January 28, 2012

Omaha man charged with sending explicit e-mail to young girls

An Omaha man is now jailed on charges he sent sexually explicit e-mails and nude photographs of himself to underage girls — most of whom were in Iowa. Twenty-seven-year-old Jayson Tegeder is charged with enticing a child with an electronic communications device.

Omaha police officer Michael Pecha says all of the charges are felonies. Pecha says, “Tegeder had been contacting girls under 16-years-old by instant messaging on a social networking site.” Pecha says most of the children the suspect was contacting on-line were living nearby and all of them were under 16.

He says, “Most of the girls were from Iowa.” Pecha says Tegeder knew he was talking to young teenagers. He says, “During contact with these girls, he did send nude photographs of himself to them, knowing that they were underage.” A parent of one of the victims, a 13-year-old, knew her daughter’s password and discovered what was going on. She then contacted police and Tegeder was arrested. He is being held on a $25,000 bond.

Theatre Cedar Rapids has plan to restore flood-damaged home

A performing arts group, that’s celebrating its 75th year in Cedar Rapids, has announced a six-million dollar restoration of their flood-damaged home. Theatre Cedar Rapids was forced out of the downtown Iowa Theatre Building in June.

Tim Boyle, executive director of the Cedar Rapids Area Convention and Visitors Bureau, says the new theater will help revitalize the city. “We can’t simply inflate and rollout a downtown, or a scene or a nightlife or a community. It has to exist on its own and be sustained by itself so that when we bring people to town, they can see it and they can have an authentic and memorable experience,” Boyle said.

Work on the new theatre will begin this spring and it’s expected to open next February.  Artistic director Leslie Charipar says the original theatre first opened in 1928 as a vaudeville and movie house. Theatre Cedar Rapids moved into the building in the early 1980s.

“It’s all going to be new and it’s all going to be really user friendly. I think people are going to be blown away by how beautiful this facility is,” Charipar said. The first production in the renovated building will be the Broadway musical hit, “The Producers.”

Charipar says the play’s creator, Mel Brooks, will be invited to the opening performance.

 

Over a dozen charged in child pornography investigation

Federal officials have released the names of 14 Iowans who are facing charges in a statewide child pornography investigation. Eleven of the suspects were initially identified when search warrants were served last November. Matthew Whitaker, the U.S. Attorney for Iowa’s Southern District, says it took some time for investigators to piece together all the evidence.

"When we executed the search warrants, we only had probable cause that there were computers at those locations," Whitaker said. "We had to further our investigation, do interviews and also (conduct) computer forensics to make sure they still had the illegal contraband on them."

The 11 people named in the case, dubbed "Operation Wire Breaker," are all charged with receipt and possession of child pornography. Some are charged with distribution. Three other men are facing charges in a case that’s unrelated to "Wire Breaker." Of the 14 total suspects, two are charged with producing child porn.

Whitaker says the young victims of the production crimes are believed to be from Iowa. He says it appears there were at least two victims. Chad Cunningham of Norwalk and Jeremiah Windschitl of Council Bluffs are identified as the men charged with child porn production.

The other people charged are Ralph Johnson of Clemons, Hugo Alberto Duran-Garcia of Des Moines, Matthew Collins of Council Bluffs, Jerry DeAngelo Valdez and Ramon Marcelo Valdez, both of Des Moines, Todd Montgomery of Marshalltown, Brian Tracy of Davenport, Benjamin Lucas of Earlham, Jennifer Abbott of Iowa City, Christopher Conger of Buffalo (Iowa), Robert Hawes of Des Moines and Matthew McArthur of Clive.

Whitaker says, if convicted, the punishment could range from five to 20 years in prison for distribution or receipt of child pornography. Possession of child porn is punishable by up to 10 years in prison, while the penalty for production is 15 years to life behind bars. Three of the defendants – Johnson, Cunningham and Hawes – are already in custody. Duran-Garcia recently escaped from a halfway house. A warrant has been issued for his arrest. The other defendants are receiving summons to appear in court.

 

Body found in Boone County is identified

Investigators are releasing the name of the person found dead in central Iowa earlier this week, though questions remain about how he died.

Authorities have now identified the body as found in rural Boone County as 38-year-old Shannon Washburn of Boone.

An autopsy by the State Medical Examiner showed Washburn died of exposure. The body of Washburn was found in a wooded area shortly before 6 P.M. Monday near 115th and Nature Road, eight miles north of Boone. The Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation assisted the Boone County Sheriff’s Department in the case that remains under investigation.

 

Iowa Senate endorses "Bicyclist’s Bill of Rights"

The Iowa Senate has endorsed a so-called "Bicyclist’s Bill of Rights."

A bill which passed the Senate late this afternoon would require motorists to mainain a five-foot distance when passing a bicyclist, and motorists caught following a bicyclist too closely could face a $25 ticket — but if the cyclist is injured, the fine jumps to $500. If the cyclist is killed, the fine would be $1000.

Senator Matt McCoy, a Democrat from Des Moines, said eight bicyclists were killed on Iowa roadways last year. "When you have a state where you’re seeing consistently eight or ten people a year killed on Iowa’s roads through bicycling and you’re seeing 430 injuries, you do have a problem and that you ought to spend a little time working and educating Iowans about how to share the road," McCoy said.

