January 27, 2012

Man will face trial in Minnesota for 1997 murder of Iowan

A man who was convicted of a 1997 murder and then had the conviction overturned, will now face charges in Minnesota. Jackson County, Minnesota authorities have filed second degree murder, kidnapping, first and second-degree assault charges against 40 year old Juan Humberto Castillo-Alvarez.

Castillo-Alvarez was the last person arrested in connection with the shooting death of Gregory Sky Erickson. Erickson was kidnapped in Spencer and was killed in a rural Jackson, County Minnesota farmhouse. Nine other co-defendants in the case have been tried and convicted in state or federal court.

Authorities say Castillo-Alvarez fled to Mexico and managed to avoid arrest until 2006. He was extradited to Iowa where he was convicted in 2007 of second-degree murder, second-degree kidnapping and conspiracy to commit a forcible felony. The Iowa court of Appeals overturned the convictions saying there was a violation of Iowa’s speedy trial rules.

Officials say since the crime happened in both states, Minnesota has jurisdiction to prosecute Castillo-Alvarez under Minnesota law.

By Mark Bruggom, KICD, Spencer

Report gives Iowa top grade for dental health

Iowa got an “A” grade on a new national study of how states are ensuring proper dental health for children and their access to dental care. Shelly Gehshan, director of the children’s dental campaign for the Pew Center on the States, says the report is based on eight main criteria in four categories.

“The first is how well states are preventing dental problems in the first place,” Gehshan says. “The second set is how well they’re improving access to children on Medicaid. The third is whether or not they’re getting providers to take care of children and the fourth set is, are they tracking progress so they can even figure out how well they’re doing.” While Iowa was among the top-ranked states in the report, Gehshan says there’s still room for improvement.

“Iowa is doing well, but getting an A does not mean that your work is done,” Gehshan says. “One of the things they need to do is to raise Medicaid reimbursement rates for dentists because they are below the cost of providing the care. The dentists lose money on every Medicaid patient they see which is why it’s so hard to get children into a dentist if they’re enrolled in Medicaid.” Iowa was among seven states that got A’s on the study, while nine states got F’s — with New Jersey ranking last.

“Two-thirds of states are doing a poor job,” Gehshan says. “Two-thirds are leaving children without the policies in place that they need in order to access care. Fully 17-million children, or one in five across the nation, do not get the care they need and those are the children we most worry about.”

To see the full report on Iowa and all states, visit the website of the Washington D-C-based non-profit group at: “www.pewcenteronthestates.org“.

Illness forces Sioux City representative to end work at statehouse

A serious illness will keep a western Iowa state representative from returning to Des Moines and has ended his bid for another term. Cancer has forced Roger Wendt, a Democrat from Sioux City, to end his duties in Des Moines this year and to not run again.

Wendt was advised by his doctor to slow down after the diagnose of lung cancer. He first elected to the Iowa House in 2002 and was the chair of the House Education Committee. He says he is proud of work on education issues such as equalizing school funding for districts like Sioux City, which he said helps both property taxpayers and our schools.

Wendt was a teacher for nine years and administrator in Sioux City for 35 years before being elected. Wendt says it has been a great honor serving the people of Sioux City and Iowa.

By Josie Cooper, KSCJ, Sioux City

New credit card protections in place today

Attorney General Tom Miller

Attorney General Tom Miller

Iowa Attorney General Tom Miller says new protections for credit card users that took effect today should serve as a reminder to consumers to carefully read their monthly billing statements and shop around for the best credit card terms.

The U.S. Credit Card Act place a number of limits on credit card companies boosting interest rates. Previously, the companies could raise a user’s interest rate with very little notice and apply the new rate to both future and previous transactions.

“Now, if they want to change the interest rate, they have to give you 45 days notice. So, you know it’s coming and you can consider other opportunities,” Miller said. “Probably even more significantly, the charges you made relying on the previous interest rate, you pay that previous interest rate. That is fair.”

The new law also makes it illegal for credit card companies to increase the interest rate in the first year after the card is issued. In addition, card issuers are now banned from raising the interest rate if the consumer is late on paying another bill. “What they would do is borrow a default, even a minor default, from elsewhere and use that as the excuse or basis for raising the interest rate,” Miller said. “They can’t do that anymore…an important reform.”

