Transcripts For WOI Local News At Ten 20151106

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team and we star brad/wx wall weather adlib: we did it again today- we reached the 70s! that makes this the warmest start to november on record for central iowa! i hope you got your fill of unseasonably warm weather because a cold front has gone through and the cooling has begun! northwest to westerly winds will continue to cool us down into the early morning hours., so get ready to bundle up your kids before you send them out the door. as that front pushed through it kicked up a line of showers/storms that will continue to move eastward out of the state. temperatures are actually going to be average- if you can believe that! lows in the 30s and highs in the 50s will be the rule heading through the weekend, but at least we are looking at lots of sunshine! next week looks pretty decent to start off with mainly dry conditions until wednesday and thursday when we will see our next chance at or above average " local 5 news at 10 in iowa and we start with breaking news" stephanie: breaking right now, a shooting on the north east side of des moines. police are on the scene now, and so is local 5's kattey ortiz. jack: kattey, what do we know so far? kattey: (adlibs intro) kattey/live: stephanie: stay with local 5 as this story develops. we'll check back kattey/live: stephanie: stay with local 5 as this story develops. in with kattey if anything else breaks. jack: detectives in des moines may be taking a new look at the case of a metro boy missing for decades. this renewed hope comes after a break in the abduction case of a boy from minnesota just last week. daniel heinrich is now a person of interest in the disappearance of jacob wetterling in minnesota in 1989. heinrich appeared in federal court yesterday and a judge ruled he should be kept in jail, calling him a "danger to the community." right now, he only faces child pornography charges, not anything related to jacob wetterling's case. still-- details about evidence found in heinrich's home caught the attention of a retired des moines police detective. jack: he worked on the case of missing paper boy eugene martin, who was abducted in 1984, and never found. local five's amanda krenz takes a look back at the case that gripped the life of a police officer and all of iowa. it's tonight's big story. ((nats of garage opening, revealing eugene's face.)) as this garage door opens... it reveals a young man with big brown eyes staring back at you. this is eugene miller. 19:13 everyday when i drive in, walk in, i look at him, think about him. where's he at? what happened to him? eugene is missing. he disappeared on august 12th, 1984...a date permanently etched in jim rowley's memory. 9:54 my boy was august 12, 84 - on my son's birthday. amanda - intersting that you call him my boy. jim "well he is. i can't find him so he is. jim rowley wants to be reminded of his missing boy everyday, that's why this 30-year-old poster is hanging in his garage. jim used to be senior police officer rowley, the main investigator in eugene martin's disappearance. (standup) gene was 13-years old when he vanished from this corner of sw14th and highview in des moines. it was about 5:30 in the morning... he had some of his papers rolled up and ready to be delivered. 2:19 "sw 14th and highview, got a missing paperboy, don't let it be a west des moines case." about 2 years before that call came in about eugene martin, 13 year old johnny gosch went missing while he was delivering papers in west des moines. 3:46 we worked 3-4 days around the clock, neighborhood canvas, interviewed everybody in the house, petsdogs, children, cars, we found some interesting people but nothing that ever sent the balloon up. the dci, fbi, and west des moines p.d. came to help with the case. eugenes father, donnie martin, tried to coordinate search efforts with neighbors and volunteers. (((nats of donnie talking to group about some new information that just came in))) the only solid clues left behind that day were eugene's bag full of papers, left on the corner, and a few people who saw eugene that morning talking to somebody. 3:00 we found 3 people going to the balloon fest that had drove by and eugene talking to a man, it looked like a father son conversation between them. the search team combed through corn fields, officers even flew to cancun to follow a lead. as time went on it became clear, eugene martin's case was sadly similar to johnny gosch. years slipped by with no sign of the missing kid. eugene's father, talked to reporters on the anniversaries of his son's disappearance. 4 year anniversary story - "don 1:37 i'll never give up hope, as long as there's no body or evidence pointing in that direction. i'll never give up hope." don martin passed away in 2010, never owing what happened to eugene. although in his obituary it says he was preceded in death by his son. don martin was good friends with the officer jim rowley, the two met every week for years on friday evenings to talk about new leads. 10:28 no matter what lead he had i would go out and work it. and we never had a concrete lead. the eugene martin file, remains opens open today... full of paperwork from more than 30 years of following leads and collecting any fraction of evidence. the case haunts jim rowley. 