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Keep up-to-date with Fox News Radio, Radio Iowa, Brownfield & the Iowa Agribusiness Networks!
No injuries were reported following an accident Monday morning, in Atlantic. According to the Police Department, vehicles driven by Ashley Mayo, of Lewis, and Robert Stuetelberg, of Atlantic, collided at around 10-a.m., at the intersection of 7th and Chestnut Streets. The accident, which caused $3,500 damage altogether, occurred in the middle of the intersection, as Mayo was traveling east on 7th and Stuetelberg was turning west on 7th. Both drivers claimed the other ran the stop sign. Mayo was cited for having No Proof of Insurance.
Four people were arrested recently, in Mills County. The Sheriff’s Department reports 39-year old Justin David Reha, of Thurman, was arrested early this (Wednesday) morning on charges of OWI/1st offense and Driving Under Suspension. His bond was set at $1,300. On Monday, 28-year old Brett Allen Coyle, of Glenwood, was arrested for Domestic Abuse Assault. He was being held in the Mills County Jail without bond.
Last Saturday, deputies arrested 24-year old Adam Lee Maher, of Shenandoah, on a charge of OWI/2nd offense. Maher’s bond was set at $2,000. And, on Friday, 25-year old Lance Christian Bierma, of Sheffield, TX, was arrested on an OWI charge. Bond was established at $1,000.
The Mills County Sheriff’s Office reports also, a Malvern woman was injured during a single vehicle accident Sunday, two-miles southeast of Pacific Junction. Nancy Ruwe was driving a 2007 Chevy westbound on 221st Street, when the vehicle drifted onto the shoulder. Ruwe overcorrected, sending the vehicle across the center line of the road and into a ditch, where it came to rest after hitting a tree. Ruwe was transported to the University of Nebraska Medical Center by Pacific Junction Rescue.
A Shenandoah man was arrested without incident this (Wednesday) morning, for allegedly stealing a vehicle from the Shenandoah area. According to the Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office, 20-year old James Allen Lilly was taken into custody by Red Oak Police following a traffic stop on 130th Street in Montgomery County. Lilly was being held in the Montgomery County Jail on $5,000 cash bond, for Possession of Stolen Property. He also faces a charge of Driving While Suspended.
The Iowa Board of Cosmetology Arts and Sciences has suspended indefinitely, the license of a Pottawattamie County woman. The Board’s decision in May went into effect June 24th. Melissa Huerta Mendoza, of 2800 Margaret Avenue in Council Bluffs, was ordered to surrender her original license to the Board, after she failed to contest the matter at a hearing. The penalty was the result of Mendoza’s failure to comply with an order issued by the Iowa Department of Revenue’s Centralized Collection Unit.
The Iowa Board of Massage Therapy has fined a Shelby County man for advertising a service he was not licensed to perform under Iowa Code. In it’s ruling issued July 1st, the Board ordered David North of Harlan, to pay $1,000 within 30-days, or face further, legal action.
In December 2012, the Board ruled North advertised his Shiatsu massage therapy practice in the Atlantic News Telegraph when he was not licensed to perform that therapy under Iowa Code.
The Board says the Practice of “Massage Therapy” includes the performance for compensation, of massage, myotherapy, massotherapy, bodywork, bodywork therapy, or therapeutic massage, which comes in several forms.
Officials in Shelby County said Tuesday, a Harlan man was arrested on July 4th as he was caught trying to ride a bike while allegedly intoxicated. The Harlan PD says 32-year old Ian Leib was arrested after officers were called to the area of 4th and Hill Streets. Leib faces an enhanced charge of public intoxication. He was brought to the Shelby County Jail where he bond was set at $1,000. Leib’s preliminary hearing was set for July 25th.
A Des Moines hospital is now putting units of blood and plasma on every flight of its rescue helicopter. Iowa Methodist Medical Center “Life Flight” program manager, Michael Zweigart, says they decided to take O-negative blood and A-B-plasma after seeing a need. “Often we would see patients that needed either product or both, and it was not readily available at referring facilities, or ready in a time-efficient manner. Or we would do scene flights where obviously there no resources out on the highway, we have to bring the resources to them,” Zweigart says. He talked about the move while standing on the rooftop landing deck — saying it’s a groundbreaking move for the state.
“We’ll be the only aircraft in Iowa carrying the blood products on every mission,” Zweigart says. “Other aircraft may have the capabilities of doing it as needed. We’re going to be able to provide them every mission — have it available with us — so if we get somewhere and recognize it is needed, we already have it with us.” Trauma surgeon, Richard Sidwell, says the blood products will give patients a better chance to get back to the hospital where he can treat them.
“It’s important because, people are bleeding blood. And the sooner that we are able to replace blood, the sooner that we are able to replace clotting factors, the better it is for the injured person,” Sidwell explains. “And so, if that can start at the scene, then that gives them a head start on the care that they would receive at the hospital.” It seems like a simple idea to add the blood products to the helicopters, but Dr. Sidwell says it is part of the evolution in treatment of trauma patients.
“That’s one of the lessons that we’ve learned in trauma care over the last 10 years — is how important it is for the severely injured people to get that blood and clotting factor early. And so, it’s really only the last couple of years that it’s been something that we’ve focused on in the hospital,” Sidwell says. “So, it’s really taking the cutting edge care from the hospital and pushing it into the pre-hospital environment.” There is more to adding the blood to the flights than just loading it into the copter.
“It has to be kept stored properly…blood and blood products have a shelf life. And that’s all part of the program, sorting out the policies and the procedures. And we have to conform to all of the blood bank policies, so it’s just the same in the pre-hospital environment as it is in the hospital environment,” Sidwell explains. Zweigart had to work out some of the details to transport the blood products.
“There was actually a lot that went into it, it’s a very highly regulated aspect. We’re actually going to become an extension of the blood bank of Methodist Medical Center,” Zweigart says. “So we have a fridge and freezer on our helipad now that are exactly like the ones that they have in the blood bank. And we will have the units available to walk right out the door with us.”
Iowa Methodist’s helicopter covers roughly one third of Iowa’s counties. Zweigart says there are a few other helicopter services in the Midwest that provide the blood products on each call, and he expects that to eventually become the standard practice.
(Radio Iowa)
Here is the latest Iowa news from The Associated Press
DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — The Iowa Secretary of State’s Office will rewrite its new voter registration form after complaints that it could confuse people and prompt them not to register. Secretary of state legal counsel Charlie Smithson says his office agreed with concerns raised by the American Civil Liberties Union of Iowa. The ACLU had argued the new form gave the impression registrants must provide a driver’s license or identification card number and their Social Security card in order to register. State law actually requires a Social Security number only if registrants don’t have a state-issued identification.
WATERLOO, Iowa (AP) — Waterloo police and firefighters were trying to recover a body spotted floating in the Cedar River. Police say someone noticed the body about 3 p.m. yesterday in the river near an asphalt plant. Authorities were trying to remove the body. Police say the body is that of an adult.
DAYTON, Iowa (AP) — Authorities say a man in north central Iowa has died after becoming trapped in a grain bin yesterday afternoon near Dayton. Sheriff’s Chief Deputy Rod Strait says some corn was being removed from the bin when the man became stuck. His identity hasn’t been released. An autopsy is scheduled today.
IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — The Iowa Department of Public Safety says it is conducting an internal investigation into the actions of two on-duty state troopers involved in an April 26 speeding incident with the vehicle transporting Governor Terry Branstad. It’s separate from a disciplinary investigation into Division of Criminal Investigation Special Agent in Charge Larry Hedlund, who was also involved in the April 26 incident. The department will release more information after the investigations are completed.