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Nebraska woman pleads not guilty in death of infant daughter

Jocelyn Nordin
Jocelyn Nordin

ORD, Neb. (AP) — A North Loup woman charged in the death of her 4-week-old baby has pleaded not guilty.

24-year-old Jocelyn Nordin entered the plea Tuesday at a hearing in Valley County District Court. She is charged with intentional child abuse resulting in death.

Prosecutors say Nordin called 911 on May 2 and reported that her baby wasn’t breathing. The baby eventually was flown to an Omaha hospital, where she died on May 9.

Doctors say the infant had suffered a broken skull and other injuries. Authorities say the baby had been dropped on her head twice and violently shaken.

Body of man found along Platte River still not identified

A body found near the Minden interchange has numerous tattoos, including this dragonfly skeleton on his shoulder.  Police are asking the public for help in identifying the body.
A body found near the Minden interchange has numerous tattoos, including this dragonfly skeleton on his shoulder. Police are asking the public for help in identifying the body.

KEARNEY, Neb. (AP) — Officials are still trying to identify the remains of a man found along the Platte River earlier this month, but law enforcement authorities have theorized that he was traveling laborer or transient.

The body found June 10 was clothed a camouflage jacket and pants and hiking boots. He also had several tattoos, including a black and red scorpion on the inside of a forearm and a dark-colored shark surrounded by light blue water on another forearm.

Authorities have not ruled out foul play. An autopsy and DNA analysis were ordered.

Canoeists paddling on the Platte River discovered the body in a channel in some brush.

Chadron man sentenced for production of child pornography

Jesse Lucio
Jesse Lucio

United States Attorney Deborah R. Gilg announced that Jesse Lucio, 39, formerly of Chadron, Nebraska, was sentenced today in Lincoln, Nebraska, to 19 years in prison by United States Senior District Judge Richard G. Kopf, for the production of child pornography.  Following his release from prison, Lucio will serve 10 years on supervised release and be required to register as a sex offender.

In September of 2015 the Chadron Police Department was informed of a possible sexual assault involving Lucio and a minor female victim.   The reporting party indicated to law enforcement that there was a video of Lucio and the minor female victim engaging in sexually explicit conduct on a tablet computer located at Lucio’s home.  The reporting party stated that she knew the age of the minor female victim and that she also saw Lucio in the video.  The tablet was later examined by law enforcement officials, including a forensic examination conducted by the FBI, and 2 videos were recovered on the tablet computer, both videos having been produced on September 12, 2015, in Chadron Nebraska, and depicting Lucio and the minor victim engaged in sexually explicit conduct as defined by federal law.

Lucio was interviewed by the Chadron Police Department and admitted to having sexual contact with the minor female victim and recording the sexually explicit conduct on the tablet computer.

This case was brought as part of Project Safe Childhood, a nationwide initiative to combat the growing epidemic of child sexual exploitation and abuse launched in May 2006 by the Department of Justice. Led by United States Attorneys’ Offices and the Criminal Division’s Child Exploitation and Obscenity Section (CEOS), Project Safe Childhood marshals federal, state and local resources to better locate, apprehend and prosecute individuals who exploit children via the Internet, as well as to identify and rescue victims. For more information about Project Safe Childhood, please visitwww.projectsafechildhood.gov.

This case was investigated by the Chadron Police Department and the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

Nebraska judge rejects death penalty ballot language lawsuit

judgeshipLINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — A judge has struck down a lawsuit alleging that a ballot question to reinstate capital punishment in Nebraska is unfairly slanted in favor of death penalty supporters.

Lancaster County District Court Judge Lori Maret rejected arguments by death penalty opponents in a ruling issued Tuesday.

The ballot language submitted by Attorney General Doug Peterson informs voters that retaining the repeal law would eliminate capital punishment and change the “maximum” penalty for first-degree murder to life in prison.

Death penalty opponents contend the word “maximum” is misleading because it incorrectly implies that first-degree murder convicts could face a lesser sentence than life in prison.

Maret noted in the ruling that the ballot wording is consistent with the language lawmakers used in the legislation that abolished capital punishment.

Union Pacific touts safety of fastening system

Union-PacificA spokesman for Union Pacific Railroad says the company’s rail fastening system has an outstanding safety history.

Spokesman Justin Jacobs’ statement was in response to the Federal Railroad Administration’s preliminary report on a June 3 fiery oil train derailment in the town of Mosier, Oregon. The report blamed Union Pacific for not properly maintaining its tracks and missing problems with bolts that fasten the rail ties to the rails.

Jacobs says the company will replace all the lag bolts with rail spikes, which will make problems easier to detect on inspections.

