An Iowa man accused of child sex crimes was found in Indonesia. On Tuesday the U.S. Marshals Service announced that with the help of the U.S. Department of State and Indonesian officials 32-year-old Trevor John Collison was taken into custody on federal charges of sexual exploitation of a child and possession
Trevor John Collison, 32, has been returned to the United States and will appear before a Federal Magistrate for his outstanding warrant.
The first piece of legislation President Trump will sign into law includes provisions Iowa’s congressional delegation has sought for the past eight years. Iowa Congressman Randy Feenstra […]
(Council Bluffs) A Council Bluffs man was sentenced to 22 years (264 months) in federal prison for conspiracy to distribute methamphetamine.
(Council Bluffs A Council Bluffs man was sentenced to 210 months in federal prison for receiving child pornography.
The first piece of legislation President Trump will sign into law includes provisions Iowa’s congressional delegation has sought for the past eight years. Iowa Congressman Randy Feenstra is a sponsor of “Sarah’s Law” — named for a 21 year old Council Bluffs woman who died in Omaha just hours after she’d graduated from college.
An Iowa man wanted on multiple federal child sexual exploitation charges has been arrested Trevor John Collison, 32, is charged with se
Sarah Root was just 21 years old when investigators say she was killed, hours after graduating college in Bellevue. The man who was accused posted bond and was never seen again. After Sarah's death, Iowa Sen. Joni Ernst made it her mission to seek justice for Sarah and proposed Sarah's Law.
The Iowans’ push stems from the 2016 death of Sarah Root, a Council Bluffs resident who was killed by an undocumented immigrant driving drunk.
The Council Bluffs Police Department is requesting the public’s assistance in locating a missing 86-year-old man. Dale Edward Haven was last seen in Adair at
Iowa Western Community College officials are ecstatic over the new semester's enrollment picture. Iowa Western President Dr. Daniel Kinney anticipates an increase between half-of-a-percent to 1%--similar to hikes in recent semesters.
Lawmakers introduced a slew of bills in the second week of the session, including hands-free driving legislation, new traffic camera rules and a ban on citizen police review boards.  To add on to the chilly week,