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Weekend Traffic Stops lead to Heroin and Marijuana

state-patrol-logo(Lincoln, Neb.)-  Troopers with the Nebraska State Patrol seized nearly 24 lbs. of heroin and 131 lbs. of marijuana in two separate weekend traffic stops.

Just after 3:00 p.m. Sunday, June 7, a trooper stopped an eastbound 2009 Nissan Rouge for a traffic violation about a mile east of the Waverly exit on Interstate 80. The trooper received consent to search the vehicle. The search led to the seizure of 23.6 lbs. of heroin. The heroin contained in nine packages was located in two false compartments in the passenger portion of the vehicle.

The driver of the vehicle, Rodrigo Jordon Gastelum-Flores, 25, San Ysidro, Calif., was lodged in the Lancaster County Corrections on a charge of Possession of a Controlled Substance with Intent to Deliver.

A Saturday, June 6, traffic stop on I-80 just east of Grand Island led to the seizure of 131 lbs. of marijuana. Just before 10:30 a.m., a trooper stopped an eastbound 2015 Chevy Suburban for a traffic violation.  An NSP Police Service Dog (PSD) alerted to the odor of drugs coming from the vehicle. A probable cause search led to the seizure of 131 lbs. of marijuana. The marijuana contained in five packages was located in a large bag in the cargo area of the vehicle.

The driver of the SUV, Nathan W. Morgan, 30, Pocahontas, Arkansas, was lodged in the Hall County Jail on a charge of Possession of Marijuana with Intent to Deliver.

Suspect Arrested in Connection with North Platte Stabbings

david wenglerAt around 11:10 PM on June 5th Officers from the NPPD responded to a home in the 2000 block of East 2nd St. on the report that a man had been stabbed. Police learned that the assault occurred during a scuffle involving as many has five people, some of whom have not been identified. The 19 year old male vicitm, who was transported by ambulance to Great Plains Health due to an abdominal stab wound, alleged that the suspect, David Wengler, 32, brandished a 12” knife and stabbed him. The victim reported that this occurred while he was attempting to come to the aid of another 29 year old male, who the victim was with in a garage located at the residence. The 29 year old male reported being assaulted by one of two other males, who showed up with Wengler. Both victims alleged that they did not know Wengler and the two other men, or why the assault had occurred. The three suspects then fled the area.

Officers continued the search for Wengler and evidence to identify the two other suspects in this case. Then on the afternoon of June 7th Police responded to the area of the 1500 block of W. 6th Str. on the report of a suspicious man matching Wengler’s description. Wengler was located exiting the rear of a residence near there. Wengler was taken into custody without incident, transported to the Lincoln County Detention Center and jailed for Felony 1st Degree Assault, Use of a Weapon to Commit a Felony and Possession of a Concealed Weapon. During the arrest process a TRS.XB Stinger, 4” knife was seized as evidence. The stabbing victim’s condition, which is thought to be non-life threatening, is unknown at this time. The investigation is ongoing at this time.

Crash kills Presentation basketball player, assistant coach

Cameron Isreal
Cameron Isreal

ABERDEEN, S.D. (AP) — Presentation College in South Dakota is mourning the death of a basketball player and a graduate assistant coach.

The school issued a statement saying player Cameron Isreal and assistant coach and former player Terry Strong died Friday in a vehicle crash near Valentine, Nebraska.

Cherry County Sheriff’s Deputy Joe Kreycik tells the American News that the vehicle the two were in crossed the center line on U.S. Highway 83 and collided head-on with another vehicle.

The 23-year-old Isreal was from Chandler, Arizona. The 26-year-old Strong was from the Los Angeles area.

Presentation President Margaret Huber says in a statement that the college is “devastated by their passing.”

Man admits plotting suicide bomb attack at Kansas airport

terry loewen

–UPDATE–

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A former avionics technician has admitted to plotting a suicide bomb attack at a Wichita airport.

Terry L. Loewen pleaded guilty Monday to attempting to use a weapon of mass destruction, after striking a deal with prosecutors for a proposed 20-year sentence.

It is up to U.S. District Judge Monti Belot whether to accept the agreement. If the judge rejects it, Loewen would be allowed to withdraw it. Belot told Loewen he was “almost certain” to accept it. Sentencing is set for Aug. 31.

The 59-year-old Wichita man was arrested in 2013 after allegedly trying to bring a van filled with inert explosives onto the tarmac at what was then Wichita’s Mid-Continent Airport.

