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Mills County Sheriff’s report (1/27)

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January 27th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

The Mills County Sheriff’s Office reports two arrests took place, Saturday. Authorities say at around 3:04-a.m., 31-year old Justin Kaiser Mials, of Decatur, GA., was arrested for OWI/1st offense, following a traffic stop on Highway 34. His bond was set at $1,000. And, a little after 4-p.m. Saturday, 24-year old Russell Logan Barker, of Council Bluffs, was arrested following a traffic stop at 210th & 221st Streets in Mills County. Barker was charged with Driving While Barred, and Speeding. His bond was set at $2,000.

Cass County Sheriff’s report (1/27): 2 arrested on drug charges

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January 27th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

The Cass County Sheriff’s Office reports five arrests over the past week, including two people who were arrested on separate drug-related charges. On January 22, 2020, 41-year old Aaron Joseph Moore, of Atlantic, was arrested on a Sheriff’s Office warrant for (Felony) Possession with Intent to Deliver. Upon arrest for this charge, Moore was additionally charged with Possession of Marijuana 3rd/Subsequent offense, and Possession of Drug Paraphernalia. Moore was taken to the Cass County Jail and held there. On January 24th, Moore was additionally charged with a Felony Sex Offender Residency Violation/2nd or Subsequent offense, and an additional Felony charge of Possession with Intent to Deliver/Marijuana. Moore remains held at the Cass County Jail on $22,300 bond.

On January 16th, 48-year old Lisa Marie Shrimpton, of Atlantic, was arrested on a Felony charge of Possession with Intent to Deliver/Methamphetamine. Shrimpton was taken to the Cass County Jail where she remains held on $10,000 bond.  That same day, Cass County Deputies arrested 31-year old Justin Lee Cooley, of Atlantic, on a Cass County warrant for Failure to Appear. Cooley was taken to the Cass County Jail where he remains held.

On January 19th, 29-year old Justin Dale Hardisty, of Cumberland, was arrested on a Felony charge of OWI/3rd or Subsequent Offense; as well as Driving While Barred, and Interference with Official Acts. Hardisty was taken to the Cass County Jail and released later that day on $5,000 bond. On January 21st, Cass County Sheriff’s Deputies arrested 59-year old Daryl D. Armstrong,  of Anita, on a charge of Domestic Assault. Armstrong was taken to the Cass County Jail and released later that day on $2,000 bond.

 

UPDATE: Casey man arrested on OWI charge following Sunday morning accident near Anita

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January 27th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

In an update to our earlier reports, that Cass County Sheriff’s Office says 38-year old Ryan Paul Elgin, of Casey, was arrested early SUNDAY morning, following a single-vehicle rollover accident northeast of Anita. Following an investigation into the accident, Elgin was taken into custody for OWI/offense. He was also cited for Failure to Maintain Control. The accident happened at around 1:04-a.m., Sunday on 760th Street, about one-half mile north of White Pole Road.

Elgin was driving a 2014 Ford F-150 pickup, and had attempted to back up and turn around at that location. In doing so, he backed into a ditch, causing the pickup to roll onto the passenger side. No injuries were reported. Damage to the vehicle is estimated at $1,500. Elgin was taken to the Cass County Jail and released later that day on his own recognizance.

Ames police looking for man after shooting at McDonald’s

News

January 27th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

UPDATE: The Ames Police Department announced Monday that 20-year-old Cedar Rapids resident Demarcus Stokes was arrested in Polk County, Missouri around 4:15 p.m. (Original story follows, below):

(Radio Iowa) – Ames police have issued a warrant for a man who shot out the window of a local fast food restaurant. Witnesses told police a man came into a McDonald’s around 10:47 last night (Sunday) — then went out to a car in the parking lot and got a shotgun and fired at a man and woman in the restaurant. A window was shattered — but no one was injured. Police say one of the targets of the shooting knew the man and identified him as 20-year-old Demarcus Stokes of Cedar Rapids.

Demarcus Stokes

Ames Police issued an attempted murder warrant for Stokes and say he should be considered armed and dangerous. The red car he was last seen driving was found in Story County and he may now be driving a gray Chevy Suburban with license plate number G-N-P-480. Anyone with information is asked to call the Ames Police Department at 239-5133 or the anonymous tip line 239-5533. You may also contact Crime Stoppers.

Memoir by Sen. Joni Ernst of Iowa coming out in May

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January 27th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

NEW YORK (AP) — Sen. Joni Ernst has a memoir coming out in May. The book is called “Daughter of the Heartland: My Ode to the Country That Raised Me.” According to her publisher, Threshold Editions, Ernst will tell of a journey from farm girl to first female senator from Iowa. Her book arrives as she faces what is expected to be a competitive race for re-election. Ernst is among a handful of Republican incumbents whom Democrats and pollsters have identified as vulnerable in 2020. The 49-year-old Ernst was elected to the Senate in 2014.

Trump officials and backers to flood Iowa on caucus day

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January 27th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

WASHINGTON (AP) – President Donald Trump’s reelection campaign is mustering governmental muscle as it tries to turn out Republican voters next month in early voting Iowa. With most of the attention focused on the battle for the Democratic nomination, Trump’s campaign is announcing what it is calling an “unprecedented” surrogate operation. It will include more than 80 supporters fanning out across the state the day of its kickoff caucuses on Feb. 3. Among them will be acting White House chief of staff Mick Mulvaney and much of Trump’s Cabinet, as well as elected officials, Liberty University President Jerry Falwell Jr. and the inventor of “My Pillow.”

