May 22, 2012

Missing eastern Iowa mushroom hunter found

An eastern Iowa man was found safe on Sunday after he disappeared while hunting mushrooms the previous night. At about 9:30 p.m. Saturday, Linn County authorities were called out to rural Springville on the report of a missing person.

Seventy-one-year-old David Stoneking went mushroom hunting south of his home and had not returned. Family, friends and emergency workers searched the area until about 4 a.m. Sunday, then postponed the search until daylight. The hunt resumed at about 7 a.m. and Stoneking was finally found in a field southwest of his home almost two hours later. Stoneking was in good condition and returned home.

Sheriff’s deputies say Stoneking told them he knew he had wandered off his property and was lost. He was cold and soaking wet and decided to cut open and sleep inside a hay bale. Stoneking had not taken his cell phone because it was raining and he didn’t want it to get wet.

By Roger King, KOEL, Oelwein

Jury sides with inmate in case against Scott County jail

A federal jury is siding with an inmate in her lawsuit against Scott County and its jail. The suit was filed by Lillian Slater, who went to jail January 25, 2006, on a bad check charge.

Slater says she was denied medical attention one day later when her sickle cell anemia flared up. In addition, she was confined by jail staff to a restraining chair on two occasions that day for a total of seven hours. The jury ordered Scott County to pay $35,000 for pain and suffering because officers used excessive force.

Two corrections officers also must pay $3,500 each. The Quad-City Times reports that defense lawyers called Slater a drug seeker who used manipulative behavior in an attempt to avoid being detained.

By Phil Roberts, Davenport

New buildings at Western Iowa scout camp dedicated

A ceremony was held over the weekend at the Boy Scout camp in western Iowa where a tornado killed four scouts in 2008. The tornado killed three Omaha boys and 14-year-old Aaron Eilerts of Eagle Grove, Iowa, in addition to injuring nearly 50 other boys and adult leaders and leveling much of the Little Sioux Scout Ranch.

The ceremony on Saturday was to dedicate several of the buildings at the Harrison County camp that have been rebuilt, all through volunteer labor and with donated supplies. It includes a storm shelter that can reportedly withstand winds up to 250 miles an hour.

The camp’s new ranger says he’s confident the new shelter will keep scouts safe, but he adds that he hopes it’s never put to the test by another twister.

Drake Relays director pleased with event

The 101st Drake Relays wrapped up Saturday afternoon. Saturday’s 45 straight sellout crowd avoided bad weather until the very end when the meet was suspended for about an hour by a storm that rolled through Des Moines. The meet featured more than a dozen new records and a lot of highlights according to Relay director Brian Brown.

He says the Lolo Jones race, and the men’s hurdle race, along with some of the high school performances. Brown felt the meet ran smoothly despite some issues with the weather on Friday and late Saturday. Brown says it’s a testament to the people working the relays, as they are able to make some decisions in bad weather to keep things running well.

Fans won’t have to wait long to see many of the competitors, again, as Drake Stadium will host the U.S. National championships in June. Brown says many of the elite athletes will make the junior nationals. Brown says it won’t be long until the planning begins for next year’s Drake Relays, as they start work immediately to get things going.

By John Martenson KGRN Grinnell

Culver in Cedar Rapids to sign I-JOBS expansion

Governor Culver has approved an update to his I-JOBS infrastructure initiative.  Culver’s I-JOBS program was launched in 2009 to help finance infrastructure and disaster recovery projects around the state. 

 The original legislation authorized more than $800 million in borrowing, but $105 million of that has not been divied out yet. Today, Culver signed a plan which specifies I-JOBS officials will have that $105 million, plus another $45 million dollars to hand out this year. 

Thirty million of that will reserved for communities struck by flooding or tornadoes in 2008. That’s why Culver staged his bill signing ceremony in Cedar Rapids where flood waters covered 10 square miles of the city in June of 2008.

[Read more...]

Northeast Iowa soldier dies in Afghanistan

Command Sergeant Major John Keith Laborde

Command Sergeant Major John Keith Laborde

A soldier from northeast Iowa has died in Afghanistan. Command Sergeant Major John Laborde of Reinbeck died Thursday in Afghanistan. According to the military, Laborde died from injuries he sustained in a “non-combat related incident” at the Kandahar Air Field in Afghanistan.

Laborde had a 31-year career in the military. In 1975 he enlisted in the Marines and in 1985 he enlisted in the Army. Laborde had deployed to Afghanistan as part of the 649th Regional Support Group based in Cedar Rapids.

Laborde and the other 50 soldiers from that unit have been providing management services to other units deployed in the region.

As a command sergeant major, Laborde was the highest-ranking enlisted soldier in the unit.

Bronson man dies in motorcycle accident

A Bronson man died after a motorcycle accident southeast of Sioux City Saturday afternoon. The Iowa State Patrol reports 49-year-old Michael McDermott failed to negotiate a curve on a road south of Bronson.

The motorcycle McDermott was driving left the roadway, struck a sign post and become airborne before stopping in a ditch. The crash resulted in McDermott’s death. He was not wearing a helmet.The Iowa State Patrol and Woodbury County sheriff’s office are investigating the crash.

By Joanne Glamm, KLEM, LeMars