RAP SHEET
Operator: 911 . . .
Caller: Um, somebody just started
my car on fire.
O: Where do you live at?
C: Northwest 50th Street
O: OK, hold on here, I'm going
to go ahead and start the fire
department.
C: OK, I need the police here,
too, because they stole from me
and...
O: Hang on here, just a minute,
OK? Do you have any idea who would
do that?
C: No, they stole from my house.
I had some lawn chairs and a bike
outside and we heard them stealing
my stuff and so we came outside.
And we went back and looked at
my car and they were trying to
rip the license plate off my car
and I was just like, "What
the hell?" I was like, "Get
a life," you know? They must
have been sitting outside, like
waiting and listening, you know?
So we went back in my house and
I heard something again and we
came outside and I saw them pull
out. I saw the car, it was a white
Hyundai...
O: A white what?
C: A white Hyundai. Like, a really
new one. It was super nice. One
of my neighbors saw the car, too.
And I ran around the corner and
they were peeling out and then
my freaking car was on fire. They
started my car on fire. Two guys
who live in my apartment complex
put it out, but still, like, what
the hell?
O: The fire department'll come
and put it out, OK?
C: I'm really scared. I have no
idea who these kids are.
O: OK, calm down.
C: They know where I live and
stuff, you know?
O: I understand, I understand.
Well, we've got the fire department
called to make sure the fire's
out in your car, OK? What did
they set on fire?
C: My car. My whole freaking car.
I couldn't even see it. My car
was on fire.
O: OK, hang on here. You mean
the inside?
C: No, like, the outside. They
freaking started it on fire. The
outside of my car was burning.
I don't know what the fuck they
did.
O: What kind of car you got?
C: A Ford Taurus.
O: What year, honey?
C: Um, '93.
O: OK, I'm going to go ahead and
let you go. I've got the police
coming and the fire department,
OK?
C: OK, thanks.
Officer's Report: I talked to
Dana who told me that she got
home from work around 0200 and
was relaxing and watching a movie.
Around 0300 hours they heard a
noise outside and went to check
it out. She said some bikes and
lawn chairs were missing, but
they didn't care about that. Dana
looked at her car and noticed
that the rear license plate had
been folded up like someone was
trying to break it off. Dana said
she yelled, "Look, they're
trying to steal my plate off my
car." Dana didn't see anyone
and said that just in case anyone
was around. About 10 minutes later
she heard another noise and went
outside and saw her car on fire.
Docket Diving
Pamela Newman wanted an expert
to take the stand and tell the
jury that, in her case, women
are the weaker sex.
When Waterloo fire officials
arrived at Newman's home in January
2002, it was quickly apparent
to them that the blaze that ripped
through her kitchen was intentionally
set with the help of an accelerant.
At the scene, Newman claimed she
had been sewing in the living
room, went to the bathroom and,
when she emerged to find the kitchen
inexplicably on fire, she might
have kicked over a gas can as
she dashed out of the house. At
the police station, though, she
changed her tune, saying it was
Darryl Speller - a man who had
been living with her since 2001
but whom she had asked to leave
months before the fire due to
his smoking crack cocaine - who
had pinned her to a corner of
the kitchen for hours, doused
her with gasoline and set the
house ablaze.
Despite the pair of explanations,
Newman was charged with arson
and, at trial, a third story emerged.
Speller's brother, who arrived
on the scene just before the flames,
testified that the couple was
fighting and, when Darryl told
Newman their relationship was
over, the accused arsonist dropped
her cigarette on the floor and
began shaking a gas can around
the room. That story fit with
the testimony of the Waterloo
police chief, who noted that,
had the fire happened as Newman
reported, she would have been
far more severely burned in her
sprint from the bathroom to the
front lawn. Faced with such evidence,
the jury convicted Newman of first-degree
arson, and the judge handed down
a 25-year prison sentence.
But Newman appealed, arguing
the jury hadn't gotten the full
story from independent fire investigator
John Woodland. While the Waterloo
chief told the jury the fire was
just as likely set by a woman
as by a man, Woodland had a different
opinion. "I believe the profile
of the fire scene is indicative
of an act committed by a man,
and not typically the act of a
woman," Woodland's report
explained. "The violence
of the act, and the volume and
type of fuel required to cause
the level of damage observed,
implies a confidence in and understanding
of the fuel, not typically portrayed
by women. "But while the
judge allowed Woodland to testify
as to the cause, spread and burns
caused by the fire, he determined
that "it would invade the
province of the jury" if
Woodland were given free reign
to discuss the psychological profiles
and gender statistics in arson
cases. Newman, however, argued
that the court abused its discretion
when it excluded Woodland's full
testimony and, that exclusion,
sparked questions worthy of a
new trial.
In addressing her claims, the
court of appeals turned to a similar
case handled by the Iowa Supreme
Court. In that instance, Appeals
Judge P.J. Huitink explained,
the justices ruled that allowing
an expert to testify that a defendant
does or does not fit a certain
profile "clearly goes beyond
ordinary character evidence. It
comes cloaked with an aura of
scientific reliability about the
predisposition of certain individuals
to commit the type of crime at
issue." Therefore, Huitink
extended, Woodland's profile testimony
would constitute an "improper
comment" on Newman's guilt
or innocence. As such, the court
of appeals upheld Newman's conviction
last week, deciding that the district
court was right in ruling out
the gender profiling.
Sucks to be you

