We have a brand new updated website! Click here to check it out!

Union Pacific Ordered to Reinstate Injured Worker

Union-Pacific(AP) — Federal regulators have ordered Union Pacific to reinstate an injured Nebraska worker and pay $85,000 in damages.

The U.S. Department of Labor’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration said Wednesday the railroad improperly terminated the North Platte employee after he reported an injury.

Union Pacific spokesman Mark Davis said the railroad is reviewing OSHA’s decision and hasn’t decided whether to appeal.

OSHA says the worker hurt his back in Oct. 2012 after a chair he was sitting on collapsed.

After the injury, regulators say the worker was removed from duty and accused of violating several railroad policies, including workplace violence rules.

Regulators say the firing was done in retaliation for reporting the injury.

Few details were released about the employee because regulators consider him a whistleblower.

Iowan Who Made Bomb Threats in Nebraska Sentenced

gavel-and-scale(AP) — An Iowa man who mailed bomb threats to the FBI office in Omaha has been sentenced to time served.

Thirty-year-old Matthew Fell, of Waterloo, Iowa, was sentenced on Wednesday in Lincoln by Senior U.S. District Judge Richard Kopf (kuhpf). Fell had pleaded guilty to making a false threat. Fell has been behind bars for 15 months while awaiting final disposition of his case.

Court documents say postal workers at a Lincoln post office found an envelope in June 2012 that had “This is a Bomb!” written on it. There was no bomb in the envelope, but it did contain another envelope that was addressed to the FBI in Omaha. That envelope contained a piece of paper and a thumb drive. Omaha postal workers found a similar envelope a week later.

Nebraska Signs Georgetown’s Moses Abraham Ayegba

Moses Ayegba (32)
Moses Ayegba (32)

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Moses Abraham Ayegba (EYE-eg-buh) of Georgetown has signed transfer papers to play at Nebraska for one season.

Ayegba will graduate from Georgetown with a degree in economics next month and be eligible to play for the Cornhuskers in 2014-15.

The 6-foot-9, 247-pound Ayegba played in 31 games for the Hoyas last season, averaging 1.9 points and 2.8 rebounds. He was second on the team with 23 blocked shots.

Nebraska coach Tim Miles said Thursday that Ayegba provides a physical presence inside and can affect the game on the defensive end with his rebounding and shot blocking. Miles said Ayegba is capable of improving on the offensive end.

Nebraska assistant Kenya Hunter coached Ayegba for three seasons on Georgetown’s staff.

Omaha Man Gets Prison for Teen Sex Assaults

sex-offenders(AP) — A 41-year-old Omaha man who sexually assaulted a teenager has been given 30 to 35 years in prison.

Ross Ohrt was sentenced on Wednesday. He’d pleaded no contest and was convicted of sexually assaulting a child and visual depiction of sexually explicit conduct.

Authorities say Ohrt had known the girl for several years and had worked out a barter system with her. He awarded her points toward gifts in exchange for her performing sexual acts or sending him explicit photos.

FDA Proposes Extending Its Oversight Tobacco

fda(AP) — The federal government wants to extend its oversight of tobacco to include cigars, hookah, nicotine gels, pipe tobacco and dissolvable tobacco products.

The Food and Drug Administration proposal being issued Thursday would ban sales to minors and require approval for new products and health warning labels.

Companies also would be required to register their products with the agency and disclose ingredients, among other things.

Once finalized, the agency could propose additional restrictions on the products, such as flavor bans or marketing restrictions.

Officials also are seeking public comment on whether the agency should treat premium, handmade cigars differently than machine-made cigars.

A 2009 law that gave the FDA authority to regulate tobacco but so far have only focused on cigarettes and smokeless tobacco products outlined in that law.

Baer To Be Inducted In Omaha Sports Hall of Fame

10-10-09 Tri-City Storm Indiana IceKEARNEY, Neb. – The man who brought hockey to the heartland will be enshrined in the Omaha Sports Hall of Fame Thursday night.

Ted Baer, the original owner of the Tri-City Storm from 2000-06, will be a member of the eighth class of inductees. Baer is credited with starting the Storm franchise, and maintaining ownership for seven years.

