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Nebraskan Who Rammed Trooper’s Car Sent to Prison

aaron-white(AP) — A 39-year-old northeast Nebraska man has been sentenced to prison for ramming his tractor into a state trooper’s car.

Online court records say Aaron White, of Plainview, was sentenced on Wednesday in Antelope County District Court. He was given 25 to 30 years for assaulting an officer and 20 months to five years for criminal mischief. He’d pleaded no contest to both charges after prosecutors dropped two more counts of criminal mischief. The two sentences are to be served at the same time.

Authorities say White created several disturbances on Dec. 18, 2012, in Plainview. When law enforcement officers confronted him, White tried to ram a deputy’s car with his tractor before hitting a trooper’s car and hurting him.

Another officer shot White.

Nebraska Organizer Seeks Help with Honor Flights

Korean War(AP) — Efforts to fly more Nebraska veterans to Washington, D.C., to visit the Korean War and other memorials have taken an $80,000 hit.

Bill Williams, of Patriotic Productions in Omaha, says a donor has reduced his pledge to $20,000 from $100,000. So Williams is issuing another call for donations to help around 440 veterans make the trip.

Williams has chartered three jets to carry the vets, family members and volunteer guardians to the nation’s capital on March 25. They’ll visit the memorials and take in other sights on their all-expenses-paid journey, returning that evening to a hero’s welcome in Omaha. He organized a similar trip in October for 135 veterans.

The total cost is about $471,000. Williams says the planes are paid for, but the $80,000 is needed for other expenses.

Californian Held in Neb. on US Drug Charge

Homeland-Security(AP) — Officials say a 29-year-old California man has been arrested in Nebraska after more than $934,000 in suspected drug money was found inside a vehicle he was driving.

Court records say Ryan Perich, of Woodbridge, Calif., was arrested last week after he’d been pulled over for a traffic violation on Interstate 80 in Lancaster County.

An affidavit by Homeland Security agent Mark Lee says officers found the money inside vacuum-sealed bags in the vehicle after Perich gave permission for a search.

State charges were dropped after federal authorities stepped in. Perich is held on a charge of interstate travel in aid of racketeering enterprises. Lee says he thinks Perich is a money courier for California-based marijuana traffickers.

Perich’s attorney didn’t immediately return a call Friday from The Associated Press.

Neb. Woman Gets Another Shot at Suing Pathologist

ne-supreme-court(AP) — The Nebraska Supreme Court has ruled that a former day care operator cleared of charges in a baby’s death deserves to have her lawsuit against a pathologist in the case heard by a jury.

Friday’s decision is the second time the state’s high court has reversed a lower court ruling dismissing the lawsuit.

The high court found that Lancaster County District Judge Paul Merritt Jr. was wrong to grant pathologist Matthias Okoye’s request for summary judgment.

Carla Jean McKinney was charged with the 2007 death of a 4-month-old baby in her care, based in part on the autopsy Okoye performed.

Charges against McKinney were later dropped after two other pathologists cleared her of wrongdoing, and she sued Okoye and his corporation for nearly $275,000.

UNL Expects Budget Woes

UNL(AP) — The chancellor of the University of Nebraska-Lincoln says the university community must find ways to overcome an expected budget shortfall for the next school year.

Chancellor Harvey Perlman shared the financial news with university staff in an email on Thursday.

The amount of the shortfall is still being evaluated, but Perlman says the increase in spring enrollment didn’t provide the revenue numbers administrators were seeking.

A university spokesman says enrollment was up 1.2 percent this spring, compared with spring 2013.

Sidney Officer’s Wife Accused of Bank Robbery

FBI(AP) — Authorities say a 30-year-old woman accused of robbing a Sidney bank is the wife of a Sidney police officer.

An FBI affidavit filed to support a bank robbery charge says Janetta Lenstrom, of Potter, had quit her job at another area bank the day before she robbed the Sidney Federal Savings & Loan last week.

A bank employee told investigators that she thought she recognized Lenstrom as the robber, who was wearing a stocking cap and sunglasses.

The affidavit says Lenstrom’s husband was among the first officers on the scene but was pulled from the investigation. He later called her and asked her to meet him at a Sidney parking lot. The Sidney police chief arrested her when she arrived.

Court records don’t list the name of her attorney.

Suspect in Utah Deputy’s Killing Was Fugitive, 27

police-lights-red(AP) — Authorities say the man accused of killing a Utah deputy and wounding another was a fugitive who previously served prison time for attempted homicide.

Utah County sheriff’s officials identified the shooter as 27-year-old Jose Angel Garcia Juaregui (how-REG’-ee). Authorities say he’s in extremely critical condition after being shot by law enforcement officials Thursday in Juab County, and his prognosis isn’t good.

Officials say Utah County sheriff’s Sgt. Cory Wride had stopped to check on a truck that appeared to be disabled on a two-lane highway Thursday afternoon. He was using his computer to do a background check when he was shot from the truck and killed.

Sheriff Jim Tracy says the suspect clashed with officers and shot another deputy in the head during a 50-mile chase. That deputy is in critical condition.

Report: US Cattle Herd at Lowest Number Since 1951

cattle(AP) — The lingering effects of drought across the Great Plains in recent years have led to another decrease in the U.S. cattle herd.

The National Agricultural Statistics Service reports that the U.S. inventory of cattle and calves totaled 87.7 million animals as of Jan. 1. That was down by about 1.6 million cattle, or 2 percent, compared with this time last year.

The agency says this is the lowest January inventory since 1951.

A bright spot was a 2 percent increase in young, female cattle retained for breeding. One expert says that factor could allow the herd’s seven-year contraction to stabilize.

Totals in Texas, the nation’s leading cattle producer, decreased 4 percent.

The January report had been anxiously awaited because the agency didn’t issue a report in July due to sequestration.

Keystone XL Report Changes Few Minds in Nebraska

Keystone_construction_ND1-306x204(AP) — The U.S. State Department report on the Keystone XL may have removed a hurdle for the pipeline, but it hasn’t swayed the entrenched foes and supporters in Nebraska.

Project backers argued Friday that the report leaves President Barack Obama no choice but to approve the entire Canada-to-Texas pipeline. Opponents say they still plan to fight the pipeline in court and hold a series of public vigils next week in Omaha, Lincoln, York and O’Neill.

Ernie Fellows, a ranch owner from the northern Nebraska town of Mills, says opponents will continue with their lawsuit challenging a state law that allowed the pipeline to proceed in Nebraska.

Brad Miller of the Omaha-based Laborers’ Local 1140, a union group, says numerous reviews have found no significant problems with the pipeline.

Company Warns Neb. Customers About Phone Scam

black-hills-energy(AP) — A natural gas utility is warning its customers in Nebraska about a phone scam.

Black Hills Energy says fraudulent callers are contacting customers and telling them they have a small window of time to pay an outstanding bill. They threaten to discontinue service within a half hour.

The company says the callers are targeting certain communities and customers who may not fully understand traditional billing and marketing practices.

Black Hills Energy serves 197,000 natural gas customers in Nebraska. It is a subsidiary of Black Hills Corp., an energy company based in Rapid City, S.D. Aside from Nebraska it has customers in Colorado, Iowa, Kansas, Montana, South Dakota and Wyoming.

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