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Ag Equipment dealer theft reported in Shenandoah

Ag/Outdoor, News

June 4th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

Authorities in western/southwest Iowa are investigating separate burglaries and thefts from an ag-equipment dealer. Police in Shenandoah say a burglary took place last Saturday evening at Vetter Equipment, in Shenandoah. Authorities say the suspects entered the building a little after 8:15-p.m., and in a security camera video, were seen loading into a trailer, tools and equipment worth $50,000-to-$80,000. Most of the items stolen were STIHL brand equipment, including leaf blowers, chainsaws, weed eaters, trimmers and other materials. Police were working to try and get the license plate of the vehicle pulling the trailer.

A similar break-in and theft occurred at Vetter Equipment, in Onawa. Additional information about that incident is currently not available. Anyone with information about the burglary at Vetter Equipment in Shenandoah, is asked to call Shenandoah Police at 712-246-3512.

(Podcast) KJAN 8-a.m. News, 6/4/20

News, Podcasts

June 4th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

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

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1 dead in central Iowa crash, Thursday

News

June 4th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

A crash at around 4:25-a.m. today (Thursday), in Central Iowa’s Warren County, has resulted in a death. The Iowa State Patrol says a 2010 KIA Sedona was traveling south on Interstate 35 southbound, when the SUV struck a guard rail near mile marker 63.25. The driver of the vehicle, who was not wearing a seat belt, died at the scene. Their name was not immediately released. The accident remains under investigation.

Creston Police report 6/4/20

News

June 4th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

Officials with the Creston Police Department report 49-year old Michael Williams, of Creston, was arrested Wednesday afternoon, for Domestic Abuse Assault by impeding air and/or blood flow, and, for Violation of a Protection Order. Williams was being held in the Union County Jail while awaiting a bond hearing. And, on May 30th, 39-year old Christopher Kackley, of Ft. Dodge, was arrested in Creston on a charge of Burglary in the 3rd degree. He was being held in the Union County Jail on a $5,000 bond.

(Podcast) KJAN Morning News & Funeral report, 6/4/20

News, Podcasts

June 4th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

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

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Iowa COVID-19 update (6/4/20) 7-a.m.: 14 more dead. 562 new cases

News

June 4th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

The Iowa Department of Public Health reports 14 more people have died from COVID-19. for a total of 578, and there were 562 new, positive cases of the virus, since Wednesday, for a total of 20,574. There were also 8,620 more negative case test results than Wednesday, 265 more people have recovered from the virus – for a total of 12,157, and the number of Iowans tested rose 9,145 to 173,280.

The IDPH reports also, there were four less persons who remained in a hospital, but 10 more were admitted Wednesday, for a total of 310. The number of persons in an ICU was down 11, to 105; Six fewer people were on ventilators, for a total of 70. The number of Long-Term Care facility (LTC) outbreaks is unchanged at 42. 10 more patients and/or staff tested positive for COVID-19, for a total of 1,605, five more died at those facilities, for a total of 288, and 80 have recovered from COVID-19, which is 41 more than Wednesday.

The Region 4 Regional Medical Coordination Center (RMCC)  data – covering hospitals in western/southwest Iowa – shows one less person hospitalized,  two less people in an ICU, none were admitted over the past 24-hours, and 2 remain on ventilators. For Cass and surrounding counties, there wasn’t much change in the number of cases and the number of those recovered, over the past 24-hours. The exceptions: Guthrie and Shelby Counties, both of which had 1 more positive case of COVID-19, and Pottawattamie County, where the IDPH dashboard shows 306 cases and 185 recovered.

Study finds vaping boosts risk of dental disease

News

June 4th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

A study on electronic cigarettes done in part by a University of Iowa researcher finds vaping significantly increases the risk of dental disease. U-I Professor Sukirth Ganesan says he was stunned by how quickly the use of e-cigarettes impacted good bacteria, leaving users’ mouths teeming with infection-causing organisms and at a substantial risk for ailments ranging from gum disease to cancer. “All of these patients are using e-cigarettes for anywhere between three months, four months to a year,” Ganesan says. “Within a year of use, the e-cigarette vaping is messing up the oral bacteria, their functions and everything around.”