But Republicans complained the bill fails to hold bicyclists to the same standards as motorists. Senator Larry Noble, a Republican from Ankeny, is a retired state trooper. "In a motor vehicle, a person operating while intoxicated has their license suspended. What about bicyclists? In a motor vehicle, a driver must take a test to operate the motor vehicle. What about a bicyclists? In a motor vehicle, a person must show proof of insurance. What about a bicyclist?" Noble asked. "And I could go on and on."

Senator Joel Bolkcom, a Democrat from Iowa City, said it’s becoming more and more dangerous to ride bikes on Iowa roads. "I wish we didn’t need this bill, but I think we do because I think it’s time that we recognize that we have a problem and that’s rising fatalities," Bolkcom said. "This shouldn’t be a partisan issue. This is about the safety of all the people out there that need this protection."

Senator Brad Zaun, a Republican from Urbandale, said he and his 11-year-old son ride their bikes together nearly every night in the summer, but Zaun thinks the bill is silly. "What’s next — the motorcycle bill of rights? The snowmobiler’s bill of rights? The runners’ bill of rights? The golf carts’ bill of rights?" Zaun asked. "I mean, how many of these bills are we going to do?"

The bill now goes to the House, where it faces an uncertain future. If the bill does become law, it would prohibit someone from opening a car door into bicycle traffic and it would give bicyclists the right of way when a bike trail intersects with a street.

 

Governor will sign $60 million increase in state aid to schools

Governor Chet Culver says he will sign into law the two percent increase in general state aid to schools which legislators endorsed this week. State law requires legislators and the governor to set the main, per student payments to K-through-12 schools more than a year in advance, to give administrators time to plan and this increase would take effect in the academic year which begins in the fall of 2010.

Culver says two percent is as much as the state can afford in this economic downturn. "We were very clear with teachers and other groups that are involved in school districts, for example, (about) this tough decision," Culver says. "But I think if you talk to them, they appreciate the fact that we literally did as much as we could."

Culver says Iowa’s public schools wouldn’t have gotten two percent without money in the federal economic stimulus that’s aimed at education. "Because we’re going to go to two percent, it’s less likely that we will have as many layoffs," Culver says, "and so anything that we can do to use this stimulus in the areas of health care or infrastructure or education or energy, you know, to prevent pink slips, that’s what we’re going to try to do."

A two percent increase in per-student aid to K-through-12 schools for the 2010/2011 school year amounts to about $60 million more in state support. The Iowa House late this afternoon gave final approval to that increase; the Iowa Senate approved the move on Tuesday.

The governor and legislators have not yet addressed state funding for the school year which begins this fall, however. The governor has said the state can afford only two percent rather than the four percent increase in state aid that was promised last year, but legislators have not yet ratified that.

 

House GOP seeks sale of Iowa Communications Network

Republicans in the Iowa House say it’s time to sell or lease the state-owned fiber optic network that was championed by former Republican Governor Terry Branstad.  House Republican Leader Kraig Paulsen admits they don’t know how much the system’s work, or whether anyone would be willing to buy it.

The state started installing fiber optic cable throughout the state in 1990. It was Governor Branstad’s goal to provide "distance learning" in each school district over what is called the Iowa Communications Network. Paulsen says many superintendents tell him they use their ICN rooms for storage. "The technology’s dramatically outdated and we end up spending tens of millions of dollars each year on something that quite frankly really doesn’t have that much more capability than plugging your computer into the wall and hooking up to the Internet," Paulsen says.

The ICN provides audio-video hook-ups in 744 classrooms throughout the state, but the fiber optic cables are also providing phone service and Internet connections to every agency in state government. Paulsen argues even if the state doesn’t wind up finding a buyer for the Iowa Communications Network, the state might wind up spending less by getting phone and Internet services from a private company.

"The phone industry is so hyper-competitive, I can’t imagine we wouldn’t have an opportunity to spend less than the way we’re doing it," Paulsen says.

Forty-three Republicans voted in favor of selling the Iowa Communications Network during House debate this afternoon, but 55 Democrats voted against the idea. However, while Democrats may have rejected the argument this week, a key Democrat held open the possibility the ICN’s sale may be explored yet this spring. Representative Jo Oldson, a Democrat from Des Moines, is chairwoman of the House Appropriations Committee. "I think it’s an important issue to talk about, as we should every other issue that may affect the state budget," Oldson says. "But I think it’s a pretty complicated issue and it needs to be done in a pretty plan-full way."

Representative Doris Kelley, a Democrat from Waterloo, reminded legislators their own laptops are linked to the Internet via the Iowa Communications Network when they’re at the statehouse — and Kelley argued the ICN should be used to expand broad-band access into remote sections of the state. "We have an asset that is so critical, but it’s underutilized," Kelley said. "And it’s under-utilized because we have not taken advantage of the opportunities that are there."

Representative Cecil Dolecheck, a Republican from Mount Ayr, says if the network is sold, accommodations must be made to keep some of the state-owned fiber optic lines serving rural areas of the state where high-speed Internet service is still not available. "I won’t say that I’m ready to sell it yet, although it will probably be a good move at some point in time to get that off the books," Dolecheck says, "but we need to make sure that we continue to provide the services…and I’m not sure that all of Iowa is quite up to speed."

Dolecheck also has a different perspective on the value of ICN classrooms. "I just had a visit with the person who coordinates the programs for I.C.N. In one week’s usage out of Southwestern Community College, there were over 30 presentations in one week," Dolecheck says. "And so as we go through this scenario and talk about selling the I.C.N. we have to be cognizant…of what they do for our schools…and make sure…that opportunity to use some kind of services remains there."