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Former State Trooper faces federal charge over 2017 traffic stop

A former Iowa State Patrol officer with a history of excessive force allegations has been indicted on a federal charge over a 2017 traffic stop in which dash-camera video captured him roughing up a motorcyclist.

A federal grand jury charged Robert James Smith last week with violating the motorcyclist’s civil rights by using unreasonable force during the Sept. 25, 2017, stop near West Liberty, a community of about 4,000 people roughly 15 miles (25 kilometers) southeast of Iowa City.

The indictment notes that the victim suffered “bodily injury” during the encounter, which means the charge could carry a maximum of 10 years in prison.

Smith is scheduled to make his initial appearance on Nov. 16 at the federal courthouse in Cedar Rapids. He did not immediately respond to phone messages seeking comment, and court records don’t show whether he has an attorney.

Dash camera video shows Smith pulling over Bryce Yakish for speeding at a gas station off of Interstate 80. The routine stop escalated immediately when Smith ran from his car with his gun drawn and pointed at Yakish, who was then 20 years old.

Smith used his left hand to strike the face shield of Yakish’s helmet, knocking him backward onto his motorcycle and to the ground. Smith briefly put his knee on Yakish’s neck while handcuffing him. Yakish can be repeatedly heard in the video complaining of neck pain.

Smith falsely accused Yakish of trying to flee and charged him with eluding law enforcement, even though Yakish stopped immediately after Smith activated his patrol car’s lights and siren. That charge was dropped after a prosecutor reviewed the video and concluded it was baseless.

Yakish lost his license because of the arrest, his motorcycle was impounded and he spent the night in jail. A chiropractor later treated him for neck pain.

The Iowa State Patrol allowed Smith, a 30-year veteran of the force, to quietly retire in 2018 after conducting an internal investigation into the incident. Smith was later hired as a police officer in the small town of Durant, where he was accused of using excessive force against a woman during an arrest.

Smith’s use of force during the 2017 traffic stop only became public in 2019 after The Associated Press published video of the incident obtained from Cedar County Sheriff Warren Wethington.

The sheriff released the video after announcing he would no longer book any suspects arrested by Smith at his jail. He said he could no longer vouch for the credibility of Smith, whose wife serves on the Cedar County Board of Supervisors and has been a political rival of the sheriff. Smith soon resigned from Durant’s police force.

Luke Combs & Chris Stapleton Win Big At The CMA Awards

The 55th Annual CMA Awards went down at Nashville’s Bridgestone Arena last night, and it certainly was a party.

Luke Combs took home the night’s most coveted award Entertainer of the Year for the very first time, and judging by the cheers he got from the crowd it was the right choice. “I’m really kinda at a loss for words,” Luke shared, before acknowledging his fellow nominees. “I don’t deserve to win this but I’m sure as hell glad that I did.”

Chris Stapleton was the big winner of the night in terms of hardware, taking home four trophies including his third Album of the Year win for “Starting Over,” while the album’s title track also took Song of the Year and Single of the Year and Chris himself won Male Vocalist of the Year for the fifth time.

Another big winner was Brothers Osborne took home Vocal Duo of the Year for the fourth time and looked genuinely shocked. In accepting the award TJ Osborne thanked the country community for supporting him after coming out, saying “it really does feel like love wins tonight” (Cameras even caught him kissing his boyfriend Abi Ventura, after their big win.)

Carly Pearce also had a pretty emotional night taking home Female Vocalist of the Year for the very first time. She was so overcome she could barely talk, which prompted her collaborator Ashley McBryde to come up and help her as she regained her composure. “I’ve had just a crazy year and I want you to know that this means everything to me,” Carly said. “Country music saved me at a time that I needed it and this is all I’ve ever wanted in the entire world.”

