Linda Reiner, age 58 of North Platte, passed away Sunday April 21, 2019 at Great Plains Health. Funeral arrangements are pending at Adams and Swanson Funeral Home at 421 West 4th Street in North Platte.
Month: April 2019
Louise Cullinan
Louise Cullinan, age 78 of North Platte, passed away Sunday April 21, 2019 at Great Plains Health. Funeral arrangements are pending at Adams and Swanson Funeral Home, 421 West 4th Street in North Platte.
Allegedly drugged driver arrested following pursuit near Kearney
Troopers with the Nebraska State Patrol arrested a California man following a pursuit on Interstate 80 early Saturday morning.
At approximately 12:40 a.m. a trooper observed a Ford Mustang traveling at just 4 miles per hour on I-80 near Kearney at mile marker 269. As the trooper attempted to perform a traffic stop, the Mustang showed no response and continued driving slowly. Moments later, the vehicle accelerated to approximately 70 miles per hour. The trooper initiated a pursuit.
The Mustang began driving recklessly, passed vehicles on the shoulder, and reached speeds up to 147 miles per hour. Near mile marker 285, the vehicle came to a stop voluntarily. As troopers approached the vehicle, the driver accelerated rapidly. Troopers continued the pursuit.
A few minutes later, additional troopers were able to successfully deploy spike strips and bring the Mustang to a stop near Wood River at mile marker 302. The driver, Jonathan Suckow, 37, of Lomita, California, was arrested for driving under the influence of drugs, willful reckless driving, and felony flight to avoid arrest. Suckow was lodged in Hall County Jail.
The entire pursuit lasted approximately 22 minutes.
Troopers find 368 LBs of marijuana during I-80 traffic stop
(LINCOLN, NEB.) – Troopers with the Nebraska State Patrol (NSP) found 368 pounds of marijuana and arrested an Indiana man during a traffic stop on I-80 near Goehner on Saturday.
At approximately 11:50 a.m. Saturday, April 20, a trooper observed an eastbound Dodge Ram failing to stay in its lane. During the traffic stop, the trooper detected the odor of marijuana coming from the pickup.
Troopers searched the vehicle and found 16 large trash bags containing marijuana in the cargo area. The total weight of the marijuana was 368 pounds.
The driver, Bradley Wooten, 37, of Carmel, Indiana, was arrested for possession of marijuana – more than one pound, possession with intent to deliver, and no drug tax stamp. Wooten was lodged in Seward County Jail.
Police: 6-year-old died after being struck by vehicle
BELLEVUE, Neb. (AP) – Police say a 6-year-old girl was fatally struck by a sport utility vehicle in Bellevue.
The accident was reported a little before 8 p.m. Sunday. Police say Aubrey Oregon was hit when a friend of her family was moving a sport utility vehicle from a driveway into the street. The man driving, 59-year-old Dale Valverde, told police he didn’t know the SUV had struck Aubrey. She was pronounced dead at Nebraska Medical Center.
No arrest or citations have been reported.
2 dead after vulture strikes motorcycle head on in Kansas
BARBER COUNTY, Kan. —Two people died in an accident just after 3p.m. Saturday in Barber County.
The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2015 Harley Davidson motorcycle driven by Brandon Husband, 42, Fowler, was southbound on East River Road thirteen miles northwest of Medicine Lodge.
A vulture came out of the north ditch and struck the driver in the head. The vehicle traveled off the road into the north ditch, struck a barbed wire fence and overturned.
Husband was pronounced dead at the scene and transported to Larison Funeral Home. A passenger Jennifer Husband, 43, of Fowler, was transported to Wesley Medical Center where she died. They were not wearing helmets, according to the KHP.
Barber County is in south-central Kansas.
*Information for this story came from Hays Post*
Energy plant suspending production to make repairs

Big Ox Energy spokesman Kevin Bradley told the Sioux City Journal that it won’t be accepting truckloads of organic waste from customers and will wind down operations until early next month.
Bradley says the extent of damage and necessary repairs will determine how long production will be halted. Bradley say the damage has occurred since Big Ox began operations in September 2016.
Earlier this month Nebraska officials cited Big Ox for failing to control emissions. Inspectors had noticed gas leaking from a damaged anaerobic digester structure. The plant has been under scrutiny since neighbors complained about the plant’s odor.
Man gets 24-25 years for fatal collision while driving drunk
NORFOLK, Neb. (AP) — A man has been imprisoned for driving drunk and causing the crash death of an 82-year-old woman in northeast Nebraska.
Madison County District Court records say 36-year-old Jose Valdez was sentenced Friday to 24 to 25 years. He’d pleaded guilty to vehicular homicide with a prior conviction for drunken driving.
Police say Valdez was driving home from a Christmas party in Norfolk on Dec. 8, 2017, when he didn’t yield at an intersection and collided with a vehicle being driven by 82-year-old Geneva Sinkbeil. She died later at an Omaha hospital.
