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!

Illinois man’s murder trial in Iowa is delayed

News

December 26th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

BURLINGTON, Iowa (AP) — A judge has granted a trial delay for an Illinois resident accused of killing a man in southeast Iowa last year. Des Moines County court records say 29-year-old Antoine Spann, of Dalton, Illinois, was scheduled to go on trial Jan. 8 . He’s pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder and conspiracy to commit a forcible felony for the death of 26-year-old Demarcus “Peanut” Chew. Chew was shot to death Sept. 10, 2017, in a car outside the home of his mother in Burlington.

The Hawk Eye reports the delay was granted last week. Spann’s attorneys had said more time was needed to obtain depositions from the more than 70 witnesses who might testify. The new trial starting date will be set after the judge and lawyers confer with the case coordinator.

Pott. County Sheriff’s report (12/26)

News

December 26th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

A woman wanted on a felony warrant for Assault Causing Serious Injury, was brought to the Pottawattamie County Sheriff’s Office Monday afternoon. A bail bondsman transported 22-year old Shae Gabriel Gomez, of Council Bluffs to the Sheriff’s parking lot. Once the warrant was confirmed, Gomez was placed under arrest and transported to Pott. County Corrections. 35-year old Carrie Dawn Williams, of Des Moines, was arrested at around 1:50-a.m. Christmas Day, after the vehicle she was in broke down at mile marker 48 on Interstate 80. A routine records check showed Williams had a warrant out of Madison County for being a Fugitive from Justice. Williams was brought to the Pott. County Jail and held pending extradition to Madison County.

And, Tuesday afternoon, 51-year old Julie Ann Frieze, of Council Bluffs, was arrested on felony charges for Theft in the 1st Degree and Dependent Adult Abuse by Exploitation. Frieze was taken into custody after a deputy was dispatched to 757 North Highway Street, to check on a wanted party. A caller to Pott. County Communications said Julie Frieze was on location and had a valid warrant. The caller had previously been told to call 911 if Frieze showed up at the address. When the Deputy made contact with Frieze, she stated she had done anything wrong. After a brief discussion though, the woman was placed under arrest and transported to the Pott. County Jail.

Pioneer cemetery boards try to meet requests for new burials

News

December 26th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

MAQUOKETA, Iowa (AP) — Commissions that oversee some of Iowa’s oldest pioneer cemeteries are struggling to accommodate requests for new burials. To qualify as a pioneer cemetery, there must be fewer than 12 burials in the past 50 years. That limit and other factors can make it hard to approve requests for new burials. The Telegraph Herald reports the Jackson County Pioneer Cemetery Commission has been working to establish rules allowing residents to be buried in the old cemeteries.

Allen and Marjorie Fowler have been waiting for three years for Jackson County to establish rules that would let them be buried in the Union Center Cemetery, near their family farm east of Maquoketa. JoAnn Caven, a member of the commission, said the panel hopes to establish rules in 2019.

(Podcast) KJAN 8-a.m. News, 12/26/18

News, Podcasts

December 26th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

More State and area news from KJAN News Director Ric Hanson.

Play

Use caution when clicking on pop-up ads, even if you love Oprah

News

December 26th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — Iowans are warned to think before they click if they see a familiar celebrity like Oprah or Ellen on a pop-up ad, pitching products for skin care, losing weight or boosting memory. Jim Hegarty, C-E-O of the Better Business Bureau in Omaha-Council Bluffs, says many of those ads are scams and they’re rigged to rope you in. “People don’t read the fine print even if the fine print is there,” Hegarty says. “They think they’re just getting a week’s trial or a month’s trial and all they have to do is pay for shipping, but when they pay for that shipping, they’re agreeing to have that product shipped to them month after month and have those charges reoccur on their cards.”

The con artists who produce the pop-ups don’t really have the endorsement of the celebrity you see, he says, and more scams seem to appear as fast as they’re being shut down. “They’re like Whack-a-mole,” Hegarty says. “Most of them are operating out of Florida, there’s been some FTC action and a couple of these operations were shut down, but here’s the deal: because individual loss might be $180 or $200, there’s not any individuals that are losing hundreds of thousands of dollars.” Whatever amount you may have lost on the worthless products, Hegarty says it’s important to let the authorities know, as well as the nearest office of the Better Business Bureau. “We want them to report it to the BBB because we can compile that data and when state or local losses get to a certain threshold, then the government can take action,” he says.

Hagerty says this type of scam is estimated to have bilked Americans out of $1.3 billion in the past ten years.

Man accused of stealing from mother in Dubuque

News

December 26th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

DUBUQUE, Iowa (AP) — Authorities say a man stole nearly $37,000 from his mother while they lived in a smelly Dubuque residence filled with trash. Dubuque County court records say 35-year-old Michael Woods is charged with dependent adult abuse. The records don’t list the name of an attorney who could comment for him. Woods’ preliminary hearing is scheduled for Friday. The Telegraph Herald reports that police say Woods and his 75-year-old mother, Barbara Gebhardt, had been living as squatters in the lower level of a residence that had been owned by a woman who died in February 2017.

