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Police ID store clerk shot by robber in Omaha

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Authorities have identified a convenience store clerk shot by a robber shot in Omaha.

Police say 50-year-old Thomas Foster was shot around 3:30 a.m. Wednesday on the southeast side of the city during a robbery.

Police say the robber walked in and demanded cash. Police say Foster took some from the register, but the robber grew angry when Foster couldn’t open the store’s safe. The robber then took money from the register and fired once as he left the store.

Police say the bullet hit one of Foster’s forearms and hips. He’s expected to survive.

No arrest has been reported. Omaha Crimestoppers is offering a $10,000 reward for a tip leading to the arrest of the suspect.

Attorneys seek to spare ex-doctor from death for 4 slayings

By MARGERY A. BECK, Associated Press

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Attorneys for a former doctor convicted of killing four people connected to an Omaha medical school began the effort Wednesday to spare him from the death penalty — even as he refused to help in his own defense.

Anthony Garcia appeared disheveled, with a heavy beard and unkempt hair, when he was wheeled into a Douglas County courtroom in a wheelchair. He appeared to sleep throughout the hearing and refused to engage in conversation with his attorneys, who presented hundreds of documents and interviews collected over years intended to show that he was mentally ill at the time of the killings.

Garcia’s lawyers hoped to present any mitigating factors — such as impaired mental capacity — that might save him from execution. Much of the evidence Garcia’s lawyers presented Wednesday sought to show Garcia as an alcoholic who suffered depression since childhood and mental illness that caused him to have invasive thoughts of hurting people.

Garcia, 45, of Terre Haute, Indiana, was convicted of fatally stabbing 11-year-old Thomas Hunter, son of Creighton University School of Medicine faculty member Dr. William Hunter, and the family’s housekeeper, 57-year-old Shirlee Sherman, in 2008 at the family’s home in an upscale Omaha neighborhood.

Garcia also was found guilty of two other killings in a separate incident five years later, the 2013 Mother’s Day deaths of another Creighton pathology doctor, Roger Brumback, and his wife, Mary, in their Omaha home.

Prosecutors say Garcia blamed Hunter and Brumback for his 2001 firing from Creighton’s pathology residency program.

His lead attorney, Jeff Pickens with the Nebraska Commission on Public Advocacy, on Wednesday, painted the medical residency programs to which Garcia was accepted — including the Creighton program where Garcia worked for about a year — as “poor programs” that accepted Garcia simply to fill open positions.

“There’s a cruelty built into this case in that Mr. Garcia was set up to fail,” Pickens said.

Garcia’s parents attended the hearing, but Pickens said he did not plan to have them testify on Garcia’s behalf.

The jurors who convicted Garcia found evidence of several aggravating circumstances that could lead to his execution. A three-judge panel in Omaha will determine whether he will be sentenced to death or to life in prison. The sentence is not expected to be announced for at least a month.

Nebraska has not executed an inmate since 1997 when the state’s method of execution was the electric chair. The state has since adopted a lethal injection protocol that has been fraught with controversy, legal challenges, and difficulty in obtaining some of the drugs used to carry out lethal injection.

Twelve people are on Nebraska’s death row.

NCAA D1 Council makes huge change to Redshirt rules

Indianapolis, In – The College Football landscape just was changed with a stroke of the pen on June 13.

From NCAA.com:

College athletes competing in Division I football can participate in up to four games in a season without using a season of competition, the Division I Council decided this week at its meeting in Indianapolis.

Division I student-athletes have five years to compete in up to four seasons of competition. The new exception allows football players to preserve a season of competition if, for example, injuries or other factors result in them competing in a small number of games.

Council chair Blake James, athletics director at Miami (Florida), said the rule change benefits student-athletes and coaches alike.

“This change promotes not only fairness for college athletes, but also their health and well-being. Redshirt football student-athletes are more likely to remain engaged with the team, and starters will be less likely to feel pressure to play through injuries,” James said. “Coaches will appreciate the additional flexibility and ability to give younger players an opportunity to participate in limited competition.”

The proposal was tabled in April over questions about timing, the number of games and potential application to other sports. To mitigate one concern, the Council adopted noncontroversial legislation to specify that midyear enrollees who participate in postseason football competition that occurs before or during the student-athlete’s first term at a school cannot use the exception.

Several representatives of different governance groups reiterated concerns that caused the proposal to be tabled in April. The Division I Student-Athlete Experience Committee will examine how a similar concept could be applied to other sports, including what number of games would be appropriate. In its review, the committee will consult with the Division I Student-Athlete Advisory Committee.

Both the Football Bowl Subdivision and Football Championship Subdivision representatives on the Council adopted both rules. They are effective for the 2018-19 football season.

Basically giving football players a safety blanket.

Text-to-911 now available in NP, Lincoln County

The North Platte 911 Center is now equipped to receive text messages.  However, calling 911 is the most efficient way to reach emergency help.

Text-to-911 could be helpful if you are deaf, hard of hearing, or have a speech disability.  It could also be beneficial in those rare situations where making a voice call to 911 might otherwise be dangerous or impossible.

Voice calls allow the 911 operator to more quickly ask questions and obtain information from the caller, while two-way communication by text can take more time and is subject to limits on the length of text messages.  When you make a voice call to 911, the call taker will typically receive your phone number and the approximate location of your phone automatically.  This is not the case with text-to-911.