Police say Valdez’s blood alcohol level that night was nearly three times the legal limit.
Nebraska lawmakers soon will take on budget, tax changes
LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — With the legislative session more than two-thirds over, Nebraska lawmakers are getting ready to confront some of the biggest issues they’ll face this year, including the state budget, a contentious property tax plan and a longshot attempt to repeal the death penalty.
All the proposals are set for debate in the full Legislature between now and the session’s final scheduled day on June 6.
Here’s a breakdown of things to watch:
___
PROPERTY TAXES
Many state lawmakers campaigned on promises to lower property taxes, but they have yet to agree on how to do it.
The latest plan from the tax-focused Revenue Committee seeks to ease the burden on property owners by raising the state sales tax from 5.5% to 6.25%, eliminating sales tax exemptions and boosting state funding to K-12 schools. Nebraska’s cigarette tax would jump from 64 cents to $1 per pack.
The extra revenue would then be used to lower school property taxes by an average of 20 percent — a major savings for farmers, ranchers and homeowners. It’s already proven controversial, with Gov. Pete Ricketts strongly opposed and “alarmed that senators are even considering this.”
Supporters of the plan say it could easily change but argue that senators need a plan that will offset sharp increases in property tax bills over the past several years. Ricketts’ proposal to slow the growth of local government tax collections doesn’t appear to have enough support to pass in the Legislature.
“We can sit here and stare at the problem, or we can actually try to fix the problem before we have a crisis,” said Sen. Lou Ann Linehan, of Omaha, the committee’s chairwoman.
___
THE BUDGET
Lawmakers will soon consider a new state spending plan, which is now being crafted by the Appropriations Committee. The $9.4 billion budget includes extra money for property tax credits, K-12 schools and a voter-approved initiative to expand Medicaid.
Still uncertain is how lawmakers will balance the budget with other priorities, such as tweaking the state’s tax incentives for businesses.
“These next few weeks will be a heavy lift for all of us,” said Sen. John Stinner, of Gering, the committee’s chairman.
Stinner said he expects a lot of debate over how much money the state should keep in its cash reserve. It’s designed for emergencies and one-time expenses, and lawmakers have drawn from it heavily the last few years to balance the budget and pay for road projects.
The budget outlook could also change on Thursday when the Nebraska Economic Forecasting Advisory Board meets to update its estimates of how much tax revenue the state will collect.
The debate may be less contentious than last year, however, because lawmakers will no longer have an argument over how to spend federal family-planning dollars. The money has traditionally gone to the state but was awarded to a private organization this year. That decision came after Ricketts inserted requirements into the budget that effectively prevented any of the money from going to Planned Parenthood of the Heartland.
___
DEATH PENALTY
Three years after voters overturned the Legislature’s 2015 vote to abolish the death penalty, lawmakers will tackle the issue once again.
Sen. Ernie Chambers, of Omaha, a longtime opponent of capital punishment, has introduced a repeal bill that’s slated for floor debate this week. The Judiciary Committee advanced the measure last month on a 5-2 vote.
It’s unlikely to pass, however, because the Legislature’s membership has changed since 2015 and a larger number of senators now support capital punishment. Several Republican lawmakers who voted for the repeal in 2015 were targeted by Ricketts in the 2016 election and lost their seats.
Ricketts was instrumental in last year’s execution of Carey Dean Moore, the state’s first inmate to die by lethal injection. The Republican governor helped finance a ballot drive to restore capital punishment, and once it was back in place, his administration changed Nebraska’s lethal injection protocol to overcome challenges in purchasing the necessary drugs.
Before Moore’s execution, Nebraska last carried out a death sentence in 1997, using the electric chair.
Chambers opposes the death penalty on grounds that it diminishes the value of human life, amounts to cruel and unusual punishment and is disproportionately imposed on minorities. He argues that a life-and-death issue such as capital punishment shouldn’t be left to the whims of voters.
___
MEDICAL MARIJUANA
Lawmakers have yet to debate a proposal to legalize medical marijuana, despite the looming threat of a statewide ballot initiative that could usher in one of the nation’s least restrictive programs.
The bill is still in committee, but supporters say they’re trying to find a compromise that will build support for the proposal.
Even so, it’s unlikely to pass in a Legislature that has traditionally rejected medical marijuana programs. A petition drive is already underway to put the issue on the November 2020 general election ballot.
Nebraska Cattlemen offering disaster aid
LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — The Nebraska Cattlemen is offering financial aid to cattle producers affected by the bomb cyclone storm that struck the state last month.
The group says applicants must have operations in counties or tribal areas falling under emergency or disaster declarations made by the Nebraska governor or the Nebraska Emergency Management Agency. Applicants must demonstrate genuine need and that their assets aren’t adequate to rebuild from the damage suffered.
Membership in Nebraska Cattlemen is not required for the help.
The applications must be postmarked by May 31 and mailed to 4611 Cattle Drive, Lincoln, NE 68521 or emailed to disasterrelief@necattlemen.org.