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Adams County man arrested on an OWI charge (delayed report)

News

September 9th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Corning, Iowa) – Sheriff’s officials in Adams County, today (Monday), said a man from Carbon (IA) was arrested at around 10:30-p.m. Aug. 30th, for OWI/2nd Offense. 55-year-old Michael Newsome was pulled over on 183rd Street and Highway 148, and upon further investigation, arrested on the OWI charge. Newsome’s breath alcohol content registered .228 (nearly 3x the legal limit). He was transported to the Adams County Jail and released a short-time later after posting a $2,000 cash-only bond.

Adair County Sheriff’s report: 2 drug & 2 assault arrests

News

September 9th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Greenfield, Iowa) – Adair County Sheriff Jeff Vandewater reports six arrests took place between August 30th and Sept. 7th. Two people were arrested on separate assault charges:

  • On Aug. 30th, 23-year-old Kaylee Marie Kingery, of Greenfield, was arrested by Greenfield Police, on an Adair County warrant for Simple Assault. Kingery was later released on a $300 bond.
  • On Sept. 2nd, Greenfield Police arrested 45-year-old Jose Antonio Garcia Vizcarra, of Omaha, on two counts of Assault with Intent to Inflict Serious Injury. Garcia was arrested following an investigation into an incident whereby a man was reportedly arguing with the clerks at the Greenfield Casey’s Store. According to the Sheriff’s report, Garcia allegedly tried to grab one of the clerks before leaving the store and getting into his SUV which was parked sideways at the gas pumps. Garcia allegedly attempted to run over two civilians. When a deputy arrived on the scene, he observed Garcia revving the engine of his SUV and driving towards the two civilians, one of whom had escorted Garcia out of the store when he became belligerent toward the clerks. Jose Garcia was taken into custody and later released on his Own Recognizance for the Adair County charges, but then turned over to Homeland Security/ICE officials (Immigration and Customs Enforcement) based on a detainer for a previously issued removal order (to be removed from the United States).

Those arrested on drug charges in Adair County include:

  • On August 30th: 44-year-old Anthony Pointer, II, of Omaha, was arrested by Stuart Police, following a traffic stop. Pointer was charged with Possession of a Controlled Substance/Methamphetamine/1st offense and Possession of Drug Paraphernalia. He was also cited for No Valid Driver’s License, Failure to Provide Proof of Financial Liability (insurance), and Open Container of Alcohol/driver over the age of 21. Pointer was later released on a $1,000 bond.
  • And, on Sept. 7th, Stuart Police arrested 42-year-old Brian Keith Alberts, of Lowell, IN, for Possession of a Controlled Substance/1st Offense -Cocaine; Poss. of Paraphernalia, and Person Ineligible to carry dangerous weapons. The latter charge was with regard to a loaded .45-caliber Glock handgun that was found in a holster on the passenger seat of Pointer’s vehicle. Pointer was later released on a $1,000 bond.

Others arrested in Adair County, include:

  • On August 30th: 39-year-old Jackie Lee Marler, of Thayer (IA), was arrested at the Adair County Sheriff’s Office by the Iowa State Patrol, for Driving While Barred. Marler was later  released on a $2,000 bond. And,
  • On Sept. 2nd, 33-year-old Keaton Macdonald Todd, of Peoria, IL, was arrested by sheriff’s deputies at the Adair Kum & Go store, on a charge of Harassment in the 1st Degree. He was arrested following a call about a transient allegedly threatening a female employee with a knife. Keaton was being held in the Adair County Jail on a $2,000 bond.

Elite Octane Pledges $250,000 to Vision Atlantic’s Transformative Project

News

September 9th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Atlantic, Iowa) – Officials with Vision Atlantic report Elite Octane has pledged a generous donation of $250,000 to Vision Atlantic’s transformative project, which will bring a housing development, new childcare center, and YMCA expansion to Atlantic. Christina Bateman, Vision Atlantic President said “We deeply appreciate Elite Octane and their significant contributions to the Atlantic and Cass County communities. Their generosity will continue to stimulate and build economic development in our communities.”

Elite Octane’s generosity and forward thinking is bringing this project out of the idea stage and into reality. Nick Bowdish, President & CEO of Elite Octane said “Elite Octane is excited to support Vision Atlantic and its objectives of elevating the community in multiple ways. When Elite Octane was founded in 2017, it had a vision to enhance the agricultural economy, and its success would not have been possible without the overwhelming community support we received. This contribution back to the community is yet another small gesture of our appreciation.”

Vision Atlantic, through extensive research and surveying of the community and surrounding region, identified three areas that will help increase Atlantic’s population: expanded childcare, quality housing and quality of life amenities. Bid letting for land infrastructure will begin this fall, with construction of all three projects slated to begin late spring of 2025.

