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Stolen vehicle report leads to foot chase and arrest in southwest Iowa

News

December 11th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Sidney, Iowa) – The Fremont County Sheriff’s Office reports an investigation into a stolen vehicle Sunday, resulted in a foot pursuit and arrest in Emerson. The Sheriff’s Office received a report of a vehicle stolen from a residence in Farragut by a subject, known by the victim. Shortly after the report, Mills County deputies located the vehicle near Emerson.
Mills County deputies stopped the vehicle near Highway 59 and Kroon Road. The driver, identified as 44-year-old Tabitha Rose Ann Holste, of Clarinda, then fled on foot.

Tabatha Holste

A search was conducted utilizing the Fremont County K9 Unit and the Mills County Drone Unit and Holste was located hiding in a Creek south of Emerson. Holste was apprehended with the assistance of the Fremont, Mills, Montgomery, and Page Sheriff’s Offices, the Shenandoah and Red Oak Police Departments and the Iowa State Patrol. The vehicle was recovered and turned over to the owner.
Holste was transported to the Fremont County Sheriff’s Office and a search of her person uncovered approximately 1/4 pound of suspected Methamphetamine. Holste was being held at the Fremont County Jail on Possession with Intent to Distribute more than 5 grams of Methamphetamine, Failure to Affix a Drug Tax Stamp, Theft 1st Degree, and Possession of Contraband in a Correctional Facility. Her bond was set at $100,000. She was also being held on multiple out of county warrants.

Fremont County Sheriff’s report on arrests, 11/27-12/9 2024

News

December 11th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Sidney, Iowa) – Fremont County Sheriff Kevin Aistrope reports the following arrests:

Tyler Nathan Gall
• Age: 39
• Address: Council Bluffs, IA
• Location: 1900 block Waubonsie Ave, Thurman
• Charge Description: Possession of a Controlled Substance
• Arrest Date: 11/27/2024 @21:43
• Release Date/Reason: Held on $1,000 surety bond/HOLD FOR OTHER AGENCY
Bradley Alan Scott
• Age: 39
• Address: Omaha, NE
• Location: FCSO
• Charge Description: Eluding
• Arrest Date: 12/04/2024 @ 09:42
• Release Date/Reason: 12/04/2024 @10:19 Cash Bond
Kyra Marie Hill
• Age: 42
• Address: Omaha, NE
• Location: 3500 block Hwy 2
• Charge Description: Interference with Official Acts
• Arrest Date: 12/05/2024 @ 06:45
• Release Date/Reason: 12/05/2024 @ 17:53 Surety Bond
William James Andrew Sidzyik
• Age: 52
• Address: Sidney, IA
• Location: Clay St, Sidney, IA
• Charge Description: Driving Under Suspension
• Arrest Date: 12/07/2024 @ 21:46
• Release Date/Reason: 12/07/2024 @ 23:10 Cash Bond
Gary Lewis Milburn
• Age: 55
• Address: Woodburn, OR
• Location: Horse Creek Road
• Charge Description: Public Intoxication
• Arrest Date: 12/08/2024 @ 07:46
• Release Date/Reason: 12/08/2024 @ 14:00 Guilty/Time Served
Tabatha Rose Ann Holste
• Age: 44
• Address: Clarinda, IA
• Location: Emerson, IA
• Charge Description: Possession of Methamphetamine more than 5 grams, Theft 1st Degree, Drug Tax Stamp Violation, Possession of Contraband
• Arrest Date: 12/08/2024 @ 18:40
• Release Date/Reason: Held on $100,000 surety bond/HOLD FOR OTHER AGENCY
Shelby Marie Eischeid
• Age: 28
• Address: Sidney, IA
• Location: 900 block West St, Sidney
• Charge Description: 2 counts Child Endangerment w/ injury, Interference with Official Acts
• Arrest Date: 12/08/2024 @ 19:20
• Release Date/Reason: Held on $5,000 surety bond
McKenzie Lucille Hackney
• Age: 22
• Address: Sidney, IA
• Location: 900 block West St, Sidney
• Charge Description: Child Endangerment w/ injury
• Arrest Date: 12/08/2024 @ 19:20
• Release Date/Reason: Held on $5,000 surety bond
Rebecca Anne Mayer
• Age: 36
• Address: Clarinda, IA
• Location: Shenandoah
• Charge Description: Violation of No Contact Order
• Arrest Date: 12/09/2024 @ 19:45
• Release Date/Reason: 12/11/2024 @ 12:25 Own Recognizance
It should be noted that a criminal charge is merely an accusation, and the defendant is presumed innocent until proven guilty.