  • Other big winners of the night included: Old Dominion, who won Vocal Group of the Year for a fourth straight time, Jimmie Allen, who took home New Artist of the Year; and Kelsea Ballerini and Kenny Chesney, who won Video of the Year and Musical Event of the Year for “Half of My Hometown.” (click here for a winners list.)
  • It should be noted that while Morgan Wallen wasn’t invited to the CMAs and didn’t win, he did garner some huge cheers when “Dangerous The Double Album” was announced in the Album of the Year category. You could even hear a few chants of Morgan from the crowd.
  • Luke Bryan hosted this year’s telecast, and got in a few laughs at his own expense, joking about how few nominations he got this year, and that he hasn’t been nominated for Entertainer of the Year for a while. In fact, he spent most of the night being the butt of jokes, including a crack about how he’s not even the most popular country Luke anymore thanks to Luke Combs. .

Of course, while the awards are important, the real reason people tune in are the performances and there sure were plenty of showstoppers. Highlights included:

  • Miranda Lambert, in a blue and red jumpsuit with red-fringed sleeves, kicked off the show with a five-song career-spanning medley that included “Kerosene,” “Mama’s Broken Heart,” “Bluebird,” “Little Red Wagon” and “Gunpowder and Lead.”
  • Eric Church was on fire…literally, for his performance of “Heart On Fire,” with pyro going off all around him.
  • Carly Pearce and Ashley McBryde showed off their vocal chops on their collab “Never Wanted To Be That Girl.”
  • Gabby Barrett, introduced by her “American Idol” judges, performed a stripped-down version of “One of the Good Ones,” in a white outfit that made her look like an angel on stage.
  • Chris Young and Kane Brown teamed up for their hit “Famous Friends,” with high school photos of some of today’s biggest stars, like Keith UrbanCarrie UnderwoodDierks Bentley and more, projected on the screen behind them, much to the delight of the stars in the audience.
  • Jason Aldean and Carrie Underwood teamed up to perform their number one hit “If I Didn’t Love You” for the first time anywhere.
  • Keith Urban kicked off his performance of “Wild Hearts” walking the streets of Nashville and dedicating the song to all the dreamers trying to make it in music.
  • Although not an official performance, presenter Deana Carter sang a bit of her classic “Strawberry Wine” a cappella, and had the entire audience singing along and giving her a standing ovation.
  • Mickey Guyton, Brittney Spencer and Madeline Edwards teamed for a powerful performance of “Love My Hair,” while proudly showing off some very big hairdos. The performance was introduced by Faith Fennidy, the young girl who was sent home from school because of her braids, which inspired Mickey to write the song.
  • Chris Stapleton was backed by a string section for his soulful performance of “Cold,” but despite rumors he was not joined by Adele for his performance.
  • Jennifer Hudson saluted Aretha Franklin’s country contributions with a performance of “Night Life,” a song Aretha recorded more than half a century ago. She was joined for the performance by Chris Stapleton on guitar and they ended the performance a soulful version of “You Are My Sunshine.”
  • Brothers Osborne gave a powerful performance of “Younger Me,” with TJ sharing that he never thought he’d be able to be on stage at the CMAs because of his sexuality.
  • Other performances included: Dierks Bentley was joined by Hardy and Breland for “Beers On Me,” Zac Brown Band got the audience up and clapping along to “Same Boat,” with smoke rising from the floor Blake Shelton performed his current single “Come Back As A Country Boy,” Old Dominion got everyone dancing with “I Was On A Boat That Day,” Luke Combs performed his new song “Doin’ This” for the first time, Thomas Rhett performed “Country Again,” Dan +Shay performed “I Should Probably Go To Bed,” Jimmie Allen performed “Freedom Was A Highway,” and host Luke Bryan performed “Up,” and wrapped the show with “Don’t Want This Night To End” as the credits rolled.

