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Southwest Neb. school board rejects recall vote

Hitchcock County Jr/Sr High School

TRENTON, Neb. (AP) – A southwest Nebraska school board has rejected an attempt to force a recall vote on three of its members. The Hitchcock County school board voted 5-1 this week to not call a recall election, even though the county clerk has certified the signatures. School attorney Karen Haase told The McCook Daily Gazette that that some signers claimed they were told the petition was to save an old school building, while others believed it was to lower their property taxes Haase says the man behind the petition, Shane Rippen, reportedly did not gather all of the signatures himself even though he signed the petition as the sole circulator. Haase says she advised the school board members against calling the election to avoid possible lawsuits.

Central Neb. city council bans ‘dumpster diving’

KEARNEY, Neb. (AP) – “Dumpster diving” is now a no-no in Kearney. The Kearney Hub reports that the City Council on Tuesday adopted an ordinance banning people from scavenging in garbage cans. The move came after Kearney Police Department Chief Dan Lynch raised concerns. According to the memorandum from City Attorney Michael Tye, other communities have reported problems with people scavenging through trash receptacles looking for recyclable metal and other materials. Scavenging also has been a source of identity theft. The new ordinance makes digging through someone else’s garbage a
misdemeanor offense.

Traffic stop nets $252,470 for central Neb. county

KEARNEY, Neb. (AP) – A summer traffic stop along Interstate 80 in central Nebraska is proving profitable for several Buffalo County agencies that will share $252,470 that was seized. The Kearney Hub reports neither of the men who were in the car when it was stopped on July 12 tried to claim the money in court. So Buffalo County Judge John Icenogle ruled the cash had been forfeited. Court documents say Nebraska State Troopers found the cash hidden in the lining of suitcases in the rental car’s trunk after the two men told conflicting stories about their travel plans. No drugs were found in the car, so the men were released. The money will be split between Buffalo County’s fines and licensing fund and the county drug law enforcement and education fund.

Heineman frustrated with child welfare problems

Neb. Governor Dave Heineman

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) – Nebraska Gov. Dave Heineman says he’s frustrated with the state’s efforts to enact child welfare reforms, but he’s promising improvements after meeting with an agency director and other stakeholders. The Republican governor says he makes no excuses for the recent problems that have risen with the effort to privatize services. He says he met this week the director Nebraska Department of Health and Human services, a non-profit service provider, and the Lancaster County Attorney’s office, which has clashed with the state before. Heineman’s comments came one week after State Auditor Mike Foley released an audit of the state’s child welfare services. The agency dispute parts of the report, and says it has made improvements to address others. Heineman says he still supports privatization of Nebraska’s child welfare services.

Colorado farm says Listeria found in cantaloupe

DENVER (AP) – A melon farm in Colorado has issued a recall of cantaloupe following a Listeria outbreak that has killed at least two people, sickened 22 and spread to several states. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said the deaths from the outbreak were reported in Colorado and New Mexico, and state health departments said more deaths could be confirmed once testing comes back. The CDC said the 22 people infected are in seven states: Colorado, Indiana, Nebraska, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Texas and West Virginia. Jensen Farms spokeswoman Amy Philpott said y that one of the Colorado farm’s Rocky Ford cantaloupes tested positive for the bacteria, but more tests are needed to determine if it’s the same strain linked to the outbreak. It is first time the bacteria has been linked to cantaloupe in the U.S.

Lincoln County Jail booking activity- Friday (9/16)

This information is not criminal history. All individuals included in this post are innocent of crimes until proven guilty in a court of law. The North Platte Post assumes no legal liability or responsibility for the accuracy, or completeness, of this information. Any person who believes information provided is not accurate may submit a complaint to admin@northplattepost.com.

(VIDEO) SARAH PALIN: Hooked Up With B-Baller Glen Rice

Former NBA baller Glen Rice has confirmed that he had a one-night stand with Sarah Palin back in 1987 while he was playing for the University of Michigan in a college basketball tournament in Alaska. At the time, Palin was a sports reporter for a local TV station.

The story came up after the National Enquirer snagged some info from Joe McGinniss’s new book The Rogue: Searching for the Real Sarah Palin. In the book, McGinnis quotes Rice as confirming the story. According to a source, McGinniss says that the then-future Alaskan governor had a “fetish” for African-American men at the time.

The book also claims that Palin used cocaine and marijuana, and had a long affair with her husband’s business partner.

Sentencing delayed again for ex-NU regent

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) – The sentencing date for former University of Nebraska Regent David Hergert has been delayed again. Hergert had been scheduled to be sentenced Wednesday, but a federal judge approved delaying that until Dec. 14. Hergert has admitted inflating the assets of Hergert Milling so he could keep a $3 million loan from First National Bank of Omaha.
Hergert pleaded guilty in March to one count of submitting a false document to a bank in a deal that is expected to get him probation. Hergert was removed from the university’s board of regents in 2006 after the Nebraska Supreme Court ruled he broke campaign finance laws during his 2004 regent campaign and lied to conceal that. The Mitchell businessman lost his grain storage operation after officials discovered a grain shortage there.

Colo. man pleads not guilty in Neb. shooting

OGALLALA, Neb. (AP) – A Colorado man accused of firing at law enforcement officers during a chase in western Nebraska has pleaded not guilty to attempted first-degree murder and attempt first-degree assault on an officer. KNOP-TV in North Platte says Mark Phillips of Louisville, Colo., pleaded not guilty on Tuesday in Keith County court in Ogallala. Phillips remains in in the county jail on $1 million bond. Phillips is accused of firing at two officers in rural Keith County after fleeing a traffic stop in December. The officers fired back and wounded Phillips.

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