Prosecutors say the plot was hatched during an undercover sting operation was aimed at inflicting “maximum carnage.”

— —

A man accused of plotting a suicide bomb attack at a Wichita airport is expected to return to court to change his plea.

Terry L. Loewen is scheduled to appear before U.S. District Judge Monti Belot in Wichita on Monday.

Loewen was arrested in December 2013. He is accused of trying to bring a van filled with inert explosives onto the tarmac at what was then Wichita’s Mid-Continent Airport.

He is charged with attempting to use a weapon of mass destruction, attempting to use an explosive device to damage property and attempting to give material support to al-Qaida.

Prosecutors say in court filings the plot hatched during an undercover sting operation was aimed at inflicting “maximum carnage” that would have killed and injured hundreds of people.

MRN pageant judges announced

Judges have been announced for the 60th annual Miss Rodeo Nebraska Pageant scheduled for June 14-17 in North Platte. The judges are:

Almabeth Kaess

almabethAlmabeth Kaess, of La Junta, Colo., was crowned Miss Rodeo America 1978 in Oklahoma City, Okla. The former Miss Rodeo Colorado also won the horsemanship, personality and speech awards at the pageant, which hosted contestants from all 50 states and two provinces of Canada.

During her reign, Kaess made almost 100 personal appearances at rodeos, horse shows and special events. In May of 1978, she was invited to accompany a group of western wear and tack manufactures to Paris and London to promote western fashion and apparel.

While in London, Kaess did some promotional work with the British Quarter Horse Association.  A staged photo of her roping a policewoman appeared in the “London Times.”

That fall, Kaess helped break ground on the Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association Rodeo Hall of Fame in Colorado Springs, Colo. The facility currently houses a pair of shiny red, patent leather boots she wore during her reign.

Kaess is also known for being the first Miss Rodeo America to ride in the Rose Bowl Parade in Pasadena, Calif., as a guest of Monte Montana.

Kaess went on to obtain a Bachelor of Arts in recreation from the University of Southern Colorado and a Master of Arts in Leadership Education from Mid-American Christian University.

She founded two therapeutic riding centers: the Angelview Therapeutic Horsemanship Center in Salida, Colo. and the Horses in Therapeutic Challenges Center in Pueblo, Colo.

Kaess is currently employed at Otero Junior College in La Junta, Colo., as the associate vice president of enrollment management.

Chris Williams

chris williams

Chris Williams lives in Amarillo, Texas with her husband, Mike, of 36 years. They have two children, Lara and Taylor, and three granddaughters, Hailie, Anna and Claire.

Chris is an antiques dealer and the bookkeeper for her husband’s medical practice. She is no stranger to the rodeo queen world, having won many titles in California.

She was the 1967 National Appaloosa Queen, 1968-Miss Grand National, 1969 Miss Rodeo California and earned the prestigious, coveted title of Miss Rodeo America in 1970.

Chris has judged the Miss Rodeo America Pageant twice and has served as a chaperone during the MRA pageant for the past 17 years.

In her spare time, Chris enjoys traveling, playing racquetball, gardening, scrapbooking, antiquing and playing with her grandchildren.

Chuck Bowman

chuckChuck Bowman has been involved in the horse industry since the 1950s. He and his family were livestock dealers in central Iowa, where they used horses to feed livestock daily and work and move cattle they had purchased.

Because Bowman grew up on and around horses, it was natural that he became interested in showing and owning Quarter Horses.

He competed in both high school and college rodeo and showed horses throughout the Midwest, training many horses to Championships for himself and as a professional trainer.

Bowman served as director and president of the Iowa Quarter Horse Association. He was elected as a national director for the American Quarter Horse Association and spent nearly 20 years as an AQHA judge at shows throughout the U.S., Canada and Germany.

Bowman worked for the AQHA almost 10 years in the Show Department’s Field Services division – attending equine functions and shows throughout the U.S. and Canada. His duties included making sure show rules were followed, insuring humane treatment of animals and monitoring judges for the Association.

He worked closely with the membership, attended stock shows and trade shows to answer questions, took care of problems and helped run the world shows.

He and his wife currently reside in Platteville, Wis.

I-80 North Platte 177 WB Exit Ramp will be closed to South Bound 83 traffic

— Starting today at 9:00PM —

I-80 North Platte 177 WB Exit Ramp will be closed to South Bound 83 traffic.

Ramp traffic will be directed to the NB 83 ramp to exit I-80.

