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Iowa early News Headlines: Tuesday, May 29th 2018

News

May 29th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

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

COUNCIL BLUFFS, Iowa (AP) — Authorities say a 15-year-old Nebraska boy has died in a western Iowa lake. Council Bluffs Assistant Fire Chief Derrick Williams says witnesses saw the Omaha boy disappear beneath the water shortly before 1 p.m. Monday at Lake Manawa. The boy had gone to Lake Manawa State Park in Council Bluffs with two siblings. Williams says the boy was last seen on an inner tube near the ropes that mark the end of the swimming area.

SPARTA, Wis. (AP) — Police say the Iowa man accused of making threats to kill estranged relatives at a high school graduation in Wisconsin has been arrested. The Sparta Police Department said Benjamin Sidie was taken into custody by Dubuque, Iowa police on Monday. School district officials in Sparta decided to cancel Friday’s graduation because of the alleged threats.

IONIA, Iowa (AP) — Authorities say a 17-year-old has died while swimming in a northeast Iowa park. The Chickesaw County sheriff’s office says Samuel Hake, of Nashua, died on Saturday at Chickesaw Park. Hake was an 11th grader at Nashua-Plainfield High School. Authorities have given few details on how Hake died, and are still investigating his death.

WATERLOO, Iowa (AP) — Two people have died in an eastern Iowa crash involving a car and a motorcycle. Authorities say officers responded to the crash in Waterloo around 5:40 p.m. Saturday. The driver of the motorcycle and a passenger in the car died at the scene. The car’s driver was taken to the hospital with serious injuries.

Greenfield woman arrested for harboring a runaway

News

May 28th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Adair County Sheriff Jeff Vandewater, Monday night, released a report on arrests that took place over the past week. On May 20th, 53-year old Katherien Ann Larsen, of Greenfield, who also lists an address in Wichita, KS, was arrested at the Casey’s Store in Greenfield, on an Adair County warrant for Harboring a Runaway against the wishes of a parent. Larsen was released the following day on a $400 bond.

On May 23rd, 27-year old Brandy Lee Lumpula, of Omaha, was arrested in Adair, for Possession of a Controlled Substance/2nd offense, after a K9 alerted to the presence of narcotics in her vehicle. A Probable Cause search of the Cadillac SUV resulted in the discovery in a bag located in the back seat. The bag contained a plastic cup with a white, crystal-like substance. Also inside the bag, was glass pipes believed to have been used for smoking meth. Lumpula admitted after being read her rights, that the substance was meth, and that she forgot the residue was there on the cup. She was booked into the Adair County Jail and released the next day on bond.

On May 24th, 27-year old Joshua Lee Jones, of Creston, was arrested following a traffic stop for speeding on Interstate 80. The driver of the vehicle told the Adair County Deputy that his passenger, Jones, had punched him in the side of his face. A female in the back seat had an active protection order in place against Jones, who was charged with simple assault and Violation of a Protection Order. Bond was set at $300.

On May 25th, 40-year old John Michael Burgoyne, of Brooklyn, IA, was arrested on a warrant for Violation of Probation, after being picked up from another law enforcement agency. His cash bond was set at $2,000. On May 26th, 38-year old David William Pat Clayton, of Greenfield, was arrested for Domestic Assault with Bodily Injury. He was released the same day after posting a $1,000 cash or surety bond. Also arrested May 26th, at the same location, was 41-year old Carrie Lee Ross, of Greenfield, who was charged with Domestic Abuse Assault causing bodily injury /2nd offense. Her cash or surety bond was set at $2,000.

Profoundly important’ new option for stroke patients in Iowa

News

May 28th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

There are now two hospitals in Iowa offering a new treatment for stroke victims that removes clots in the brain, potentially reversing early symptoms that previously could have led to permanent damage. The University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics in Iowa City and Mercy Hospital in Des Moines both offer endovascular thrombectomy. Michael Jacoby, medical director at Mercy, calls the procedure a “profoundly important” new option.

“It’s opened up a whole new avenue of stroke care in terms of an opportunity that wasn’t previously available to a large population of patients,” Jacoby says. According to Jacoby, for about 20 years, doctors only had I-V medication to offer as an immediate treatment for stroke.