The study found those who vape had oral bacteria that resembled periodontitis, a gum infection that can lead to tooth loss and, left untreated, is a risk factor for heart and lung disease. “This is kind of alarming that these changes are happening within a year,” Ganesan says. “We have to follow up and see what happens to these people who are using e-cigarettes.” When vaping first gained popularity seven or eight years ago, it promised to be a viable alternative that could help people quit smoking traditional tobacco cigarettes, but Ganesan says that’s clearly no longer the case. “I’ve had patients tell me, ‘Oh, doc, I’m using this vaping to try and quit smoking and it’s working great,’ and I’ll be like, ‘Fantastic, go for it,’ because we had no idea what it was doing,” Ganesan says. “Now, yeah, definitely not. Sometimes I feel bad that in 2012 and ’13, that I didn’t know and I would just say ‘yes’ if someone asked me because I didn’t know what was going on.”

Vaping continues to gain popularity in Iowa, especially among youth. An American Lung Association report last year found 16-percent of Iowa adults smoke cigarettes while about five-percent vape, versus Iowa high schools where four-percent of 11th graders smoke cigarettes and more than 22-percent vape. Ganesan’s research was published in the journal Science Advances.

https://advances.sciencemag.org/content/6/22/eaaz0108

Red Oak man arrested for Criminal Mischief, Wed. night

News

June 4th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

Police in Red Oak, Wednesday night, arrested a man on a Criminal Mischief charge. 46-year old James Reed Mitroff II, of Red Oak, was taken into custody in the 900 block of E. Washington Avenue a little before 10-p.m. and brought to the Montgomery County Jail. His cash bond was set at $300.

House passes bill outlining felon voting rights guidelines, attention shifts back to Senate

News

June 4th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — Republicans in the Iowa House have approved legislation to forbid paroled felons who owe victim restitution from voting if Iowans approve a constitutional amendment that automatically restores felon voting rights. Representative Bobby Kaufmann, a Republican from Wilton, was the bill’s chief advocate. “We’re talking about somebody who potentially killed someone,” he says, “not just some dismissive bill they can’t pay.”

Representative Mary Wolfe, a Democrat from Clinton, is a criminal defense attorney. Wolfe says last (Wednesday) night was a strange time to pass the bill as protesters 50 blocks from the Capitol were calling for criminal justice reform. “It’s punishing people because they do not have the financial resources to pay a debt,” Wolfe said. “It’s a poll tax.”

Representative Ras Smith of Waterloo, a Democrat, says the bill exacerbates inequities in the criminal justice system.”You are knowingly utilizing legislation to guarantee that poor Iowans are dis-proportionally impacted and shut out from the process to raise their voices,” Smith said. “That’s just what it is.”

Kaufmann says this was always part two of Republican lawmakers’ plans on felon voting rights. “If I’ve got care-o-meter for the rights of the victim, it’s up here,” Kaufmann says. “And if I’ve got a care-o-meter for the rights for the people who committed the crimes and hurt them, it’s a lot lower.”

The bill goes to the governor, so attention shifts back to Senate Republicans who’ve balked at passing a plan to end Iowa’s status as the only state that bans felons from voting once they’re released from prison. In 2019, Governor Reynolds called on lawmakers to pass a resolution for a constitutional amendment that would automatically restore felon voting rights. She has resisted calls to accomplish that with an executive order, as former Governors Vilsack and Culver did.

Reynolds has streamlined the system for individuals seeking voting rights through applications she must review and approve.

Senate sends governor medical marijuana program expansion

News

June 4th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The Iowa Senate has sent Governor Reynolds a bill to adjust Iowa’s medical marijuana program. It will not boost the potency of the cannabis products as significantly as a bill she vetoed in 2019 would have. Senator Rich Taylor, a Democrat from Mount Pleasant, says he’d like to pass a meaningful bill.

“I figured this year we’ll come back and tell the governor: ‘No, you’re wrong,'” Taylor said. “‘We’re going to stick with this. We’re going to move Iowa forward. We’re going to get some real help for some very, very sick people who can be helped by this drug.'”

The bill aligns with the recommendations of a state task force — allowing Iowans in the medical cannabis program to buy a 90-day supply of products with a maximum of four-and-a-half grams of T-H-C. That’s the key chemical in marijuana. Senator Brad Zaun of Urbandale, a Republican, says the bill isn’t perfect, but worth supporting because it also lets doctors recommend a higher dosage.

“Tell that 57-year-old woman that is already on the program that will go to her doctor and want an increase in the THC level, explain to her why you’re voting against this,” Zaun said, “because this is a step forward.”

Senators had an often testy debate over this bill before it passed on a mostly party-line vote. The House endorsed the plan earlier this year.