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Waterloo Police say possible human remains found inside Wastewater Treatment Plant

News

March 6th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

WATERLOO, Iowa (KCRG) – Police say they’re investigating after possible human remains were found at the Waterloo Waste Treatment Plant. Officers were called to the plant, at 2550 Kenyon Avenue, at around 12:15 p.m. on Monday after the remains were found. Police said the remains will be taken to the Iowa Medical Examiner’s office for identification and cause of death.

No additional details have been released. The investigation remains ongoing.

Falling bricks causes NW Iowa post office to close for safety reasons

News

March 6th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

CHARTER OAK, Iowa (KCAU) – Charter Oak residents were left displeased when they learned their post office was closed temporarily due to falling bricks from the neighboring building. Now, the city has made a move. At the Charter Oak city council meeting Monday night, the city made the decision to red tag the buildings, closing them off due to safety concerns.

Going forward, the city said it will stay in contact with the property owner in order to come to a suitable resolution for everyone.  But now the city’s main concern is getting the town’s post office reopened.

With the town’s post office temporarily closed, residents have to travel to the neighboring town of Ricketts to get their mail.

Sioux City officers cleared in fatal shooting at casino parking ramp

News

March 6th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Woodbury County Attorney James Loomis has cleared two Sioux City police officers in the fatal shooting of a man in the parking ramp of the Hard Rock Casino on January 8th. Loomis says 55-year-old Salvador Perez-Garcia of Sioux City wanted a confrontation with officers.”His violent aggression was planned and targeted at law enforcement. His attack on officers with the Sioux City Police Department placed those officers lives in immediate danger. The use of deadly force was justified to put an end to that immediate danger,” he says.

Loomis says Loomis says Perez-Garcia had been banned from the casino in June of 2023 because of thefts. Loomis says he was seen smoking was believed to be meth on a casino security camera before driving to the police station and then returning to the parking garage. He then rammed the car of an officer who was there on an unrelated matter. “The collision was violent enough to deploy the airbags of the officers patrol car and Mr. Perez Garcia’s pickup truck. The collision disabled the officers patrol car and shoved it into a concrete wall the officer was slightly injured and trapped inside his patrol car,” he says.

Loomis says Perez-Garcia rammed a second patrol car, and then came at officers with a chain that had a metal object on the end. “Mr. Perez Garcia attacked one officer by swinging his weapon wildly at him. The officer retreated. Another officer attempted to go hands on with Mr. Perez-Garcia to get him into custody, but Mr. Perez-Garcia attacked him with his weapon as well, causing him to retreat,” Loomis says. “The two officers who were attacked with the weapon responded by firing their handguns.”

Officers fired eleven rounds, and Perez-Garcia died at the scene. Police Chief Rex Mueller says the two officers have returned to duty. “It can’t be understated how difficult it is for officers to have to deal with this,” he says. “Nobody wants to enter a law enforcement career and have to take somebody else’s life. But you know, these officers did exactly what they were trained to do. And there’s a recovery process and we are watching out for them and caring for them, but I can’t say it’s an easy process.”

Mueller and Loomis both extended their condolences to Perz-Garcia’s family.

Skyscan Forecast for Atlantic & the Nishna Valley: Wed., March 6, 2024

Weather

March 6th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

Today: Partly sunny, with a high near 58. South southeast wind 5 to 10 mph.
Tonight: Mostly cloudy w/a 20% chance of showers after midnight. Low 37.
Tomorrow: Mo. Cldy w/a 60% chance of showers, mainly after noon. High near 55. East wind 5 to 15 mph. New precipitation amounts between a tenth and quarter of an inch possible.
Tom. Night: Showers & breezy. Low around 35. N/NE @ 10-20 mph w/gusts to around 30. New precipitation amounts between a quarter and half of an inch possible.
Friday: Showers likely, mainly before noon. Windy. High near 44. New precipitation amounts between a tenth and quarter of an inch possible.
Saturday: Sunny & breezy, with a high near 48.

Tuesday’s High in Atlantic was 59.Our Low this morning was 16. Last year on this date, the High in Atlantic was 41 and the Low was 32. The Record High for March 6th was 76 in 2017. The Record Low was -20 in 1960. Sunrise: 6:47. Sunset: 6:16-p.m.

Marshalltown RSO who left a residential facility is arrested in Oklahoma

News

March 6th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Tulsa, OK) – A registered sex offender from Iowa who walked away from a Residential Facility in Marshalltown last week, was arrested in Oklahoma on armed robbery charges after allegedly holding up a gas station in Tulsa for money and cigarettes over the weekend.
The Marshalltown Police Department had issued a public assistance request for 35-year-old Eric Enslow on Feb. 26, and according to News on 6 in Tulsa, the suspect “pointed a pistol at the clerk, got what he wanted and he ran off” at the QuikTrip near the intersection of Admiral Plaza and Memorial Drive there before he dropped his gun and surrendered once officers caught up to him on Saturday night.

Eric Enslow

According to the Iowa Sex Offender Registry, Enslow was convicted of third degree sexual abuse and soliciting a lascivious act in Story County in 2008. He pled guilty to voluntary absence from custody in Marshall County back in September, the latest in a long line of parole violations over the last 15 plus years.

Wednesday High School Boy’s State Basketball Schedule

Sports

March 5th, 2024 by admin

Class 4A – Quarterfinals

  • #1 Cedar Rapids Kennedy (23-0) vs #8 Dallas Center-Grimes (20-3) @ 10:30 a.m
  • #4 Dubuque Senior (21-2) vs #5 Ankeny (17-6) @ 12:15 p.m
  • #2 Valley (18-5) vs #7 Johnston (14-9) @ 2:00 p.m.
  • #3 Cedar Falls (20-3) vs #6 Bettendorf (17-6) @ 3:45 p.m.