“It’s only in the past couple years or so has a brand-new and in particular a very earth-shattering, or revolution, basically, in stroke care come to be in that we have this ability now to go in and take out clots that previously had resulted in devastating stroke,” Jacoby said. Mercy recently reached adequate medical staffing to offer the procedure anytime an eligible patient arrives. Patients can be transported from other hospitals to Mercy or UI Hospitals and the window for beginning treatment can be as long as 24 hours. But, Jacoby emphasizes that with stroke – it remains critically important to get medical attention as quickly as possible for the best outcomes.
….
http://www.mercydesmoines.org/Mercy-Neuroscience-Center/Neurosurgery/Mechanical-Thrombectomy
(Radio Iowa, w/Thanks to Amy Mayer, Iowa Public Radio)

Body of a NE teen pulled from Lake Manawa

News

May 28th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

UPDATE – COUNCIL BLUFFS, Iowa (AP) — Authorities say a 15-year-old Nebraska boy has died in a western Iowa lake. Council Bluffs Assistant Fire Chief Derrick Williams says witnesses saw the Omaha boy disappear beneath the water shortly before 1 p.m. Monday at Lake Manawa. The boy had gone to Lake Manawa State Park in Council Bluffs with two siblings.

Williams says three lifeguards were staffing the lake and the Iowa Department of Natural Resources had a boat patrolling the lake at the time. The body was found shortly after 3 p.m.

Williams says the boy was last seen on an inner tube near the ropes that mark the end of the swimming area. The boy’s body was found near the shore in the swimming area in water that was 3- to 4-feet deep.

Man arrested, accused of threats that canceled graduation

News

May 28th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

SPARTA, Wis. (AP) — Police say the Iowa man accused of making threats to kill estranged relatives at a high school graduation in Wisconsin has been arrested. The Sparta Police Department said Benjamin Sidie was taken into custody by Dubuque, Iowa police on Monday. School district officials in Sparta decided to cancel Friday’s graduation because of the alleged threats.

Police said most of the threats were made by text message over a period of several days. Sgt. Jason Pipkin says Sidie “threatened to die by suicide by cop. And he was going to do it at the graduation.”

Police worked with the FBI to locate the 44-year-old suspect and did not believe he was in Wisconsin. His last known address is in Osceola, Iowa. School district administrators promised to reschedule the graduation ceremony when the threat was resolved.

Teen drowns while swimming in northeast Iowa park

News

May 28th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

(UPDATE) Authorities in northeast Iowa are investigating a weekend drowning at a Chickasaw County quarry that’s a popular place for local swimmers. Sheriff Marty Hemann confirmed on Monday that 17-year-old Sam Hake died in an apparent swimming accident at Chickasaw Park near Ionia.

Emergency vehicles from numerous agencies converged on the park around 3:15 p.m. on Saturday. Hake’s body was recovered from the park’s quarry a short time later. According to Hemann, an autopsy is planned. Hake was a student at Nashua-Plainfield High School who was finishing his junior year. District administrators made counselors available at the school Monday morning.

Hake’s drowning at Chickasaw Park occurred nearly two years to the day when another high school student died in the same quarry. 18-year-old Christopher Balvanz of Hawkeye drown while swimming with friends on May 25, 2016, just days before his scheduled graduation from Sumner-Fredericksburg High School.

(Radio Iowa)

ISU Extension economist discusses upcoming report on farmland ownership

Ag/Outdoor, News

May 28th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Rental rates for Iowa farmland increased this year for the first time since 2013, according to a survey from Iowa State University Extension. It shows the average statewide rental rate is $222 per acre, an increase of just 1.4 percent over last year. ISU Extension economist Ann Johanns says another, related report is on the way.

“Soon, Iowa State will release a farmland ownership survey. That’s something we do every five years and that really gives us some insight into how much is land is rented and how it’s rented,” Johanns said. According to the most recent figures from the USDA, a little more than half of the farmland in Iowa is rented. ISU Extension will be holding leasing meetings around the state in July and August, at which time the survey on farmland ownership will be discussed.

“Which we think really gives some good insight into who owns the land, how they own it, and it asks how they might intend to pass it on,” Johanns said. The increase in farmland rental rates, while rather small, is somewhat surprising in light of grain prices. Johanns notes rental rates have dropped by nearly 18-percent since 2013. Over the same time period, corn and soybean prices received by Iowa farmers declined by 52 and 37-percent, respectively.

(Radio Iowa)

2 killed in eastern Iowa crash involving car and motorcycle

News

May 28th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

WATERLOO, Iowa (AP) — Two people have died in an eastern Iowa crash involving a car and a motorcycle. Authorities say officers responded to the crash in Waterloo around 5:40 p.m. Saturday. The driver of the motorcycle and a passenger in the car died at the scene.

The car’s driver was taken to the hospital with serious injuries. Authorities have not released the names of those who were involved in the crash. The crash is still under investigation.

Witness: Wrong man is in prison in 1986 slaying of Council Bluffs teen

News

May 28th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — A key witness has come forward with new sworn testimony that suggests the wrong man may have been in prison for 31 years in the brutal slaying of a western Iowa girl. The testimony comes in the case of Daniel Harris, who maintains his innocence in the 1986 stabbing and beating death of 16-year-old Kristina Nelson in Council Bluffs. Harris’ lawyers say they are convinced Harris is the victim of a miscarriage of justice, and are seeking new proceedings and forensic testing that they believe will prove he was framed.