This day in Country Music History

  • Today in 1993, Dolly Parton launched her new line of cosmetics at her Dollywood theme park in Tennessee’s Smoky Mountains.
  • Today in 1995, Deana Carter married Chris DiCroce. The couple has since gone their separate ways.
  • Today in 1996, Deana Carter had a lot to celebrate. Her single, “Strawberry Wine” went to #1, the video also hit #1 on CMT. She also did her first cover shoot for a national magazine and a horse named Strawberry Wine placed first in a race at Churchill Downs.
  • Today in 1998, “The Hits” album by Garth Brooks was certified for multi-platinum sales of 10-million.
  • Today in 2002, Dixie Chick Emily Robison and her then-husband, Charlie Robison, welcomed their first child at 10:06pm in San Antonio. Charles Augustus Robison made his debut at a hearty 8-pounds, 13-ounces and measured 21-inches long. News of the happy arrival was leaked on the Chicks’ webboard that afternoon as a fan posted that she heard the sister of a local nurse spill the beans to a local radio station. Reps for the Chicks confirmed the arrival the following morning.
  • Today in 2004, Darryl Worley, Mark Willis, and Rebecca Lynn Howard delivered a Veterans Day performance for troops in Tampa, Florida.
  • Today in 2006, Carrie Underwood carved her name into the top of the Billboard country chart with “Before He Cheats.”
  • Today in 2008, Taylor Swift’s album “Fearless” was released.
  • Today in 2009, Taylor Swift took home four awards at the 43rd annual CMA awards.
  • Today in 2010, Jason Aldean’s duet with Kelly Clarkson “Don’t You Wanna Stay” hit the airwaves.

As cities grow, wastewater recycling gets another look

By BRITTANY PETERSON and SAM METZ

DENVER (AP) — Around the U.S., cities are increasingly warming to an idea that once induced gags: Sterilize wastewater from toilets, sinks and factories, and eventually pipe it back into homes and businesses as tap water.

In the Los Angeles area, plans to recycle wastewater for drinking are moving along with little fanfare just two decades after similar efforts in the city sparked such a backlash they had to be abandoned. The practice, which must meet federal drinking water standards, has been adopted in several places around the country, including nearby Orange County.

“We’ve had a sea change in terms of public attitudes toward wastewater recycling,” said David Nahai, the former general manager of the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power.

The shifting attitudes around a concept once dismissively dubbed “toilet to tap” come as dry regions scramble for ways to increase water supplies as their populations boom and climate change intensifies droughts. Other strategies gaining traction include collecting runoff from streams and roads after storms, and stripping seawater of salt and other minerals, a process that’s still relatively rare and expensive.

Though there are still only about two dozen communities in the U.S. using some form of recycled water for drinking, that number is projected to more than double in the next 15 years, according to WateReuse, a group that helps cities adopt such conservation practices.

In most places that do it, the sterilized water is usually mixed back into a lake, river or other natural source before being reused — a step that helps make the idea of drinking treated sewage go down easier for some.

Funding for more wastewater recycling projects is on the way. The bipartisan infrastructure bill passed by Congress has $1 billion for water reuse projects in the West, including the $3.4 billion project in Southern California.

And tucked into the federal budget reconciliation package being debated is $125 million in grants for alternative water sources nationwide that could include reuse technologies.

The Southern California project would be the nation’s largest wastewater recycling program, producing enough water to supply 500,000 homes, according to the Metropolitan Water District, which serves 19 million people in Los Angeles and surrounding counties.

In Colorado, over two dozen facilities already recycle water for non-drinking purposes, which is more affordable than cleaning it for drinking. But growing populations mean cities could need to pull additional supply from the Colorado River, which is already strained from overuse.

At that point, it might make sense to start recycling for drinking purposes as well, said Greg Fisher, head of demand planning for Denver Water.

To warm residents to the idea, Colorado Springs Utilities is hosting a mobile exhibit that shows how wastewater recycling works. On a cold, rainy afternoon, dozens of visitors showed up to learn about the carbon-based purification process and sample the results, which several noted tasted no different than their usual supply.

The recycling process typically entails disinfecting wastewater with ozone gas or ultraviolet light to remove viruses and bacteria, then filtering it through membranes with microscopic pores to remove solids and trace contaminants.

Not all water can be recycled locally. Often, Western communities are required to send treated wastewater back to its source, so that it can eventually be used by other places that depend on that same body of water.

