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Nebraska lawmakers advance ban on cellphones in prisons

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Prison visitors and inmates who are caught with cellphones inside a state prison could face a misdemeanor charge under a bill advanced by Nebraska lawmakers.

Lawmakers gave the measure first-round approval Wednesday as part of an omnibus prisons package.

The bill is designed to help state corrections officials, who confiscated more than 250 contraband phones last year. Nebraska corrections director Scott Frakes told a legislative committee in January that it’s a major problem in the state prisons.

A report last year from the Inspector General of the Nebraska Correctional System identified cellphones as a “significant safety concern” because inmates can use them to coordinate gang activity and communicate in secret with the outside world.

The measure advanced on a 40-0 vote.

Nebraska state budget headed to final vote in Legislature

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — A new two-year state budget is headed to a final vote in the Nebraska Legislature.

Lawmakers advanced the mainline budget Wednesday through the second of three required votes.

The $9.3 billion budget includes additional money for expanding Medicaid, K-12 schools, construction of new prison space and property tax credits.

The vote came one day after the budget bill stalled amid opposition from some conservative lawmakers who mounted a filibuster. The bill was placed back on Wednesday’s agenda and advanced on a 40-7 vote.

Nebraska man ID’d as victim of fatal shooting in New Mexico

MAGDALENA, N.M. (AP) — Authorities have released the name of a Nebraska man who was killed in New Mexico earlier this week.

New Mexico State Police say the victim was 30-year-old Stuart Gordon of Lincoln.

His name was released Wednesday after his relatives were notified of his death.

State Police say 39-year-old Jo Hill is jailed without bond on suspicion of an open count of murder.

The Magdalena Marshals Office was dispatched Monday afternoon to the High Country Lodge about a gunshot victim.

Gordon was pronounced dead at the scene and State Police was brought in to investigate.

They say Hill and Gordon got into a physical altercation in the parking lot of the lodge.

Hill then reportedly shot the victim.

It was unclear Wednesday if Hill has a lawyer yet.

Former Nebraska trooper gets probation for drug violations

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — A former Nebraska State Patrol investigator has been sentenced to two years’ probation for possession of drugs.

The federal prosecutor’s office for Nebraska said in a news release today that 46-year-old Christopher Kober was sentenced Wednesday after pleading guilty to a single count in a deal with prosecutors. As part of the deal, Kober must surrender his law enforcement certification, forego any appeal of his firing from the Nebraska State Patrol and not seek future employment in law enforcement.

Investigators say Kober was living in Bellevue when officers raided his home in March 2017, finding nearly 2,000 pills that included various opioids that Kober took from prescription medication collection events and overdose investigations from January 2016 until his arrest.

Kober was fired following an internal patrol investigation.

Fire crews respond to report of smoke at NPHS

North Platte Fire and Rescue crews responded to North Platte High School on Wednesday afternoon after smoke was reported in a hallway.

According to NPHS Principal Scott Siegel, at around 1:26 p.m., smoke was reported in the hallway that connects the Commons area to the Athletics Halls.

The smoke did not trigger the fire alarms at the school, but still prompted administrators to contact the North Platte Fire Department.

Firefighters arrived and determined that there was no danger to students or staff, and determined that the smoke was caused by an electric wire or electric motor.

Students and staff were placed “On Hold” and were not allowed to leave classrooms or the gym, while fire personnel investigated to identify any further risks.

The hold was lifted at around 1:52 p.m.

Six Knights garner post-season honors

Six North Platte Community College softball players have received post-season honors including sophomore Willow Chitty (North Platte) who was named Region IX Division II Offensive Player of the Year as well as being named to the All-Region IX team, the Region IX tournament team and the all Nebraska Community College Athletic Conference team.

Joining Chitty on the All Region 9 team were freshman Hallei Morales (North Platte) and freshman Megan Hernandez-Bellew (Broomfield, Colo.).

Chitty was named to the all-tournament team with sophomore Mikayla Gibson (West Valley, Utah) and sophomore Emily Marsden (Papilion).

All-NCCAC team members included Chitty, Gibson and sophomore Ashlynn Krueger (Littleton, Colo.)

In 45 games this season, Willow Chitty led all Region IX Division II hitters with a.575 batting average with seven homeruns and 48 RBIs. She was also first in at bats (153), runs (43), hits (88), doubles (18), total bases (131), on-base percentage (594) and slugging (.856). Her 88 hits this season were the second best in the nation among players from 131 Division II schools. Her batting average was third best in the nation and her on-base percentage fifth in the nation.