Name: James Doyle
Place of Incident: Des Moines
Posed for this picture because:
Apparently looking to satisfy
a craving for something other
than a sandwich, James Doyle sat
down at a table in a North Side
Subway for only a moment before
allegedly stabbing a patron multiple
times in the torso without provocation.
Following the assault, Doyle reportedly
demanded at knife-point the car
keys of another patron, took the
man's vehicle and led the police
on a 50-block car chase before
being taken into custody only
after his car flipped over. Doyle
was arrested last week on two
counts of first-degree robbery,
attempted murder, eluding police
and driving with a suspended license.
Unfinished Business
The following individuals owe
the City of West Des Moines for
overdue parking tickets:
- Syverind Halvorson of West
Des Moines owes $100 for a ticket
issued July 23
- Ryan Breckenridge of Des Moines
owes $100 for a ticket issued
Aug. 6
- Peter Gimba of Des Moines owes
$100 for a ticket issued Aug.
6
- Lacy Reed of Des Moines owes
$100 for a ticket issued Aug.
27
- Rosalie Ballard of Des Moines
owes $100 for a ticket issued
Aug. 27
- Anne Iversen of Pleasant Hill
owes $100 for a ticket issued
Sept. 2
- Derek Knudsen of Des Moines
owes $50 for a ticket issued July
23
On the Clock
Des Moines Police - Oct. 12
1:28 a.m. Attempted burglary
in the 2700 block of University
Avenue, involving a rock thrown
at the window of P&P Small
Engine, causing the glass to "spider"
but not break. Entry was not gained.
3:30 a.m. Burglary in the 1700
block of 24th Street, involving
a man returning to his home after
one month in jail and discovering
several individuals in his residence.
The victim did advise a female
friend to watch the residence,
however, she was not given the
keys to the home and was told
only to watch the exterior.
4:10 a.m. Burglary in the 2800
block of Ingersoll Avenue, involving
a motion alarm tripped at Star
Bar, a window forced open on the
north side of the building, but
nothing discovered missing by
the owner.
9:25 a.m. Burglary in the 2600
block of Grand Avenue, involving
an office door pried open and
suspects rifling through business
drawers and cabinets at TalentLink,
and Lundquest, Schiltz and Associates.
12:20 p.m. Domestic assault causing
injury on Indianola Road, involving
a woman hit in the leg and hip
with a metal bar by a boyfriend
after an argument.
12:30 p.m. Burglary in the 2300
block of East Walnut, involving
a victim returning home for lunch
to find the front door wide open
and the theft of seven gold and
diamond rings valued at $5,000,
two necklaces valued at $1,500,
eight credit cards, one book of
unused checks and one set of spare
car keys.
1:20 p.m. Violation of a no-contact
order in the 800 block of Southeast
County Line Road, involving a
woman called three times by suspect
shortly after he had been served
with a no-contact order the previous
day.
1:30 p.m. Domestic assault on
Douglas Avenue, involving a woman
punched in the face and top of
her head when she opened the door
of her residence to allow a boyfriend
she had asked to move out to retrieve
some clothes.
(Alleged) Drunk Drivers

Name: William Martin Rogers
Arrested: Oct. 11
Third offense

Name: Jeramie Lee Tracy
Arrested: Oct. 13
Second offense

Name: John MacCurtis Temple
Arrested: Oct. 13
First offense
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