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Western Iowa Authorities Investigate Dog Poisonings

Pottawattamie-County-SherifCOUNCIL BLUFFS, Iowa (AP) — Authorities are investigating the latest of what residents in one western Iowa neighborhood believe is a series of dog poisonings dating back years.

Several dogs have died mysteriously along Rosebud Lane just outside Council Bluffs in the last six years.

The latest being investigated by the Pottawattamie County Sheriff’s Office is that of a golden retriever puppy belonging to the father of Tara Campbell of Council Bluffs. A trip to Campbell’s eastern Nebraska veterinarian after it became six Tuesday showed the dog had anti-freeze crystals in its urine. The dog later died.

Sheriff’s investigators are testing refried beans found in the yard where the puppy had been tethered.

Campbell says she has had two other dogs die suddenly in the last six years.

Lawsuit Claiming Unlawful Detention of Nebraska Man Dismissed

dept.-of-justiceOMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Three years after it was filed, a lawsuit filed by a Papillion man who says he was unlawfully detained and wrongly treated as an illegal immigrant has been dismissed against Sarpy County.

U.S. District Judge Joseph Bataillon dismissed the lawsuit against the Sarpy County sheriff, jail staff and a federal immigration agent on Thursday. The American Civil Liberties Union of Nebraska had sued on behalf of Ramon Mendoza in 2013.

Bataillon said the lawsuit failed to show Mendoza’s constitutional rights were violated.

Mendoza was jailed in March 2010 after he was pulled over by a sheriff’s deputy for a traffic infraction.

Mendoza is a naturalized U.S. citizen from Mexico, but was held for days on suspicion of being in the country illegally.

Numbers Show Sandhill Crane Migration Ahead of Schedule

sandhill-craneOVERTON, Neb. (AP) — New numbers show the sandhill crane spring migration through central Nebraska is well ahead of schedule this year.

The latest aerial count taken Monday of sandhill cranes along the Platte River from Chapman to Overton showed 213,600 cranes. Crane Trust vice president Brice Krohn says that’s the largest number recorded in February since weekly crane inventories during migration season began in 1998.

The most sandhill cranes previously recorded in the area during February was 30,000 in February 2005.

Experts are crediting warmer-than-normal weather.

The average daily temperature in February in Grand Island was nearly 7 degrees above the 30-year average.

The sandhill crane migration generally runs from mid-February through mid-April, when more than 500,000 sandhill cranes pass through the Platte River basin.

Lincoln County Marriage Licenses (Week of February 29, 2016)

marriage-licenses

  • Kile Blake Schilke, 27, Imperial NE and Kalli Jo Mann, 32, Imperial NE

 

  • Frankie Seanz, 51, North Platte NE and Elizabeth Salazar, 41, North Platte NE

 

  • Justin Curt Arnold, 32, North Platte NE and Kisha Marie Morland, 34, North Platte NE

 

  • William Charles La Rue, 53, North Platte NE and Sharon Lee Wagner, 57, North Platte NE

 

  • Jerry Bryan Owen, 43, North Platte NE and Jessica Diane Petrackis, 30, North Platte NE

Death Penalty Drug Provider Refusing to Refund Nebraska

sodium-thiopentalLINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — The man who agreed to sell lethal injection drugs to Nebraska is refusing to return a payment for one of the drugs, saying the state’s failure to import them wasn’t his fault.

Records released Friday show Nebraska corrections director Scott Frakes asked Harris Pharma to repay $26,700 for sodium thiopental that was never delivered. Frakes alleges in a January letter that the drug supplier violated its contract.

Harris Pharma CEO Chris Harris says in a Jan. 28 letter that his company tried shipping the drugs and is still willing to do so. But he says he was told the shipment was on hold until the state could renew its federal import license.

Gov. Pete Ricketts has halted efforts to import the drugs until voters decide whether to keep capital punishment.

Roger Wendell Holsten

ROGER

Roger Wendell Holsten, age 88, of North Platte, NE, died Wednesday, March 2, 2016, at Great Plains Health in North Platte.

Roger was born June 16, 1927, at Norman, NE, to Swan August and Violet Esther Estergaard Holsten and in later years gained a stepfather, Arthur Bramble. He grew up and attended school in Hastings, NE and Cambridge, NE then joined the U.S. Navy. Roger served in active duty from 1944 to 1946 and was in the Navy Reserves until 1951.