Traffic affected: I-80 & US 83 to McCook (North Platte) via US 83. The WB exit SB ramp is closed starting today at 9:00PM until tomorrow morning at about 8:00AM.

The Westbound exit ramp for Hwy 83 South traffic will be closed for accident damage repair. Ramp traffic will be directed by flaggers to the North Bound 83 ramp, to return southbound, use the nearest intersection or cross 83 into the southbound lanes.

Like Father, Like Sons; North Platte Family Faithful Volunteers at Buffalo Bill Rodeo

The Heils: Mike, father Randy, and R.C. (from left to right), volunteer their time each year at the Buffalo Bill Rodeo in North Platte. They work behind the scenes: and Randy running gates, and R.C. as the out-gate man, opening and closing the gate behind bucking horses and bulls.
The Heils: Mike, father Randy, and R.C. (from left to right), volunteer their time each year at the Buffalo Bill Rodeo in North Platte. They work behind the scenes: and Randy running gates, and R.C. as the out-gate man, opening and closing the gate behind bucking horses and bulls.

North Platte, Neb.  (June 8, 2015) – Randy Heil hasn’t missed a year of the Buffalo Bill Rodeo since he was thirteen years old in 1965.

The North Platte man began attending the rodeo as a kid, and then, in the early 1980s, began volunteering at it.

And his sons R.C. and Mike have followed in his footsteps.

It all began when Randy heard the committee could use a little help setting up the turn back fence, the panels set up in the arena during the bull riding to keep the bulls bucking close to the chutes. They are no longer used, but when they were, it took a lot of man power to set them up in a hurry so fans didn’t have to wait for the bull riding.

Randy volunteered, and soon R.C., who was a youngster, was helping, too. Terry Miller, R.C.’s mother, had been a trick rider so R.C. was familiar with rodeo, having traveled in the summers with her to rodeos where she trick rode.

R.C. was thirteen when he began helping his dad at the rodeo. And after the fence wasn’t used anymore, the Heils stayed on as volunteers, each helping in their own ways: Randy as the gate man for the entrance behind the chutes, R.C. as the out gate operator, where the bucking bulls and horses go after their ride, and Mike as the gate man for where the specialty act comes in and out of the arena. Mike also unties calves during the tie-down roping.

For R.C., as the out gate man, he’s in what can be a dangerous spot. Horses and bulls are bucking and running as they head to the out gate, and often a pickup man is behind them, sometimes with a rope around them. R.C. could get hurt if he’s not careful; he never has been, but “you’ve got to be paying attention,” he said. And there’s not a better place to watch the rodeo, he said. “The only people who have a better seat than me are (announcers) Randy Corley and Hadley Barrett.” He sees what the fans don’t see; what goes on once the horses and bulls are run through the stripping chutes and the bareback riggings, bronc saddles and bull ropes are removed. “There are a lot of things the fans don’t ever see. There can be some wrecks back there (behind the chutes).”

R.C. is quick to acknowledge his fellow volunteers who the fans never see, those behind the scenes running the stripping chute. “I have good help behind me. There are three other guys back there, and that helps. It’s a big team effort.”

Randy, who is 62, figures he has never missed a year of the Buffalo Bill Rodeo since 1965. He may not have made it to all four performances, but he’s made it to the rodeo at least once each of those years.

Even last year, as he was recovering from knee surgery, he didn’t miss the rodeo. “I went out there on crutches,” he said, “and stood up there against the fence, at the north end of the bucking chutes, where I’m usually at.”

The Buffalo Bill Rodeo is produced by volunteers, so the Heils know their time and efforts are appreciated, and they love being involved. “We know everybody, and every year we come and help and do whatever we can,” Randy said. Mike agrees. “You get to see friends you don’t get to see that often.”

The rodeo takes place June 17-20 at the Wild West Arena in North Platte. It begins at 8 pm each night, with tickets ranging in price from $7 to $20. Tickets can be purchased online at NebraskalandDays.com, at the NebraskalandDays office at its new location at 2801 Charlie Evans Drive (at the Wild West Arena), and at the gate. For more information, visit the website or call 308.532.7939.

Nebraska commission receives $10K for Cowboy Trail

NORFOLK, Neb. (AP) — The Nebraska Game and Park Commission has received $10,000 in funding from a grant program to continue development and management planning for the Cowboy Recreation and Nature Trail in northern Nebraska.

