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Appeals Court won’t move murder trial to juvenile court

OGALLALA, Neb. (AP) — The Nebraska Appeals Court says a 16-year-old boy should be tried in adult court on a murder charge in western Nebraska.

In a ruling released Tuesday the court agreed with a Keith County judge that the boy’s case shouldn’t be moved to juvenile court as he’d requested. The Associated Press generally doesn’t name juveniles accused of crimes.

Prosecutors say the boy was 15 when he stabbed to death 25-year-old John Fratis in Ogallala on March 28, 2017. He’s pleaded not guilty to second-degree murder.

His attorney, Maren Chaloupka, said Tuesday that she and her client will be discussing whether to appeal the decision to the state Supreme Court.

Omaha man sentenced in 2017 shooting death outside school

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — A 51-year-old Omaha man has been sentenced to up to 40 years in prison for the May 2017 shooting death of a 21-year-old man during a robbery outside a north Omaha middle school.

Milton Felder was sentenced Tuesday to 36 to 40 years after earlier pleading no contest to manslaughter and a weapons count in the May 2017 shooting of Brandon White.

Prosecutors say Felder and three teens had planned to rob White and another man during a marijuana deal when the shooting happened outside McMillan Middle School.

Another adult, 19-year-old Allana Smith, has also pleaded no contest to manslaughter and a weapons count. Two other teens charged as adults have pleaded no contest to lesser felonies. All three await sentencing.

Mining firm says project won’t dump water in Missouri River

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — The firm working to build a mine in southeast Nebraska to extract a rare heat-resistant element says the project won’t need to dump saltwater in the Missouri River.

NioCorp Developments said Tuesday the proposed niobium mine near Elk Creek won’t need an expensive water line to the river, and the project won’t need two federal permits.

The change is possible because NioCorp recently determined that the proposed mine will produce significantly less bedrock water.

NioCorp CEO Mark Smith says this change will reduce the environmental impact of the proposed mine.

The U.S. currently imports nearly all the niobium that’s used in this country to harden steel and make it more heat-resistant for industrial uses.

NioCorp is based in Centennial, Colorado.

Lawsuit seeks to keep Medicaid proposal off Nebraska ballot

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Opponents of a measure to expand Medicaid coverage in Nebraska have filed a lawsuit to try to keep the issue from appearing on the November general-election ballot.

The lawsuit was filed Tuesday on behalf of state Sen. Lydia Brasch, of Bancroft, and former state Sen. Mark Christensen, of Imperial. Both are Republicans who have opposed Medicaid expansion bills in the Legislature.

The lawsuit argues that the petition violates Nebraska’s Constitution as well as a law that dictates how state money can be spent.

The petition drive’s campaign manager, Meg Mandy, says the lawsuit is “clearly a desperate attempt to block the people’s ability to voice their opinion on this issue and ensure affordable health care for 90,000 Nebraskans.”

Lawsuit: Nebraska mental hospital violated state rules

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — A psychiatrist at Nebraska’s state psychiatric hospital is alleging that the state violated rules and regulations in diagnosing and treating mentally ill patients.

Dr. Farid Karimi of Lincoln Regional Center is suing the Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services and two former supervisors, Stacey Werth-Sweeney and Dr. Roger Donovick.

Karimi alleges that he reported procedural and medical violations several months after he started working at the center in February 2016. The lawsuit states that Werth-Sweeney and Donovick didn’t take any action to correct violations and instead retaliated against Karimi. The two employees left him out of meetings, made false accusations against him and negated his orders, according to the lawsuit.

Department of Health and Human Services spokeswoman Julie Naughton declined to comment on pending litigation, which is being handled by the Nebraska Attorney General’s office.

Werth-Sweeney, formerly the center’s chief operating officer, was fired in June and Donovick, the psychiatric director, left the center last year. Werth-Sweeney said Karimi has a troubling resume and history of service at the center. She said she expects “the evidence to disclose serious, persistent problems with Dr. Karimi’s practice, including his attendance at work and patient records.”

