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Hit-and-run property damage accident in Creston

News

October 15th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Creston, Iowa) – A hit-and-run collision Friday afternoon in Creston caused an estimated $2,000 damage, but no one was injured. Police say a 2009 Chevy Impala was parked on the side of Maple Street in the 1200 block, when it was struck by a 2016 Dodge Journey SUV at around 2:45-p.m.

The driver of the SUV left the scene without notifying the owner or police. The collision caused the SUV to lose its front license plate on the back bumper of the Chevy. Officers were unable to locate the SUV. They requested an Adair County Sheriff’s Deputy try and make contact with the driver/owner of the offending vehicle, but as of the latest report, no contact had been made.

Injury accident in Creston Friday afternoon

News

October 15th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Creston, Iowa) – Officials with the Creston Police Department on Sunday (today) reported information with regard to an injury accident that took place Friday afternoon. Authorities say at around 1:50-p.m., a 2005 Cadillac Deville driven by 67-year-old Jarilyn Lue Schneider, of Creston, was traveling west on Highway 34 near the intersection of Abell Street, and was preparing to turn left onto Abell. Schneider thought she was clear to make the turn.

A Kia Forte passenger car driven by 19-year-old Sophie Grace Lyle, of Pella, was traveling east on Highway 34, when the Cadillac failed to yield, and pulled out in front of her. The KIA struck the Cadillac on the rear passenger side.

Lyle complained of pain and was transported by EMS ambulance to the Greater Regional Medical Center in Creston. Police say Schneider was checked out by medics and cleared at the scene. Damage from the collision amounted to $20,000. Both vehicles were towed from the scene. No citations were listed in the police report.

Council Bluffs Police ask for help in locating a missing woman (UPDATED!)

News

October 15th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

Update 1:30-P.M. 10/15/23: Dennisha has been located and the Family has been notified.

(Council Bluffs, Iowa) – Police in Council Bluffs today (Sunday), report 29-year-old Dennisha Kia Cook has not been heard from since last Tuesday, Oct. 10, 2023. Dennisha is homeless and has been staying in local hotels. Her last known location was the Motel 6 in Council Bluffs.

Dennisha’s mother is worried about her due to her having a mental capacity of a 10-year-old. Dennisha is a white female with a light complexion, who stands 5-feet 4-inches tall. She weighs about 190 pounds, has brown hair and blue eyes.

If you know the whereabouts of Dennisha Cook, please contact your local law enforcement dispatchers or Sgt Roberts in the Council Bluffs PD Criminal Investigation Division at 712-890-5212.

Dennisha Cook

Law Enforcement investigates social media threat against the State Capitol in Des Moines

News

October 14th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

Des Moines, Iowa – The Iowa State Patrol received information about a threat to the Iowa State Capitol building from the United States Capitol Police around 12:45 pm today (Saturday, Oct. 14). The threat was made via social media. The Department of Public Safety investigated and assessed the threat and determined it to be not credible.

Out of an abundance of caution, the State Fire Marshal’s Office and the Iowa State Patrol swept the building and located nothing of concern. The building was cleared at 1:30 p.m. and all normal activities at the Capitol have resumed.

2023 IHSAA Football Postseason First-Round Matchups: 8-Man – Class 2A

Sports

October 14th, 2023 by Asa Lucas

EIGHT-PLAYER

At-Large at 1st Place

Turkey Valley (5-3) at Clarksville (9-0)

Belle Plaine (4-4) at Winfield-Mount Union (8-0)

3rd Place at 1st Place

Boyer Valley (6-3) at Audubon (7-1)

Janesville (6-2) at Bishop Garrigan, Algona (7-1)

Fremont-Mills (4-4) at Bedford (8-0)

Iowa Valley (6-2) at BGM, Brooklyn (5-3)

Southeast Warren (4-4) at CAM, Anita (8-0)

Kee, Lansing (6-2) at Central City (7-1)

Edgewood-Colesburg (6-2) at Don Bosco, Gilbertville (7-1)

Harris-Lake Park (5-3) at St. Mary’s, Remsen (8-0)

3rd Place at 2nd Place (host by point +/-)

Montezuma (5-4) at Gladbrook-Reinbeck (7-1)

Baxter (5-3) at WACO (6-1)

2nd Place at 2nd Place (host by point +/-)

Glidden-Ralston (6-2) at Exira-EHK (5-3)

Woodbine (5-3) at Lenox (7-1)

Moravia (7-2) at Lone Tree (6-2)

Riceville (6-2) at West Bend-Mallard (6-2)

CLASS A

4th Place at 1st Place

Mount Ayr (4-4) at ACGC (8-0)