Class 1A – Semi-Finals

  • #1 North Linn (24-1) vs #4 Winfield-Mt. Union (21-2) @ 5:30 p.m.
  • #2 Marquette Catholic (26-1) vs #3 Lake Mills (25-1) @ 7:15 p.m.

Tuesday High School Boy’s State Basketball Scores

Sports

March 5th, 2024 by admin

Class 2A

#2 Hudson 55, #7 Grundy Center 51
#6 Unity Christian 59, #3 Underwood 55

Class 3A

#1 Decorah 66, #8 Williamsburg 42
#4 Assumption 84, #5 Ballard 73

#3 MOC-Floyd Valley 67, Bondurant-Farrar 50
#2 Waverly-Shell Rock 65, #7 Pella 64

Hawkeyes Down Tommies, 9-3

Sports

March 5th, 2024 by admin

IOWA CITY, Iowa – The University of Iowa baseball team defeated St. Thomas on Tuesday evening, 9-3, at Duane Banks Field.

The Hawkeyes held the Tommies to just three hits and struck out eight St. Thomas batters.

“It was much better,” said head coach Rick Heller. “Much cleaner, lots of positives on the mound. Few blips here and there, Elliot walks three in the first and then gets out of it, and then goes out and gives us a 1-2-3 inning. It was good to see him work out of it. We only had six free bases tonight which is a big improvement from where we have been the last few games.”

Elliot Cadieux-Lanoue got the start for Iowa and improved to 3-0 on the season. The freshman threw two innings, didn’t allow a hit or a run, and struck out two and walked three.

Eight other Hawkeyes saw action out of the bullpen. They combined to strike out six, while walking three.

“I thought the offense was just steady,” said Heller. “Kept putting pressure on them and scoring runs. Big hit by Blake Guerin, 3-2 count, he fouls off several pitches and gets a big bases loaded hit with two outs. Michael Seegers had a big game; it was good to see him bounce out of it.”

Michael Seegers had a 3-for-4 night with three RBIs and a home run off the scoreboard. Blake Guerin added two RBIs for Iowa, and Andy Nelson and Gable Mitchell each added a RBI.

DAVID E. SWOLLEY, 68, of Exira (Svcs. 3/8/24)

Obituaries

March 5th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

DAVID E. SWOLLEY, 68, of Exira, died Sunday, March 3rd 2024, at the Douglas County Healthcare Center in Omaha. Funeral services for DAVID SWOLLEY will be held 2-p.m. Friday, March 8, 2024, in the Iowa Veterans Cemetery near Adel. Kessler Funeral Home in Exira has the arrangements.

Friends may call at the funeral home, where the family visitation is on Friday, from 9-until 11-a.m.

Burial is in the Iowa Veterans Cemetery near Adel.

DAVID E. SWOLLEY is survived by:

His wife – Ronda Swolley.

His sons – Jacob Swolley and Toby Swolley.

His daughter – Brandy (Travis) Schleusner.

His step-children: Heath (Kim Stowell) Robinson; Kari Hansen, and Jessica “Jessie” (Jesse Mills) Hansen.

His brothers – Francis “Bud” (Linda) Swolley Jr, Jerry (Audrey) Swolley, andSteve (Tootsie) Swolley.

His sister – Julie (Jim) Swolley.

7 grandchildren, many other relatives, and his in-laws.

Atlantic City Official warns about tax increases if EMS isn’t declared an essential service

News

March 5th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Atlantic, Iowa) – The Atlantic City Council will be focusing on Emergency Medical Services (EMS) as an Essential Service, in the weeks to come. Councilwoman Elaine Otte said the City has been working with the County and the hospital on EMS [ambulance] services.

The Board of Supervisors has set the date for a public hearing on the matter, and “In support of that, we all need to perk our ears up, we need to make sure that when that goes on the ballot in November, that gets passed as an essential service, for Cass County and Atlantic to continue to have ambulance service.”

City Administrator John Lund said the EMS issue “Will be a big thing,” when he discusses the City’s Budget. “The City of Atlantic needs to vote ‘yes’ on this, because if this [referendum] does not pass with a 60% [majority], which would put the property tax levy on a much wider [spread out] amongst a much larger tax base than the City has…if that fails, the City Council next year will have two options, and they’re both horrible.”

He said “It’ll be astronomically high tax rates that we’ve never seen before, or the Council will be in the position of having to gut departments. And I’m not being like dramatic about that…if you have to come up with $200,000 for an ambulance service, and you don’t want to raise the taxes, that’s the only alternative you have. And, it could be $300,000 if we don’t get fully funded again from the Small Business Income Tax credit,” and other “headwinds,” such as a Commercial Property tax rollback.

Lund said “Nobody likes to vote to increase their own taxes,” but about one-third of the base in the County comes from Atlantic. Councilwoman Otte reminded the Council and public, Essential Service gives the County and Cities the ability to levy taxes that support an ambulance or  EMS service. “We already have the right to do that for Police and Fire Departments, but ambulance services have never been considered an ‘essential service,’ so there was no way to get tax support for that.”

She said the legislature a few years ago made it possible for counties and cities would have the ability to do so, but it must be approved through a voter referendum. Mayor Grace Garrett said it will be very important for the City and County to educate the public and help them understand that this is another piece of providing an essential service to the community. Voters in Shelby County passed a referendum last November, approving a new tax to fund EMS. That decision puts EMS on the same level as police and fire services. Guthrie County is working on a similar proposal.