Saturday, December 12, 2015
CEDAR RAPIDS, IA (IRN) – A man wanted for a home invasion homicide in Kansas might have ties to Iowa, U.S. Marshals warned Friday. The Waterloo Cedar Falls Courier reports 20-year-old Bryan Bridges is wanted for first-degree murder, aggravated burglary and conspiracy to commit aggravated robbery. Bridges and others allegedly broke into a home in Kansas and shot and killed someone in the home when he surprised the suspects. THAYER, IA (IRN) – Iowa DCI agents and Union County deputies were at two homes Friday in Thayer as part of the investigation into the death of Loretta Dillinger. KCCI-TV reports 37-year-old Dillinger was found dead in a pond near Lorimor on Monday. The man who found her body was bow hunting when he saw what he thought was a cow or a deer in the water. When he got closer, he saw human feet and legs. SHELDON, IA (IRN) – Following what administrators are calling a “non-specific threat,” Sheldon High School in northwest Iowa will have additional security in place on Monday. KIWA Radio reports high school students won’t be allowed to bring backpacks to school, and there will be a police presence in the school that day. While school officials are confident the threat is a hoax, they say they take the responsibility of keeping their students safe very seriously. DES MOINES, IA (IRN) – Clients and staff at the Central Iowa Shelter in Des Moines were shocked when they learned more about their new director, 46-year-old Mark Hanrahan, according to WHO-TV. Hanrahan, once a high-level executive at Principal Financial, was charged with felony kidnapping in January. Hanrahan held a man at gunpoint and tried forcing him to buy crack cocaine. Hanrahan obtained a plea deal, and received two years probation. Board members say he’s doing a great job, and the shelter is a place for second chances. CHARLES CITY, IA (IRN) – Charles City Middle School has a new staff member–a therapy bunny named Comet. KIMT-TV reports school counselor Heather Wilson came up with the idea. Wilson says it’s amazing to see how the bunny is helping kids already, and that “Comet doesn’t care what you look like or who you are. It’s just an unconditional acceptance for some of our kids who don’t always fit in.”