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Hearings for Fairfield teens delayed in teacher death case

Hearings for both of the two Fairfield teenagers accused of killing their high school Spanish teacher have been put on hold.  Hearings were scheduled Thursday (3/24) for 16-year-old Willard Miller and 16-year-old Jeremy Goodale on whether the two should be tried as juveniles, rather than adults, when they stand trial for the murder of 66-year-old Nohema Graber last November.  The judge has postponed both hearings with no new date scheduled. Christine Branstad, an attorney for Miller, has asked the Iowa Supreme Court to review if Judge Shawn Showers was correct in allowing evidence that she says should be suppressed because it was obtained in violation of Miller’s constitutional rights.  Miller’s hearing was postponed Wednesday (3/23); Goodale’s was postponed Thursday.

Iowa Lottery sees impact of gas prices, inflation

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RADIO IOWA – Iowa Lottery sales so far this fiscal year are nearly even through February when compared to the record set last year.

Iowa Lottery spokesperson, Mary Neubauer, says higher gas prices and inflation are starting to show their impact on sales. “That doesn’t leave as much money for entertainment options such as the Lottery. So, we are starting to see some of the impact of that,” Neubauer says.

Sales of Instant scratch tickets which have long been the Iowa Lottery’s top product are down two percent. “Scratch ticket sales probably have been impacted the most directly by these high costs we’ve seen that are impacting people’s pocketbooks. But we understand that,” she says.

MegaMillions ticket sales are down and some of that is due to people having less discretionary income — and a lack of bigger jackpots. “MegaMillions sales are down almost 30%. That’s what happens in a big jackpot game like that,” according to Neubauer. “Those sales are jackpot driven, and so in one year where you have a huge jackpot, you get a bin buster. And then the next year when you don’t have that big jackpot, you don’t see those same results.”

Neubauer says overall there’s no big concern in the numbers right now. “It’s not that Lottery is having a bad year for sure. We are still going to end up with think with the second-biggest sales year overall — but our sales are being impacted by the bigger picture we are seeing right now,” Neubauer says.

Neubauer and other Iowa Lottery officials said they expected things to level out after last year’s record year that was driven in part by the pandemic.

More signatures needed to run for county offices

Anyone who wants to run for County Supervisor, County Attorney, County Treasurer and County Recorder now needs 75 signatures on nomination papers.  This after Governor Reynolds signed a bill into law this week that changes the requirements for nomination papers.  Anyone who has already turned in paperwork for those offices does not have to re-file.  The filing deadline for the June 7 primary election is this Friday, March 25 at 5pm.  For more information, call your county auditor’s office.

Tornado rips into New Orleans and its suburbs, killing 1

By GERALD HERBERT and REBECCA SANTANA

ARABI, La. (AP) — A tornado flipped cars, ripped off rooftops and deposited a house in the middle of a street in the New Orleans area, part of a storm front that caused damage in places as it blew from Texas to South Carolina. Two deaths were attributed to the weather.

Other tornadoes spawned by the same storm system had hit parts of Texas and Oklahoma on Monday, killing a woman north of Dallas and causing multiple injuries and widespread damage, before moving eastward.

The National Weather Service confirmed that tornadoes touched down Tuesday night in St. Bernard Parish, which borders New Orleans to the southeast, and in Lacombe, across Lake Pontchartrain from the city. Parish officials gave no details on how the person died; they said multiple other people were injured.

New Orleans television stations broadcast live images of the storm as it barreled across the metropolitan area. In the aftermath, rescue workers were searching through Arabi, just east of the city’s Lower 9th Ward, where St. Bernard Parish President Guy McInnis said the tornado caused significant damage in an area wrecked by Katrina.

Many residents also suffered damage just last year when Category 4 Hurricane Ida swept through. Stacey Mancuso’s family just completed repairs to their home in Arabi after Ida ripped off the roof and caused extensive water damage. As Tuesday’s tornado tore through their street, she huddled in the laundry room with her husband; two children, ages 16 and 11; and dogs as part of their new roof blew away.

“We’re alive. That’s what I can say at this point. We still have four walls and part of a roof. I consider myself lucky,” said Mancuso. Still, the twister was the third time they’ve had major weather damage since Katrina in 2005.

In Arabi, there was a strong smell of natural gas in the air as residents and rescue personnel stood in the street and surveyed the damage. Some houses were destroyed while pieces of debris hung from electrical wires and trees. An aluminum fishing boat in front of one house was bent into the shape of a C with the motor across the street. Power poles were down or leaning over, forcing emergency workers to walk slowly through darkened neighborhoods checking for damage.

Michelle Malasovich lives in Arabi. Initially she had been worried about family to the north who were also getting hit by bad weather. She was texting with them when “all of a sudden the lights started flickering.”

