February 9, 2012

Attorney General files lawsuit against Louisiana car company

Iowa’s attorney general has filed a lawsuit against a Louisiana company, charging it uses “deceptive” ads to lure buyers to used-car sales events in Iowa. The attorney general says the ads devised by “Smart Automotive Group” tricked consumers into thinking they were paying bargain-basement prices for used cars and trucks that had been seized or repossessed.

According to the attorney general, though, the vehicles were actually coming from the dealers’ regular inventory. The lawsuit charges that the sales ads used deceptive headlines like “Emergency Disposal Event” but consumers sometimes didn’t get a bargain. Instead, they paid prices that were “even higher than normal.”

Officials say the company helped stage these kind of deceptive sales at dealerships in Des Moines, Bloomfield and Marshalltown in the past three years. The lawsuit asks for a fine of up to 40-thousand dollars for each vehicle sale the attorney general questions.

State officials filed a similar lawsuit against an Ohio company engaged in the same kind of alleged trickery and, in 2006, that company agreed to stop such practices.

Emerald Ash Borer found on Mississippi River island

Limb from tree infected with the emerald ash borer.

Limb from tree infected with the emerald ash borer.

State officials said today the emerald ash borer has been found on the doorstep of the state. Agriculture Secretary, Bill Northey, says the destructive bug was found along the state’s eastern border.

Northey says it’s on an island out in the Mississippi River and is considered to be in Allamakee County. He says it is very close to an infestation that was found in Victory, Wisconsin, and they had suspected there could be something there.

Northey says the island is only accessible by boat and is not inhabited unless someone would boat over and camp there. Northey says they are not recommending any actions by homeowners with ash trees at this point. The bug destroys ash trees.

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Iowa band reunites this weekend

The original five members of the 1960s Iowa-based rock ‘n’ roll band DeeJay and the Runways will reunite Saturday at the Iowa Rock ‘n’ Roll Music Museum in Arnold’s Park. One of the band members, John Senn, says they had their biggest hit in 1966 with the song, “The Tale of Peter Rabbit.”

He says the song reached #44 and #46 of the Top 100 on the two major record “charts” of the time, Cashbox and Billboard, while it stayed on the charts for 11 and 14 weeks. Senn says the song’s popularity propelled the band into taking a national concert tour, which he says was an eye-opening experience for the young men. The tour also included a national TV appearance.

“You can imagine what six guys from the state of Iowa, who had never really been that much out of the state, here we were traveling on our first national tour,” Senn says. “We went to Chicago and on to Norfolk, Virginia, to do the ‘Dick Clark Where The Action Is’ TV show on the U.S.S. Forrestal, which was an aircraft carrier in drydock.”

Some members of the band still live in the Iowa Great Lakes region. The program starts at 1 P.M. on Saturday. Appearing along with Senn will be: Denny Storey, Gary Lind, Bob Godfredsen and Denny Kintzi. They’ll hold a panel discussion about how they met, formed the band and came to record “Peter Rabbit.” There is no admission charge. See the group perform on the Iowa Rock ‘n’ Roll Hall of Fame website at “www.iowarocknroll.com“.

By Pat Powers, KQWC, Webster City

Pleasant Hill cop fired, new charges filed

A police officer in the Des Moines suburb of Pleasant Hill is facing more charges following his arrest last month. Pleasant Hill Police Sergeant Dan Edwards was charged with misdemeanor drug possession after crashing his patrol car on April 1. Investigators said Edwards was high on methamphetamine.

Now, the Division of Criminal Investigation has charged Edwards with third-degree burglary, a felony, and operating a vehicle while intoxicated. Investigators believe Edwards took the meth from a police evidence room.

Edwards had been on paid administrative leave. He was fired on Friday afternoon.