11:21 you can leave a homicide at work, i know that sounds bizarre, you can leave a shooting or stabbing or robbery at work, but there's a boy missing and all he was doing was delivering papers. rowly has a theory that both eugene martin and johnny gosch were the victims of a pedaphile. he believes they're both dead. but he hasn't given up on finding out what happened... to his boy. 15:19 i hope nobody ever gives up on 'em. jack: jim rowley says he plans to keep a close eye on the minnesota case. he also hopes, before the end of his life, to have answers about what jack: jim rowley says he plans to keep a close eye on he plans to keep the minnesota case. he also hopes, before the end of his life, to have answers about what happened to eugene martin. if you want to see more local 5 archival footage from when this case first came about....... we have those stories on our website -- we are iowa dot com. stephanie: new at 10, senator joni ernst backs the governor's decision to privatize medicaid in iowa. stephanie: this move would affect 560 thousand iowans, but still needs federal approval. and a hearing into wether or not a state employee used confidential information to help one of the companies sink a bid is standing in the way too. during senator ernt's weekly press conference today she said there are two things this move has to accomplish--to benefit the state and those who use it. "if we are able to save those dollars, utlize those dollars, and making sure that those paitients or those customers are really taken care of and recieving quality healthcare, than i think that's the direction we should move as a state. " stephanie: and the governor says that's what this move will accomplish. he says the state will save 51- million dollars once the deal goes through...plus it will provide a better healthcare system for those who currently use it. "without coordinated care, we have one provider basically subscribing this medicatin, another, this and they often times are in conflict with eachother and the person ends up in the hopital or emergency room. " kattey iowans met at the state capitol transition. the biggest concern is if the transition can be completed smoothly by january first, the date it's set to roll out. jack: a big donor gets to see what he bought for the waukee police department. rod french gave $14-thousand dollars to the department back in may to buy body cameras. today, officers showed mr. french the new cameras including how they'll be used in the field. and police say it'll create a safer environment for everyone . john quinn, waukee police chief: "and this is an accountability too. it holds the officers accountable for their actions, their words. it also holds the community members accountable for their words and their actions too. so, you know, it complements each other and it accomplishes the overall mission, and that is to provide public safety." jack: right now, each of the waukee officers has a camera when they go out on a call. they can download whatever video they shoot onto a server in just a couple of minutes. stephanie: only a select number of iowans will speak next week at the iowa utilities board public hearing. it's for the proposed dakota access, or bakken pipeline, which would cut diagonally state. the project has sparked strong opinions from want and those that do. they will let 210 people speak at next week's and half against the pipeline. that isn't sitting well with some. nathan when you look at the numbe ro fobjections that have been from iowans outnumer cecil splitting it 50/50 seemed to be fairest way to provide both sides to speak at the public hearing. stephanie: all the speaking basically full, call the i-u-b to get on the list. head to our website for more details. a big discovery tonight by a team at iowa state university. members of the veterinary discovered a affects infant pigs. local five's jacob peklo joins us now with more on the research. jacob: jack, for years, veterinarians and farmers have been trying to figure out why born, experiencing severe shaking. more often that not, it means they die early. but now, the team thinks they unlocked the key vaccine. microscope rotating his doctorate at iowa during the last two years, he's spent a lot of time trying to help problem. diagnostics lab pathologist: "we're trying to save those it in the first few days the brazilian is part of a team at iowa state infant pigs who suffer from involuntary shaking. sometimes the piglets won't live longer than a couple of days because of the tremors. as part of their research, they inject the virus into the uterus of pregnant sows...and then have a control group to compare it to, and run the tests. natural sound of pipette dropping needles paulo arruda, isu diagnostics lab pathologist: "the virus is very common with pigs that are shaking, and not common in control pigs. so, we have one more piece of evidence that the virus might be linked to the signs being observed." pestivirus was not the tremors, but diagnostics lab pathologist: "so, we kind of hit the time where the brain developed. so, we believe that the virus, through a mechanism that we do not and with their hoping their next step breakthrough. diagnostics lab major goal is to try to jacob arruda says the pestivirus isn't usually epidemic across large it can strike often within that's one of the big reasons he says they're trying to slow its spread. live in the studio, jacob peklo, local five news. we are iowa. jack: team members say the virus does not make pork unsafe for you to eat. and it cannot spread from pigs to people. jack: coming up on local 5 sports, meet a member of the iowa wild hockey team who's battled his whole life to get where he is, both on and off the ice. stephanie: then there's some pretty clear cutoffs for the next republican debate.. tonight who failed to make the cut. brad: ((ad lib weather toss)) take sot tomorrow on good morning iowa... it's friday so local five heads to the movies... we get a look at the latest james bond movie... and a well-loved comic strip jumps to the big screen ... plus, your weekend forecast... we're looking at a dry, sunny, and cool take sot tomorrow on good morning iowa... it's friday so local five heads to the movies... we get a look at the "now, we are iowa's most accurate forecast with chief meteorologist brad edwards. certified by weatherrate the independent weather experts" brad: weather adlib: we did it again today- we reached the 70s! that makes this the warmest start to november on