Her husband was out on the porch and saw the tornado coming.

“It just kept getting louder and louder,” Malasovich said. After it passed, they came out to survey the damage — some columns were blown off their porch and the windows of her Jeep were blown out. Others fared worse: “Our neighbor’s house is in the middle of the street right now.”

The parish president said a young girl was on a ventilator in the home at the time.

“We had one rescue — a home that was actually picked up and came down in the middle of the street. A young girl was on a ventilator, her father was looking for firefighters to come help, come help,” McInnis said. “And they were already in there taking care of the young lady and she’s doing fine.”

New Orleans Mayor LaToya Cantrell tweeted late Tuesday that there were no reports of casualties or significant damage within the city and that the power utility was working to restore electricity. About 13,000 homes and businesses were reportedly without power in the three parishes around New Orleans. Entergy reported that about 3,500 remained without electricity early Wednesday morning.

As the storm front moved eastward, an apparent twister ripped apart a metal building and shattered windows east of Mobile Bay in Baldwin County, Alabama, and torrential downpours caused flash floods. The weather service reported more than 8 inches of rain fell in the central Alabama city of Sylacauga overnight, and the roofs of several homes were damaged in Toxey, Alabama, where tornado warnings were issued.

The wild weather waned as it moved into South Carolina early Wednesday, but the weather service warned that isolated tornadoes remained possible in southern Georgia.

Shelters were opened ahead of the severe weather, and many schools closed early or canceled after-school activities in parts of Louisiana and Mississippi. Louisiana’s federal and state authorities reminded the more than 8,000 hurricane survivors living in government-provided mobile homes and recreational vehicle trailers to have an evacuation plan.

The vicious weather hit Texas on Monday, where several tornadoes were reported along the Interstate 35 corridor. In Elgin, broken trees lined the rural roads and pieces of metal — uprooted by strong winds hung from the branches. Residents stepped carefully to avoid downed power lines as they worked to clean the remnants of broken ceilings, torn down walls and damaged cars.

J.D. Harkins, 59, said he saw two tornadoes pass by his Elgin home.

“There used to be a barn there,” Harkins said, pointing to an empty plot on his uncle’s property covered with scattered debris. He said the building was empty when the first tornado hit, and that his family is thankful nobody was hurt.

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott declared a disaster in 16 hard-hit counties. Abbott said 10 people were injured by storms in the Crockett area, while more than a dozen were reportedly hurt elsewhere.

The Grayson County Emergency Management Office said a 73-year-old woman was killed in the community of Sherwood Shores, about 60 miles (95 kilometers) north of Dallas, but provided no details.

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Associated Press journalists Jay Reeves in Birmingham, Alabama; Kimberly Chandler in Montgomery, Alabama; Ken Miller in Oklahoma City; Jill Bleed in Little Rock, Arkansas; Terry Wallace in Dallas; Janet McConnaughy in New Orleans and Acacia Coronado in Austin, Texas contributed to this report.

Statewide tornado drill set for today

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RADIO IOWA – As part of Severe Weather Awareness Week, Iowans are urged to take part in this morning’s statewide tornado drill.

Meteorologist Alex Krull, at the National Weather Service in metro Des Moines, says with the number of deadly tornadoes that have already hit Iowa in recent weeks, he hopes people will take this drill very seriously, wherever they are at 10 a.m. today.

“Get your plan into action and practice executing your plan in the event severe weather strikes — which will likely be happening at some point this spring and summer,” Krull says. “Keep in mind, where are the best places to go in your own home, in your businesses or your school.”

We’ve heard stories from survivors of the March 5th tornadoes that tore through the Winterset area who rode out the powerful storm in their basements, but that’s not always an option for everyone.
“If you don’t have a basement available to you, get to the lowest level floor of the building that is available and try to get to the center of it, particularly any room that has multiple interior walls,” Krull says. “A lot of times, it’s going to end up being a bathroom or a closet, something that puts as many walls between you and the outdoors as possible.”

The annual statewide tornado drill will take place at the traditional time of 10 o’clock this morning, but the methods for issuing the alert have shifted. “We will no longer be doing the test tornado warning like we’ve done in years past,” Krull says. “Rather, we’ll use things like social media to get the warning out and other various communications methods that we have with law enforcement and other core partners.”

The derecho that hit Iowa on December 15th spawned a record 61 tornadoes, the highest number ever recorded in a single day in Iowa. The storms on March 5th spun off ten tornadoes across the state which claimed seven lives and destroyed or damaged dozens of homes.

“The tornado drill is always an important drill for Iowans and anyone in the Midwest to go through every year, just given the frequency of severe weather,” Krull says. “Given the notable tornado outbreaks we’ve had in the past six months here in the state of Iowa, definitely will have a little more attention to it than it may have had in past years.”