The Omaha businessman got his start in the USHL when he purchased the Lancers in 1987. During his ownership, he moved the team to the Ak-sar-ben Coliseum and won six Clark Cup championships, four Anderson Cup titles and one national championship.

Baer was also recognized by the USHL with the Distinguished Service Award in 2007.

Although he has had success in hockey, Baer is also a bowling enthusiast, and is a member of three bowling Halls of Fame, including the Council Bluffs Bowling Hall of Fame, Omaha Bowling Hall of Fame and State of Nebraska Bowling Hall of Fame.

The induction ceremony and banquet for the class of 2014 takes place at the Scott Conference Center on the campus of the University of Nebraska Omaha.

Baer is one of 11 inductees, including former NFL players Chris Bober and Rik Bonness, gymnasts Phil Cahoy Sr. and Phil Cahoy Jr., former UNO hockey coach Mike Kemp, former NBA player Mike McGee, Creighton basketball star Christy Neneman, soccer standout Heather Taggert-Long, NCAA All-American basketball player Dean Thompson Jr. and the 1963-65 Omaha Ryan/Pepsi Baseball Team.

For more information, head to omahasportshalloffame.com.

The Storm are now preparing for the USHL Entry Draft, which takes place from May 5-6. A two phase, multiple-day event, the draft will allow the team to reload with new players for the upcoming 2014-15 season.

NCAA Board Endorses More Power for Big Schools

NCAA-Logo-College-SportsINDIANAPOLIS (AP) — The NCAA’s board of directors endorsed a proposal Thursday giving schools in the five largest football conferences more autonomy and more voting power in changing rules within the organization.

The changes would allow the wealthiest schools to adopt some legislation on their own, including provisions for money beyond what current scholarships cover, up to the full cost-of-attendance, expanded insurance coverage and money to help families travel to NCAA tournaments.

The proposal would affect the 65 schools in the ACC, Big 12, Big Ten, Pac-12 and SEC.

NCAA President Mark Emmert supports the move. A formal vote is expected in August. If passed then, the transition could begin this fall.

The board also approved allowing schools to provide unlimited meals and snacks to athletes.

Royals Dominated by Kluber in 5-1 Loss to Indians

kc-royals

CLEVELAND (AP) — One by one, the Royals went to the plate and came back empty.

Corey Kluber had them flailing and failing. They missed the right-hander’s pitches, popped them up or hit weak groundouts against Cleveland’s starter.

He controlled them — completely.

Kluber struck out a career-high 11 and allowed Kansas City just four hits in his first complete game, leading the Indians to a 5-1 win over the Royals.

“He handcuffed us,” Royals manager New Yost said. “He threw a great game. We couldn’t do anything with him, nothing all day long.”

Kluber (2-2) didn’t walk a batter and let Cleveland manager Terry Francona give some needed rest to his bullpen. Kluber is the first Cleveland pitcher with a complete game, 11 strikeouts, no walks and no earned runs since Len Barker’s perfect game in 1981.

David Murphy and Asdrubal Cabrera delivered two-run hits in the Indians’ five-run fifth off Bruce Chen (1-2), who controlled Cleveland’s lineup for four innings.

“Obviously I’m not very happy with the fifth inning,” said Chen, who had retired 11 straight heading into the fifth. “I wasn’t able to make good pitches. Early in the game I was mixing my pitches well. There were some key at-bats where I could have made better pitches.”

The Royals scored their only run — and unearned one — off Kluber in the seventh when Omar Infante singled and scored when Indians first baseman Nick Swisher made a half-hearted attempt at Mike Moustakas’ grounder, which got by him for an error and rolled all the way into the right-field corner.

Other than that, Kansas City’s hitters were unable to do much against Kluber, whose previous long outing was 8 2-3 innings last July against the White Sox. He’s 3-0 in four career starts against the Royals.

“He put it to us,” said Alex Gordon, who went 0 for 4 and struck out to end the game. “Give him credit. You look at our offense today and say we stunk. That’s how it was.”

Chen coasted through four innings, dominating the Indians with a mix of off-speed pitches before they touched him for five runs and chased him in the fifth.