Testing has shown that location information is very unreliable.  If you text the 911 Center, you will need to provide an accurate location to the call taker.  In general, you must have a text-capable wireless phone and a wireless service subscription or contract with a wireless phone company to use the service.  You can make a voice call to 911 using a wireless phone that does not have a service plan, but you cannot send a text message to 911 without a service contract that includes texting.

Not all cellphone providers support text-to-911 and it is not available in some 911 centers in our region.  If you attempt to text 911 and it’s not supported, you will receive a message advising you that you must make a voice call to 911.

Officials say if you are able to safely make a voice call, that is always the preferred method for contacting emergency personnel.

Authorities: ATV flipped over on driver when bull rammed it

CRAWFORD, Neb. (AP) — Authorities say a man was injured when his all-terrain vehicle flipped over atop him when it was rammed by a bull in northwest Nebraska.

The incident occurred a little before 9:30 a.m. Monday in a pasture near Crawford. The Dawes County Sheriff’s Office says the bull struck the ATV from behind.

The driver was identified as 56-year-old Barry Stewart. He was reported in good condition after being taken to a Scottsbluff hospital.

Wounded Columbus officer released from hospital

COLUMBUS, Neb. (AP) — A Columbus police officer wounded during a gunbattle has left an Omaha hospital.

Sgt. Brad Wangler was released Monday from Nebraska Medical Center.

He was shot Thursday evening after he and another officer arrived at a Columbus home to serve a Hall County arrest warrant. But police officials say the suspect met him with a handgun and fired. The two exchanged several shots. Police say Wangler was hit twice, and 24-year-old Jorge Robledo was hit five or six times. Court records also list his first name as Jorje.

Police Capt. Todd Thalken told the Columbus Telegram that the ordeal has been trying for the 19-year-veteran of the force and his family.

Robledo remains in the hospital.

Prosecutors: Video shows 2 buying tools used to cut up woman

By MARGERY A. BECK, Associated Press
OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — A Nebraska woman who went missing in November was still alive when the duo accused of killing her was caught on store surveillance video buying the tools that police think they used to dismember her, prosecutors allege in newly unsealed court documents.
Aubrey Trail, 51, and Bailey Boswell, 23, appeared in Saline County Court on Tuesday to face charges of first-degree murder and the improper disposal of human skeletal remains in the killing of 24-year-old Sydney Loofe, of Lincoln. Trail is representing himself. The Nebraska Commission on Public Advocacy, which is representing Boswell, declined to comment Tuesday.
Since he and Boswell were arrested weeks after Loofe’s disappearance, Trail has told several news outlets that her death was accidental, though he didn’t elaborate. In the unsealed arrest affidavit, though, investigators said Trail and Boswell were captured on video at a Home Depot in Lincoln on Nov. 15 buying tools used to dismember Loofe, hours before Loofe’s death and while she was still at work.
Authorities say Loofe met Boswell through the Tinder dating app and that they went on a date Nov. 14 and planned a second one for the following night. Loofe’s mother reported her missing on Nov. 16, and her dismembered body was found in December stuffed into garbage bags that had been dumped in a field near Edgar, about 90 miles (145 kilometers) southwest of Lincoln.
In the newly unsealed documents, prosecutors allege that Trail told investigators he strangled Sydney Loofe with an extension cord. Investigators believe Boswell, who lived with Trail in Wilber, helped Trail dismember Loofe and get rid of her remains.
Trail and Boswell were quickly named as people of interest in the case and were arrested in late November in Branson, Missouri, on unrelated fraud charges. They have been held in the Saline County jail since then, though the charges in Loofe’s death weren’t announced until Monday.
Authorities haven’t suggested a motive for the killing. The Nebraska Attorney General’s office, which is prosecuting the case, said it is considering seeking the death penalty.
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Follow Margery A. Beck on Twitter: https://twitter.com/ Margery3

Weather service confirms 5 Nebraska tornadoes, 1 in Iowa

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — The National Weather Service has confirmed that five tornadoes touched down in eastern Nebraska and one in western Iowa but caused little damage.

Each spotted during Monday’s powerful thunderstorms Monday caused no injuries, only minor damage and was rated EF-0, with winds from 65 through 85 mph.

Three were in areas around Louisville and Murray. One touched down near Elk Creek and one near Table Rock, and the sixth was spotted west of Thurman in Iowa.

Nebraska woman gets new trial date for Iowa murder trial

SIOUX CITY, Iowa (AP) — A trial has been rescheduled for a Nebraska resident accused of stabbing to death a woman in northwest Iowa.

Court records show the attorney for 20-year-old Melissa Camargo-Flores, of Dakota City, Nebraska, wanted more time to prepare her defense. The new trial starting date set Tuesday is Sept. 18 in Woodbury County District Court. The former date was July 10.

Camargo-Flores is charged with first-degree murder in the Sioux City slaying of 24-year-old Kenia Alvarez-Flores on April 8. Court documents say Camargo-Flores admitted stabbing Alvarez-Flores and told investigators she’d been involved in a relationship with the victim’s boyfriend.

Authorities say the two women were not related.

Robber shoots convenience store clerk in Omaha

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Authorities say a robber shot a convenience store clerk in Omaha.

The robbery occurred around 3:30 a.m. Wednesday on the southeast side of the city.

Police say the robber walked in and demanded cash. The clerk took some from the register. The robber took it and then fired once as he left the store.

Police say the bullet struck one of the clerk’s forearms and hips. He’s expected to survive his wounds.

No arrest has been reported.

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