Photo submitted

With substantial monetary support from the Charles E. Lakin Foundation and local donors, $17.9 million has been raised in the past 10 months, over 58% of a $30 million goal. Vision Atlantic’s Project Committee is actively working to secure the remaining $12.5 million needed to meet the fundraising goal. If you are interested in helping transform Atlantic, whether it’s through monetary donations or acts of volunteerism, please contact Vision Atlantic at visionatlanticiowa@gmail.com. Follow Vision Atlantic on Facebook for behind-the-scenes access to project updates or visit www.visionatlantic.org.

Vision Atlantic is a 501(c)(3) non-profit whose mission is to empower growth, enhance lives, and build a thriving community together through the economic development of Atlantic, Iowa.

ADAM CROGHAN, 22, of Avoca (Svcs. 9/16/22)

Obituaries

September 9th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

ADAM CROGHAN, 22, of Avoca, died Monday, Sept. 9, 2024, at the Woodward Resource Center. Funeral services for ADAM CROGHAN will be held 2-p.m. (Monday) Sept. 16, 2024, at the Pauley-Jones Funeral Home in Avoca.

The family will greet friends at the funeral home in Sept. 16th, from Noon until 2-p.m.

ADAM CROGHAN is survived by:

His mother – Christine (Bob) Madsen, of Avoca.

His father – Michael Croghan, of Omaha, NE.

His siblings: Azia Gillotte; Christopher Croghan; Shyanne Croghan and Ivan Joslin.

His step-siblings: Damion, Dylon &Heidi Madsen.

His grandparents: Grace and Brian McManus, Elizabeth Cooperrider-Mars, and Doug McManus-Madsen.

and many other relatives.

Three Council Bluffs Individuals Sentenced to Federal Prison for Methamphetamine Conspiracy

News

September 9th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Council Bluffs, Iowa) – The U-S Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Iowa reports three individuals from Council Bluffs were sentenced to federal prison recently, for conspiracy to distribute methamphetamine:

  • George Ormond Rolle, Jr., 51, was sentenced on August 28, 2024, to 210 months in federal prison;
  • Joseph Robert Winger, 34, was sentenced on February 23, 2024, to 140 months in federal prison; and
  • Linda Clover Winger, 41, was sentenced on April 25, 2024, to 78 months in federal prison.

According to public court documents, Rolle, Joseph Winger, and Linda Winger conspired with each other to distribute methamphetamine in the Council Bluffs metro area in 2023. In July 2023, law enforcement officers received information on a package, containing methamphetamine, that was addressed to a residence in Council Bluffs. Law enforcement officers seized the package and conducted a controlled delivery of the seized package. Rolle and Linda Winger attempted to retrieve the package from the residence and were subsequently taken into custody. Their vehicle was searched and had approximately 76 grams of methamphetamine, drug paraphernalia, drug ledgers, and more than $4700. Phone messages confirmed the group was working together to pool their money to buy the methamphetamine for distribution in the Council Bluffs metro area.

After completing their term of imprisonment, each individual will be required to serve a five-year term of supervised release. There is no parole in the federal system.

United States Attorney Richard D. Westphal of the Southern District of Iowa made the announcement. This case was investigated by the Southwest Iowa Narcotics Task Force.

Annual Doodlebug celebrations begins Wednesday in Webster City

News

September 9th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Webster City will be invaded by the friends and fans of Doodlebugs for the annual celebration of the two-wheeled scooters that begins Wednesday at the Hamilton County Fairgrounds. Gerald Huisman of the Doodlebug Committee says they rumbled onto the scene in the 1940s. “Well, a doodlebug is a scooter that was designed and built in Webster City, a former Beam Manufacturing. Some people confuse that. Beam became Franklin manufacturing,” he says. “The Beam Manufacturing that made vacuum sweepers was another facility. They were made from 1946 to 1948.”

More than 40-thousand Doodlebugs were built in Webster City and approximately one-thousand are still running.  “It was originally built with a one-and-a-half horsepower Briggs and Stratton engine, and at the post-war time that Briggs and Stratton couldn’t supply enough engines, and so there were a series of them that were made with Clinton one-and-a-half horsepower engines as well,” Huisman says. 

This is the 38th annual Doodlebug Reunion in Webster City, and Huisman says one of the highlights of the celebration of the Doodlebug this year will be the dedication of a sculpture in the shape of a Doodlebug in downtown Webster City. “They’ve asked us to be part of the ribbon cutting, and it’s on Friday at three o’clock. I talked to our police chief here in town, and he is going to give us a police escort from the fairgrounds to the event. And that’ll become an honor…I’m only guessing we’ll have 40 to 50 doodlebugs riding down to see that sculpture,” Huisman says.

The Doodlebug Reunion runs through Saturday. There is more information about the reunion on the Doodlebug Facebook page or at www.wcdoodlebug.com.