Court system unveils free online forms for divorce cases without children

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January 27th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — The state court system has released the first group in a series of free interactive court forms designed to assist you in accessing the state court system without an attorney. Judicial Branch spokesperson, Marissa Gaal, says the first forms are for people seeking a divorce who don’t have nay minor or dependent adult children.  “These were developed to kind of address an access to justice issue. We know that there are people out there that struggle to access our court system,” Gaal explains. The forms are free for anyone to use. “The process helps prepare those court forms based on user’s answers to step-by-step questions,” Gaal says.

She says all you have to do to get started is to go to the Judicial Branch website. “And they can navigate to ‘representing yourself’ and that will guide them tour divorce page where there are step-by-step instructions for accessing those interactive court forms,” according to Gaal. The webpage is at www.iowacourts.gov. Gaal says all the information you need to know should be on the site. “The interactive forms should have a section that will list off any important information for them to have on hand before they begin the process,” Gaal says, “and all that information is on our webpage as well.”

She says filling out the forms is the first step in the process. “Once they have gone through the interactive court forms — they will generate the forms that they will print off, sign and then file those forms with the court,” Gaal says.  Gaal says the court system saw there were five-thousand-430 (5,430) divorces in the state last year where there were no children involved.

Scammers Spoofing FBI Omaha Numbers and Impersonating Government Employees to Defraud Victims

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January 27th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

OMAHA, NE – The FBI Omaha Field Office is warning the public to be on alert for a phone scam that spoofs, or fraudulently displays, the FBI’s telephone number on the victim’s caller ID. The scammer impersonates a government official and uses intimidation tactics, such as the threat of arrest, to demand payment of money. These claims are false and the calls are NOT from the FBI. The FBI Omaha Field Office has seen its main number, (402) 493-8688, spoofed in this manner recently, as well as the numbers of its Resident Agencies, or satellite offices, throughout Nebraska and Iowa. Citizens nationwide have been targeted.

The FBI defines this type of scam as government impersonation fraud, in which criminals impersonate government officials in an attempt to collect money. In some cases, the intended target may be told there is a federal warrant for their arrest, which would be dismissed by the court in exchange for immediate payment to the caller. Special Agent in Charge Kristi K. Johnson says “The public should be aware that the FBI will not call or email people to demand money or threaten arrest.”

The FBI strongly encourages anyone contacted by a caller who says they are with the FBI or any government agency to verify the information with their local FBI Field Office or the government agency in question. Contact information for all 56 FBI field offices can be found at www.fbi.gov. According to the Internet Crimes Complaint Center (IC3), more than 12,000 people nationwide have reported being victims of government impersonation scams in 2019, with losses totaling over $112,000,000. Anyone who feels they were the victim of this or any other online scam should report the incident immediately using the IC3 website at www.ic3.gov.

Daylight Saving Time — forever — is the plan from one Iowa lawmaker

News

January 27th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Daylight Saving Time — forever. That’s the idea behind a bill State Representative Mike Sexton of Rockwell City is sponsoring. “People are just tired of changing their clocks and the effect it has on their children, their lives,” Sexton says. “When you visit with people, it really disrupts their life, especially the ‘spring ahead,’ when you lose an hour.”

Humans used to measure time by the position of the sun. In the late 1700s, the British introduced the concept of “Standard Time” — so time would be uniform throughout a region. The concept was adopted in America about a century later. Daylight Saving Time was introduced in the U.S. and many European countries during World War One, to conserve the fuel used to make electricity. The extra hour of sunlight at the end of the day in the springtime and summer helped farmers. “A lot of farms didn’t have electricity and so doing chores and taking care of livestock, the more light you had, the better it was. That’s why you had all these windows in barns,” Sexton says. “Now, our tractors with GPS…I tell folks with one my tractors, I could shut the lights off and it would just go down through the field better than I could steer it.”

Sexton says the majority of people who’ve talked to him about this issue prefer to stay on Daylight Saving Time, to get that extra hour of sunlight in the summer. “That’s what people want,” Sexton says. “They get off work and they have that extra hour to go to ballgames and do stuff during the summer.” Sexton tried, but failed to advance his idea through the 2019 Iowa legislature. He plans to try again this year after the state of Washington was successful in getting a federal waiver and making the move to year-round Daylight Saving Time. A bill that’s been introduced in the Iowa Senate would make Central Standard Time year-round in the State of Iowa.

Cong. King wants meeting with Corps of Engineers about flood prevention plan

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January 27th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — Iowa Congressman Steve King says he wants to talk with leaders of the U-S Army Corps of Engineers about their plan for 2020 flood control in the Missouri River basin. King says he wants to know how the Corps will help to prevent a repeat of the flooding that caused parts of Interstate 29 in western Iowa to be flooded three times in 2019. “That’s what I want to sit down with the Corps and have a discussion about,” King says. “Having spent my working life in these kind of projects, although this is a bigger project than King Construction has ever done, I want to look at the whole scope of this, the entire Missouri River watershed.”

Four states along the Missouri River are joining forces to look for ways to avoid the kind of flooding that caused millions of dollars damage last year. Nebraska, Iowa, Missouri and Kansas are pooling their money to pay for half of a $400,000 study with the Corps of Engineers to measure how much water flows down the Missouri River. King says he’s concerned about the feeder tributaries into the Missouri River, like Perry Creek and other northwest Iowa rivers that ran high or flooded last year. “If it is a series of dams up in each of these watersheds like Perry Creek, if it’s a 20- or 30-year project like often these things turn into,” King says, “we need to see it with a clear eye and start down that path.”

King says he is anxious to hear ideas from the Corps on the flood issue. King says, “What I hear sometimes from the Corps is, ‘We don’t have the money, we don’t have the resources,’ and I say, ‘That’s not what this is about right now. It’s about the biggest idea you can come up with that does the most good and how we might tailor that into something that might solve this.'”

King spoke at a town hall meeting Saturday in Sioux City.