Capitol Update

August 9, 2023

Abortion Rates in Iowa

The Department of Public Health is required to report the number of abortions completed in Iowa every year. After requesting the data from them, we see that this particular map displays that almost 4 out of every 1,000 woman (ages 15-44) from my district of Mahaska, Keokuk and Jefferson Counties, had an abortion in 2021. Abortion is termed "Induced Termination of Pregnancy" on this map and is officially defined as, "‘the purposeful interruption of an intrauterine pregnancy with the intention other than to produce a live-born infant and which does not result in a live birth. " Most of us just simply call it the killing of a baby...


You will notice in this data that the highest rates of abortions are from women residing in Des Moines, Davenport, and Cedar Rapids, respectively.


This data and so much more can be found in this 2021 Vital Statistics of Iowa report.


"For you fashioned my inmost being, you knit me together in my mother's womb."

  • Psalm 139:13

Mahaska Health Hospital Awarded $250,000

More than $2.2 million in support funding is headed to three Iowa hospitals over the next three years, as reported from the Govenor's office and released in the Capital Dispatch:


"Cass Health, Mahaska Health and Van Buren County Hospital will receive up to $250,000 annually for three years from the Centers of Excellence program. The hospitals have announced plans to use the funds for specialty health services, including maternal and geriatric care.


The Centers of Excellence grant program awards funds to help regional and local health systems to build and enhance systems, with a goal of providing access to specialized care in rural areas at the same rate as Iowans in metro areas. 


Mahaska Health will use funds to build upon partnerships supporting maternal care, obstetrics and general surgery as well as developing partnerships for cardiology and oncology. 


Cass Health will use funds to improve rural maternal health services in the area it serves, southwest Iowa. Specifically, the health care group aims to sustain and grow OB-GYN outreach clinics to increase routine access to prenatal and postnatal care.

 

Van Buren County Hospital will use the grant money for geriatric patients and to support the Southeast Iowa Complex Care Network, which is an “innovative system of collaboration and managed care” to guide patients to available resources.


Gov. Kim Reynolds toured Sioux Center Health Tuesday, where she applauded the use of grant money to expand the facility and its offerings and commented on rural health care needs and challenges. Reynolds also noted a recent ranking, which placed Iowa as the No. 2 state for health care.


Mahaska Health serves a 14-county region, including Jefferson, Appanoose, Davis, Iowa, Jasper, Keokuk, Lucas, Mahaska, Marion, Monroe, Poweshiek, Van Buren, Wapello and Washington counties.


Cass Health serves a five-county region, including Adams, Adair, Audubon, Cass, and Montgomery counties.


Van Buren County Hospital serves a four-county region, including Van Buren, Davis, Jefferson and Lee counties."


Carbon Pipeline Update

The above Senators and Legislators attended a pipeline rally in Charles City on July 31. The event was well attended by landowners and the general public while speakers addressed:


  • Personal testimonies of Summit drilling 90 ft wells on private property as they "surveyed" for a pipeline that they tell us will be no more than six feet deep.
  • Eminent Domain laws
  • Companies that are providing options to ethanol plants to convert, on site, the by-product of carbon dioxide to methanal, thereby, removing the demand for a pipeline.
  • Safety concerns from emergency management personal.
  • History of how we got here and who the players are in this boondoggle. Learn more here.

 

Photo: Senator Kevin Alons, Representative Anne Osmundson, Senator Dennis Guth, Representative Cindy Golding, Hayes, and Representative Charley Thomson


Navigator CO2 Pipeline UPDATE


On July 17th, 2023, Navigator/Heartland/Greenway filed a" motion for a procedural schedule." This document included two requests:

 

    1. A request for the IUB to set a scheduling conference for August 14, 2023. (A scheduling conference is a time when IUB and Navigator come together personally to discuss and set deadlines/timelines.)