Former Congressman Jim Leach has died

News

December 11th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio  Iowa) – Jim Leach, a Davenport native who represented Iowa in congress for 30 years, has died at the age of 82. Leach — first elected to the U-S House in 1976 — rose to be Republican chairman of the powerful House Banking Committee. Dave Loebsack — the Democrat who defeated Leach in 2006 — calls Leach a statesman.

“As I said many, many times — I wasn’t running against Jim Leach. I was running against total Republican control of Washington, D.C. at that time,” Loebsack said. “…I respect him for what he did in office. I respect him for breaking with his party as much as he did. I often tell people he was one of only six Republicans who voted, at the time, against the Iraq war resolution.”

That vote was in 2002. In 2008, Leach, a Republican, endorsed Barack Obama and the following year Obama appointed Leach to be chairman of the National Endowment for the Humanities. In 2022 during an Iowa Public Radio interview, Leach said he’d become a registered Democrat and was backing Democrats running for the U-S House to make congress more functional.

“We have to come together as a society and if we don’t come together as a society, we’re going to have a very difficult time leading ourselves, let alone leading the world,” Leach said. Leach moved from his hometown of Davenport to Iowa City when congressional district lines changed for the 2002 election. Secretary of State Paul Pate served as mayor of Cedar Rapids from 2001 to 2005 when Leach was representing the city. “He truly listened and tried to do right by us,” Pate says.

Leach, a three-sport athlete in college, won a state wrestling title in 1960 as a high school senior and was elected to the National Wrestling Hall of Fame. After graduating from Princeton, earning a masters from Johns Hopkins University and studying at the London School of Economics, Leach entered the foreign service and, for a time, shared an office with Dick Cheney. In the past decade, Leach served in several academic roles. Leach briefly led the Institute of Politics at the Kennedy School at Harvard and taught at Princeton. He’d also been a visiting professor and a senior scholar at the University of Iowa.

Gov. Reynolds Announces Disaster Proclamation for Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza in Sac County

Ag/Outdoor, News

December 11th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Updated statement) DES MOINES—Gov. Kim Reynolds today authorized a disaster proclamation for Sac County, Iowa effective immediately through January 10, 2025. The USDA has confirmed a positive case of highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) in commercial turkey flock.
This proclamation allows state resources from Iowa Homeland Security, the Iowa Department of Agriculture and Land Stewardship, and other agencies to assist with tracking and monitoring, rapid detection, containment, disposal, and disinfection. The proclamation also waives regulatory provisions related to commercial vehicles responding to affected sites.
The recent HPAI detections in birds do not present an immediate public health concern, and it remains safe to eat poultry products. If producers suspect signs of HPAI in their flocks, they should contact their veterinarian immediately.

Ernst, Feenstra Demand U.S. Coast Guard Support Commerce on Missouri River

Ag/Outdoor, News

December 11th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

WASHINGTON – U.S. Senator Joni Ernst (R-Iowa) and U.S. Rep. Randy Feenstra (R-Iowa) today (Wednesday), called for the U.S. Coast Guard (USCG) to support commerce on the Missouri River instead of removing 36 of its Aids to Navigation (ATONs) north of Blencoe, Iowa.

Navigation on the Missouri River is an integral part of moving Iowa’s inputs and goods both domestically and worldwide. In recent years, navigation up to Sioux City, Iowa has increased, and planned development projects are expected to further increase traffic in years to come.

“In Iowa, we are proud to feed, fuel, and supply consumers around the globe with products straight from the heartland. Our beautiful rivers are integral to sharing those products with the rest of the world.” said Senator Ernst. “The removal of this infrastructure on the Missouri River threatens the livelihoods of Iowans in our manufacturing and agricultural communities. I urge the Coast Guard to reconsider this decision.”

Read the full letter here.

Big Ten Announces 2025 Football Schedule

Sports

December 11th, 2024 by Christian Adams

IOWA CITY, Iowa — The Big Ten Conference announced Wednesday dates and league football opponents for the 2025 season.

Iowa will open conference play on the road for the sixth straight season, traveling to Rutgers on Sept. 20. It will mark the second time in three seasons that the Hawkeyes will play their Big Ten opener in Piscataway, New Jersey.

The Hawkeyes will host Indiana in their conference home opener on Sept. 27, marking the second time in four years that Iowa will play the Hoosiers in its Big Ten home opener (2021).