record for central iowa! don't get used to it because a cold front will be coming through by 5 pm, and you will know it has because the winds will be turning to the nw and get much cooler. there will also be a chance for some showers and storms, but most of the rain looks like it will fall east of the metro over tonight and keep us cool for friday. temperatures are average- if you can believe that! lows in the 30s and highs in the 50s will be the rule heading through the weekend, but at least we are looking at lots of sunshine! next week looks pretty decent until wednesday and thursday when we will see our next chance for rain. temperatures will be at or above average next week. stephanie: jack: jack: local 5 news at announced for ten, cuts the next republican debate. who's being booted off the stage for next week. "your watching local 5 news at 10 in hd with edwards and local 5 sports with sports director jon schaeffer. this is local 5 news at 10. we are iowa." stephanie: two candidates bumped down and two bumped out of the next debates. stephanie: welcome back, in your local election headquarters tonight, details on the next presidential debate. fox business network is hosting this one next tuesday. today they announced that chris christie and mike huckabee failed to qualify for the prime time debate. candidates george pataki and lindsey graham failed to qualify for the udercard debate and will not be invited to wisonsin next tuesday. stephanie: and good news for mediacom customers hoping to watch the debate. all customers will get a free 24-hour preview of the fox business network that tuesday. you can watch the debate on channels 248, 675 and 775. stephanie: the republican debates have been a hot topic this week after candidates made specific demands to the media, that's one of our main topics on this week in iowa. we'll focus on how those demands could impact the debates here in iowa. this week in iowa airs sundays at 9 am here on local 5. jack: jon's here now and iowa state women hitting the court tonight jon: yeah jack it's just an exhibition but it's a sign of the changing seasons. coming up on local 5 sports we head to ames as isu takes on midwestern state. " now, local 5 sports their action tonight with an exhibition against midwestern state. it's our first look at a team that is young-- but has tons of potential. this year they're playing quarters in women's basketball. bridgette carlton hits the triple 13 to 9 ball game early. 8 point game now in the second quarter kidd and lays it in. third quarter we go-- cyclones going inside to freshman meredith burkhall-- the former roosevelt roughrider kisses it off the glass for a pair isu up 10. they'd roll from there 79 to 36 the final from hilton coliseum jon: growing up in canada the sport of choice for most kids is hockey. for iowa wild goaltender leland irving that holds true. the netminder has dealt with some ups and downs-- not just in hockey-- but in life as well. leland irving's road to the iowa wild has been anything but normal-- he's gone from the calgary flames-- to the khl in russia-- now to des moines. "it's been a battle like definitely not the easiest road to further my career." but at the age of 7 irving had to face a battle bigger than any his career would present. " we thought it was just like a black fly bite it swelled up pretty bad and was actually kind of pushing my ear so we got it checked out at the local hospital and they didn't find anything at first but then once i went into the specialist in edmonton that's when the results came back that it was cancer." "irving was diagnosed with rhabdomysarcoma, a cancer that forms in soft tissue" "it was a tumor on the outside of my skull. they removed it and then i went through 13 months of chemo therapy." "being 8 years old i didn't realize the impact that cancer could have on my life." "i knew i would lose my hair which i wasn't too worried about." , leland faced more than a year of chemo head on, turning to hockey as a welcome distraction... "it was probably the thing that might have saved me throughout the treatments. i played hockey almost every day whether it was in the basement with my brother or road hockey with friends still competed played regular minor hockey. i only missed one game and one practice because my blood count was too low and we couldn't risk any sort of internal bleeding but it just takes your mind away from everything that's going on and really just allowed me to be a normal 8 year old." irving completed his treatment, with the cancer in remission.. "we were fortunate to catch it early and didn't have to go through any radiation or anything other than that." "18 years cancer free" the battle with cancer and his love of hockey shaped irving into the goaltender you see between the pipes-- and the man he is away from the ice. "it's tough you lose a lot of people in this world to cancer unfortunately it's a disease that's just part of our world and we have to deal with it. but i think a key is to stay positive that's one thing i'm fairly good at just try to bring a smile to the rink everyday and work hard and no matter what the situation is try to take the positives out of it." jon: irving says he has a soft spot for kids with irving says he has a soft spot cancer. he's reached out to youth in the through battles similar to his and hopes to get an opporunity to do more here in des irving is 2-2 and 1 this season in net for the wild. brad: weather adlib: we did it again today- we reached the 70s! that makes this the because a cold front will be coming through by 5 pm, and you will know it has because the winds will be turning to the nw and get much cooler. there will also be a chance for some showers and storms, but most of the rain looks like it will fall east of the metro cool winds wil and now, abc's "jimmy kimmel live." >> dicky: from hollywood - it's

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