Learn more about today’s drill and this awareness week at www.weather.gov/dmx.

Marion County emergency alert system updated

If you live in Marion County and are signed up for the County’s emergency notification system, you’ll need to sign up for it again.  Marion County public information officer Emily Feagins tells us the County has upgraded its notification system.

“Even if you were previously signed up in our old emergency alert system,  you will still need to go on and re-submit and sign up for this alert. You can follow us on Facebook.  I have it pinned to the top of our page.  There’s a link that you can sign up to.  Or you can text MarionIA to 672-83.”

Feagins says she can help you upgrade or sign up for emergency notification for the first time Wednesday (3/23) from 2-4pm at the HyVee in Pella…and Friday (3/25) from 2-4pm at the HyVee in Knoxville.  The target date to transition to the upgraded system is July 1.

Fairfield teens allegedly used baseball bat to kill teacher

By David Pitt

AP – Two Fairfield teenagers used a baseball bat last fall to kill their high school Spanish teacher, and one of them described in social media posts how they followed the woman, carried out the attack and hid her body, police allege in court documents publicly released Tuesday (3/22).

Also Tuesday, a judge rejected defense lawyers’ requests that the media be excluded from a hearing Thursday (3/24) at which the teens will seek to be tried in the juvenile system rather than in adult court.

Jeremy Goodale and Willard Miller, both 16, are charged with murder in the death of Fairfield High School Spanish teacher Nohema Graber, 66. Her body was found Nov. 3, hidden under a tarp, a wheelbarrow and railroad ties at the Chautauqua Park in Fairfield. She had been reported missing earlier that day.

Details about the case were included in search warrant information that had been sealed by a judge until this week.

The documents state that a witness who knew Goodale showed police Goodale’s Snapchat messages that indicated Miller and Goodale “were involved in the planning, execution, and disposal of evidence” related to Graber’s death. Goodale’s messages described out he and Miller conducted surveillance on Graber, how she was killed, where her body was located, where her car was parked and how the teens disposed of and concealed evidence.

Included in the messages was that a baseball bat was used to kill Graber. Court documents said the teacher suffered “inflicted trauma to the head.”

According to the court documents, police investigators viewed surveillance video that showed Graber’s car left Fairfield High School and entered the park about 4 p.m. on Nov. 2. The car was driven out of the park about 42 minutes later, followed by a pickup truck.

The documents say a witness told police the items used or worn during the crime were taken to Goodale’s home.

In an interview, Miller told Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation agents that he provided a wheelbarrow from his home, according to the documents. Another witness said he saw a male subject pushing a wheelbarrow down a Fairfield street around midnight on Nov. 2.

Many details remain concealed from public view, including an alleged motive. Attorneys for the teens have asked the court to keep most information about the evidence under seal and had requested that the media and public be excluded from Thursday’s hearing on whether the teens should be waived from adult court back to juvenile court.

Judge Shawn Showers on Tuesday denied the request for the private hearing, saying the defense attorneys didn’t show the teens’ right to a fair trial would be irreparably damaged if the hearing was open.

Goodale and Miller are charged as adults as required by Iowa court procedures, which say anyone 16 or over charged with a forcible felony is automatically waived to adult court “and is subject to the same criminal procedures and penalties as adults.”

The adult sentence for first-degree murder in Iowa is life in prison, although in 2016 the Iowa Supreme Court banned judges from imposing murder sentences of life without parole for offenders under age 18, saying it amounts to cruel and unusual punishment under the Iowa Constitution.

It’s likely Goodale and Miller would serve lengthy prison sentences if convicted as adults. If moved to juvenile court the two would be released from custody when they turn 18, less than two years.

The judge scheduled trial dates for the teens, with the trial for Goodale set for Aug. 23 and Miller’s date planned for Nov. 1.

Updating Oskaloosa’s comprehensive plan

Oskaloosa residents are being asked to help update the City’s comprehensive plan.  There will be public open houses Wednesday (3/23) from 11:30am to 1:30pm and 5 to 7pm….and Thursday (3/24) from 11:30am to 1:30pm at the Oskaloosa Public Library.  Oskaloosa Development Services Director Shawn Crist talks about the open house.

“So this is something that we haven’t done for about 23 years.  Our last comprehensive plan was done in 2000 and it takes a look at all those things.  How you want your city to look in the future, how you want it to develop.  For example, where you might residential to go, where you might want new streets to go.  Maybe certain areas that you feel may need more attention or continue to have attention. So it’s the public’s view of how they want their community to look in the future.”

There’s more information online at www.PlanOskaloosa.com.

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