Patients may be sent to the facility by court order or by local mental health boards. The lawsuit lists alleged violations such as changing patient orders, following outdated policies, denying patient visitation rights and moving patients against court orders. Karimi also alleges that the facility failed to use passive restraints on patients who needed to be on highly restrictive status, which resulted in repeated assaults on staff.

Karimi seeks unspecified damages and the removal of all disciplinary actions from his record. He claims that the defendants damaged his reputation in the community and workplace.

MetLife intends hiring more than 150 for future Omaha office

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Insurer MetLife says it intends to hire more than 150 people for its future Omaha customer service center.

New York-based MetLife said Tuesday that it expects the center to open in downtown Omaha by the end of the year. The global financial services company provides insurance, annuities, employee benefits and asset management.

A unit of MetLife earlier this year said it would move its legal domicile to Nebraska. Insurance experts say companies can save money in Nebraska because of the state’s relatively low tax rate on insurance premiums.

The state requires companies moving their domiciles to Nebraska to maintain operating offices here, carrying out functions such as claims processing or customer relations services.

Police say 72-year-old died after altercation in Hastings

HASTINGS, Neb. (AP) — Authorities say a 72-year-old man died after a physical altercation in Hastings.

Station KSNB reports that officers were sent to help an unresponsive man around 1 p.m. Tuesday. They and medics tried to revive him, but he died later at a Hastings hospital.

The man’s name hasn’t been released.

Police say officers arrested a 57-year-old man on suspicion of assault by mutual consent. Online court records don’t show that he’s been formally charged.

Woman suspected of arson in Beatrice fire that injured man

BEATRICE, Neb. (AP) — Authorities suspect a woman set a fire that damaged an apartment building in southeast Nebraska and injured a man.

Police arrested the woman Tuesday as firefighters put out the blaze at the brick, six-unit building that sits just east of the Gage County Courthouse in Beatrice.

The injured man was taken to Beatrice Community Hospital and then transferred to a Lincoln hospital. His name hasn’t been released.

The woman was arrested on suspicion of arson. Online court records don’t yet show that she’s been formally charged.

John L. Sullivan

John L. Sullivan, 86, of rural Wallace, died July 6, 2018, at Linden Court in North Platte.

He was born on Aug. 19, 1931, south of Wallace, to Ed and Genevieve (Priest) Sullivan. He went to grade school in rural Hayes County and graduated from St. Patrick High School in North Platte. John was a lifelong member of St. Mary’s Catholic Church in Wallace, where he married Donna Johnson in 1950. They lived and actively farmed on the family farm (on a third generation and now a fifth generation farm) since marriage.

John was a volunteer fireman, a director of Farmer’s State Bank of Wallace and a member of the North Platte Catholic Schools Endowment fund. He formed Sullivan Equipment Inc. in the 1950s, building customized fire trucks and equipment for departments from southeast to northwest Nebraska. In the 1960s, the company converted to the ag chemical and fertilizer business and helped introduce liquid fertilizer use and eco-fallow methods in southwest Nebraska. Throughout his life, John supported agriculture by serving as president of Nebraska-Wyoming Wheat Growers; director and chairman of the Nebraska Wheat Board in Lincoln; founding member and board member of the Gasohol Board, which became the Ethanol Board in Lincoln; board member of Great Plains Wheat in Garden City, Kansas; founding member of National Association of Wheat Growers in Washington, D.C.; and secretary-treasurer of Western Wheat Associates in Portland, Oregon. John L. Sullivan was a key member who helped combine Great Plains Wheat and Western Wheat in to what is now U.S. Wheat Associates, the organization that promotes wheat all over the world. These positions gave him the opportunity to travel worldwide promoting Nebraska wheat and all U.S. agriculture.

He was preceded in death by his parents; and a sister-in-law, Mary Alyce Sullivan.

