712 Digital Group - top

KJAN News

KJAN News can be heard at five minutes after every hour right after Fox News 24 hours a day!
Keep up-to-date with Fox News Radio, Radio Iowa,  Brownfield & the Iowa Agribusiness Networks!

Iowa early News Headlines: Friday, Feb. 1st 2019

News

February 1st, 2019 by Ric Hanson

Here is the latest Iowa news from The Associated Press at 3:48 a.m. CST

CORALVILLE/IOWA CITY – One person is dead, another was injured during a multi-vehicle collision on a 100% ice covered I-80 westbound Thursday afternoon, near Coralville. The Iowa State Patrol reports the collision involved seven passenger vehicles and four semi tractor-trailers. Diminished or reduced visibility was also a factor. The names of the victims has not yet been released. The accident, which happened at around 3:30-p.m. near the 242.5-mile marker, remains under investigation.

CHICAGO (AP) — The bitter cold that gripped the Midwest forced commuters to bundle up like polar explorers. But by early next week, many of those same people might be able to get by with a light jacket or even short sleeves. Forecasts say temperatures could climb by as much as 80 degrees over the next few days. Experts say the rapid thaw is unprecedented, and it could create problems of its own _ bursting pipes, flooding rivers and crumbling roads.

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — More than half of the Republican-dominated Iowa Senate is backing a constitutional amendment aimed at weakening the state court system’s power to review abortion restrictions. The move comes just days after an Iowa judge overturned what would have been the nation’s broadest such limit, banning abortions when a “fetal heartbeat” is detected.” The amendment would expressly state that the state constitution “does not secure or protect a right to abortion.

CRESCO, Iowa (AP) — Democrat Sherrod Brown is making his first trip to Iowa as a presidential prospect. The three-term swing-state senator is visiting the leadoff caucus state in Cresco, in the one county in the nation both Democrat Barack Obama and Republican Donald Trump won by at least 20 percentage points. Brown is testing a message aimed at reaching working-class voters who also lifted Trump to victory in 2016 in swing states Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Sen. Joni Ernst is expressing frustration with Iowa Congressman Steve King’s comments about immigration and white supremacy. Ernst told Iowa reporters Thursday that she shouldn’t have to be “spending precious time talking about white supremacy and comments by a member of our delegation.” King claims his comments were taken out of context. The House rebuked him and he was denied any committee assignments.

Iowa Republicans seek to weaken courts on abortion questions

News

January 31st, 2019 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — A majority of legislators in the Iowa Senate, frustrated at repeated court rulings declaring anti-abortion laws unconstitutional, have introduced a proposed amendment to the Iowa Constitution that would declare it “does not secure or protect a right to abortion.”

The proposed amendment was introduced Jan. 24 by Republican Sen. Jake Chapman two days after a state court judge struck down yet another attempt by the Legislature to limit abortion. It has the backing of 29 senators.

Chapman says the court created a right that doesn’t exist in the constitution. The House must pass a similar resolution and the Legislature must pass it again next year before it would be placed on a statewide ballot. Voters in Alabama and West Virginia passed similar constitutional amendments in November.

Babysitter testifies doomed infant seemed lightweight

News

January 31st, 2019 by Ric Hanson

LE MARS, Iowa (AP) — A woman who says she babysat an Iowa infant who was later left to die in a baby swing testified at the mother’s trial that the baby seemed underweight. The Courier reports that Jennifer Schriever, who had been a neighbor of 21-year-old Cheyanne Harris’, testified Thursday during the second day of Harris’ murder trial that she offered to babysit for Harris in July 2017.

Schriever said the first time she babysat, Harris left then-3-month-old Sterling Koehn and a 2-year-old girl with her for 17 hours. Schriever said the baby had a raw diaper rash and seemed underweight, but ate hungrily.

Schriever said she babysat one other time before the baby was found dead Aug. 30, 2017. An autopsy shows he died of malnutrition, dehydration and an E. coli infection caused by being left in a maggot-infested diaper for up to two weeks.

The boy’s father, Zachary Koehn, already has been sentenced to life in prison.

Iowa Sen. Ernst expresses frustration with King comments

News

January 31st, 2019 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Republican Sen. Joni Ernst is expressing frustration with Iowa  Congressman Steve King’s comments about immigration and white supremacy. Ernst told Iowa reporters Thursday that she shouldn’t have to be “spending precious time talking about white supremacy and comments by a member of our delegation.”

Ernst says “we really do need to start focusing on our speech and watching our tone.” She says everyone would be better off focusing on the issues and not on religious or ethnic differences.

King, a nine-term House member, caused an uproar after he was quoted in the New York Times stating, “White nationalist, white supremacist, Western civilization — how did that language become offensive?”

