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Nebraska’s February Jobless Rate of 2.7 Percent Lowest in US

unemploymentbennyLINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — A new report shows that Nebraska’s preliminary unemployment rate of 2.7 percent last month was the lowest in the country.

The Nebraska Labor Department said in the report released Friday that the February rate is seven-tenths of a point under the February 2014 rate of 3.4 percent.

The new Nebraska figure remains well below the preliminary national unemployment rate of 5.5 percent in February. U.S. Labor Department figures say Nebraska was trailed by North Dakota at 2.9 percent and South Dakota and Utah at 3.4 percent.

Nebraska Supreme Court: Doors Should Stay with Sold Custer County Building

ne-supreme-court-gavelOMAHA, Neb. (AP) — The Nebraska Supreme Court has ruled against a man who sold a building without disclosing to the buyers that he was taking all of its interior doors with him.

The high court on Friday upheld a Custer County District Court ruling that found Andrew Solomon was wrong to take the building’s 12 interior doors. It ordered his business entity, Drew LLC, to pay Thomas and Heather Griffith $3,420, plus costs, to cover replacement doors.

Solomon appealed, arguing in part that the doors were trade fixtures of the dental practice run by his wife.

But the high court said the doors could not be considered equipment used to carry on a trade. It also said the buyers had a reasonable belief that the doors were part of the purchase agreement.

Nebraska Students Walk in Chief Standing Bear’s Footsteps

commons.wikimedia.orgNEAR WYMORE, Nebraska (AP) — A group of students from Peru State College have received the opportunity to learn a history lesson by leaving the classroom.

A professor of the undergraduate course called History of Nebraska received a grant that helped pay costs for students to take a two-day trip Thursday to the Chief Standing Bear Trail south of Wymore.

In 1877, the Ponca Tribe was forced to march from its home in northeast Nebraska to Oklahoma. Chief Standing Bear led them on the march. The students will visit several sites along the trail, including the burial site of the chief’s daughter, who died during the journey and the Ponca Tribal Museum.

Medical Examiner: 22-Day-Old Baby Girl Starved to Death

ambulance-lightsBARTOW, Fla. (AP) — A medical examiner says a baby who was found dead in her car seat in a Florida restaurant parking lot had lost more than one-third of her body weight in the 22 days since she was born.

The testimony Friday from Polk County’s assistant medical examiner came in a bond hearing for Roy Stephens of Tennyson, Indiana. He and the baby’s mother, Ruby Stephens, are charged with first-degree murder.

Dr. Vera Volnikh testified that the baby died Dec. 23 of malnutrition as a result of starvation. Roy Stephens’ attorney questioned that claim, saying the medical examiner only did a cursory examination and tests.

According to records, the baby wasn’t Stephens’ daughter, but he had assumed parental responsibilities.

The couple had two other children and both were in good health.

Nebraska High Court Affirms Conviction of Man in Beating

ne-supreme-courtLINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — The Nebraska Supreme Court has affirmed a lower court’s decision to keep a man serving a life sentence behind bars.

James Branch had filed a motion for post-conviction relief seeking to be released from prison. Prosecutors say he and two other men beat James Clark, tied wire around Clark’s neck and dumped him into the trunk of his car at his auto business after robbing him.

Branch has maintained that while he used a credit card stolen from Clark, he knew nothing about the robbery and assault.

In 2013, the state Supreme Court ordered a Douglas County District Court to grant Branch a hearing on his motion, in which he said his lawyer was ineffective.

The lower court did and then denied Branch’s motion, which the Supreme Court upheld Friday.

Colorado Defends Pot Law, Says States Free to Legalize Marijuana

colorado-420DENVER (AP) — Legal weed in Colorado isn’t hurting its neighboring states. That’s according to a Supreme Court filing Friday that marks the first time Colorado has defended legal marijuana in writing.

Colorado sent the argument to the nation’s highest court as a defense against a lawsuit from Oklahoma and Nebraska, which have asked the court to stop pot regulation.

Colorado says in response that their gripe is with the federal government for not enforcing the Controlled Substances Act. Colorado says that Congress banned marijuana but did not compel states to enforce the ban.

Colorado’s neighbors claim that the 2012 pot legalization vote has sent the drug flooding across Colorado’s borders.

The U.S. Supreme Court has not said whether it will hear the challenge.

 

Troopers Seize 45 Pounds of Pot in Hamilton County Traffic Stop

POT-BUSTAn Illinois man is in jail after a trooper seizes 45.3 lbs. of marijuana during a traffic stop in Hamilton County.

At approximately 12:41 p.m., Thursday, March 26, a trooper stopped a 2006 Chevy pickup for speeding just off of the I-80 Giltner exit on County Road 9/J. An NSP Police Service Dog (PSD) alerted to the odor of drugs coming from the rear of the pickup. A probable cause search led to the seizure of 45.3 lbs. of marijuana. The marijuana contained in 42 packages was located in two suitcases in the bed of the pickup.

The driver of the pickup, James C. Slater Jr., 47, of Bartonville, Ill., was transported to the Hamilton County Jail.  He’s been charged with possession of marijuana with intent to deliver.

Nebraska Court Dismisses Republican River Irrigation Lawsuit

Republican-RiverLINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — A judge has dismissed a class-action lawsuit by Nebraska farmers who say the Department of Natural Resources deprived them of irrigation water to which they were entitled.

But District Court Judge James E. Doyle IV ruled this week that the farmers can amend their lawsuit with new arguments challenging the decision to divert the water to comply with the Republican River Compact.

Doyle ruled that the department’s duties to comply with the compact govern how water must be distributed.

More than 150 irrigators who receive water through the Frenchman Cambridge Irrigation District say their crops suffered because they were denied access to water that went to Kansas under the compact. The compact allocates 49 percent of the river’s water to Nebraska, 40 percent to Kansas and 11 percent to Colorado.

Team Surveying Birds Along Platte River

whoopingcraneKEARNEY, Neb. (AP) — Two Cessna 172 airplanes are continuing the annual tradition of flying over the Central Platte River as part of the Platte River Whooping Crane Monitoring Project.

Two pilots and two observers will fly over 90 miles of the river Friday as part of the project, which was started in 2001. The project aims to collect data about how whooping cranes use the river and adjacent areas during their spring and fall migrations.

Ground observers protect the birds, which are on the federal Endangered Species List, from being disturbed and also collect data on features of the locations, length of stay and crane behaviors.

The Platte River Recovery Implementation Program is the main user of the data.

Father Sues Former Husker After Son’s Fundraiser

lawsuit-settlementLINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — A father has sued a former University of Nebraska football player who hosted a fundraiser for the man’s son, claiming he didn’t receive money raised at the November event.

Dan Walker filed the lawsuit last week against P.J. Smith, safety for the Huskers from 2009 to 2012, and Scott Wuethrich. Walker alleges the men withheld most donations made on his 11-year-old-son’s behalf, who’s recovering after being hit by a truck in October.

Walker claims Smith and Wuethrich kept all donations except for $1,031, which he says he used to buy Christmas gifts for his six kids. The lawsuit seeks compensation for all money raised at the fundraiser or later by selling donated items.

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