John is survived by Donna, his loving wife of 68 years; children, Cynthia (Robert) Wusk of Colorado Springs, Colorado, Larry (Pam) Sullivan of Deadwood, South Dakota, Joyce (Steve) Tarris of Tucson, Arizona, Mike (Terri) Sullivan of Wallace and Doug (Michelle) Sullivan of Wallace; 16 grandchildren; 27 great-grandchildren; a brother, Bill Sullivan; and a sister-in-law, Altha Nielsen.

Due to allergies, the family requests no flowers. A memorial has been established.

Services will be at 10 a.m. on Tuesday, July 10, at St. Mary’s Catholic Church, Wallace, with Father Tom Bush officiating. Burial will be at the Wallace Morning View Cemetery. Rosary will be at 7 p.m. on Monday, July 9, at St. Mary’s Catholic Church, Wallace. Bullock-Long Funeral Home, Grant, is in charge of arrangements.

Karen Lee Newman Rood

Karen Lee Newman Rood, 76, died June 30, 2018, at Premier Estates Assisted Living in North Platte, surrounded by her family and Angels on Earth.

She was born on Jan. 6, 1942, at Moorehouse Hospital in Benkelman in Dundy County to Alvin Purl Newman and Ruth Rose Bunning Newman. She was the oldest of three children. At the age of 3½, the family moved to the mountains near Jackson Hole, Wyoming, where she enjoyed riding horses, hunting rattlesnakes with her brother and playing. Some of her fondest memories of this period of her life were being driven to school by team and wagon, watching her dad ride in rodeos and attending Sunday services at a little log church with picnics to follow at Yellowstone National Park. At the age of 10, the family returned to McCook, and it was here that she attended junior high and high school.

In 1957, she met and married Robert Duane Wyman and to this union five children were born. They lived in the south central Nebraska area until the children grew, and in 1976, they divorced.

For most of her adult life, she worked in the medical field caring for others. In 1991, she graduated from Mid-Plains Community College with her licensed practical nursing degree and enjoyed being a caregiver until the age of 72. If everyone who Karen touched reached out to the person on either side, the circle would be big enough to go around the world.

In 1991, she moved to Broken Bow. She met and married Richard Rood in 1997, and they divorced in 1999. In 2014, she moved to North Platte to be closer to family due to failing health.

She was preceded in death by her husband, Richard Rood of Broken Bow; her father, Alvin Purl Newman of Funk; her mother, Ruth Rose (Bunning) of Broken Bow; a special mother, Velma Marie Newman of Commerce City, Colorado; a brother, James Alvin Newman of Stamford; a sister, Rita Jean Looney of Atlanta; a sister-in-law, Karen Rae Newman of Stamford; a brother-in-law, Kirk Looney of Atlanta; daughters-in-law, Donna Wyman of Lexington and Phyllis Wyman of Whitewater, Kansas; and a granddaughter, Angie Schade of Kearney.

She is survived by three sons, Craig Wyman of Gothenburg; Randy Wyman of Whitewater, Kansas, and Todd Wyman of Coeur D’Alene, Idaho; two daughters, Nancy (Roger) Robinson of North Platte and Cindy Burg of Lincoln; 11 grandchildren; many great-grandchildren; sisters, Velva (Les) Hall of Broomfield, Colorado, Carolyn Webb of Livingston, Texas, and Carol (Darrell) Goodner of Broken Bow; brothers, Timothy Parker of Albion, David Parker of North Platte and Steve Parker of Lincoln; and many nieces, nephews and friends.

Online condolences may be shared at carpentermemorial.com.

Services will be at 10 a.m. on Saturday, July 7, at Carpenter Memorial Chapel with Chaplain Richard Karr officiating. Burial will be at 1:30 p.m. on Saturday at the Benkelman Cemetery. Visitation will be from 6-8 p.m. on Friday, July 6, at Carpenter Memorial Chapel, which is in charge of arrangements.

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