He also says an upgraded braking system called for by the Federal Railroad Administration wouldn’t have made a difference in the severity of the derailment.

Game and Parks identifies woman injured in Bridgeport tubing accident

Nebraska_game_and_parksLINCOLN – A 21-year-old Virginia woman is hospitalized in stable condition following a June 22 boating accident at Bridgeport State Recreation Area (SRA).

Hailie Knight, of Virginia Beach, Virginia, was one of two occupants on a tube being pulled on the SRA’s center lake by a personal watercraft. The tube struck a tree, resulting in the victim’s severe injuries. The second occupant was treated for minor cuts and bruises. Alcohol does not appear to be a factor in this incident.

Knight was transported to Morrill County Community Hospital in Bridgeport. She was stabilized before being airlifted to Regional West Medical Center in Scottsbluff, where she underwent surgery.

The victim’s husband, Joshua Knight, 21, was the operator of the personal watercraft, which was the only vessel on the lake at the time of the accident.

The accident was called into Bridgeport Communications at 1:10 p.m. The Nebraska Game and Parks Commission, Nebraska State Patrol and Morrill County Sheriff’s Office are investigating.

This boating accident is the fifth reported to Nebraska Game and Parks this year. Typically, at least 10 accidents are reported by mid-June.

Herb Angell, Nebraska’s boating law administrator, said: “We want boaters to be safe and have fun. The top five contributing factors to boating accidents are; excessive speed, lack of experience by the operator, not paying attention, not maintaining a proper lookout and machinery failure.”

Angell said people new to boating should consider taking a boating safety course. Nebraska law requires all motorboat operators born after Dec. 31, 1985, to take a boating safety course. Available classes are listed at BoatSafeNebraska.org.

He added that boaters also should be vigilant about maintaining their vessel by making sure that items such as life jackets, noise-making devices (horns and whistles), fire extinguishers and other carriage requirements are kept up to date.

Marines: Identities of Iwo Jima flag raisers were mistaken

Joe Rosenthal VINTAGE WWII Iwo Jima Flag Raising Pulizter Prize RARE Press Photo (www.antiquesnavigator.com)
Joe Rosenthal VINTAGE WWII Iwo Jima Flag Raising Pulizter Prize RARE Press Photo (www.antiquesnavigator.com)

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — The Marine Corps says one of the six men long identified in an iconic World War II photograph showing the raising of the American flag at Iwo Jima was actually not in the image.

The Marines announced Thursday that an investigation launched after questions were raised by two amateur historians determined that a previously unknown Marine was in the picture shot by Associated Press photographer Joe Rosenthal during a horrific battle on the tiny island.

A panel found that Private First Class Harold Schultz, of Detroit, was in the photo and that Navy Pharmacist’s Mate 2nd Class John Bradley wasn’t in the image. Bradley had participated in an earlier flag-raising on Mount Suribachi.

The Marines began a review after being contacted by researchers working on a Smithsonian Channel documentary.

Nebraska Sen. Jim Scheer of Norfolk to run for speaker

Sen. Jim Scheer
Sen. Jim Scheer

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — A state senator from Norfolk has announced his candidacy to become the Nebraska Legislature’s next speaker.

Sen. Jim Scheer is looking to replace Speaker Galen Hadley of Kearney, who won’t return to office next year because of term limits. Scheer said in a statement Thursday he’s proud of what lawmakers accomplished during his four years in the Legislature, and he sees opportunity to build on successes and learn from mistakes.

Scheer, a Republican, says he won’t let lobbyists or lawmakers from either party bully or pressure him. He says he would ensure that all bills receive fair treatment and that the legislative process is transparent.

If elected, Scheer would be the second speaker from Norfolk in recent history. Former Sen. Mike Flood served as speaker from 2007 to 2013.

Nebraska boy pulled residential lake has died, officials say

douglas-county-sheriffWATERLOO, Neb. (AP) — Douglas County authorities say a 3-year-old Waterloo boy has died after being pulled from under a dock at a housing development lake last weekend.

The Douglas County Sheriff’s Office said in a news release Thursday that Aspen Seemann was taken to Children’s Hospital & Medical Center in Omaha shortly after he was taken from the water Saturday at West Shores Lake. A deputy who’d been dispatched around 3 p.m. saw the boy was lying on the beach and that resuscitation efforts were underway.

The 203-acre lake and surrounding development are situated about a mile southwest of Waterloo.

The news release didn’t say when Aspen died. A Sheriff’s Office spokesman didn’t immediately return a call from The Associated Press. An autopsy is scheduled for Friday.

The incident is being investigated.

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