 

    2. A request that IUB set a proposed hearing date of June 27, 2024. (The hearing is the procedurals step in which Navigator requests the IUB to grant them the use of eminent domain for the parcels that have not signed voluntary easements in the project.) The IUB will not grant the permit to build the pipeline until after the hearing is complete. If it is anything like the Summit hearing that is starting August 22nd, the Navigator hearing will likely take months to complete also.

 

On August 8th, the IUB responded to Navigators request for the "procedural schedule" by:

 

  1. DENYING the request. They did so because, by law, they cannot schedule the requested July 27 hearing date until "Exhibit H filings" are complete. "Exhibit H filings" are eminent domain requests for landowners who have not signed voluntary easements. 

 

  2. Instead, they set a date for a "scheduling conference” to discuss the schedule. It will be held on Monday, October 9th following their regularly scheduled monthly meeting at 1375 E. Court Avenue, Des Moines. 

 

This could explain why Navigator agents are placing so much pressure directly on landowners in my district that have not signed voluntary easements yet. The agents have been misleading property owners on the process and have not been forthright with how the eminent domain process actually works. The more landowners who refuse to sign easements, the more difficult the hearing for Navigator. For comparison, Summit, LLC, (the pipeline proposed through several states and into much of northwest Iowa) begins their hearing this month. Approximately 1000 parcels (1/3 of the route in Iowa) have not signed. There are 417 intervenors in all, the largest number of intervenors for an IUB hearing in Iowa history. Twenty Legislators, including myself, are intervening on behalf of the general public. This means that our testimony will be an official part of Summits legal hearing before the IUB. 

 

The complete IUB response can be found here. Please check out and share this resource that provides answers to frequently asked questions on eminent domain.

 

Please reach out to me if you have any further questions!

The topics of the above town hall announcement are tentative and may be subject to change. More details to be announced soon!

Journey to the Border - Parts 3 and 4


In June, myself and six other Iowa legislators toured the Mexico/U.S border for the first time. This section is a continuation from the July newsletter when I began to publish portions of my 10-part mini-series, Journey to the Border. Read about parts 1 and 2 in previous the previous newsletter which can be found .


Journey to the Border – Part 3: Cartels, Coyotes and Chaos


The Cartels:


During our debrief with the Brooks County Sheriff, he described the cartel trade as “just doing business,” meaning that it is nothing personal but enormous amounts of lucrative wealth can be generated during the illegal smuggling of people, guns and drugs. It was made very clear to us that the cartels (in unity with the Mexican government) are the ones who tell immigrants when and where they will cross, along with how much it will cost. And not everyone pays the same…


Mexico/Central America nationalities: Currently $5,000.00 - $7,000.00.

Romania, Middle Eastern nationalities: $10,000.


A single Chinese national: $30,000.


Mexico was described to us as the “most corrupt country in the world” due to the flourishing cartel groups. It is these same cartel groups that have connections with people in Iowa and throughout the Midwest to move and provide whatever products they request, be it drugs, labor or sex. Each destination requires more money, forcing the goal of the illegal immigrant simply to not get caught by an organization that will extort you for even more money than you have already paid.


Coyotes:


The coyotes are individuals hired by the cartels to run drugs and smuggle people across the border. They too have their own system of charging fees for their services while simultaneously bribing the Mexican immigration officials and staying on the good side of the cartel. Some only work to move migrants up through Mexico and then deposit them at the border if they want to give themselves up to be documented as they seek asylum. Others will assist with smuggling over the border and traversing acres of private property to stash houses away from the border. Landowners described to us how today’s coyotes are much more brazen as they smuggle their human cargo and cause extensive damage to property in their quest north.


Choas:


When we asked why the Mexican government does not do more to curb the influx of immigrants, we were told that they, too, fear the cartel. The cartels, with their power, weapons and money, rule the country of Mexico, not the formal government.


One thing that was pointed out to us were the “stash houses.” These are often times homes that are rented by cartel or coyotes where illegal immigrants are secretly housed as they move through the state on their way to their final destination. Most states, including Iowa, apparently have a system of stash houses where overcrowded illegals are put in cramped and dire housing. 


