January 27, 2012

Iowa soldiers train in “Shoot House” in Mississippi

The 3,000 Iowa National Guard soldiers bound for Afghanistan could be in situations that will force them to make life and death decisions in a matter of seconds. They’re learning how to deal with those situations during training at Camp Shelby, Mississippi.

One training exercise, known as “The Shoot House,” involves a structure containing a half dozen rooms. Troops enter each room with weapons drawn. If they see a cut out photo of an enemy combatant, the soldiers shoot to kill.

A second of hesitation could put the troops in danger, but acting to fast could kill or injure innocent people. Private First Class Erik McDonald of Iowa City says it’s a nerve wracking experience. “I looked like I was falling apart the first time I tried it,” McDonald said. “Once you get it down, especially with the same people, it’s a lot easier.”

First Lieutenant Justin Foote of New Hartford says the repetition of the exercise builds confidence. “To be able to work as a team and have trust is a key thing. If you can’t trust the guy in front of you and the guy behind you, it’s not going to work out in our favor,” Foote said.

Troops who have recently come back from Afghanistan and Iraq oversee the training and give soldiers tips and techniques. For now, the Iowa soldiers fire blanks in The Shoot House. They’ll use live rounds in the final phase of training – shortly before their deployment to Afghanistan.

By Mark Geary, KCRG-TV, Cedar Rapids

Football Friday Night Scores 8-27-10

Friday 8-27-10

CLASS 4A

  • Indianola 42, Sioux City West 0
  • Bettendorf 52, Davenport West 0
  • Dowling Catholic 69, Council Bluffs Jefferson 0
  • SE Polk 49, Des Moines Roosevelt 7
  • Urbandale 43, Des Moines Hoover 0
  • Ankeny 20, Ames 7
  • Iowa City High 48, Dubuque Senior 6
  • Ft. Dodge 54, Des Moines East 9
  • Linn-Mar 43, Cedar Rapids Jefferson 15
  • Marshalltown 45, Des Moines North 8
  • Cedar Rapids Xavier 35, Cedar Rapids Kennedy 0
  • Council Bluffs Lincoln 48, Johnston 13
  • WDM Valley 17, Ottumwa 7
  • Des Moines Lincoln 36, Mason City 28
  • Sioux City East 41, Waukee 25
  • Davenport Assumption 43, Clinton 0
  • Muscatine 35, Davenport North 12
  • North Scott 21, Plesasant Valley 17
  • Cedar Falls 24, Dubuque Hempstead 7
  • Cedar Rapids Washington 41, Cedar Rapids Prairie 21
  • Dubuque Wahlert 42, Waterloo West 19
  • Iowa City West 35, Waterloo East 14

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Remove your license plates when selling a car or risk a speeding camera ticket

Police departments in Cedar Rapids, Davenport, and Clive are now catching violators with red light and speeding cameras, but some people are getting tickets for violations they didn’t commit because they didn’t take their license plates off when they sold their vehicles.

Some former owners are getting traffic tickets when new owners get caught by camera running red lights. Linn County deputy treasurer Sharon Gonzalez says her office is getting calls from unhappy former car owners who had nothing to do with running the red light.

“All of a sudden they’re getting at ticket in the mail for a vehicle they’ve disposed of. Our first question is did you take your license plates off,” Gonzalez says. She says that one question usually solves the issue right away. “And usually the response is ‘No I left them on the vehicle’,” Gonzalez says, “and of course that’s the only identifier when those tickets are issued, is by the license plate.”

Gonzalez says removing the plates when selling a vehicle also protects you from parking tickets rung up by the new owner. In Clive and Davenport, police say they’re reissuing traffic camera citations to the actual offender if former owners can show they had sold the vehicle before the violation occurred.

In Clive, police say they had a case where a woman who got the car in a divorce settlement ran up traffic violations which were caught by camera. The tickets then went to the ex-spouse.

Davenport man given year in jail for threats against federal buildings

A 60-year-old Davenport man has been sentenced to nearly a year in prison for making a series of threats against federal property last September. According to the U.S. Attorney’s Office, David John Carter called an office in one of the federal buildings in downtown Davenport and suggested he’d like to get “a wrecking ball and explosives” to destroy the buildings.

A federal officer, along with several Davenport cops, went to Carter’s house and he repeated those threats. Carter took it one step further, writing a letter — with his name and return address on the envelope. He repeated his threats to the buildings in that letter. But he also threatened anyone involved in the investigation of his case.

In addition, Carter wrote that he wanted money from the investigating officers. Carter has been sentenced to 350 days in prison, followed by two years of probation.

Thieves steal $600,000 from Catholic Diocese of Des Moines

The Catholic Diocese of Des Moines says thieves were able to electronically steal over $600,000 from one of the organizations bank accounts. Diocese spokeswoman, Anne Marie Cox, says they were notified by the bank on August 17th. Cox says as soon as the learned about the fraud, they closed all the relevant accounts and began looking at recovering the funds.

The F.B.I. is investigating and the U.S. Treasury has been notified, and Cox says it looks as though all the proper procedures were followed and no bank staff or diocese employees are believed to be involved. Cox says they also want to reassure donors they are safe.

Cox says the bank has assured them that no donor accounts that use automatic donation have been compromised. “Law enforcement tells us that we seem to have been victim of a highly sophisticated operation,” Cox says. Cox says they are working to get all the money back.

She says the bank has been able to recover $180,000 and they’ve notified their insurance carrier and hope to recover all funds. The Diocese of Des Moines includes 82 parishes in 23 counties in central and southwest Iowa.

Davenport sentenced for making threats to federal buildings

A 60-year-old Davenport man has been sentenced to nearly a year in prison for making a series of threats against federal property last September. 

According to the U.S. Attorney’s Office, David John Carter called an office in one of the federal buildings in downtown Davenport and suggested he’d like to get “a wrecking ball and explosives” to destroy the buildings.  A federal officer, along with several Davenport cops, went to Carter’s house and he repeated those threats. 

Carter took it one step further, writing a letter — with his name and return address on the envelope.  He repeated his threats to the buildings in that letter.  But he also threatened anyone involved in the investigation of his case.  In addition,  Carter wrote that he wanted money from the investigating officers. 

Carter has been sentenced to 350 days in prison, followed by two years of probation.

Coon Rapids couple likely died of lack of oxygen in well

Initial test results indicate the couple who died earlier this month in a rural Guthrie County well likely died from a lack of oxygen. The Coon Rapids couple,  36-year-old Jamie Eyberg and his 34-year-old wife, Ann, died August 14.

Guthrie County Sheriff Marty Arganbright says samples of air indicated there was an extremely low level of oxygen down in the well. “Coon Rapids Fire Department did a test that showed low oxgen, less than five percent. Ours showed less than five percent and then I had Council Bluffs Fire Department…(come) up with some other equipment,” Arganbright says. “And that’s one of the most specific things is low oxygen.”

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