32-year-old Cody Pleis, of Atlantic, was arrested on Cass County Warrant for Domestic Abuse Assault (2nd Offense). He was taken into custody and transported to the Cass County Jail where he was booked in and held.

Iowa teacher accused of sending inappropriate photos via SnapChat resigns

News

August 31st, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – A western Iowa teacher has resigned after being accused of sending inappropriate photos to students via social media. The IKM-Manning Community School District Board of Education accepted the resignation of 24-year-old Cassidy Kraus earlier this week. Kraus was placed on leave by school officials on August 21st, just days before the new school year started, after the district received a complaint alleging she had shared inappropriate photos with students.

A district investigation found that Kraus had sent multiple photos of a sexual nature in May 2023 via Snapchat. Kraus resigned on August 25. No criminal charges have been filed, but authorities say an investigation into the allegations is ongoing.

Clarinda man arrested this week on felony sex charges

News

August 31st, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Clarinda, Iowa) – Page County Sheriff Lyle Palmer reports that on Tuesday, August 29, 2023, at approximately 6:30 PM, 40-year-old Jesse Josiah Stimson of rural Clarinda, was arrested on a Page County warrant for Sexual Abuse – 2nd Degree (a Class B Felony), Lascivious Acts with a Child – Fondle or Touch (a Class C Felony), and Indecent Contact with a Child (an Aggravated misdemeanor).

Stimson was arrested at the Page County Jail where he turned himself in. Stimson was unable to post the $70,000.00 cash only bond and is currently being held in the Page County Jail pending further court appearances.

The charges stem from an investigation conducted by the Page County Sheriff’s Office with consultation from the Page County Attorney’s Office.

A charge is merely an accusation and that the defendant is presumed innocent until and unless proven guilty.

First vote keeps Carrie Chapman Catt’s name on ISU building

News

August 31st, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – An Iowa State University committee’s first vote would to keep Carrie Chapman Catt’s name on a campus building. Nine members of the committee voted to keep Catt’s name on the building and six voted to remove it. The building was named in her honor in 1990 for her efforts to ratify the 19th Amendment giving women the right to vote. The committee was formed in 2021 after accusations that Catt used racist language and tactics in her push to get the issue passed

Catt Hall (ISU photo)

The committee met 27 times to review multiple documents surrounding the 1880 I-S-U grad. There is now a public input period that will last through October 29th, and the committee will then take a final vote.

Bicyclist struck and killed in eastern Iowa Wed. afternoon

News

August 31st, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Benton County, Iowa) – A man from eastern Iowa died Wednesday afternoon, after the bicycle he was riding was struck by a car on southbound Highway 218 at 51st Street, south of  La Porte City. The Iowa State Patrol reports the bicycle, occupied by 83-year-old John R. Rice, of Cedar Falls, was hit by a Nissan Altima at around 2:24-p.m. Rice died at the scene.

The driver of the car was identified as 77-year-old Dewayne L. Arends, of Oxford Junction. The accident remains under investigation.

Drought conditions continue to expand in Iowa

Ag/Outdoor, News, Weather

August 31st, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(UPDATED) – The latest Iowa Drought Monitor shows drought conditions have worsened. State Climatologist Justin Glisan says there’s been an 18 percent increase in extreme drought conditions since last week’s report. “The big standout that we see on the map this week is a big expansion of that D3 extreme drought category across north central into northeastern Iowa,” Glisan says. There’s a persistent area of extreme drought in southeast Iowa as well. Some farmers have begun chopping corn for silage because most leaves on the stalks have died. “Corn is drying up out there. Soybeans are dropping pods because of the heat and the dryness,” Glisan says. “Harvest is going to come at us fast given the drier conditions and the warmer temperatures that we’ve seen.”