King, a Republican, claims his comments were taken out of context. The House rebuked him and Republicans stripped him of committee assignments.

Panel OKs governor’s bill to restore felon voting rights

News

January 31st, 2019 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Gov. Kim Reynolds’ proposal to restore voting rights to felons after they’ve served their sentences has passed its first legislative hurdle with unusual bipartisan support and rare endorsement from a broad spectrum of victim rights, civil rights and religious groups.
The two Republicans and one Democrat on the House Judiciary Committee voted Thursday to advance the governor’s bill to a full committee.

The bill calls for a constitutional amendment and must pass the House and Senate in consecutive, separately elected legislative sessions before going for a public vote. Among groups favoring the bill were the American Civil Liberties Union, NAACP, Iowa Coalition Against Sexual Assault and Family Leader Foundation.

The Iowa Organization for Victim Assistance wants to add the requirement of repayment of restitution before a felon gets voting rights restored, a sentiment also expressed by some senators.
Some supporters of the measure say that could delay restoration of voting rights for the poorest of felons by years.

Man fatally shot by officers at nuclear site ID’d as Iowan

News

January 31st, 2019 by Ric Hanson

MERCURY, Nev. (AP) — A person fatally shot by law enforcement officers during a confrontation at a U.S. nuclear security site in Nevada has been identified as an Iowa man. Nye County Sheriff Sharon Wehrly said Thursday that the man killed Monday was 27-year old Nekiylo Dawayne Graves, from Waterloo. Wehrly said in a video news release that a sheriff’s deputy and a security officer shot Graves when he refused commands and continued to approach them following a pursuit after Graves’ vehicle failed to stop at the security gate at the Nevada National Security Site.

The site is located 70 miles north of Las Vegas. Wehrly said the FBI and the Nevada Department of Public Safety are investigating the incident and that her agency is conducting an internal affairs investigation.

Triple fatality accident in Crawford County, Thu. morning

News

January 31st, 2019 by Ric Hanson

Three people died and two others were injured during an accident this (Thursday) morning south of Denison, in Crawford County. The Iowa State Patrol reports a 1997 Ford Windstar van driven by 52-year old Penny Hulsebus, of Defiance, was traveling north on Highway 59 at around 5:10-a.m., at the same time a 2008 Nissan Rogue driven by 46-year old Saul Armando Guzman Orellana, of Denison, was traveling southbound. The van crossed the center line of the highway and struck the SUV head-on. Hulsebus, and two rear seat passengers in the SUV died at the scene. They were identified as 48-year old Maria Petra Garcia Hernandez, and 42-year old Ericka Leticia Dionicio, both of Denison.

Orellana and a third passenger in his SUV, 50-year old Herme Yaneth Guzman Hernandez, of Denison, were injured in the crash. They were transported by Crawford County Ambulance to the Crawford County Memorial Hospital, and later transferred to The UNMC in Omaha, by LifeNet and Midwest Air ambulance, respectively. All of the crash victims were wearing their seat belts. The accident remains under investigation.

The State Patrol was assisted at the scene by the Crawford County Sheriff’s Dept., Crawford County Rescue & Ambulance, Manilla Rescue, and the Denison Police Dept.

More low temperature records set in Iowa

News, Weather

January 31st, 2019 by Ric Hanson

The dangerously cold weather was still setting low-temperature records in many Iowa communities Thursday morning. It was minus 30 in Cedar Rapids, shattering previous record -21 set Jan. 31, 1996. The low of -28 in Iowa City was 10 degrees colder than the previous record of -18 set Jan. 31, 1996. New lows for the date also were set in Dubuque and Waterloo. The bitter cold chilling the middle of the U.S. also broke records in several Iowa cities Wednesday, including Des Moines.

A meteorologist says parts of the northern U.S. are going to experience an “unprecedented” and “dramatic warm-up.” Weather Underground’s meteorology director Jeff Masters says places in Michigan and Illinois experiencing record or near-record cold this week are expected to be around 50 degrees Fahrenheit by Monday. He said Thursday that he hasn’t before seen a 70-degree shift in temperature during the winter. He says “past record-cold waves have not dissipated this quickly” and that the region seems headed for “spring-like temperatures.”

Masters says the polar vortex is “rotating up into Canada” and is not expected to return in the next couple of weeks. He says it might return in late February, but if it does, “it won’t be as intense.”