Roger owned a bar in Cambridge for a short time before he started his career as a drywall contractor. By the early 1950’s, Gene’s Drywall was started by Roger, his brother, Stanley, and Gene Wolf, and they worked in Omaha, Denver and North Platte. During this time Roger also invented a drywall taping gun which he patent and later sold. It was and still is used by many drywallers.

On September 23, 1955, Roger married Barbara Ann Cox in Omaha. They lived in Omaha for 6 years before moving to Denver for a year then settling in North Platte. They were married for over 42 years when Barbara passed away in 1997.

Roger enjoyed playing pool and Bingo and getting hugs from anyone. He also liked his special treatment from the Assisted Living gals at Premier Estates. Roger was a great husband, dad, grandpa and uncle, he was loved by all.

He is survived by his children, Michael Holsten (Phyllis Smith) and Kimberly Whitson, of North Platte and Bobette Morris (Bill Johnson), of Panama City, FL; three grandchildren, Leah (Roger) Stroud, Chase (Jenna) Whitson and Joey Smith; four great-grandchildren, Gage, Daejah, Kenna and Aidan; his sister, Marjorie Troubaugh, of North Platte; brother, Stanley (Helen) Holsten, of Grand Island, NE; and several nieces, nephews and other family.

Along with is wife, Barbara, Roger was preceded in death by their daughter, Sherri Holsten; his parents, Swan Holsten and Violet Holsten Bramble; stepfather, Arthur Bramble; and son-in-law, Woody Whitson.

Cremation was chosen. Graveside Memorial Service with military honors will be 2 p.m. Friday, April 8, 2016, in Fort McPherson National Cemetery. The memorial book may be signed at odeanchapel.com or from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Thursday, April 7th at Odean Colonial Chapel at C & Sycamore which is in charge of arrangements. Memorials are suggested to Premier Estates Assisted Living.

Mistrial Ruled in Omaha Case That Sparked Melee

judgeshipOMAHA, Neb. (AP) — A mistrial has been declared in an Omaha slaying case that sparked a courthouse brawl.

A judge made the ruling on Friday morning in the trial of Charles Trotter, who’s charged with murder in the shooting deaths of Dexter Joseph and Marcel Lovejoy in an apartment on Jan. 3, 2015. A new trial is scheduled to begin June 13.

The fight Wednesday involved family and friends of Trotter, Joseph and Lovejoy. The judge subsequently sequestered the jury, and security was increased.

On Thursday a witness who’d been in the apartment when Joseph and Lovejoy were shot replied “I don’t remember” to several questions about what happened. He gave the same reply when a prosecutor asked whether he’d been threatened not to testify completely.

Nebraska Reaches Settlement in SNAP Benefits Lawsuit

lawsuit-settlementLINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — A Nebraska state agency has reached a settlement in a lawsuit alleging that it failed to process Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program benefits in a timely manner.

The Department of Health and Human Services says it has improved processing times as part of the settlement announced Friday.

The class-action lawsuit was filed by the groups Nebraska Appleseed and the National Center for Law and Economic Justice. Federal law requires states to process SNAP benefits in a timely manner to ensure that low-income people can buy food.

Department spokesman Russ Reno says his agency has taken several steps to speed up services, such as sending out renewal notices earlier and making sure paperwork is ready to be processed when workers arrive each day.

Teen Died in Rollover Crash, Cedar County Authorities Say

fatal-accidentRANDOLPH, Neb. (AP) — Authorities say a 16-year-old girl has died after a rollover crash in northeast Nebraska.

The accident occurred around 1:30 a.m. Friday about a half-mile southeast of Randolph. The Cedar County Sheriff’s Office says Emily Bloomquist, who lived in Randolph, was ejected when her car went out of control. She was pronounced dead at the scene.

She was a junior and an athlete at Randolph High School.

Man Imprisoned for Trying to Rob Rural Martell Resident

Bryan Reiber
Bryan Reiber
LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — A 30-year-old man who tried to rob a rural Martell resident at gunpoint on Christmas Day has been given 14 to 24 years in prison.

Bryan Reiber, of Lincoln, was sentenced Thursday. He’d pleaded no contest to attempted robbery, possession of a firearm by a prohibited person and possession of a deadly weapon by a prohibited person for three separate incidents.

At the time of the attempted robbery on Christmas Day, he was out of jail on bond on gun charges from December 2014 and January 2015.

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