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Suspect wounded in shooting with police in northwest Iowa

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February 26th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

SIOUX CITY, Iowa (AP) — One person is hospitalized after being wounded in a shootout with Woodbury County Sheriff’s deputies in northwest Iowa. The Sheriff’s office says deputies were pursuing two suspects south of Sioux City around 3:30 a.m. Sunday before the shooting happened.

Authorities say the suspects started firing at deputies after the chase ended, and the deputies returned fire. One suspect was wounded and taken to a hospital, but the injuries are not expected to be life-threatening. The other suspect was arrested.

Authorities have not identified the suspects or said why they were being pursued initially.

Going back to school? Atlantic BPW offers 4 scholarships this year

News

February 26th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

The Atlantic Business and Professional Women (BPW) are offering four scholarships this year for adults looking to head back to school to further their education or gain additional skills.

  • Two, $1,000 scholarships are available to a Cass County (IA) resident (male or female) needing education to either re-enter the work force, gain additional education for a career, meet educational requirements for employment, or, to continue education that was interrupted for family or other reasons. Applications must be submitted by April 1st, 2017.
  • A $500 Colleen Scholarship is available to a female resident of Cass, Shelby or Audubon Counties (IA), who is pursuing a degree in Computer Science, Management Information Systems, Computer Systems Management, Chemistry or Engineering. The student may be of any age and attend school full- or part-time. Applications must be submitted by April 1st, 2017.
  • A $1,000 Bev Mendenhall nursing scholarship is available to a female residents of Cass County (IA) who wants to re-enter the work force, gain additional education for a career, meet educational requirements for employment, or, to continue education that was interrupted for family or other reasons. Applications must be submitted by April 1st, 2017.
  • And, BPW Iowa is awarding five $1,o000 scholarships to a man or woman who is a resident of Iowa. The applicant need not be a BPW member except in the case of a member living out of state. The applicant must be a non-traditional student, who:
    • Is a U-S citizen
    • Has been out of the work force and wants or needs to go back to work, but needs additional education.
    • Has completed High School five or more years ago and now wants to start or resume their college education.
    • Demonstrates financial needs, scholastic ability, leadership skills and career goals.

Applications for the BPW Iowa scholarships must be postmarked by March 1st, 2017. Contact Jolene Roecker, BPW Scholarship Chairman, at 712-249-7700, or e-mail jolene.roecker@greatwesternbank.com for an application.

Are Iowa immigration, sanctuary cities bills needed?

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February 26th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Bills in the Republican-controlled Iowa Legislature this session purport to enforce federal immigration laws, but academics say some proposals are redundant and could face legal challenges.

The proposed bills include a so-called sanctuary cities ban that would require state, local and college officials to follow laws related to immigration. Another proposal would ensure employers don’t knowingly hire people who aren’t in the country legally. A third measure would prohibit Iowa courts from applying foreign law to state cases, which some critics say is anti-Islam.

Legal experts and academics argue that existing federal laws already cover these topics, and adding new legislation could open the state up to lawsuits. Republicans dispute any argument that Iowa isn’t welcoming to immigrants, and they emphasize that the measures ensure rules are followed.

Fundraising kicks off for $1.8M trail system in Glenwood

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February 26th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

GLENWOOD, Iowa (AP) — Organizers have kicked off fundraising for a $1.8 million trail system in southwest Iowa. The Council Bluffs Daily Nonpareil reports that the trial would stretch 2 1/2 miles, starting at a trailhead next to Glenwood Community High School. The location will include parking for 100 vehicles and a pavilion with a restroom and clothes-changing facility.

The trail would run along Keg Creek, then east to the city athletic complex. Officials expect to install three new bridges over Keg Creek, along with three culvert crossings over creek tributaries as part of the trail system.

Officials hope to connect Glenwood’s trail to the Wabash Trace and eventually to the Keystone Trail system across the Missouri River in Bellevue, Nebraska.

Corning man arrested for possession of drug paraphernalia

News

February 26th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

A traffic stop at around 10:40-p.m. Saturday, in Adams County, resulted in the arrest of a man for Possession of Drug Paraphernalia. Sheriff’s officials say 18-year old Jackson Soll, of Corning, was arrested after deputies detected the odor of marijuana coming from his vehicle. After conducting a probable cause search, numerous smoking devices were found in the vehicle. Soll was taken into custody and transported to the Adams County Jail, where his bond was set at $300.