The Norfolk Daily News (https://bit.ly/1FEd0O1 ) reports the grant was received under the Rails-to-Trails Conservancy’s newly launched Doppelt Family Trail Development Fund. The fund supports organizations and local governments that conduct projects to build and improve trails on former rail lines. Three different projects across the country have been funded.

Public meetings will be held later this year to discuss the trail’s future and ways to increase visitation.

North Platte Weather-June 5

 

FileL

Today: Sunny, with a high near 87. West northwest wind 6 to 8 mph.

Tonight: Mostly clear, with a low around 59. West northwest wind around 5 mph becoming calm after midnight.

Tuesday: Sunny, with a high near 94. West wind 3 to 7 mph.

Tuesday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 61. West northwest wind around 6 mph becoming calm in the evening.

Wednesday: A 30 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms after 1pm. Mostly sunny, with a high near 88. East northeast wind 7 to 13 mph becoming south southeast in the afternoon.

Wednesday Night: Showers and thunderstorms likely, mainly before 1am. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 64. Chance of precipitation is 60%.

Thursday: A 50 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Partly sunny, with a high near 79.

Thursday Night: A chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 58.

Friday: A chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 72.

Friday Night: A chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 58.

Vernon D. Allen


allen

Vernon D. Allen, age 89, of North Platte, died June 6, 2015 at Great Plains Health. He was born on March 6, 1926 in Petersburg, NE to Theodore “Ted” and Edna (Paulsen) Allen.
Vernon graduated from Petersburg High School before entering the Army Air Corp in 1944. He served in North Africa, then to the European Theatres where he served as a photographer on B17’s and B29’s. After his discharge, Vernon returned to Petersburg where he married Bonnie Rogers on March 17, 1947 in Smith Center, KS. The couple moved to Omaha where Vernon attended the Universal Trade School where he studied refrigeration.
After the electricification of the rural areas, he worked as an electrician and in the refrigeration business. He later worked in the family grocery business, doing appliance repair work out of the back. He then opened Allen’s TV and Appliance in Petersburg.
In 1972, the family moved to North Platte where Vernon worked at Welty’s TV and Rrepair for several years before opening Allen’s TV and Appliance in North Platte. He and Bonnie continued to run the store until Bonnie passed away in 1989. Vernon married Gloria Egger in February 1990. They made their home in North Platte, but enjoyed going to Texas every winter.
Vernon was a member of the Episcopal Church of our Savior, the American Legion, the Sertoma Club, served on the Petersburg School Board, and was on the Board of Directors at the Paradise Park Retirement Community. He enjoyed camping and boating, traveling with his family, reading, and home remodeling.
Survivors include his 5 children, Terri (Stan) Timm of Omaha, Ken (Cheryl) Allen of Castle Rock, CO, Bob (Karen) Allen of North Platte, Randy Allen of North Platte, and Merri (John) Brownell of Omaha; 2 step-children, Tara (Bob) Lockman of Cheyenne, WY, and Rodd (Sally) Egger of Aurora, CO; 3 sisters, LaVonne Faust of Omaha, Sharlene Bogs of Dyer, Indiana, and Marcella (Russ) Sharples of Tempe, AZ; 14 grandchildren, Mike (Colleen) Timm, Mark (Megan) Timm, Matt (Katie) Timm, Kristin (Aaron) Shockey, John (Christina) Brownell, Eryn Brownell, Jill Brownell, Charlie (Serrita) Allen, Cody (Keri) Allen, Sonja (Kevin) Pearson, Amy Allen, Cammy (D.J.) Smith, Ken (Dawn) Allen, Matt (Diane) Allen ; 3 step grandchildren, Nick Lockman, Cortney Lockman, Alexandria Egger; and 37 great-grandchildren; a brother-in-law, Fred (Mary Ann) Fangman of Petersburg, NE; his faithful canine companion, Misty; and numerous other family members and friends. He was preceded in death by his parents; his wives, Bonnie and Gloria; 4 grandchildren, Theodore Joseph Allen, Jenna Rose Allen, David James Allen, and Scott Robert Allen.
A memorial has been established to the North Platte Senior Center, or to the Episcopal Church of Our Savior, and online condolences can be made at www.adamsswanson.com.
Services will be 11:00 a.m. today June 9, 2015 at the Episcopal Church of our Savior with the Rev. Dr. Jeffrey S.F. Nelson officiating. Burial will be at the Fort McPherson National Cemetery with full military honors. Adams & Swanson Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements

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