January 28, 2012

Mt. Pleasant man shot and killed by police officer

Investigators are awaiting autopsy results from a man who was shot and killed by a Mount Pleasant police officer at the local hospital Monday. Thirty-eight-year-old Michael J. Harris was fatally shot in the chest by officer Richard Martin as Harris choked Martin.

Martin had accompanied Harris to the Henry County Health Center emergency room for an evaluation when the two men got into a fight. During the fight Martin shot Harris once in the chest.

This was not the first time that Harris was involved in a shooting with police. He was shot by Mt. Pleasant police in 2005 after an armed standoff at his mother and stepfather’s home in Mt. Pleasant. Harris was released from prison in 2008 after serving time for going armed with intent and reckless use of a firearm.

 

Briar Cliff hopes to carry over late season momentum

Briar Cliff and Morningside will both take part in the Great Plains athletic conference baseball tournament later this week in Hastings, Nebraska. Morningside is the seventh seed and will play second seeded Hastings on Thursday morning.

Briar Cliff is the sixth seed and opens against Dakota Wesleyan Thursday afternoon. The Chargers post season began last weekend when they needed to win three of four against Northwestern and Morningside just to qualify for the tournament.

Briar Cliff coach Boyd Pitkin says it started on the Friday with Northwestern and didn’t end until they got done what they needed to get done. He says the Chargers do have momentum heading into the tournament.

Pitkin says they played with a lot of passion and emotion and playing a rival helped that, but so did wanting to get into the tournament.

Loras in driver’s seat in Iowa Conference race

Loras is in the driver’s seat as the Iowa Conference baseball race heads into its final week. The Duhawks are 12-6 and lead Beuna Vista and Wartburg by a game in the loss column.

Loras coach Carl Tebon who says the players are thrilled to be part of a title chase and have worked themselves into a great opportunity to control their own destiny. Tebon says he is not surprised the league race has been this close, as he says the conference play has always been tight and he knows anyone can win.

Loras has been close several times over the past few years. Tebon hopes they can get over the hump and win the regular season title.

Loras plays the University of Dubuque on Wednesday before closing out the league race this weekend with a three game series at Cornell.

 

William Penn softball team top seed in tourney

The William Penn softball team will be the top seed in the Midwest Collegiate Conference tournament in Iowa City this week. The Lady Statesmen won the MCC regular season title with a 28-4 record and won their final nine games of the regular season.

Penn coach Mike Christner they had a young team and it was just a matter of how soon the talent would jell. He says his team is playing its best at the right time, with good pitching and defense. The offense has been led by junior Tyanna Helton who set a career record with her 32nd home run over the weekend. Helton also leads the team with 61 runs batted in.

Christner says the other players have done a great job of getting on ahead of Helton and that puts pressure on the other team. As the top seed William Penn will need to win only two games to win the tournament.

Mason City man pleads guilty to housing discrimination

A Mason City man has pleaded guilty to one count of interfering with the housing rights of an African-American family. Twenty-one-year-old Justin Hanson in a plea agreement admits to placing a racially offensive sign in a family’s yard last May, and the next day firing a B.B. gun into the victims’ home, breaking a bedroom window.

Hanson admits to attempting to injure, intimidate, or interfere with the victims’ enjoyment of their federally protected housing rights because of the victims’ race and because they were living in his neighborhood. U.S. District Judge Linda Reade has set Hanson’s sentencing for July 16th. He faces up to ten years in prison and a $250,000 fine.

 

Two die in truck/school bus accident

Two people were killed when a school bus and a pickup collided in northeast Iowa. It happened at about 3:30 PM Monday at the intersection of Highway 13 and 275th Street in Delaware County.

 Authorities say a pickup driven by 42-year-old Kurt Knipper of Dyersville crossed the center line and collided head-on with a school bus driven by 67-year-old Mary Gentz of Manchester.

Two passengers in the pickup were killed; they were identified as 45-year-old Howard Craig of Manchester and 65-year-old Craig Wilson of Manchester. The pickup driver, Knipper, was lifeflighted to University Hospitals.

There were 25 students on the bus; two of them were treated at local hospitals. They were identified as ten-year-old Megan Downs of Manchester and 14-year-old Reilly Ryan of Coggon. The bus driver was also treated.

 

No reports of County Recorders refusing gay marriage licenses

There were no reports of county recorders denying marriage applications to gay couples in Iowa Monday. Hundreds of same sex couples applied for marriage licenses on the first day they could do so following the April 3rd Iowa Supreme Court ruling legalizing gay marriage.

Johnson County Recorder Kim Painter actually encouraged same sex couples to apply for a license. Painter, who is openly gay, greeted and took pictures with couples before the recorder’s office opened.

In February 2004, 52 same sex couples applied for marriage licenses in Johnson County. Painter says she considered granting them illegally, but did not.

“My particular position as an openly gay elected official led me to believe in part that those who sought office as openly gay candidates would have a terrible time if I had chosen to break the law and break the oath of office because of something I dearly wanted,” Painter said. “You can not do that, I can not stand here and enforce laws as I wish them to be. I have to do what the law says.”

Although Painter did not grant marriage licenses more than five years ago, she says the controversial event initiated meaningful discussions about same sex marriage. “I think it changed attitudes and it helped shift the dynamic in Iowa and the dialogue in Iowa,” Painter said. In Johnson County, at least two waivers to the three day waiting period were granted Monday, allowing those couples to marry immediately. Painter plans to marry her partner in the fall, but for now is satisfied signing the licenses of other same sex couples.

“To just be able to walk up to my counter and sign those license forms is amazing,” Painter said. At least a couple dozen same sex couples from outside of the state got marriage licenses Monday. George Farrage , the top deputy in the Pottawattamie County Recorder’s Office, says since the county sits on Iowa’s western border, there is interest from gay couples in states to the west.

“We’ve had inquiries from other states such as Missouri and Kansas and Colorado and places of that nature,” Farrage said. In Council Bluffs, two women from Nebraska were married Monday by a magistrate. Toni Heard and Michelle McBride received a waiver from the usual three-day waiting period because of medical issues.