May 16, 2012

Autopsy planned for Atlantic woman found in her car

An autopsy is being conducted today on the body of a western Iowa woman who was found after being missing for a little over a week. Pottawattamie County Sheriff Jeff Danker says it appears 57-year old Dawna Lynne Massie, of Atlantic, died as the result of a traffic accident.

The sheriff said Massie’s vehicle had been traveling westbound on Highway Six near Quick, when it veered toward the south and sideswiped a power pole before entering a deep ravine and ending up in a culvert.

Danker says Massie was still wearing her seatbelt when she was discovered, and it appears that there was no other activity after the initial impact. They won’t know the health problems caused the accident until after the autopsy results are returned.

Massie was last seen the morning of June first, when she left her home in Atlantic to head toward Omaha, where she had an emergency appointment with a dentist. Her car was discovered Thursday afternoon, when officials tracing her cell phone signature were able narrowed down the search area.

Funeral arrangements pending for Iowa woman killed in Iraq

Funeral arrangements are pending for the Iowa Falls native who was killed in Iraq this week. Naval reservist Jaime Jaenke died Monday after a roadside bomb exploded, the first Iowa woman killed in the Iraq War. A second sailor from Illinois was also killed in the bombing.

Jaenke grew up in Wisconsin where her former high school gym teacher Julie Grabner remembers her fondly. Grabner says “She was just one of those kids that you just loved to have in class because you could always count on her. She was always one of those kids that people just naturally gravitate towards because she has a calming effect and keep things moving and she motivates people. She’s a quiet motivator.”

The 29-year-old Jaenke is survived by a young daughter. Jaenke is reportedly the first Iowa woman killed in combat since World War Two.

Grassley to hold another meeting to talk about Maytag

Some 23-hundred jobs will be lost in Newton with the shutdown of Maytag’s headquarters and the washer-drier factory there. After a meeting Thursday with Newton’s top leaders, U.S. Senator Chuck Grassley says he and his staff are setting up a large-scale meeting to be held in Newton.

Grassley says “To bring together all the resources, not only of the Labor Department but some other departments of government, working with Economic Development people and the political leadership of Newton to see what resources are available and how we can smooth the transition from the closedown of Maytag to other jobs and other employment for these people.”

Grassley says Maytag has been a landmark operation in Iowa for decades and it’s hard to believe it’s disappearing. Grassley says “The economic facts of life are — this happens quite frequently in the United States so what you do is, you put the resources together to try to get the job done right.” He says the sale of Maytag to Whirlpool and the closing of the Newton operations is like Iowa having its right arm cut off. Grassley expects the Newton meeting to be held within a few months.

Fallon looks for work now that campaign is over

Buoyed by a strong third-place finish in Tuesday’s primary vote, Democratic gubernatorial candidate Ed Fallon is fielding job offers. “My life is committed to public service,” Fallon says. “That doesn’t necessarily mean through the political process. I may be doing something outside the political meanstream. I’m not sure. I’ve got plenty of options, plenty of connections, plenty of ideas.”

Speaking of connections, Fallon has received phone calls from potential presidential candidates like former First Lady Hillary Clinton who’s now a New York Senator and Wisconsin Senator Russ Feingold. Both are potential presidential candidates in 2008.

Fallon, who is 48, holds a degree in religion from Drake University and has been a state representative for the past 14 years. “I did a lot better than the pundits thought I would do,” Fallon says of his finish Tuesday night. “A lot, lot better.”

Fallon vows to continue working on the issues he outlined in the campaign — such as campaign finance reform. Fallon says he’s got to tie up a lot of loose ends from the campaign first before he makes a decision on the next phase of his life.

Old child stealing case solved

A child-stealing case more than a quarter-century old was solved this week in South Sioux City, Nebraska. Dakota County Attorney Ed Matney says in August 1980 Sharon Grummond kidnapped her 4-year-old granddaughter Angela from the child’s home there. There was a change in county attorneys about that time and in the confusion that followed there was no warrant issued for nearly three years, though Matney says they knew the woman had taken the child.

Once the complaint was filed, federal authorities began a search and several times in the eighties they came close to catching her, but the woman eluded them. Finally they closed the file, saying they didn’t have the resources to continue on this case. The prosecutor credits a local officer, Lieutenant Chuck Carson with looking through “cold-case” files and reviving the search for the girl.