Tri-Center, Neola (3-5) vs. Akron-Westfield (7-1), at LeMars

North Linn (6-2) at Lisbon (8-0)

IKM-Manning (4-4) at Madrid (8-0)

Sibley-Ocheyedan (2-6) at Saint Ansgar (8-0)

North Butler (6-2) at Starmont (7-1)

Danville (4-4) at Wapsie Valley (7-1)

North Union (5-3) at Woodbury Central (8-0)

3rd Place at 2nd Place

Maquoketa Valley (6-2) at Columbus Community (6-2)

Central Decatur (5-3) at Earlham (5-3)

South Winneshiek (5-3) at East Buchanan (6-2)

South Central Calhoun (5-3) at Logan-Magnolia (7-1)

Pekin (6-2) at Lynnville-Sully (7-1)

Kingsley-Pierson (6-2) at MMCRU (6-2)

Lake Mills (6-2) at Nashua-Plainfield (6-2)

Gehlen Catholic, LeMars (4-4) at West Hancock (7-1)

CLASS 1A

4th Place at 1st Place

Ridge View (4-4) at Emmetsburg (6-2)

Cascade (2-6) at Grundy Center (8-0)

Hudson (5-3) at MFL MarMac (7-1)

Shenandoah (3-5) at OABCIG (6-2)

Eddyville-Blakesburg-Fremont (3-5) at Regina, Iowa City (7-1)

West Central Valley (3-5) at Sigourney/Keota (7-1)

Denver (5-3) at South Hamilton (7-1)

East Sac County (4-4) at Underwood (7-1)

3rd Place at 2nd Place

Pocahontas Area (4-4) at Columbus Catholic, Waterloo (6-2)

AHSTW (5-3) at Hinton (5-3)

Dike-New Hartford (5-3) at Manson NW Webster (3-5)

Ogden (4-4) at Pella Christian (6-2)

South Hardin (4-4) at Sumner-Fredericksburg (7-1)

West Sioux, Hawarden (4-4) at Treynor (7-1)

Pleasantville (5-3) at West Branch (5-3)

Wilton (7-1) at Woodward-Granger (4-4)

CLASS 2A

4th Place at 1st Place

Okoboji (2-6) at Central Lyon/George-Little Rock (8-0)

Cherokee (5-3) vs. Kuemper Catholic, Carroll (6-2), Site & Time TBD

Anamosa (4-4) at Mediapolis (6-2)

North Fayette Valley (3-5) at Monticello (7-1)

Interstate 35, Truro (3-5) at PCM (6-2)

Southeast Valley (5-3) at Spirit Lake (7-1)

Albia (4-4) at Van Meter (8-0)

Union, LaPorte City (2-6) at Waukon (5-3)

3rd Place at 2nd Place

West Burlington/Notre Dame (5-3) at Camanche (4-4)

Des Moines Christian (4-4) at Clarinda (6-2)

Western Christian, Hull (6-2) at Estherville Lincoln Central (5-3)

Crestwood (3-5) at Jesup (5-3)

Northeast (4-4) at Mid-Prairie (4-4)

West Marshall (2-6) at New Hampton (3-5)

Clarke, Osceola (4-4) at Roland-Story (6-2)

Clarion-Goldfield-Dows (3-5) at West Lyon (7-1)

DeSantis criticizes ‘palace intrigue’ of House GOP speaker’s race

News

October 14th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Republican presidential candidate Ron DeSantis backs the current nominee to be the next speaker of the U-S House.  “Jim Jordan…I don’t know if he has the votes. I would vote for him if I were there. He’s a good man. He’s a good conservative,” DeSantis says. “But here’s the thing: what they’re showing the country is that they’re like chickens with their heads cut off. They can’t shoot straight. There’s a lot of drama and palace intrigue. That’s not the way you do business.”

DeSantis served three terms in the U-S House before he was elected governor of Florida in 2018. DeSantis says Americans don’t see progress in congress on key issues like border security and controlling inflation. “In Florida, we lead on substance and we produce results…We have no sideshows. It’s not about me. It’s not about creating drama. It’s about executing the mission and delivering for the people that you represent,” DeSantis says. “…So what’s happened up there (in Washington, D.C.), I don’t see them producing results.”

DeSantis spoke with Radio Iowa this (Saturday) morning from his campaign bus, headed to events in southwest Iowa. DeSantis calls last weekend’s terrorist attacks the gravest challenge Israel has faced in modern history and DeSantis says now is not the time for former President Trump to be airing personal grievances about Israel’s leader. “In the aftermath of those attacks, Donald Trump decided to attack Prime Minister Bibi Netanyahu,” DeSantis says, “and largely because Netanyahu congratulated Biden after the 2020 election and Trump has never spoken to him since and he dislikes Bibi as a result of that.”