Small sections of Fremont and Ringgold Counties are the only areas of Iowa considered to be drought-free and Glisan says nearly 99-and-a-half percent of the entire state is now in some level of drought. The U-S-D-A began issuing Drought Monitor reports 23 years ago. “This is going into the 166th week of at least D1, that moderate drought category somewhere in the state, so the longest drought that we’ve had since the Drought Monitor came into inception,” Glisan says, “but also longer term than the 1988 and 2012 droughts.” Those two drought years were more intense because of particularly warm temperatures in the upper Midwest, according to Glisan. Glisan says the statewide average rainfall is about three and a quarter inches in August — about an inch below normal, but Glisan says there’s wide variation in sections of the state.

“If you look at the climate divisions in eastern Iowa, so climate division 3 is the northeastern corner and then east central is where the nose of Iowa is — it’s the top 10 driest August on record,” Glisan says, “so that statewide average is skewed where we see higher precipitation totals across the southern part of the state.” The southern two tiers of Iowa got an average amount of rainfall during the past month. On this last day of August, there is no rain in the forecast anywhere in Iowa.

In southwest Iowa:

Parts of northern and eastern Pottawattamie County, all but the northeastern part of Cass County, along with the southern half of Adair County, most of Adams, and all of Union Counties, are considered Abnormally Dry.

Severe drought conditions exist in mainly the western half of Pott. County and the northern tier of Mills County, while other area counties are seeing a variety of Moderate to Abnormally dry conditions.

Extreme drought conditions are being experienced in a large portion of northeastern Iowa, and parts of seven southeastern Iowa counties.

Iowa blood centers are stocking up to send life-saving fluid to hurricane zone

News

August 31st, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Iowa-based LifeServe Blood Center is appealing for donors as it’s on-call through a national network to provide blood anywhere it’s needed as the hurricane that hit Florida on Wednesday is now a tropical storm heading up the East Coast. LifeServe spokeswoman Danielle West says they’ve been in close contact with blood centers across Florida, Georgia and the Carolinas, all of which felt — or are feeling — the impact of Idalia (ee-DOLL-ee-ah). “They did not mention as many injuries as much as damage, so it’s more about if the blood center can continue to function and collect blood, then they may not need ours,” West says. “They’re assessing that right now and ensuring that all of their team members can still make it into work and they can still function as a blood center.”

In addition to widespread power outages, there’s damage from the powerful winds, as well as heavy rains and flash flooding. West says blood centers in cities that were hit by the monster storm are regrouping and determining what they need.  “They want to make sure that they can sustain what they’ve already worked out with their local hospitals,” West says. “They’re keeping us posted. As far as we know, we have not sent blood products to them yet, but we still have O-positive and O-negative set aside, and we’re technically on call through Sunday of this week.”

Monday is a holiday and LifeServe offices won’t be open for donations, so they’re working to continue stocking up now, as the summertime has been challenging for donations. “We have not seen the number of blood donors that we would like to see to support our hospitals,” West says. “We’re lower in almost every blood type then we’d want to be, A-positive, B-positive, all of our negative blood types, of course the Os, so truly if you’re a blood donor, if you’ve never donated blood before, we absolutely need you.”

LifeServe has multiple offices in the Des Moines metro, as well as in Ames, Fort Dodge, Marshalltown, Mason City, Pella and Sioux City. LifeServe provides blood products to 161 hospitals primarily in Iowa, Nebraska and South Dakota. To schedule a visit, call 800.287.4903 or log on to lifeservebloodcenter.org.

Red Oak woman arrested Wed. on a drug charge

News

August 31st, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Red Oak, Iowa) – Police in Red Oak report the arrest at around 8-a.m. Wednesday, of a woman on a drug charge. 30-year-old Antonia Jashae Hudson, of Red Oak, was arrested after officers were called to the 400 block of E. Coolbaugh Street, following a complaint. She was charged with Possession of a Controlled Substance/1st offense. Hudson was being held at the Montgomery County Law Enforcement Center on a $1,000 bond.

ACSD Staff hosted by local churches recently

News

August 31st, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Atlantic, Iowa) – Officials with the Atlantic Community School District (ACSD), say more than 120 District staff were hosted to lunch August 18th at the United Methodist Church in Atlantic. A group of approximately 15 ladies, made up of members from both the United Methodist Church and the 1st Presbyterian Church of Atlantic spent the morning preparing a feast of food for all ACSD staff to enjoy. Communications Specialist Mallory Robinson says “This group of ladies arrived early the morning of Aug. 18th, to prepare homemade sloppy joes, bringing with them an assortment of salads and deserts, prepared and ready to go for the day’s luncheon.