Matney, who took the County Attorney’s office in 2004, was contacted by the national Center for Missing and Exploited Children, which had kept track of the case, and they formed an investigative group named for the child: “Task Force Angela.” The Nebraska State Patrol loaned the task force an investigator and a crime analyst, and they got the old files from the FBI and US Attorney’s Office. The case and its investigation crossed state lines.

At the time the little girl was kidnapped her mother lived in South Sioux City, Nebraska, and today she lives in Sioux City, Iowa, as Matney points out “it’s kind of like one community, the metro area.” The investigation located Grummond and the girl in Florida, where the investigators say they think she home-schooled the child to avoid being found.

On Wednesday, at the South Sioux City Courthouse, the 66-year-old grandmother was arrested and the girl, now thirty years old, met the rest of her family. They’d worked out a “self-surrender” agreement, so the grandmother turned herself in to Lieutenant Carson, who’d led the renewed investigation. Sentenced to three years probation, Sharron Brummond will serve that in Florida where she lives.

The prosecutor says while such cases don’t always have a fairytale ending, he hopes the reunion will lead to renewed family ties for Angela and her mother and father.
Before the court session, the family was given time to meet and talk. Angela’s been living in Florida for years and has a job in the pet-food business, she says. Matney says he hopes they’ve laid groundwork for a future relationship.

While they don’t know what the grandmother told Angela during the years she was raising her, the mother and father are talking it over with her. The mother and father were pleased to see their daughter, and though the prosecutor says after such a long separation the reunion will likely be “cumbersome,” the parents were overjoyed to see their daughter. Matney says he’s proud of the local law-enforcement agencies and his task force.

Kernels host run along with baseball game

There will be more than just baseball this Saturday at Veterans Memorial Stadium when the Cedar Rapids Kernels host their second annual 5K run. Doug Nelson of the Kernels says all the money raised fronm the event will go to Charity. Nelson says anyone interested in taking part can sign up until the race begins.

Nelson says food and beverages will be available after the race and plenty of proizes will be given out. He says there’s a 200 dollar prize for the top male and female finishers. Later Saturday night the Kernels will host the Fort Wayne Wizards in Midwest League action.

Parties look for candidates to fill out bottom of ballot

The leaders of Iowa’s two major political parties are scrambling to round-out the statewide general election ballot. As it stands today, there are no Republican opponents for two Democrats who are long-time office-holders, but Republican Party of Iowa chairman Ray Hoffmann is trying to recruit people to run against Iowa Attorney General Tom Miller and State Treasurer Michael Fitzgerald.

“We’ve definitely been working on that for months, actually,” Hoffmann says. “Got some great possibilities (but) right this minute no 100 percent committments so we’ve got to wait just a bit longer.” Hoffmann says Republicans don’t want to give the two Democrats who’ve held statewide office for a combined total of 48 years a free pass in the November election.

“They’ve been there for a very, very long time,” Hoffmann says. “It’s time to change the guard there.” Miller has served as Iowa’s Attorney General for 24 years and Fitzgerald was first elected State Treasurer in 1982. Hoffmann suggests the party won’t just put anybody on the ballot. “Unless I get somebody that’s really a key person, somebody that’s in a top tier as a candidate, we’re not going to just waste our time either, you know,” Hoffmann says.

Meanwhile, Democrats are also searching for a candidate to run against State Auditor Dave Vaudt, a Republican who is seeking a second term in that office. Lieutenant Governor Sally Pederson, the chair of the Iowa Democratic Party, is leading the search. “We’re talking to people with business backgrounds, with legal/accounting backgrounds, people who are interested in accountable government,” Pederson says. Like Hoffman, she isn’t willing to discuss names either. “It wouldn’t be fair at this name to be sharing names, but we hope to have a name by Saturday of convention,” Pederson says.

Both parties are holding their state conventions in Des Moines on Saturday, June 17th. Nominees to fill those open spots on the statewide ticket would have to be ratified by convention delegates.

Miller and Fitzgerald have both served 24 years in office — but Miller has not done those years consecutively. Miller was first elected in 1978, but took four years off from 1991-1994 to work in private practice. That’s when Bonnie Campbell served one term as Iowa Attorney General.