The law also enacts new protections for underage consumers. Miller says people under 21 will now need to prove they’re financially independent in order to open a credit card account. “It says, basically, that you have to underwrite someone under 21. In other words, they have to have the ability to payoff the credit cards from their income. Or they can get someone older to cosign, which would have the liability as well,” Miller said.

The new law also prohibits credit card companies from offering free items to students to get them to sign up for a card on or around a college campus.

More details on the U.S. Credit Card Act are posted on the Iowa Attorney General’s website.

Group protests bill on manure application to frozen fields

Opponents of large factory style hog farms turned out for a protest at the state capitol today. They’re fighting a bill they say would weaken new restrictions on applying manure to farm fields. Lawmakers last year passed a bill banning the application of manure on frozen ground. Rosie Partridge from Wall Lake is a member of the activist group Citizens for Community Improvement.

Partridge said: “We are here today to ask our legislators to stand up for clean water. We are here to ask them to stop house file 23-24.” Carol farmer, Vern Tigges, had the same message. “What were are demanding today is very simple,” Tigges says, “kill house file 23-24.” The bill at the center of the protest would exempt all but the newest hog farms from building manure storage structures to house the waste until the ground thaws, and critics say that would exempt thousands of farms from the ban.

But the bill’s author says lawmakers never intended the ban to be retroactive. He says he’ll strike the controversial provision from the house bill, but hopes to later introduce a provision to give existing farms a five year grace period to comply.

Radio Iowa boys high school basketball poll 2/22/10

 

Class 4A
1. Ames (22-0), LW #1 vs Mason City or DSM East (Fri)
2. Linn-Mar (20-1), LW #2 vs Dubuque Senior or CR Prairie (Fri)
3. Bettendorf (18-3), LW #5 vs Muscatine or Davenport West (Fri)
4. S.E. Polk (17-3), LW #4 vs Urbandale or Oskaloosa (Fri)
5. Des Moines Hoover (18-3), LW #3 vs DSM Roosevelt or Indianola (Fri)
6. Sioux City East (18-3), LW #8 vs SC North or SC West (Fri)
7. Johnston (17-4), LW #6 vs Ankeny or Ottumwa (Fri)
8. Cedar Rapids Jefferson (16-4), LW #7 vs Marshalltown or Newton (Fri)
9. Waukee (14-7), LW #10 vs #10 Dowling or DSM Lincoln (Fri)
10.Dowling Catholic (14-7), LW #9 vs DSM Lincoln (tonight)

 

Class 3A
1. Davenport Assumption (18-3), LW #2 vs Anamosa (tonight)
2. Sioux City Heelan (16-4), LW #4 vs Storm Lake (tonight)
3. Mount Pleasant (18-1), LW #1 vs Fort Madison (tonight)
4. Carroll (17-2), LW #3 vs Perry (tonight)
5. Norwalk (20-1), LW #3 vs Carlisle (tonight)
6. Pella (17-3), LW #7 vs Centerville (tonight)
7. Charles City (20-1), LW #6 vs Union, LaPorte City (tonight)
8. Marion (18-3), LW #8 vs Vinton-Shellsburg (tonight)
9. Denison-Schleswig (16-5), LW #9 vs Sergeant Bluff-Luton (tonight)
10.Harlan (17-4), LW #10 vs Atlantic (tonight)

DeWitt police officer suspended over road rage incident

A road rage incident has landed an eastern Iowa cop in legal trouble. A DeWitt police officer is on paid suspension while her department investigates a road rage incident that netted her an aggravated assault charge.

It happened in north Davenport. A Moline, Illinois, motorist called 9-1-1 and said another driver had displayed a gun. Sheriff’s deputies later stopped Tammi Jo Gordy. Gordy told Davenport cops the man pulled out in front of her. She says a passenger in his car then flipped her off when she passed him.

Both drivers stopped in a parking lot. Gordy said she displayed the butt of her holstered gun and some pepper spray when the man approached her in a threatening manner. She’s due in court March 3rd.

By Phil Roberts, Davenport