On Third Anniversary of a Bluff’s woman’s death, Senator Ernst Re-Introduces Sarah’s Law

News

January 31st, 2019 by Ric Hanson

WASHINGTON – On January 31, 2016, the night of her graduation, Sarah Root, a twenty-one year-old Iowan from Council Bluffs, was struck and killed in Omaha, Neb., by Edwin Mejia, who entered the country illegally and was driving drunk – three times over the legal limit.  Today (Thursday), on the third anniversary of her death, Senator Joni Ernst (R-IA), along with Senators Chuck Grassley (R-IA), Ben Sasse (R-NE), Deb Fischer (R-NE) and 11 of their colleagues, re-introduced legislation in honor of Sarah, to allow federal law enforcement to detain illegal immigrants criminally charged with killing or seriously injuring another person.

Ernst said “It is wholly unacceptable that someone who is here illegally and is responsible for the death of another human being is not considered an enforcement priority nor is detained by ICE. We have an obligation to the Root family, and to the American people, to ensure that no person falls victim to this injustice again.  Sarah’s Law brings us one step closer to restoring justice in our broken immigration system by allowing ICE to detain and hold these criminals accountable.” Grassley said “The tragic death of Sarah Root three years ago and the ongoing search for her killer underscore the serious attention border security and immigration enforcement require in America. Sarah’s life was cut short by an undocumented immigrant who disregarded the rule of law and decided to get behind the wheel after drinking.  The Obama Administration refused to take custody of Sarah’s killer because it didn’t consider him a priority, allowing him to disappear into the shadows. The Roots have been robbed of their daughter, and at least for now, they have been robbed of justice.  Our legislation, named in Sarah’s memory, will ensure that those who harm or kill Americans will be taken into custody and removed while also ensuring that victims and their families get the information they deserve from the government as they pursue justice.”

Sen. Sasse said “Edwin Mejia’s mugshot shouldn’t be on a most wanted poster — Edwin Mejia should be in jail, serving hard time for the life he took and the pain he left behind. Sarah’s Law is common-sense legislation that Sarah and her family deserve to have signed into law. Congress should waste no time sending this legislation to the President’s desk for his signature.” And, Sen. Fischer said “No family should have to endure the tragedy and pain the Root family has experienced. Sarah’s Law would end the flawed policies that allowed her killer to evade justice. Let’s honor Sarah’s memory by enacting this important solution to make our communities safer.”

Sarah’s mom, Michelle Root said Thursday, “Our family is very grateful for Senator Ernst and her willingness to continue to push for Sarah’s Law.  It means a lot to us that she is reintroducing this bill on the third anniversary of Sarah’s death.  This law is to make sure no other family has to go through what our family has.  Sarah’s killer is still on the run and if this law was in place when she was killed we wouldn’t be looking for her killer today – he would be in custody and serving his time.” Following state criminal charges of motor vehicle homicide and outreach by local law enforcement, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) used its discretion to decline to issue a detainer on Edwin Mejia, Sarah’s killer. Subsequently, Mejia posted bond, disappeared and now, three years later, still remains at-large.

About Sarah’s Law:

Sarah’s Law would amend the mandatory detention provisions of the Immigration and Nationality Act to require the federal government to take custody of anyone who entered the country illegally, violated the terms of their immigration status or had their visa revoked and is thereafter charged with a crime resulting in the death or serious bodily injury of another person. The legislation also requires ICE to make reasonable efforts to identify and provide relevant information to the crime victims or their families. Under this law, Mejia would have been detained by law enforcement and not allowed to flee from justice. The Root family would have been kept up-to-date on Mejia’s status and federal immigration authorities’ efforts to remove him from the United States.

In January 2017, President Trump implemented major parts of Sarah’s Law via Executive Order, which included prioritized detention of criminal illegal immigrants and the creation of the Office of Victims of Immigration Crime Engagement. Passage of Sarah’s Law would codify the order into law, to prevent future administrations from withdrawing President Trump’s executive order, or deprioritizing the detention of illegal immigrants who commit crimes involving death or serious bodily injury, and restricting information to victims of such crimes.

Read the text of the bill here: https://www.ernst.senate.gov/public/_cache/files/21e944d0-2303-4b6b-9e49-29d27d2cb3ca/7BF5E49D64C2DD140F05CA3C8495BCA3.sarah-s-law.pdf

Union County hit-and-run results in an OWI charge

News

January 31st, 2019 by Ric Hanson

A hit-and-run accident Wednesday night in Creston resulted in an OWI charge. Authorities say 48-year old Cody Patrick Shay, of Shannon City, was cited for OWI/1st offense, following an investigation into the incident that took place at around 10:50-p.m. in the 500 block of N. Chestnut Street, in Creston. Officials say Shay was driving a 2017 Audi Q5 northbound on Chestnut, when his vehicle struck a legally parked 2011 Ford Focus owned by a Creston man. Shay left the scene but was located a short time later at another location, still in his vehicle. Damage from the incident amounted to $9,000.