During a speech Wednesday in Florida, Trump complained Netanyahu pulled Israel out of an operation that killed an Iranian general in 2020 and Trump said Israeli intelligence needs to step up their game. DeSantis says if he’s elected president, he won’t let personal issues cloud his judgement. Yesterday (Friday), Trump posted a message on his Truth Social network, saying he stands with Bibi. DeSantis, a Navy veteran, expressed support for Israel’s war aims.

“What they need to do — and we need to support them doing this — is completely uproot, dismantle and eliminate Hamas as a terrorist group, their terrorist infrastructure so that this never happens again,” DeSantis says. “When you have terrorists groups going in and beheading babies and massacring elderly people and raping women and putting it on video…they just can’t live with those people living on their border.” DeSantis predicts in “the days and weeks ahead,” criticism of Israel from the United Nations, other countries and some elements of the Biden Administration will ramp up.

“Think about what’s going on. Israel is telling people in Gaza, ‘Hey…leave, so you won’t get hurt.’…Hamas is telling those people to stay there so they could be used as human shields, so there is no moral equivalence in terms of what’s going on here, so we’ve got to back them to the hilt,” DeSantis says. “This is a great challenge for them, but they need to do the job and finish it.” DeSantis says the impetus for the attacks by Hamas may have been last week’s meeting among Israelis, Arabs and U-S leaders who’ve been working to create a formal diplomatic relationship between Israel and Saudi Arabia.

“This could have been done with Saudi and Israel a long time ago. Biden has done really terrible with managing that relationship and so we are where we are” DeSantis says. “…Israel’s got to do what they’ve got to do. My sense is that the Saudis, behind the scenes, understand that.”

On Thursday, DeSantis signed an executive order authorizing planes from his state could be used to rescue Florida residents stranded in Israel. This (Saturday) morning, he said the first rescue flight from Israel should arrive in Florida tomorrow (Sunday) morning.

DOROTHY KOPASKA, 91, of Dexter (Funeral Svcs. 10/18/23)

Obituaries

October 14th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

DOROTHY KOPASKA, 91, of Dexter, died Friday, October 13, 2023, at the Kavanaugh House in Des Moines.  Funeral services for DOROTHY KOPASKA will be held 10-a.m. Wed., Oct. 18th, at the First Presbyterian Church in Dexter. Lamb Funeral Home in Greenfield has the arrangements.

The family will greet friends on Tuesday, October 18, 2023, at the First Presbyterian Church in Dexter from 6:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m.

Burial is in the Dexter Cemetery.  A luncheon will follow the burial at the church.

Memorials may be directed to the Dorothy Kopaska Memorial Fund to be established by the family at a later date.

DOROTHY KOPASKA is survived by:

Her sons – Carroll (CW) Kopaska & wife Belinda, of Dexter, and Bill (Lynn) Kopaska, of Stuart.

Her daughters – Colleen (Tim) Stiles, of Dexter, and Karen (Joe) Costanzo, of West Des Moines.

Her sister – Vera Shelley, of Menlo.

Her brother – Glenn (Kathy) Heckman, of Osceola.

Several grandchildren and great grandchildren; other relatives and friends.

Online condolences may be left to the family at www.lambfuneralhomes.com.

EARLENE KRAUTH, 83, of Massena (Celebration of Life 10/21/23)

Obituaries

October 14th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

EARLENE KRAUTH, 83, of Massena, died Saturday, October 14, 2023, at the CHI Health Creighton University Medical Center – Bergan Mercy in Omaha, Nebraska.  A Celebration of Life Memorial Service for EARLENE KRAUTH will be held 1-p.m. Saturday, Oct. 21st, at the Massena United Methodist Church. Lamb Funeral Home in Massena has the arrangements.

Fellowship and refreshments will immediately follow the service in the basement.

The family will greet friends one hour prior to services on Saturday at the church.

A Private family burial will be in the Victoria Township Cemetery south of Massena.

Because Earlene deeply cherished education and her community, please consider a donation in her memory to the Massena Public Library or the Massena Historical Society.

EARLENE KRAUTH is survived by:

Her daughter – Stephanie Krauth and her husband, Christopher Lindgren, of Maryville, MO.

Her sister – Karen Palumbo, of Coralville.

A grandson, her sister-in law, and other relatives.

Online condolences may be left to the family at www.lambfuneralhomes.com.