Epoch Times made this video years ago when the Mexican president called Biden the “Migrant President.” It’s great background info to understand how the system works!

 

Journey to the Border – Part 4: Unaccompanied Children


Perhaps one of the more shocking aspects of our border trip – the unaccompanied children. These are children seventeen years and younger who are given priority processing and held by border patrol for less than 20 hours. They are then immediately transferred to the Department of Health and Human Services where an MVM, which is contracted by FEMA, helps make a point of contact to someone in the U.S. They are then transferred to a holding facility until they can be released to their contacts.


Texas DPS agents guaranteed to us that more than 85,000 children have gone “missing,” which essentially means our government lost track of their whereabouts once they were processed. We were told the tragic ending of many of these children – they end up as indentured servants working in places like the chicken plant in Tennessee whose owner was busted as the “guardian” of 76 children. Even worse, they become easy victims of the sex trafficking business. 


Many of these minors become part of the “Rent-a-Child” scheme. This occurs when a man or woman, or both can rent a child (usually to the tune of $1,500) to become a “fraud family.” Once they cross the border, then they get processed and released as a family. Under the current Biden policy, families are not to be separated so the whole family unit gets set free into America. The child is then given back to the coyotes and sent back into Mexico to be used once again as part of a fraud family. Prior to Biden’s policies, border control could conduct rapid DNA tests on families to prove familial relationships, thus avoiding this scheme. When they were conducting the rapid tests, they found that over 94% of the families were frauds. All rapid DNA testing at the processing center has been stopped under the current administration.

Update: Educational Saving Accounts (ESA's)

 

* Iowa Department of Education has approved 18,627 applications for Educational Savings Accounts.

 

* ESA's will provide $7,635 per student for the 2023-24 school year.

 

* They can be used to pay private school expenses, starting with tuition and fees.

 

* These approved applications must still be accepted to an accredited, nonpublic school in order to access the funds.

 

* Over 29,000 Iowa students applied for the funds. Less than 1,000 applications remain in review while parents or guardians provide additional information or documentation.

 

Here is a list of Iowa counties that had the most students approved for ESA's:

 

Polk - 3,144

Linn County — 1,318

Scott County — 1,306

Sioux County — 1,183

Black Hawk County — 942

Woodbury County — 916

Dubuque County — 882

Johnson County — 572

Dallas County — 505

Carroll County — 427

Only three Iowa counties — Decatur, Louisa and Ringgold County — had no approved applications.

 

* Current private school students were eligible this year only if their families have a household income at or below 300% of the federal poverty guidelines.

 

* Any student switching from public school to an accredited private school was also eligible for an ESA in the 2023-24 school year, as are all incoming kindergartners if they will attend an accredited private school.

 

* In 2025 - 26 all families in the state will be able to apply.

Protect My Innocence has been busy with events as members and volunteers continue pushing back on the sexualization of children including the Monroe Old Settlers in early Augst.

How New Iowa Laws will Make Human Trafficking, Child Sexual Exploitation Charges Stronger

With the release of Sound of Freedom featuring Jim Cavezeal, the topic of child sex trafficking has been front and center once again and is one of several important reasons why America must deal with the border crisis as noted in the 10-part mini series above. The article reprinted below, published in the Des Moines Register and written by Noelle Alvis-Gransee, highlights the increased penalties we just passed!


"The arrest is part of the Altoona Police Department's 18-month-old task force that targets suspected child predators. Their efforts were given a boost when the Iowa Legislature passed a law last session that makes it easier to arrest people who allegedly have sexually exploited children and charge them with harsher penalties. The state also made similar amendments to its human trafficking laws.

 

Now, defendants are guaranteed prison time if they're convicted of these crimes. Before, it was easy for offenders to slip through the cracks — and potentially reoffend — if they pleaded guilty.

 

"As a prosecutor, I could convict someone of human trafficking, but the judge could give them — under law — a deferred sentence, which means it can go off their record, or suspended sentence, which means they never serve one day but got probation," said Iowa Attorney General Brenna Bird.