Following a trip to border-rival Wisconsin on Oct. 11, Iowa will play three consecutive home games over a span of four weeks. The Hawkeyes will host Penn State on Oct. 18, Minnesota on Oct. 25 and Oregon on Nov. 8. The Ducks will make their first visit to Kinnick Stadium since 1989. The three straight Big Ten home games have not happened in Iowa City since 1949.

For the second straight year, Iowa will travel to Los Angeles in November for a Big Ten game, this time facing the Trojans of USC on Nov. 15.

Iowa wraps up the regular season against Michigan State in its home finale on Nov. 22 and its annual Black Friday contest against Nebraska on Nov. 29. The Hawkeyes and Spartans will meet for the third straight year (twice in Iowa City).

Select dates are subject to change once the Big Ten and its media partners agree to the Friday night schedule. Game times and broadcast information for the first three games will be announced the last week of May 2025.

Iowa’s nonconference schedule was previously announced with Iowa hosting Albany (Aug. 30) and UMass (Sept. 13) and playing at in-state rival Iowa State (Sept. 6).

Aug. 30: UAlbany
Sept. 6: at Iowa State
Sept. 13: UMass
Sept. 20: at Rutgers
Sept. 27: Indiana
Oct. 4: Idle
Oct. 11: at Wisconsin
Oct. 18: Penn State
Oct. 25: Minnesota
Nov. 1: Idle
Nov. 8: Oregon
Nov. 15: at USC
Nov. 22: Michigan State
Nov. 28 (Fri): at Nebraska

State Honors Heroic Iowans for Lifesaving Efforts

News

December 11th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa – Governor Kim Reynolds and Department of Public Safety Commissioner Stephan Bayens honored heroic citizens and first responders at the 2024 Sullivan Brothers’ Award of Valor and Governor’s Lifesaving Awards ceremony held this (Wednesday) morning in the Iowa Capitol Rotunda. A total of seven individuals from communities across the state were recognized for their courageous responses.

“Today’s award winners met moments of sudden, life-threatening danger or severe hardship with inspiring courage and presence of mind,” Governor Reynolds said. “They are true heroes who represent the very best of our state, and it was a privilege to recognize them this morning.”

Added Department of Public Safety Commissioner Stephan Bayens, “These Iowans intentionally and selflessly provided aid and assistance in times of need. It’s an honor to celebrate those who placed the needs of others above their own and answered the call to serve.”

The Governor’s Lifesaving Awards Program recognizes recipients in four different categories, including:
Meritorious Service, which is awarded to those individuals in recognition of courageous and unselfish service rendered during a time of distress.
Outstanding Service, which is presented to persons who have performed a courageous act in an attempt to save an individual who was in danger of losing his or her life or to individuals who unselfishly rendered service in a time of emergency.
Lifesaving, which is awarded to those individuals who have attempted to save the life of another individual, but did not put their own life in jeopardy.
Lifesaving with Valor, which is awarded to those individuals who at the risk of their own life, attempted to save that of another.

The Governor’s Lifesaving Awards honored four civilians:

  • Randy Hartley, Adel – Outstanding Service Award

    Randy Hartley, Adel – Outstanding Service Award

  • Tyler Borneman, Waterloo – Lifesaving Award
  • Evan Scheck, Spirit Lake – Lifesaving with Valor Award
  • Joseph Salmon, Spencer – Lifesaving with Valor Award

The Sullivan Brothers’ Awards of Valor honors the memory of George, Frank, Joe, Matt, and Albert Sullivan – all in their 20s – who served together on the USS Juneau in the Guadalcanal naval battle in the fall of 1942. All five brothers died together in a tragic attack when two Japanese torpedoes struck their ship.
Kelly Sullivan, the granddaughter of Albert Sullivan, participated in this year’s ceremony. Kelly is a third-grade teacher in Waterloo who sits on the commissioning committee of the new USS Iowa and also commissioned the USS The Sullivans. A total of three first responders, all with the Oelwein Police Department, were honored at today’s ceremony:

  • Officer Gage D. Voshell
  • Officer William E. Ward
  • Officer Codi R. Wurzer

Click for event photos 
Click to visit the web page for lifesaving summaries and recipient photos

To make future nominations, or for general information on the Sullivan Brothers’ Award of Valor and Governor’s Lifesaving Awards, visit the DPS website.

