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State Treasurer Holds Events to Return Unclaimed Nebraska Property

Don Stenberg
Don Stenberg

The state treasurer’s office is hosting a series of events throughout Nebraska to help reunite residents with their unclaimed property.

The treasurer’s office says it has returned more than $6 million in property to rightful owners so far in 2013. The amount represents nearly 10,900 claims.

State treasurer Don Stenberg says in a statement that his office is holding more than $125 million of property for more than 350,000 Nebraska residents, former residents, or their heirs.

There are nine scheduled outreach events between now and January:

  • Buffalo County Fair, Kearney, July 25-27
  • Scotts Bluff County Fair, Mitchell, August 7-10
  • Nebraska State Fair, Grand Island, August 23-September 2
  • Husker Harvest Days, Grand Island, September 10-12
  • World Day on the Mall, Pershing Center, Lincoln, September 19
  • Applejack Festival, Nebraska City, September 21-22
  • Fall Home and Garden Expo, Omaha, October 25-27
  • Kearney Gateway Ag Show, Kearney, November 20-21
  • Northeast Nebraska Farm Show, Norfolk, January 16-17

Residents can also visit the Treasurer’s website at www.treasurer.org or call the Unclaimed Property Division at 1-877-572-9688.

Lincoln Woman Gets 18 Months for Federal Wire Fraud

dept.-of-justice(AP) — A former medical office administrator in Lincoln has been given 18 months in federal prison and ordered to pay restitution of nearly $542,000.

Federal prosecutors say 54-year-old Royann Schmidgall was sentenced on Monday in U.S. District Court in Lincoln. Schmidgall must serve three years of supervised release after she leaves prison.

Schmidgall had faced 15 counts, but prosecutors agreed to drop all but one in exchange for her guilty plea.

Prosecutors say Schmidgall handled payroll and other administrative duties at Nebraska Pulmonary Specialties for 15 years. She was fired in December 2011.

Nebraska Co-Op Faces Federal Fine in Worker’s Death

OSHA(AP) — Federal authorities have proposed to fine a southeast Nebraska co-op that operates a grain elevator where a worker was killed.

The Occupational Safety and Health Administration says in a news release that the penalties proposed against Farmers Cooperative Co. total $22,800.

On Jan. 29 a 69-year-old co-op worker died after a semitrailer truck backed into him at the elevator in Talmage. Authorities say he was standing in a street to direct a truck into the elevator when a second truck backed into him.

The worker, Roger Teten, of Talmage, died later at a hospital.

OSHA says more safety violations were found at the elevator after an inspection.

The co-op’s attorney, Jim Luers, said Tuesday the co-op will contest the penalties and the citations.

CDC: More Than 200 People in 4 States Had Unidentified Stomach Bug

cdc(AP) — More than 200 people in at least four states have come down with a stomach bug that could be linked to food-borne illness.

The Centers for Disease Control says the cyclospora infection causing diarrhea and other flu-like symptoms has been reported in Iowa, Nebraska, Texas, and Wisconsin. The CDC said eight people have been hospitalized and the reported illnesses occurred from mid-June to early July.

The Food and Drug Administration is investigating the cyclospora infections, which are most often found in tropical or subtropical countries and have been linked to imported fresh produce in the past.

The illness is usually spread when people ingest foods or water contaminated with feces. The agency said it isn’t yet clear whether the cases from all of the states are linked.

FDA Cracks Down on Illegal Diabetes Remedies

fda(AP) — The Food and Drug Administration is cracking down on more than a dozen companies that market illegal treatments for diabetes, ranging from bogus dietary supplements to prescription drugs sold online without a prescription.

All of the products aim to cash in on the country’s diabetes epidemic, which affects nearly 26 million Americans. Regulators worry that consumers who buy such unapproved products could put off getting legitimate medical care, which could exacerbate heart disease, kidney failure and other deadly complications.

The FDA sent warning letters to 15 companies, both in the U.S. and abroad, ordering them to stop selling diabetes treatments which violate U.S. drug laws.

Three of the products targeted are marketed as “natural” supplements, but actually contain unlisted pharmaceutical ingredients. For example, Diexi, which is sold as a traditional Indian “herbal formula,” actually contains metformin, the most common prescription drug used to treat diabetes. The product is sold by Amrutam Life Care, of Surat, India.

“Consumers should exercise caution before using products claiming to be herbal or all-natural alternatives to FDA-approved prescription drugs,” the agency said in a statement Tuesday. “These products should be considered unsafe and should not be used.”

Other products include genuine dietary supplements that make unproven claims to treat or prevent diabetes. For example, Diabetes Daily Care is a capsule-based supplement containing cinnamon extract and other herbs. Its manufacturer, Nature’s Health Supply Inc., claims it “safely and effectively improves sugar metabolism.”

Under U.S. law, only FDA-approved medicines are permitted to make claims for treating or preventing disease.