Emerald Ash Borer found in Iowa

The Iowa Emerald Ash Borer Team has confirmed today that the emerald ash borer has been found in Iowa along the Mississippi River two miles south of the Minnesota border in Allamakee County. The land is owned and managed by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

It is the first confirmation of the destructive pest in Iowa. Four larvae were found in one ash tree by members of Iowa’s EAB team during a survey of the area following the recent announcement that the beetle had been found just across the Minnesota border. An infestation in nearby Victory, Wisconsin was discovered in 2009.

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Fatal accident in Ankeny leaves Cedar Rapids church in shock

Carson and Claire DeJoode from Easter of this year.

Carson and Claire DeJoode from Easter of this year.

Police in Ankeny say it could take several weeks to complete an investigation into a crash that killed two young children. The May 6th crash has also left parishioners of a Cedar Rapids church in shock.

Heather DeJoode was driving a minivan that was struck by a pickup that drove through a stop sign. DeJoode remains hospitalized in critical condition.

Two of her children, 5-year-old Carson and 5-month-old Claire, died in the crash. Her 3-year-old son Chase was injured. Reverend Martha Rogers of Christ Episcopal Church says Heather and her husband Troy were married at the Cedar Rapids church.

“Heather is in pretty serious condition. She has survived two reconstructive surgeries, a pelvic reconstruction and a jaw reconstruction,” Rogers said. Heather DeJoode grew up in Cedar Rapids. Her parent, Mark and Sandy Eccles, still live there and attend Christ Episcopal Church. Reverend Rogers says the family is overwhelmed with grief and sorrow, but they are thankful for the outpouring of support.

“If we want to honor this family in their time of chaos and tragedy, we need to honor them by holding gently to our lives and their lives and just be appreciative of every moment we have,” Rogers said. Christ Episcopal Church is accepting donations for the family. The DeJoode family says Heather is unconscious and remains listed in critical, but stable condition.

Reverend Rogers says Heather’s husband Troy wants to emphasize the importance of organ donation. He donated organs of his two children who died and that has helped six other people. Police identify the driver of the pickup as 46-year-old Kevin Dalasta of Norwalk. Court records show Dalasta has been charged more than a dozen times with traffic-related offenses.

By Claire Kellett, KCRG-TV, Cedar Rapids

South Dakota Senator wants to respond to NW Iowa casino plan

Artist drawing of proposed Lyon County casino.

Artist drawing of proposed Lyon County casino.

While entrepreneurs in northwest Iowa’s Lyon County launch plans for building a new casino, that facility could soon have competition just across the border.

South Dakota state Senator Gene Abdallah says he’ll sponsor a bill allowing a casino to be built in or near Sioux Falls.

Abdallah says the just-approved casino in Iowa, about seven miles from Sioux Falls, will be a mega-money-maker. “The economic impact on Sioux Falls, particularly Sioux Falls, and all of South Dakota, is going to be tremendous,” Abdallah says. “I think we made a big mistake and Sioux Falls is going to pay. So is Flandreau.”

The town of Flandreau, about 20 miles north of Sioux Falls, is home to the Royal River Casino. Meanwhile, Iowa’s proposed Lyon County casino is expected to draw 80% or more of its business from out of state, mostly from Sioux Falls. Abdallah says the location of the new Iowa casino certainly deserves a response from South Dakota.

“We thought it did a couple of years ago when we proposed putting it on this side of the line but the powers that be, there was not enough support for it,” he says.

Dan Kehl the C.E.O. of the company that’s building the Lyon County casino was asked Thursday about competition from South Dakota. “I think they’ve got a tough road ahead of them to do anything,” Kehl says. He says it would likely take 10 years to get a tribal casino going, and it would take some time for the state to get one going too.

On Thursday, the Iowa Racing and Gaming Commission approved an application for a casino license in Lyon County, while rejecting requests from Fort Dodge, Ottumwa and Tama County.

 Jerry Oster, WNAX, Yankton contributed to this story.

Photo courtesy of the Lyon County Resort and Casino