Iowa State football coach Matt Campbell agrees to contract extension

Sports

December 11th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa Sports) – Iowa State is rewarding football coach Matt Campbell with a contract extension. Campbell has agreed to a new eight year deal that will run through the end of the 2032 season. A three time Big-12 Coach of the Year, Campbell has led the Cyclones to their first 10 win season in program history.

“It has been rewarding to see the amazing impact Coach Campbell, and his staff, have had over the past decade on our University, athletics department, and the young men in our football program,” said ISU Athletic director Jamie Pollard. “Given all the uncertainty currently facing college athletics, it was critical that we moved quickly to solidify the future of our football program. Matt is the perfect fit for Iowa State University and I am thrilled he wants to continue to lead our program. Leadership continuity is essential to any organization’s long-term success. This is a great day for Cyclone fans.”

ISU is 10-3 and ranked 18th after a 46-19 loss to Arizona State in the Big 12 Championship game and will play 13th ranked Miami in the Pop Tarts Bowl in Orlando on December 28th.

ISU football coach Matt Campbell. (RI photo)

“My family and I are extremely grateful for the faith and commitment shown to our program by our President, Dr. Wintersteen, and our Athletics Director, Jamie Pollard,” Campbell said. “It is an honor to be associated with a great university and community, and I am thankful to work with great leaders, administrators and student-athletes. I look forward to finishing the 2024 season strong while continuing to grow this program and pursuing excellence in the classroom and on the field.”

Tips on finding practical holiday gifts for people with dementia

News

December 11th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – More than 62-thousand Iowans are living with Alzheimer’s disease or another form of dementia, and if one of them is on your holiday gift list, some well-intentioned presents may no longer be appropriate or practical for them. Lauren Livingston, spokeswoman for the Iowa chapter of the Alzheimer’s Association, says some gifts can help a loved one in the early stages of the disease continue to navigate and maintain their independence.

“Something like a label maker, so they can stay organized and keep track of everyday household items that they might have trouble remembering,” Livingston says. “Same thing with dry erase calendars to keep them organized. Also, gifts for ride-sharing if they’re not able to drive anymore, because it’s still important that they get out there and stay active and social.”

Other gifts for someone in the early stages might include a G-P-S tracker which can help to keep them safe while allowing them to stay independent, or a “memory” calendar featuring family photos and filled in with birthdays and anniversaries. Livingston says the gift of music is always a plus.

“Music can be something that helps trigger memories for people in the middle to later stages,” she says. “So putting a playlist together of their favorite artists and songs from back in the day can really help spark those memories, and it oftentimes just makes them happy or puts them in a good mood to listen to that music that they loved.” For people in the mid to later stages, Livingston says soothing gifts can help with anxiety, like a handheld massage ball, a soft blanket, or a fluffy bathrobe.

“Comfortable, loose fitting clothing that’s easy for them to get themselves dressed and not need someone else to help as much,” Livingston says. “Another thing to think about is adaptive dining accessories, so no-spill cups, plate guards, silverware with special handles that make it easier to grasp so they can be more independent while they’re eating.”
Another thoughtful gift might be framed photographs or a photo collage created specifically for your loved one, and include people’s names on the photos.

Other suggestions include: A memory phone that can store pictures with names and contact information, puzzle and activity books, card games and board games, or an outing to a movie, play or sporting event.

Find more ideas at https://www.alz.org/iowa.

No. 3 Iowa State men visit Iowa Thursday night

Sports

December 11th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

The third ranked Iowa State men visit Iowa Thursday night in the 78th meeting in the series. One of the biggest questions is will this game even be close? The winning margin in the last six games has been 14 points or more, including last year when the Cyclones posted their most lopsided win in the series 90-65 in Ames.

That’s Iowa State coach T.J. Otzelberger. Two years ago in Iowa City the Hawkeyes ambushed the Cyclones at the start and led by as many as 29 points en-route to a 75-56 win. Otzelberger says a better start is a must in this game.

Otzelberger says the keys remain the same in every road game.

Iowa State is 7-1 and a number three ranking in the AP Poll is the highest since 1957. Hawkeye coach Fran McCaffery says a strength of the Cyclones is depth.

The Cyclones win with defense and toughness and they have already played two teams ranked in the top five.

McCaffery says the Hawkeyes must prevent the Iowa State guards from dominating the game.

Iowa has won four of the last six games and leads the al-time series 48-29. Tip off is 6-30 in Carver-Hawkeye and the game will be televised by Fox Sports One.