Other companies targeted by the FDA run online pharmacies that sell prescription drugs for diabetes without a prescription. The FDA issued a warning letter to www.bestcheapmedsonline.com for marketing unapproved versions of diabetes drugs like Januvia, from Merck & Co. Inc.

The FDA warns patients against buying prescription medications on the Internet. Only 3 percent of online pharmacies actually comply with all U.S. pharmacy laws, according to a review by the National Association of Boards of Pharmacy.

People with diabetes are unable to properly break down carbohydrates, either because their bodies do not produce enough insulin or because they’ve become resistant to the hormone, which controls blood sugar levels. These patients face higher risks of heart attacks, kidney problems, blindness and other serious complications.

Many diabetics require multiple drugs to control their blood sugar levels.

The U.S. market for prescription diabetes drugs is the largest in the world, with sales of $22 billion last year. Sales have ballooned more than 60 percent in the last four years from $13.6 billion in 2008, according to health data firm, IMS Health.

The FDA said it has not received any reports of injury or illness connected with the products, but is taking action as a precautionary measure.

The FDA sent the warning letters to the companies last week, but posted them online Tuesday morning. The letters gives each company 15 business days to reply and explain how they will come into compliance with U.S. law. FDA warning letters are not legally binding, but the agency can take companies to court if they are ignored.

79 YO Nebraska Man Killed in ATV Accident

fatal-accident(AP) — Authorities say a 79-year-old driver has died in a collision of two all-terrain vehicles on a rural road in south-central Nebraska.

Hamilton County Attorney Mike Powell says the accident occurred a little after 11 a.m. Saturday about six miles southeast of Giltner.

Powell says Ivan Stiegemeier’s ATV crossed the center line on a blind curve and rammed into an oncoming ATV driven by 58-year-old Gordon Klein, of Giltner.

Powell says Stiegemeier, of Harvard, died at the scene. Klein was taken to a hospital.

Just Says No Bond for Doctor Accused in Omaha Murders

Dr. Anthony Garcia
Dr. Anthony Garcia

(AP) — A Nebraska judge says an Indiana doctor accused of killing four people with ties to an Omaha medical school must remain in jail to await trial.

Judge Lawrence Barrett ruled Tuesday morning that no bond would be set for Dr. Anthony Garcia.

Garcia, of Terre Haute, Ind., was arrested in Illinois last week and extradited Thursday to a jail in Omaha.

He is accused of shooting to death Creighton University pathologist Roger Brumback and fatally stabbing Brumback’s wife, Mary, in May at the Brumbacks’ Omaha home. Garcia is also accused in the fatal stabbings of 11-year-old Thomas Hunter and his family’s housekeeper, Shirlee Sherman, in March 2008, also in Omaha.

Brumback and Thomas Hunter’s father fired Garcia from a Creighton residency program in 2001.

Ohio Woman’s Sentence Includes Christmases in Jail

jail(AP) — A central Ohio judge has ordered a woman to spend the next five Christmases in jail as part of her sentence for issuing state ID cards and driver’s licenses to immigrants who entered the country illegally.

Prosecutors say 44-year-old Betina Young — a former license agency employee — accepted payments from applicants to falsify records showing they had verified their immigration status. She has pleaded guilty.

Judge Michael Holbrook put Young on probation Monday for five years — ordering that she spend a minimum of three days in jail each Christmas while on probation.

If she violates probation, she could go to prison for 15 years.

North Platte Weather July 23

NWS-North-Platte

  • Today: Mostly sunny, with a high near 85. East wind 9 to 15 mph, with gusts as high as 21 mph.
  • Tonight: Mostly clear, with a low around 58. East wind 6 to 11 mph becoming light and variable after midnight.
  • Wednesday: Sunny, with a high near 87. Calm wind becoming southwest around 6 mph in the morning.
  • Wednesday Night: A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Partly cloudy, with a low around 63. South southeast wind 7 to 11 mph.

Koehler Goes 7 Strong, Marlins Top Rockies 3-1

colorado-rockiesDENVER (AP) — Tom Koehler tossed seven strong innings, Ed Lucas homered and the Miami Marlins scored for the first time in four games in a 3-1 win over the Colorado Rockies on Monday night.

Giancarlo Stanton reached base three times and Steve Cishek notched his 18th save for Miami, which snapped a four-game losing streak.

Troy Tulowitzki hit his 17th home run and D.J. LeMahieu had three hits for the Rockies.

The Marlins’ scoring drought reached a franchise-record 37 innings after suffering a three-game sweep at Milwaukee over the weekend.

Koehler (2-5) looked sharp in his first start since July 2. His only blemish was Tulowitzki’s homer to lead off the fourth that made it 3-1.

Drew Pomeranz (0-4) allowed three runs on five hits and walked four in 4 1-3 innings.

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