May 22, 2012

Aaron Thomas talks to legislators about hospital notification of law enforcement

The son of a popular football coach who was shot to death last June spoke early this morning to a small group of legislators. Lawmakers are considering a bill that would require hospitals to notify law enforcement when they release someone who has been hospitalized for a mental evaluation if that person has criminal charges filed or pending against them.

Aplington-Parkersburg coach Ed Thomas was shot to death by Mark Becker, a former student who taken to a Waterloo hospital’s psych ward after a crime spree the weekend before the shooting. Becker was released from the hospital a day before the shooting, but law enforcement wasn’t notified of his release. Aaron Thomas, the son of Ed Thomas, spoke on behalf of his family.

“The long and short of this thing is our family is really just looking for something extremely simple with administrative form so something does not happen to another family like it did with us that could probably be prevented with one phone call,” Thomas said. Hospitals are raising concerns about the bill, as is a consortium of groups seeking reform of the criminal justice system. They argue hospital staff would become police agents if the bill becomes law.

Thomas urged legislators to consider the toll on his family as they consider the complaints about the bill from hospital lobbyists and others.”We ask that you do what is right and allow a simple solution to a simple problem,” Thomas said. “I remind you while we have not much to offer you in future or as a lobbyist firm, we have paid more with the death of our father than any special interest group could offer you.” Thomas was accompanied to the statehouse by his uncle and the former police chief of Parkersburg who investigated the case.

“What occurred on June 24, 2009, was more than just tragic and devastating,” Thomas told legislators. “What we found on that day, it was something that probably could have been prevented by better communication.” Thomas said his family isn’t casting blame beyond the “one gunman” who shot the popular football coach.

“I do not come here today just asking for the Ed Thomas Bill to be passed for me, my mom, my brother or extended family,” Thomas said. “I ask you to think of the 22 high school students who saw their teacher and coach shot and killed in a place they viewed to be a safe place. I ask you to think of the entire faculty, staff and student body that once again had their idea of safety completely destroyed for a second summer in a row. I ask you to think of the town that not only lost a school leader, a church leader but a pillar of the community. I ask you to look at the state and the effects it had on the hundreds of coaches my dad worked with or mentored.”

Parkersburg was hit by a tornado in the summer of 2008 and Coach Thomas helped lead the community’s rebuilding. “I think of the many life lessons that my father taught to not only me but to all the young people he worked with. My dad was huge on doing what was right and doing the little things, as it is the little things that make the big difference,” Thomas told legislators.

“I would challenge you with the same message. Please do what is right. Do not worry about the local interest groups or if it’s going to create more work for law enforcement or for hospitals. All my family and I are looking for is an administrative form to be adopted statewide for notification to occur between hospitals and law enforcement agencies. We truly believe it can be that simple.”

Thomas, who mainly read from a prepared statement, closed out his testimony at the statehouse with this. “We are not here to point fingers or cast blame in my father’s death as there was only one gunman,” Thomas said. “Our purpose and drive is to prevent another family, another community, another town for having to go through something like we currently are and what we experienced June 24.” Thomas, his uncle and the former Parkersburg police chief then quickly left the statehouse, headed back to Allison to hear the verdict announced in Becker’s trial.

Thomas explained to legislators why he’d made the trip to the statehouse. “Obviously with everything that’s going on, it’s kind of a busy time but I guess it’s important for us today to leave Allison where we’re hopefully awaiting a verdict or something from the jury, to come down and meet with you,” Thomas said.

The three-member House subcommittee met at 8:30 a.m. and Thomas spoke for about five minutes before leaving for the two hour trip back to Allison. The lawmakers met in private with Thomas, his uncle, and the former police chief before the public subcommittee meeting began.

Read more about the bill  here.

Jury verdict: Mark Becker guilty of first-degree murder

A jury has found Mark Becker guilty of first-degree murder in the death of Aplington-Parkersburg football coach Ed Thomas last June. Becker’s defense team hadn’t disputed the shooting, but argued Becker was criminally insane when he shot Thomas to death.

Becker’s trial was held in the Butler County Courthouse in Allison, where jurors heard testimony from students who were in the school’s weight room the morning of the shooting and witnessed the murder. Psychiatrists testified, too, offering differing opinions on Becker’s sanity at the time of the slaying. The psychiatrist brought in by prosecutors said Becker carefully planned the murder, even practicing shooting and adjusting his plan of attack because he discovered his aim wasn’t good at long range.

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Judge says Becker jury has reached a verdict

Judge Stephen Carroll says jurors in the Mark Becker murder trial have reached a verdict. Becker is accused of first-degree murder in the death of Aplington-Parkersburg coach Ed Thomas last June.  Becker pled not guilty by reason of insanity.