Safety Carnival set for Oct. 17th in Atlantic

News

October 14th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Atlantic, Iowa) – The Atlantic Community School District, in collaboration with the Iowa State Patrol, is holding a Safety Carnival for Junior and Senior High students at the High School, on Tuesday, Oct. 17th from 8:30-a.m. to 3:30-p.m.  According to AHS Principal Heather McKay, the primary goal of the program is to profoundly impact teenagers by illustrating the potentially dire consequences of alcohol consumption and distractions while driving. The Safety Carnival is designed to challenge students to contemplate the dangers of drinking, texting while driving, personal safety, and the importance of making responsible decisions when lives are at stake. The event concludes a week-long curriculum presented to Dan Vargasons Leadership class at AHS.

Nearly 13,000 people lose their lives each year in alcohol-related collisions, with thousands more falling victim to distracted drivers. Our objective is to educate our students so that they can make informed choices and steer clear of risky driving habits.

Activities that will take place during the safety carnival include:

  • A Seatbelt Convincer – students are buckled into a seat that travels approximately 10 feet and mimics a slow speed (10 mph) crash.
  • Golf Cart Texting Course – Students will drive golf carts through a course designed to illustrate roadway changes (curves, stops, etc.) while composing a text.  An ISP Driving instructor will be riding with each student as they attempt to navigate the course while texting.
  • Pedal Car Course – Students will utilize the pedal car (it’s like an adult big wheel) while wearing Drunk goggles to illustrate challenges of navigating the roadway while intoxicated.
  • Field Sobriety Testing – Students will complete the Standard Field Sobriety tests while wearing the Drunk goggles to show how impairment affects their ability to perform routine tasks.
  • Virtual reality goggles – Our driving simulator that uses VR goggles will give students an opportunity to navigate different challenges presented through the simulator program.
  • Crashed Camaro – Vehicle that was traveling over 149mph and crashed at 104 mph in July 2022, killing the three teenage occupants in Dubuque.  Car has not been altered (exception of reconnecting roof) so students can see firsthand the extensive damage related to high speed crashes.   The vehicle still has contents from night of the crash (Shoes, etc.) so students can see reality of choosing to drive excessive speeds.  There is also an accompanying video we will show that interviews the family and friends of the female victims, and law enforcement who covered the crash who remain affected by this tragedy. (The ISP Technical Investigator who conducted the crash reconstruction will be present to talk about the event).

There will be 6 Troopers from the Iowa State Patrol and 1 Sergeant to conduct activities and answer questions.  The public is invited to come and join the ISP and School Administrators for the event on Tuesday.

Atlantic City Council to act on appointments to Parks & Rec Advisory Commission

News

October 14th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Atlantic, Iowa) – The City Council in Atlantic will act, Wednesday (Oct. 18th), on making appointments to the City’s Parks and Recreation Advisory Commission. The Council’s meeting begins 5:30-p.m., in their Chambers at City Hall.

You may recall, the Council passed the third and final reading of an Ordinance creating the new Commission, during their meeting on Sept. 29th. The Commission consists of five individuals with a minimum of three representatives living in the City limits, and allowing for two in Cass County. A sixth, non-voting representative from the Atlantic Community School District will also serve on the Commission.

The City of Atlantic’s Personnel and Finance Committee met on October 9th to review letters of interest from prospective Commission members, and has nominated the following persons to serve on the Parks & Rec Commission: Dolly Bergman and Kevin Ferguson (Both two-year terms); Mary Strong, Shirley Jensen and Ali Pieken (One-year terms). The two seats that may be held from those outside of City limits would be occupied by Bergman and Pieken. If the Council approves those nominations, they will become effective January 1, 2024.

In other business, the Atlantic City Council will act on approving an Order to allow the Atlantic Elks Lodge’ request to install a flagpole in the right-of-way in front of their building at 411 Walnut Street. The Personnel & Finance Committee recommends the Council approve the request for a flagpole located at the northeast corner abutting 411 Walnut.

The Council will also act on passing a Resolution “Approving of a Revolving Forgivable Loan with SHIFT ATL and providing for an Appropriation,” relating to housing rehabilitation. SHIFT has applied for a $100,000 revolving loan for the residential rehab of 201 W. 14th Street, which the Personnel and Finance Committee has unanimously endorsed.

And, the Council is expected to act on an Order to “shift future Fireworks budgets from the 4th of July to Labor Day.” The Personnel & Finance Committee met Sept. 9th to review the “Bash at the Ballfields” event that occurred over the Labor Day weekend, and concluded the event was a success. They are recommending the City hold its fireworks show on Labor Day next year, instead of the 4th of July. The Council was in agreement in an earlier meeting that the benefits of holding the event later outweigh any negative aspects, and would likely draw a bigger crowd and more entertainment.

At the end of regular business, Wednesday, the Atlantic City Council is expected to enter into a closed session to discuss legal strategy with Counsel, regarding matters of current or imminent litigation.