 

The changes went into effect July 1.

 

Bird's office has made it a priority to target suspected human traffickers by working to train law enforcement and prosecutors as well as work with groups who help support trafficking victims.

 

"I think human traffickers are vile, evil, manipulative people who exploit people and cause them so much hurt and pain," she said.

 

Forty cases have been adjudicated in Iowa since 2005, according to a database on the attorney general's website. A 2021 Federal Human Trafficking Report listed Iowa as fifth in the country for prosecuting new cases of human trafficking, fourth for minor sex trafficking cases and third for forced labor.

 

For its part, the change in law has emboldened Altoona to train other police departments across the metro to conduct similar investigations. Police said they see the harsher penalties as a better return on investment for their efforts.

 

More prison time for human trafficking, sexual exploitation in Iowa

 

The Legislature bumped up all human trafficking offenses two federal letters. A person who knowingly engages in human trafficking can now be convicted of a class B felony, which carries a 50-year sentence with a mandatory minimum of 35 years in prison. If the crime involves a minor, it's bumped up to a class A felony, which comes with life in prison.

 

Offenders charged with sexually exploiting a minor were previously charged with aggravated misdemeanors. They now face felony charges, the severity of which depends on the crime: People who allegedly have enticed a minor to engage in a sex act are charged with a class B felony, while possession of child pornography is a class D felony, which carries five years in prison. The law changes also eliminated the ability for offenders to get a deferred judgment or suspended sentence if they plead guilty.

 

Another change means someone can be charged for enticing or exploiting a minor even if they're actually talking to an officer or an agent posing as a minor. This includes sending obscene material through the phone.

 

"Just the amount of firepower of what this law is going to change is just absolutely insane," Lowe said.

 

Sending explicit photos, trying to meet up or requesting images all are on the table for arrest.

 

"If we can identify who this is, even if they don't show up or if they ghost us, if they've been engaging with us we can still go after them," said Lt. Steve Harris with the Altoona Police Department.

 

The sting involving Kimball occurred in November of 2021. Police then relied on an Iowa law called solicitation of commercial sexual activity, a felony that carries just five years in prison and 10 years on the sex offender registry, according to Meggan Guns, assistant Polk County Attorney. It was the only statute that allowed law enforcement to arrest an offender who was talking to an actual minor or law enforcement posing as one.

 

In this case, Altoona used the law to pose as a minor, and then handed the case over to the FBI so Kimball could be federally charged and receive a harsher punishment.

 

Kimball was eventually federally charged with:

 

Attempted sexual exploitation of a minor.

 

Enticement and attempted enticement of a minor to engage in illicit sexual activities.

Transfer and attempted transfer of obscene material to a minor.

 

Use and attempted use of interstate facilities to transmit information about a minor.

 

Commission of a felony offense involving a minor by a registered sex offender.

 

According to court documents, Kimball pleaded guilty to enticement and attempted enticement of a minor to engage in illicit sexual activities and was sentenced to 20 years in prison, five years of supervised release and a $100 fine.

 

Altoona police target suspected predators with text conversations

At any given moment, Lowe has dozens of unread notifications from people seeking sex online.

 

Lowe said after disclosing he's a minor, 90% apologize and cut off communication. The other 10% continue the conversation and eventually make plans to meet in person.

 

"It's been incredibly eye-opening on a lot of different levels," Lowe said. "I just got inundated with people who were wanting to chat with me. Just so much, I couldn't keep up with it. Like physically can't keep up with the amount of people that were talking, really."

 

In 2020, Altoona police became affiliated with the Internet Crimes Against Children — a national task force program that works with local, state and federal law enforcement — when they took on a lot of child pornography cases and cyber tips. Most of what police do is reactive, but the force wanted to change its child exploitation response to be more proactive. Lowe also assists other agencies in human trafficking efforts.