The judge is waiting for family members to return to the courtroom in Allison before announcing the verdict.

Thousands of gallons of ethanol spilled in Boone County

Officials in Boone County in central Iowa are working to contain an ethanol spill from a leaking railroad tanker car. Boone County Emergency Management Coordinator Dave Morlan says the car is now in a rail yard on the west side of the county.

Morlan says from what they’ve been able to tell, one of the seals on the ethanol tanker came loose. He says it sounds like the spill is just within Boone County. Morlan says the tanker carries 30,000 gallons of ethanol. Morlan says there is a large pool of ethanol in the railyard, but he says it’s hard to tell how much ethanol is there because there is a lot of snow and the ethanol is going under the snow.

[Read more...]

Grassley wants to study plan to eliminate Saturday mail

The U.S. Postal Service is formally proposing several cost-saving changes that include eliminating Saturday deliveries. Iowa Senator Chuck Grassley says the financially struggling Postal Service is also looking at closing some branches and installing more self-serve kiosks in grocery stores and elsewhere.

Grassley says, “Mail volume’s going way down because of the use of email and other methods of paying bills and communicating, so we’re going to have to align the Postal Service for the future and not rely totally on the past.” Before the U.S.P.S. can dump Saturday service, it’ll need Congressional approval — as it’s federal law to deliver the mail six days a week. Grassley says he doesn’t know if he’d support that proposal or not as he never thought it would come to this point.

“I know it’s been talked about off and on for more than a few years,” Grassley says. “I thought maybe it was just something that was thrown out there but now I know it’s going to get serious consideration and I know I’m going to have to study it thoroughly.” Grassley, a Republican, says he talked to a group of postal workers over the weekend who supported the elimination of Saturday service.

Grassley says, “I was, quite frankly, a little surprised because normally you get from the postal workers a feeling that it’s going to cut back on their work opportunities, job creation and things of that nature.” The Postal Service saw mail volume drop nearly 13-percent last fiscal year and posted losses of $3.8 billion.

Class 1A quarterfinals wrap up at girls state tourney

Mount Ayr held North Sentral Kossuth to just 30% shooting for the game as the Raiderettes claimed a 54-45 win in a class 1A quarterfinal. Mount Ayr coach Thad Streit says they knew they would shoot a lot of threes and had to defend them. He says his team has found different ways to win during the post season. Streit says they have the winning mentality and are tough and never quit.

Known as a strong shooting team North Sentral Kossuth connected on only four of 24 from three point range. Eagles coach Joel Klocke says some days it’s not meant to be, but he says his team had a heck of a year. Klocke says they were happy to get to state, but not happy to lose in the first game.

Martensdale-St. Marys played its usual harassing defense and was rewarded with a trip to the Class 1A semifinals. The top-ranked Blue Devils came up with 20 steals and held Lynnville-Sully to 10 field goals in a 57-32 first-round victory on Monday. Sophomore Morgan Halverson led the Martensdale-St. Marys offense with 21 points on 7-for-9 shooting, including a 5-for-6 effort from 3-point range.

Ashley Markert got her hands on the ball at just the right time for Manson-Northwest Webster. With her team clinging to a one-point lead, Markert stole the ball with 39 seconds left and her sister Morgan followed with two free throws, helping the second-ranked Cougars slip past No. 8 MFL-Mar-Mac 37-34 Monday night in the opening game of Class 2A play

Beating a team three times in a season can be difficult, but OA-BCIG pulled it off. Third-ranked OA-BCIG got balanced scoring and played solid defense in defeating Lawton-Bronson 55-37 on Monday night in a first-round Class 2A game

Plug pulled on appliance rebate program after one day

The $2.7 million rebate program in Iowa for the purchase of energy efficient appliances is already out of money. The federally-financed program launched Monday morning and the registration for rebates was in such high demand that the phone line and website crashed.

Don Tormey with the Iowa Office of Energy Independence says the appliance rebate processing contractor, Helgesen Enterprises Inc. of St. Paul, Minnesota, had never seen this kind of turnout for any program run by a state or a Fortune 500 company. The contractor was prepared to handle 850 calls and 11,000 web hits per hour.

Iowa households receiving a rebate will get between $100 and $500 to recycle an old appliance and buy a new energy efficient one. “It helps not only the consumer but the retailer who’s selling these appliances, it helps the manufacturer who makes them and it helps the contractor who might be installing them for people,” Tormey said.

Eligible appliances include dishwashers, hot water heaters and refrigerators. People who still want to apply for a rebate will be placed on a waiting list and might receive money if those who registered do not meet or fulfill the program guidelines. Tormey says around Iowans are already on the waiting list.

Find out more here: www.energy.iowa.gov