The left-hander gave up a leadoff single to Cabrera in the first but clamped down on the Indians until the fifth when Carlos Santana led off with a double, snapping an 0-for-16 slide with just his third hit in 48 at-bats. Michael Brantley followed with a single to center for his team-leading 19th RBI, giving Cleveland a 1-0 lead.

The Indians didn’t stop there as Murphy slapped a two-run single to left, and Cabrera made it 5-0 with his double down the left-field line to end Chen’s outing. It was Cleveland’s biggest inning this season.

“It’s part of the game,” Chen said. “I have to be more consistent. The first four innings I was able to establish all my pitches. I just need to do it the whole game.”

Kansas City managed just one hit off Kluber in the first four innings, and then the Royals ran their way out of a scoring chance in the fifth.

Alcides Escobar singled with two outs and Jarrod Dyson followed with a base hit. Escobar hesitated rounding second, and his indecision cost him as Brantley threw him out from center trying to take third.

The Royals turned a nifty double play to end the first.

With a Cabrera at third, first baseman Eric Hosmer fielded Jason Kipnis’ hard grounder, stepped on first and threw home. Catcher Brett Hayes made a sweeping tag on Cabrera, who was called out. Crew chief Bill Miller called for a review to see if Hayes had blocked the plate, but the call was confirmed.

NOTES: Royals 1B coach Rusty Kuntz returned to the team after undergoing surgery on his broken left arm. Kuntz was struck during pregame batting practice on Monday. He had a plate and eight screws inserted. There’s no timetable on his return to the coaching box. … The Royals open a three-game series in Baltimore on Friday with Yordano Ventura (1-1) facing Ubaldo Jimenez (0-3). … Royals RF Nor Aoki is batting .111 (5-for-45) on the road and .441 (15-for-34) at home. … Slumping catcher Salvador Perez got the day off. He’s in a 1-for-26 slide.

NP Man Goes on Shopping Spree at Walmart, Forgets to Pay

Tyler Henry
Tyler Henry

A North Platte man is facing a felony charge after he went on a shopping spree at Walmart.  The problem…he forgot to pay.

According to North Platte Police Department Public Information Officer, Rodney Brown, officers responded to Walmart, 1401 South Dewey, at around 11:15 a.m., on Wednesday, to investigate an attempted theft that had occurred on Tuesday.

Store employees alleged that 19-year-old Tyler Henry had entered that store and filled a shopping cart with merchandise, including clothes food and other items which totaled around $2,500.

Henry then reportedly tried to leave the store without paying and was confronted by employees.  When he was unable to produce a receipt, Brown said Henry left the area.

Later on Wednesday, officers learned that Henry had returned to the store.

Officers made contact with Henry and another male subject, 19-year-old Darren Koch, as they were leaving the store.

Both Henry and Koch were found to have stolen clothing which was on their person.

Koch was cited for shoplifting approximately $40 worth of  clothing.  Henry was issued a summons for stealing items valued at around $23.

However, following further investigation, officers deemed there was probable cause to arrest Henry for the attempted theft the day before.

As a result, he was also charged with felony shoplifting.

Henry was transported to the Lincoln County Detention Center and jailed on the felony charge.

North Platte House Fire Ruled Accidental

fire np april 22 2014A fire at a North Platte home that seriously injured a man has been ruled accidental.

According to North Platte Fire Marshal, George Lewis, Tuesday’s fire at 313 West D was caused by the improper disposal of smoking materials.

The fire, which started in the home’s basement, was reported to the North Platte Fire Department at around 10:30 a.m.

Firefighters were on the scene within minutes and gained entry into the home.

Once inside, they found 58-year-old Randy Mills who was not breathing and did not have a pulse.

Battalion Chief, Trent Kleinow, said paramedics immediately administered CPR and were able to revive Mills.

He was transported to Great Plains Regional Center before being transported to a Lincoln Hospital with burns to his airway.

Officials say they have not received any updates on Mills’ condition.

The home sustained major smoke damage.

Copyright Eagle Radio | FCC Public Files | EEO Public File