“You have to put the water back into the river because it’s not yours,” said Patricia Sinicropi, executive director of WateReuse.

As a result, much of the country already consumes water that’s been recycled to some degree, simply by living downstream from others. It’s why drinking water undergoes stringent sterilization even when it’s pulled from a river or lake that looks clean.

Encouraged by efforts in other cities, even places with stable water supplies are considering recycling their own wastewater. After a poll showed broad support for the idea in Boise, Idaho, city officials began studying plans to recharge local groundwater with treated wastewater.

“We need to be managing for the potential impacts of climate change,” said Haley Falconer, a senior manager in the city’s environmental division.

The Southern California project, which still needs to undergo environmental review and finalize its funding plan, would also lessen the region’s need to pipe in water from afar. In exchange for financing from water agencies in Nevada and Arizona, the area is ceding some of its share of the Colorado River.

“We’re taking advantage of a water supply that’s right here in our backyard,” said Deven Upadhyay, chief operating officer for the Metropolitan Water District.

Officials emphasize the project uses technology that’s been used safely elsewhere, including in Israel and Singapore. The reassurances have become critical after a separate Los Angeles wastewater treatment plant, which uses a different process to purify water for irrigation and industrial purposes, flooded and spilled sewage into the ocean in July.

“The last thing that any of us want is one of these projects that have a water quality hiccup that sets back public perception,” Upadhyay said.

___

Metz, who reported from Carson City, Nevada, is a corps member for the Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on undercovered issues.

The Associated Press receives support from the Walton Family Foundation for coverage of water and environmental policy. The AP is solely responsible for all content. For all of AP’s environmental coverage, visit https://apnews.com/hub/environment.

Red Cross spokesperson says Iowa blood supply at six year low

BY 

There’s a major blood shortage in the United States. A quarter of the blood centers in the Midwest have just a day’s supply or even less on hand.

“Our blood supply is at the lowest it has been this time of year in six years,” says Emily Holley, a spokesperson for the American Red Cross in Iowa, “so it’s critical right now that folks give blood.”

Many blood centers report they’re running critically low of O-negative blood. It’s the most common blood type used in emergencies when a patient’s blood type is unknown. Holley says more donations are also needed for platelets.

“Platelets often go to those battling cancer and other chronic illnesses,” she says. “It helps keep them healthy.”

Platelets are the cells in blood that form clots and stop or prevent bleeding. Cancer patients often need platelet transfusions if their bone marrow cells aren’t producing enough platelets due to chemotherapy.

(Reporting by Brian Fancher, KLMJ, Hampton)

Students learn about manufacturing jobs

Area high school students got a chance to learn about manufacturing jobs Tuesday (11/9) at a program at Vermeer in Pella.  The National Association of Manufacturers sponsored an event called “Creators Wanted.”  Carolyn Lee, the executive director of the Manufacturing Institute, says many people don’t know what manufacturing is like in the 21st century.

“That’s why we need to bring it to life.  We need to tell the stories.  We need to talk about what creators are and why it’s so important . Because once you light that spark, it’s magnetic.  They already see it.  But until they know about it, they don’t know to come to these great companies and to build their future and their families.”

Governor Kim Reynolds, along with Vermeer CEO Jason Andringa and Pella Corporation CEO Tim Yaggi, also spoke about the importance of filling manufacturing jobs and keeping young Iowa residents in the state.

The CMA Awards Go Down Tonight!

The CMA Awards are back at Nashville’s Bridgestone Arena tonight with a star-studded show hosted by Luke Bryan and packed with some big name performances.

Artists confirmed to perform tonight include Bryan, Jason Aldean and Carrie Underwood, who’ll perform their new number one song “If I Didn’t Love You,” Luke Combs, who’ll perform his new song “Doin’ This,” Miranda Lambert, Old Dominion, who’ll sing “I Was On A Boat That Day,” Chris Stapleton, who’ll perform “Cold,” and Chris Young and Kane Brown, who’ll perform their collab “Famous Friends.” Other performers include Jimmie Allen, Brothers Osborne, Eric Church, Dan + Shay, Mickey Guyton featuring Brittney Spencer and Madeline Edwards, Carly Pearce and Ashley McBryde,  Gabby BarrettDierks Bentley featuring BRELAND and HARDYThomas RhettKeith UrbanZac Brown Band and Jennifer Hudson who’ll make her first appearance on the CMAs.