Harris, a neighbor and friend of Nelson, was convicted in 1987 based partially on the testimony of a jailhouse snitch who has long since recanted. At trial, Harris produced evidence showing that he worked his shift at Burger King on the night Nelson was stabbed repeatedly, had her skull fractured and was left on a Missouri River bank. Jurors convicted him after prosecutors asserted he could have committed the crime before clocking in. The new testimony comes from Ricky Lee Smith, who was 16 and at a drinking party with Nelson’s boyfriend on Dec. 30, 1986, the evening the homicide occurred. In an affidavit signed in February, Smith says Nelson’s boyfriend and his friend left the party to pick Nelson up and returned “covered in blood” hours later. Smith says the two “looked like they had rolled around in blood,” said they might have killed someone and talked about ways to dispose of a body. He says they washed their hands with a solvent and he helped them burn their overalls in a barrel behind the home.

The boyfriend, who had relatives working in the Council Bluffs Police Department, was the initial suspect in Nelson’s death but was cleared after denying involvement. Smith said he didn’t tell police what he saw at the time because he was scared, and he was not called to testify at Harris’ trial. After Harris was found guilty, Smith told the media that the wrong man was convicted but claims he soon started facing harassment that caused him to move to Florida. A prosecutor dismissed Smith’s affidavit as “irrelevant” because it contradicts what he told police in a 1986 interview and in a 1987 pre-trial deposition. “Smith’s affidavit provides no exculpatory information concerning Harris. The affidavit is irrelevant, unreliable, immaterial and would not have changed the result of Harris’ trial,” assistant Pottawattamie County attorney Margaret Reyes wrote in a filing opposing any further proceedings.

Attorneys for Harris, who was 21 and had an infant son when he was sentenced to life in prison, argue that Smith’s affidavit and other concerns should be enough to allow for new discovery and forensic testing. They say the verdict would have been different if jurors heard Smith’s testimony about two other suspects leaving a party to pick Nelson up and returning without her covered in blood. “The State would rather keep an innocent man in jail on the basis that a terrified teenager failed to disclose all of what he knew on the night that Nelson was murdered, than seek out true justice,” they wrote. The DNA testing they are seeking involves hairs found in Nelson’s clenched fist, which have never been examined despite a 2001 court order to do so. They say those hairs likely belong to the killer and that it’s unclear why they haven’t been tested.

Judge Jeffrey Larson ruled earlier this month that the request for hair testing is “premature” given the posture of the case. He said he’s considering the state’s request to summarily dismiss the matter. The Iowa Supreme Court upheld Harris’ conviction in 1989, rejecting arguments that the trial should have been moved due to extensive publicity and that police searches were improper. Courts later upheld the conviction even after inmate Loran Cole, now on death row in Florida for a murder conviction, testified he had made up his trial testimony implicating Harris in order to get favorable treatment in a burglary case. Cole testified at trial that Harris told him in jail that he stabbed Nelson to death after Harris’ brother, Brad Harris, raped her. After his brother was sentenced to life in prison, Brad Harris took a plea agreement that sent him to prison for five years, insisting he was innocent while entering his guilty plea.

Brad Harris is deceased. Daniel Harris, 52, is an inmate at the Iowa State Penitentiary in Fort Madison.

Goldstar Museum open for Memorial Day

News

May 28th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Memorial Day is one of two holidays which the Iowa Goldstar Museum is open. Museum director, Sherie Colbert, says they have special events planned that include a military style breakfast in the morning. Colbert says the military tribute band will be playing, the first one-thousand visitors will get free ice cream, there’s crafts for kids and the first 300 people will get a free petunia for the “Plant a Flower for a Veteran” program. The museum has been upgrading and adding new exhibits during the past several years. “The newest one is the Pacific Theater from World War Two… and we have our World War One exhibit, which is an awesome exhibit that’s up for national recognition,” according to Colbert. “And then we are in the process of working the European Theater.”

There are exhibits on the Vietnam and Korean wars. “We also have a temporary exhibit from the American Legion, which is honoring the G-I Bill and the significance of the G-I Bill and how it has really helped to build the middle class here in America,” Colbert says. She says the exhibits have a lot of equipment and other things of interest. Colbert says there is motion, lights, buttons to push as she says they are trying upgrade the exhibits while keeping them period specific. Colbert encourages you to come out and learn more about Iowa’s military heritage.

“It’s a great opportunity for people to look around and see what we have to offer, and hopefully will come back for a lot of things that will be offered at Camp Dodge over the summer,” Colbert says. She says they have things like the Adjutant General’s summer concerts that people can come out and enjoy. The Iowa Goldstar Museum is open from five a-m until 1 p-m today (Memorial Day). The museum admission is free year round.

(Radio Iowa)