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Prosecutors: Remove Attorneys for Man Charged in 4 Omaha Killings

Anthony Garcia
Anthony Garcia

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Prosecutors are seeking to remove defense lawyers representing a former doctor accused of killing four people with ties to an Omaha medical school.

Douglas County Attorney Don Kleine filed a motion Wednesday against attorneys for Anthony Garcia, who is charged with first-degree murder. He’s asking the court to prohibit Chicago attorneys Alison Motta, Robert Motta Sr., and Robert Motta Jr., from practicing law during their time in Nebraska.

Kleine claims Alison Motta violated a court order when she told reporters DNA evidence exonerated her client. Kleine says those statements are false.

Garcia is charged in the 2008 deaths of Thomas Hunter, the son of Creighton University pathologist William Hunter, and Shirlee Sherman, the family’s housekeeper. He’s also charged in the 2013 deaths of Creighton pathologist Roger Brumback and his wife.

Governor Ricketts Signs Small Business Equal-Pay Proposal

workforceLINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Gov. Pete Ricketts has signed a bill that would extend Nebraska’s equal-pay law to businesses with two or more employees.

The measure approved Wednesday replaces the previous law which only applied to employers with 15 or more workers. The law prohibits wage discrimination based on sex.

The measure is a combination of proposals from the Business and Labor Committee and Sens. Heath Mello and Tanya Cook, who are both from Omaha.

Opponents questioned whether employers still pay women less than men in 2016. Several senators responded that women continue to be paid less than men.

Social Media Protections for Workers Advance in Nebraska Legislature

Sen. Tyson Larson
Sen. Tyson Larson

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Nebraska lawmakers have advanced new safeguards to keep employers from demanding access to their workers’ social media accounts.

Senators gave the bill first-round approval on Wednesday with a 40-1 vote.

The measure by Sen. Tyson Larson of O’Neill would prohibit employers from requiring or requesting an employee’s user names or passwords to personal Internet accounts. They also could not coerce employees to change their personal Internet account settings or retaliate against workers who refuse to disclose their personal information.

Lawmakers rejected an amendment by Sen. Ernie Chambers that would have prohibited discrimination based on sexual orientation or gender identity. Chambers called the proposal a “do-nothing” bill, saying it doesn’t address a real problem, but senators eventually reached a compromise.

Ricketts Approves Nebraska Bill to Expand State Hazing Ban

ne-legislature-13LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Gov. Pete Ricketts has signed a bill that will extend Nebraska’s ban on hazing to high school, middle school and elementary school students.

The measure approved Wednesday also adds new forms of harassment and sexual assault to the legal definition of hazing. State law previously imposed a ban on hazing by college students.

Sen. Dan Hughes of Venango has said he introduced the bill in response to a hazing incident involving the Cambridge High School wrestling team in his district. The students were punished, but authorities say Nebraska’s law didn’t allow them to pursue charges.

The law defines hazing as a misdemeanor punishable by up to six months in jail and a $1,000 fine.

Nebraska Gov. Ricketts Approves New State Budget Package

Pete Ricketts
Pete Ricketts

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Nebraska Gov. Pete Ricketts has approved a new state budget with no line-item vetoes.

Ricketts says he signed the $8.7 billion package Wednesday despite some misgivings.

He says he took issue with funding increases for priorities that he doesn’t consider an emergency, such as $1 million for community colleges. He also opposes using state money for a scholarship program just because it lost federal funding.

Despite his concerns, Ricketts says he signed the budget in the spirit of compromise with lawmakers who crafted the budget. He says the budget holds state spending growth at 3.5 percent, less than the historic average.

The package will allow new construction on levee systems surrounding Offutt Air Force Base and provide $1.5 million for pay increases at the short-staffed Department of Correctional Services.

Zoos, Feds Ask Court to Dismiss Elephant Importation Lawsuit

henry-doorly-zooWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Federal wildlife officials and three U.S. zoos want a judge to drop a lawsuit against the recent importation of African elephants.

In a motion to dismiss the case, the zoos said legal concerns about the permit process were irrelevant because the 17 elephants were flown from Swaziland earlier this month. The zoos are in Wichita, Kansas; Dallas; and Omaha, Nebraska.

Friends of Animals sued in February to stop the importation, alleging the government violated the law by approving the importation. The animal rights group hasn’t dropped the suit, saying it needs to prevent future importations.

The Connecticut-based nonprofit, along with other conservationists and animal-rights supporters, says it opposed the importation to the three U.S. zoos because elephants are highly intelligent, migratory animals.

University of Nebraska Aims to Raise 4-Year Graduation Rate

uofngraduationLINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — The University of Nebraska has launched a campaign dedicated to improving the four-year graduation rate at the state’s public university.

University President Hank Bounds visited Lincoln High School on Tuesday to promote the “Commit to Complete” campaign. The program pairs students with advisers to help them graduate on time by planning a course load of 30 credit hours per year.

Bounds said only about 30 percent of the state’s college students are completing degrees and entering the workforce within four years.

Bounds told the high school students that finishing college in four years could cut as much as 20 percent of student loan debt. He added that paying tuition for a fifth year also cuts into a year of potential wage earning.

Nebraska Man Gets Probation for Helping to Fake Robbery

gavel-and-scaleOMAHA, Neb. (AP) — A northeast Nebraska man has been given three years of probation for helping to fake a robbery.

29-year-old Steven Schulze was sentenced Tuesday in U.S. District Court in Omaha. He was convicted of helping Michael Bamberry pretend to hold up the Pony Express convenience store in Rosalie. The store’s owned by the Winnebago Tribe.

Investigators say Bamberry used a toy gun to menace Schulze, who was a clerk at the store. Schulze gave Bamberry $907 from the register.

Bamberry is scheduled to be sentenced Thursday.

Rising City Faces Uncertain Times as School Readies to Close

rising-city-neRISING CITY, Neb. (AP) — As Rising City’s only middle school prepares to close, residents of the rural Nebraska village are worried about their community’s future.

It’s difficult to predict whether any of the village’s 365 residents will relocate after the middle school of approximately 90 students closes at the end of the 2016-2017 academic year.

Rising City merged with Shelby five years ago to create Shelby-Rising City Public Schools. The district consolidation shifted elementary and high school students from Rising City to Shelby, which is about 7 miles west. Then in 2015, voters approved a nearly $15 million bond issue to expand the school in Shelby and create a single site for the district.

The community hasn’t decided what to do with the outdated building after the school closes.

Judge Bars Companies from Leaving Hospital Service Contracts

judgeshipGERING, Neb. (AP) — A judge has barred two companies from ending their dialysis services agreement with Regional West Medical Center in Scottsbluff.

Renal Treatment Center and DaVita Healthcare Partners have a five-year contract with the hospital. The two have told the hospital that the agreement provisions had made it financially untenable, so they intended to withdraw from the contract Wednesday unless it was modified.

The hospital sued, saying a contract breach would harm patient care, forcing patients to get treatment in Colorado. Regional West also said a suggested reduction of service hours was unacceptable.

On Tuesday a district judge granted the hospital’s request for a temporary restraining order that will run until 1 p.m. April 8, giving both sides time to set a hearing on the hospital’s request for a temporary injunction.

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