 

"This isn't that hard; you just gotta make it a priority," Harris said. "And even though you've always got a caseload, this is something we work in the background ... as more people see how rewarding this is, I think more people are gonna do it. "

 

According to Lowe, 99% of those who reached out to talk were men. Age, race and ethnicity vary. Many are or have been married and have children.

 

Lowe said sometimes the conversations start off slow, and other times, they are aggressive out of the gate, asking for photos and whether the child knows various things about sex.

 

"Ultimately, it's like chess. You have to play the long game. You play the strategy," Lowe said. "I know at the end of the day, whatever he gets coming to him, he gets coming to him."

 

"This is all for the greater good of society. If this person is talking to me in this fashion, then who else is he talking to? Or who has he talked to in the past?," he said.

 

Human trafficking can be found anywhere, officials say

 

Human trafficking is defined by the Office to Combat Human Trafficking as a crime involving the exploitation of a victim for commercial sex through force, fraud or coercion or for compelled labor. Officials say the crime is everywhere, and Altoona police said they've encountered traffickers who were fathers, neighbors, spouses and even doctors.

 

The Bureau of Justice Assistance released demographics on who has been prosecuted for human trafficking across the country. In 2022, it found:

 

92% were male.

63% were white.

95% were U.S. citizens.

66% had no prior convictions.

 

"So many people believe (human trafficking) is the movie 'Taken,'" said Guns, referring to a film in which actor Liam Neeson is a former spy who tries to save his kidnapped daughter. "That's not human trafficking. It's almost always somebody that the victim knows already, and it's usually somebody that they've had a relationship with before they started being trafficked."

 

In 2022, the Iowa Office to Combat Human Trafficking documented 50 human trafficking tips and leads, with 32 of them involving sex. The report didn't provide the number of cases prosecuted, but said the Southern District of Iowa opened three cases in 2022. It also reported "several recent court-related convictions."

 

A 2021 Federal Human Trafficking Report said five people were convicted of sex trafficking in the state, all in the Southern District of Iowa. According to the data provided, 67% of victims were minors and all were female.

 

Oftentimes, a power dynamic between the attacker and the victim prevents the victim from running away. Victims typically are groomed with false promises of a better life or a strong relationship but then are beaten, raped and trafficked to reinforce who is in charge, according to Charlotte Kovacs, victim witness specialist at the U.S. Department of Justice.

 

"The public may think 'Well, she drove herself to that hotel, clearly she could've left. She could've went to the police right then and there and she didn't,'" Kovacs said. "But this is a psychological crime ... the victim at this point will do absolutely anything to keep the trafficker happy, because there'll be less beatings that way and less sex work to do."

 

How to get help with combating human trafficking in Iowa

 

The National Human Trafficking Resources hotline offers 24/7 confidential assistance for those being trafficked or want to report that someone may be. The hotline has a directory to find local emergency, transitional and long-term services for victims and survivors of human trafficking.

 

For services in Iowa, contact the Iowa Helpline at 1-800-770-1650 or text "IOWAHELP" to 20121, and visit the Iowa Office to Combat Human Trafficking.

 

The Iowa Businesses Against Trafficking initiative encourages its members to learn about human trafficking in order to combat it. To learn how to recognize signs of human trafficking and ways to prevent it, or to join Iowa Businesses Against Trafficking, visit ibat.iowa.gov.

ANNOUNCEMENT:


I want to officially announce that I am committing to running for another term in the Iowa House. Representees serve a two-year term while Senators serve a four-year term. That means that next June, I will enter into the primary as an incumbent for the first time. Because I will physically be in Des Moines from January to May during the 2024 session, that only leaves me one month to prepare and door knock in my district. Therefore, I will be spending a considerable amount of time in my district meeting voters this fall in order to get a jump on it.


If the Lord moves you to assist me in any way, I welcome it and would appreciate it very much. Door knocking is high priority to me and I invite everyone to join me! If you are moved to make a financial donation, the easiest way is to send a personal check to my campaign treasurer at:


Hayes for House, Treasurer

1240 170th Street

Pella, Iowa 50219


Thank you all!!

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