“The buffet was arranged in such a manner, [and] with such great attention to detail,” she says, “that one could not help but wish for multiple plates to accommodate the many delicious offerings available for lunch that day!”

Photos courtesy Mallory Robinson

Atlantic Community School District staff filtered in throughout the lunch hour in shifts – providing a seamless flow the entire lunch hour. While sitting with new and familiar faces, ACSD current staff spent time talking with these ladies, hearing stories and remembering school years of the past.  “According to Robinson, “The luncheon preparation and meal offering is a sacrifice of work and love and one that all Atlantic Community School District employees have eagerly anticipated every year, for the last 8 years!”

Many of the ladies, she says, helped raise the current generation of teachers they prepared the meal for, in one one or another,  With a meal made from love, a prayer over the school year, and hugs and high-fives, ACSD Staff are sent on their way that final Friday before the new school year begins, knowing the generation before them is cheering them on.

Robinson says “It’s a tremendous opportunity for our ACSD Staff to be supported and fed a delicious meal by the ladies of the United Methodist and 1st Presbyterian Churches of Atlantic.  What a great example of our district’s yearly theme: Trojan CommUNITY!”

U-I Children’s Hospital now using dogs to help kids

News

August 31st, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) The University of Iowa’s Stead Family Children’s Hospital is joining a growing trend in bringing in dogs to work with young patients. Dog handler Emily Bradley says the goal of dogs Nacho and Corrin is to help kids understand their diagnosis and reduce the fear and anxiety they may feel. “We kind of use that unique human animal bond between, you know, people and dogs, that sometimes we can’t provide human to human to meet those goals for patients and family. So really just advancing that standard of care,” she says. There are a lot of different types of comfort dogs, but she says these two do something the others aren’t trained for.

“They really are able to be a part of clinical care and a part of procedures and providing therapeutic interventions that are helping patients meet their specific treatment goals as part of their medical plan,” Bradley says. Aly Humphrey handles Nacho and explains how the dog could help an anxious child. “Nacho could either be sitting on a chair next to the bed, or it could be laying next to the patient in their bed while the nurses are starting their I-V. And maybe we’re just talking about things about Nacho to kind of provide that distraction and procedural support,” she says. “Or if you know, they maybe really like engaging in deep breathing, then they can put their hand on nacho’s belly and kind of match his breath as they feel his chest and belly kind of rise with each breath. And they can match their breath to his. She says the dog could also help a child who is anxious about getting their C-T scan by riding through the C-T scanner and showing the patient exactly everything that will happen to them. Some kids might be afraid of a dog, and Bradley says they have child life specialists that will help out.

“Do they’ll kind of help us navigate if that patient might be comfortable with the dog or would be interested in that visit. Or even as handlers ourselves, before we go in a room before we get in an elevator even, like we’ll ask everyone in that room, like, ‘are you comfortable with the dog coming in the room’, and kind of assessing from there,” Bradley says. Bradley says they have protocols in place for those who might be concerned about animals in the hospital. “Based on the research and benchmarking with other hospitals around the country, the dogs are very clean, and they get weekly grooming. Professional grooming and baths, so there’s a lot of policies in place to keep them clean and keep them from bringing things in the hospital ,” she says. Bradley says one aspect of bringing in the dogs that’s been an extra benefit is the uplifting impact the dogs have already had on the rest of the staff.

Emily-Bradley,-Nacho,Aly-Humphrey,Corrin-(UI-PHOTO)

“Almost all of our staff are very excited that the dogs are in house, it’s been hard this first week in the hospital just to like contain the staff even like they’re so excited to meet our dogs and for them to be here,” she says. She says they did quite a bit of preparation this summer for all employees about the dogs do and their purpose. Both Nacho and Corrin are just under a year and a half old and will likely work for six to eight years before they are ready to retire.