Fatal car vs. pedestrian accident in eastern IA Sat. night

News

February 26th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

A pedestrian was killed when being struck by a vehicle while the victim was walking along Highway 20 in eastern Iowa, late Saturday night. According to the Iowa State Patrol, a 2012 Chrysler driven by 24-year old Angela A. Young, of Cuba City, WI., was traveling east on Highway 20 in Dubuque County, when her vehicle struck the pedestrian on the road, just before the Peosta exit (Exit 308). The accident happened at around 11:40-p.m.

The victim died at the scene. Their name was being withheld pending notification of family. The State Patrol was assisted at the scene by Dubuque County Sheriff’s Deputies, Peosta Police and Centralia Police and Fire Departments.

Iowa early News Headlines: Sunday, Feb. 26th 2017

News

February 26th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

Here is the latest Iowa news from The Associated Press at 1:20-a.m. CST

URBANDALE, Iowa (AP) — Republicans are finding themselves squeezed between a polarizing president and the hundreds of angry voters shouting them down at raucous town halls. The national pushback is leaving some Republicans wary, complicating President Donald Trump’s ability to get his agenda through Congress.

UNDATED (AP) — The Iowa Supreme Court has ruled that age alone is enough to show a person needs protection from elder abuse under a state law enacted in 2014. The ruling Friday comes in the case of 69-year-old Judith Chapman, who successfully obtained an elder abuse protection order against her adult son, John Wilkinson Jr., in late 2014. Chapman sought the order after she said her son tried to force her out of her mobile home.

WATERLOO, Iowa (AP) — A Waterloo man has pleaded guilty to a reduced charge in the July shooting death of another man. The Waterloo-Cedar Falls Courier reports that 25-year-old Jacques Dominique Williamson pleaded guilty Friday to a single count of intimidation with a dangerous weapon. Williamson had been charged with first-degree murder and attempted murder for his role the July 17 drive-by shooting that killed 21-year-old Otavious Brown and injured Dewon Campbell Jr. and Aundrey Roberts Jr.

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — A Polk County judge has ordered law enforcement not to disclose confidential information in the case of a man accused of killing two Iowa police officers after the man’s attorney asked for a gag order. Lawyers for Scott Greene complained about a Polk County Jail employee’s comment Feb. 17 on a newspaper Facebook post. Greene has pleaded not guilty to two murder charges in the Nov. 2 slayings of Urbandale Police Officer Justin Martin and Des Moines Police Sgt. Anthony Beminio.

10 Iowa Department for the Blind employees laid off

News

February 25th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Ten Iowa Department for the Blind employees have been laid off to provide more money to a program that would focus on job training for teenagers. Des Moines television station KCCI reports that the layoffs occurred Thursday. Eight of those who lost their jobs worked in the library, helping the blind access books.

Department director Emily Wharton says new federal requirements mean the department must spend more of its budget on job training. Wharton says the agency is required to spend 15 percent of the money it gets on services for teenagers and young adults to help them become employed and successful. Books, she said, can be accessed through audio and digital Braille.

Judge gags law enforcement on confidential Greene case info

News

February 25th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — A Polk County judge has ordered law enforcement not to disclose confidential information in the case of a man accused of killing two Iowa police officers after the man’s attorney asked for a gag order. Lawyers for Scott Greene complained about a Polk County Jail employee’s comment Feb. 17 on a newspaper Facebook post regarding Greene’s request for a change of venue. Details about the comment were sealed by the court.

Greene has pleaded not guilty to two murder charges in the Nov. 2 ambush-style slayings of Urbandale Police Officer Justin Martin and Des Moines Police Sgt. Anthony Beminio. The shootings took place about two miles apart within minutes of each other as both officers sat in their patrol cars. Authorities have said that Greene turned himself in hours later.

Iowa high court: Age enough to order elder abuse protection

News

February 25th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — The Iowa Supreme Court has ruled that age alone is enough to show a person needs protection from elder abuse under a state law enacted in 2014. The ruling Friday comes in the case of 69-year-old Judith Chapman, who successfully obtained an elder abuse protection order against her adult son, John Wilkinson Jr., in late 2014.

Chapman transferred title of her mobile home to Wilkinson, telling him that when she died, the trailer would be his. Wilkinson later demanded $35,000 to transfer title back to his mother. When she refused, he posted eviction notices on her door.

On Friday, Justice David Wiggins wrote that the law defines vulnerable adults as those 60 or older who are unable to protect themselves because of “age or a mental or physical condition.”