Officers sent to check the residence found Gebhardt in a room that was filled with trash and junk and smelled of “mold, rotting garbage, feces and urine.” She was taken to a hospital.

(Podcast) KJAN Morning News & Funeral report, 12/26/18

News, Podcasts

December 26th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

The area’s latest and/or top news stories at 7:06-a.m. From KJAN News Director Ric Hanson

Play

NE man arrested in Fremont County

News

December 26th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Sheriff Kevin Aistrope reports that early this morning the Fremont County Sheriff’s Office received a report of theft from the Pilot Travel Center. Upon deputies arrival the subjects had fled the scene and left the car they were operating on the side of the road after striking something and making the vehicle inoperable. A short time later Deputies located the three subjects, two of whom were juveniles. During the investigation 18 year old Cameron Peters of Lincoln, NE was found to be in possession of a controlled substance and drug paraphernalia. All three subjects were transported to the Law Enforcement center where Peters was being held on a $1,300 bond. The two juveniles were cited into court and released to guardians.

Cameron Peters

Madison & Shelby County jails among six recognized for being Iowa’s “best of the best”

News

December 26th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — The employees of six county jails in Iowa are being praised for going “above and beyond” the minimum state standards for those facilities. Delbert Longley, the chief jail inspector for the Iowa Department of Corrections, selected the six county jails as 2018 “Best of the Best” award winners. “I inspect 106 facilities every year. The vast majority of them do a tremendous job of making sure they are doing the right things and they never get recognized for that,” Longley said. “They’re just kind of like the red-headed stepchild out there…nobody wants to talk about them until, all-of-the sudden, something bad happens.”

Delbert Longley presents award to Shelby County authorities.

The awards were recently handed out at an annual banquet held by the Iowa State Sheriffs and Deputies’ Association. The six jails are located in Madison, Shelby, Iowa, Sioux, Dubuque and Marshall counties. Longley commended all six for being responsive to the needs of inmates. “They treat them with respect and (the jail staff) demand respect in return,” Longley explained. “We know the individuals who are (in jail) have been charged with something, otherwise they wouldn’t be there, but that doesn’t mean they should be treated as second-class citizens.”  The jails also scored high marks for cleanliness. “I don’t care how new or how old of a facility you have, I don’t believe there’s any reason why it should be dirty. I will cite that quickly,” Longley said. “I just don’t want poor living conditions – and not only that, it’s poor working conditions for staff.”

Another priority for Longley is making sure the county employees keep “thorough and complete” records of all jail proceedings. “The documentation is what’s going to keep a lot of jails out of lawsuits. If you can show what you’ve done, when, and why you’ve done it – that is very, very important,” Longley said. According to Longley, administrators and employees of many county jails face substantial challenges including limited budgets, overcrowding, and facilities that are badly in need of replacement or repair. There are several county jails in Iowa that were built in the early 1900s.
…………..
The 2018 “Best of the Best” county jail award winners:
Small jails (up to 25 beds) – Madison and Shelby counties
Medium jails (26-100 beds) – Iowa and Sioux counties
Large jails (over 100 beds) – Dubuque and Marshall counties

Funding crunch for online courses for Iowa high school students

News

December 26th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — Hundreds of Iowa high school students may lose access to required foreign language classes if lawmakers don’t provide a cash infusion to a state-run initiative. The program is called “Iowa Learning Online” and Iowa Department of Education director Ryan Wise uses the shorthand “I-LO” when discussing it. “It is virtually impossible to get the fees and the demand at a point where ILO pays for itself,” Wise says. The program was launched six years ago with an annual budget of one-and-a-half million dollars in state tax money. That funding ended three years ago and schools are now charged 260 dollars for each online course offered to each student. Once the fees went into effect, enrollment dropped by 40 percent and Wise says federal funding to supplement those fees is no longer available. “Really, without a state appropriation at this point, there’s not a sustainable path forward,” Wise says.

That’s especially critical for students in rural Iowa, according to Wise. Nearly 75 percent of the Iowa Learning Online courses being taken now are foreign languages. “So if (Iowa Learning Online) were to go away after this year, what you see is a big gap in opportunities, especially for rural schools that may struggle to get that world language teacher, that Spanish teacher or French teacher to come in,” Wise says. “We’re able to offer French, Spanish, German, Chinese, Japanese — all online and so this really meets a need in our schools.”

Wise says about 17-hundred Iowa high school students are enrolled in the program’s online courses for THIS school year. He’s asking the legislature and governor to provide half a MILLION dollars in state tax dollars so the program can continue in the next school year.