Confirmed presenters include Trace Adkins, Ingrid Andress, Kelsea Ballerini, Deana Carter, Lauren Daigle, Russell Dickerson, Florida Georgia Line, Amy Grant, Dulé Hill, Alan Jackson, Elle King, Lady A, Zachary Levi, Scotty McCreery, Katy Perry, Lionel Richie, Darius Rucker, Susan Sarandon, Kurt Warner, Lainey Wilson, Trisha Yearwood and more.

  • Eric Church and Chris Stapleton are the top nominees going into tonight’s show with five nods a piece, with Gabby Barrett, the most nominated female artist, with four nods. Both Chris and Eric are nominated in the coveted Entertainer of the Year category, where they will compete with Luke Combs, Miranda Lambert and Carrie Underwood. Eric, who won the category last year, is the only nominee this year to have won before, meaning there’s a good chance for a first-time winner.

The 55th Annual CMA Awards air live on ABC at 8 pm.

This day in Country Music History

  • Today in 1956, “Billboard’s” annual DJ’s Poll found that Elvis Presley was the most-played country artist and male artist overall.
  • Today in 1969, Gene Autry’s “Rudolph, the Red-Nosed Reindeer” recording is certified gold.
  • Today in 1973, David “Stringbean” Akeman (a regular on the “Porter Wagoner Show” and “HeeHaw”) and his wife, Estelle, were murdered by burglars in their home.
  • Today in 1984, “Dukes of Hazzard” actor-turned-singer John Schneider had his first #1 country single with “I’ve Been Around Enough to Know.”
  • Today in 1994, Tracy Lawrence earned a gold record for “I See It Now.”
  • Today in 1999, George Strait’s “Blue Clear Sky” album was certified triple-platinum. The same day, the “Pure Country” film soundtrack was certified multi-platinum for sales of 6-million.
  • Today in 1999, Vince Gill’s album, “The Key,” was certified platinum.
  • Today in 1999, Reba McEntire’s album, “What If It’s You” was certified double platinum.
  • Today in 2000, Billy Yates made his Grand Ole Opry debut.
  • Today in 2000, Travis Tritt’s single, “Best of Intentions,” was #1 on “Radio & Records’” Country Top 50 chart.
  • Today in 2001, Toby Keith appeared on CBS’s “Touched by an Angel” series.
  • Today in 2001, after a three-year romance, Chalee Tennison married her guitar player, Mark Gillespie, in a private ceremony in Pigeon Forge, Tennessee. About 50 of the couple’s closest friends and family members attended the intimate event, which took place in a wedding chapel nestled in the Great Smokey Mountains.
  • Today in 2003, an incredible list of stars converged on Nashville to honor the late Johnny Cash. The public event, which was hosted by actor Tim Robbins and taped by CMT for broadcast, celebrated the life and musical legacy of the Man In Black. The list of performers included his daughter Rosanne; Brooks & Dunn, Jack Clement, Rodney Crowell, Steve Earle, Larry Gatlin, George Jones, Kris Kristofferson, Willie Nelson, Kid Rock, Marty Stuart, Travis Tritt, Hank Williams Jr., Dwight Yoakam, Sheryl Crow and others.
  • Today in 2004, “Redneck Woman” became Gretchen Wilson’s first gold single.
  • Today in 2005, Rascal Flatts video for “Skin (Sarabeth)” debuted on CMT.
  • Today in 2010, Miranda Lambert won three trophies at the 44th annual CMA awards.
  • Today in 2013, Rodney Atkins married Rose Falcon in Florida.
  • Today in 2014, Sam Hunt’s single, “Take Your Time,” hit the airwaves.

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