State’s top election official says Iowa GOP has gained 100,000 voters since 2016

News

September 9th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Iowa Secretary of State Paul Pate, a Republican, says Democrats have a long way to go to be competitive in Iowa when it comes to voter registrations. “Republicans are up almost 100,000 more Republicans since 2016,” Pate said. Pate discussed voter data during an appearance this weekend at a fundraiser for Republican Congresswoman Mariannette Miller-Meeks.

“For the first time in my adult life, Republicans outnumber the no-party as well as the Democrats,” Pate said. At the beginning of September, there were nearly 462-thousand “no party” or independent voters in Iowa compared to over 634-thousand active registered Republicans — that’s a difference of over 170-thousand. Pate, who has been Iowa’s top election official for the past seven years, says the number of active Democratic voters in Iowa is down about 85-thousand since 2016. “So when you hear their party chairman claiming they’re on a rebound, they’ve got a long ways to rebound,” Pate said.

Iowa Democratic Party chairwoman Rita Hart has said party registrations in the Democratic column has grown since Kamala Harris became the party’s presidential nominee. According to data on the secretary of state’s website, the number of active Democrats in Iowa grew by about 19-hundred from August 1st to the beginning of September. The number of registered independent or “no party” voters grew the most during the past month — by nearly 85-hundred.

Suspect detained after last week’s threat found at Sioux Center High School

News

September 9th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – A northwest Iowa police chief says there is no threat to the public, but a suspect has been identified in connection to the lockdowns in Sioux County schools late last week. Schools in the Sioux Center, Rock Valley, and Boyden-Hull school districts were placed on lockdown Thursday after a threat was found written on a bathroom wall at the Sioux Center High School.

In a phone interview, Sioux Center Police Chief Josh Koedam says that during the investigation, a juvenile was identified and detained. Koedam declined to give further details except to say the juvenile court system has been notified.

Habitat to build 48-unit townhome development in metro Des Moines

News

September 9th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The Iowa Economic Development Authority is awarding Habitat for Humanity more than 700-thousand dollars in tax credits to build an affordable housing project in the central Iowa town of Waukee.

Walnut Crossing will be the organization’s first townhome development in the Des Moines metro area. Lance Henning, C-E-O of Greater Des Moines Habitat for Humanity, says the new units will help fill a big gap in the suburban housing market. Henning says, “There just aren’t very many opportunities that are in a price point for a large portion of the population that works there and a large portion actually of folks that are trying to stay there and live there but are paying way too much for their housing right now.” The 48 units are still in the design phase, but will contain three to four bedrooms each.

And, like Habitat’s other homeownership plans, buyers must earn 80-percent or less of the area median income in order to qualify. Henning says there’s a high demand for affordable units in the Waukee area.  “We’re excited about the way this partnership is between the community and Habitat for Humanity,” Henning says. “It doesn’t answer all the housing challenges on there but it’s a great step in the right direction.”

Habitat For Humanity Townhome at Baldwin Court in Council Bluffs (Conceptual drawing)

Part of the incentives will come as tax benefits through a state program that supports housing projects on empty or dilapidated land. Construction is expected to start near the end of next year with the first set of units completed in early 2026.

Water Summary Update: Decreased rainfall in August sees return of dry conditions.

News, Weather

September 9th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES — Consistent above-normal rainfall during the summer months slowed in August, leading to a return of dry conditions, according to the latest Water Summary Update.  August’s preliminary statewide precipitation was 3.20 inches, or 0.93 inches below normal. At the end of August, Iowa’s Drought Plan showed overall drought conditions have remained mostly stable for the state. However, the decrease in precipitation has led to a return of dry conditions.

The U.S. Drought Monitor (USDM) shows nearly 40 percent of the state carrying abnormally dry designations, with areas of western and northeast Iowa seeing the biggest change. This trend could turn worse if the dryness of August extends into the fall months. Temperatures for the month were near normal, with the summer months of June, July and August averaging 72.0 degrees statewide. The preliminary precipitation totals for that same period were 13.75 inches, or 0.19 inches above normal.

Despite the dry conditions, the state has received more than 38 inches of rain in the past 12 months, which is a foot more than what the state saw between September 2022 and August 2023. “The Iowa Drought Plan rates statewide drought conditions as normal, although the month of August was drier than usual. As we move into September we would expect to get less than an inch of rain per week, with average rainfall continuing to drop through the rest of the year.  It is important that we continue to see normal precipitation through the fall and into the winter months,” said Tim Hall, the DNR’s Hydrology Resources Coordinator. “We are to the point now where rainfall will begin to build up next year’s soil moisture and groundwater, so a wetter than normal fall would be great to see. If conditions remain dry, we could have issues going into 2025.”

For a thorough review of Iowa’s water resource trends, visit  www.iowadnr.gov/watersummaryupdate.

The report is prepared by technical staff from Iowa DNR, the Iowa Department of Agriculture and Land Stewardship, IIHR—Hydroscience and Engineering, and the U.S. Geological Survey, in collaboration with Iowa Homeland Security and Emergency Management Department.