Mikayla Gibson led the region with 20 stolen bases and was third on the team in hitting with a .414 batting average in 45 games, with 12 doubles and 40 runs scored. She was second in the region in at bats (152), hits (63) doubles, runs, and second with 80 total bases.

Hallei Morales batted .393 this season with six home runs and 38 RBIs. She was ranked in the top five in the region in hits (53) home runs (6), RBIS, total bases (76), on-base percentage (.461) and was hit by a pitch nine times to lead all players in the region.

Emily Marsden batted .402 and in 159 plate appearances had 60 hits (third in the conference) eight doubles and three home runs. She batted .441 (second in the region) with 24 RBIs, had an on-base percentage of .503 (second in the region) and slugged .581. She appeared in 28 games as a pitcher, starting 12 with a 6-9 record and a 5.84 ERA in 92.1 innings. She struck out 68 hitters (second most in the region) with nine complete games, also second best in the region.

Megan Hernadez-Bellew batted .380 on the season with 12 RBIs and 15 stolen bases. She was the Region IX, Division II leader in both sacrifice flies (five) and sacrifice hits (16). She hit four doubles, two triples, and had 49 total bases.

Ashlynn Krueger a pitcher/infielder appeared in 28 games as a pitcher, and went 7-12 and led all Region IX, Division players with a 4.41 ERA. She threw 111 innings, and struck out 40 hitters. She was second in the region with seven wins and was in the top four among pitchers in the region in appearances (28), games started (17) complete games (7) and strikeouts. Offensively she batted .304 with 24 hits in 79 at bats.

Sale strikes out 17 in 7 innings, Rockies top Red Sox in 11

BOSTON (AP) — Chris Sale pleaded but did not push when manager Alex Cora told him his day was done.

Cora was not about to risk the health his ace left-hander, even after he struck out a career-high 17 over seven innings. Sale may have righted whatever went wrong during an 0-5 start, but Cora still went to the bullpen for the eighth, costing Sale the chance to chase the major league record of 20 strikeouts in a nine-inning game.

Even after the Rockies rallied to a 5-4 win in the 11th, Cora and Sale seemed comfortable saying the skipper made the right call.

“AC’s got two handshakes, and you get one or the other. And you know which one is the ‘done’ one,” said Sale, who threw 108 pitches. “I’d love to have gone back out there, but as I said, I’ll never question anything he does.”

Sale became the first pitcher in major league history to fan 17 in a start of no more than seven innings. Boston pitchers combined to strike out 24, but the Red Sox had their five-game winning streak come to an end.

Sale, who isn’t the most cheerful guy in the clubhouse even after a win, couldn’t help but smile a little after this one.

“I love this game and to be able to have a chance at doing something like that is special,” Sale said. “But at the same time, it’s still a close game. You’ve got a job to do and you just try to hold it down when you can.”

Mark Reynolds, whose fifth-inning double was the first runner allowed by Sale, drove in the go-ahead run with a two-out single in the 11th against Ryan Brasier (2-2).

“You never know what’s going to happen. So I think all of us who were here tonight witnessed two walks, 24 strikeouts, but a Rockie win,” Rockies manager Bud Black said. “We just stayed at it. Man, it was a hell of a game.”

Sale struck out the first six batters and fanned eight through three innings. He dominated the Rockies with a firm fastball and sharp slider, topping his previous best of 15 strikeouts, which he had done three times.

The All-Star lefty sported his signature short sleeves despite the 44-degree temperature at the start of the game and had a shutout through six innings.

Nolan Arenado’s two-run homer in the seventh was one of only three hits the Rockies managed against Sale.

“I had terrible timing with giving up the runs I did,” Sale said. “That was the one that got them back in this game and gave them a breath of fresh air.”

Sale stopped the damage with three straight strikeouts, placing him within range of the major league record shared by Roger Clemens, Kerry Wood, Randy Johnson and Max Scherzer.

“That was fun to watch. First time I’ve been in something like that, you know, watching the strikeouts and watching the pitch count,” Cora said. “We wanted him to go deep. He was amazing.”

Boston fans chanted “We want Sale!” after the bottom of the seventh, but his night was done. When Cora told him he was coming out, Sale used his fingers to form the number 20.

Cora didn’t bite and went to Brandon Workman, who allowed a double by Chris Iannetta and Charlie Blackmon’s two-run homer with two outs in the eighth to give Colorado its first lead at 4-3.

Sale’s 17 strikeouts were the most for a Red Sox pitcher since Pedro Martinez fanned 17 against Tampa Bay on May 6, 2000.

Mike Dunn (1-0) got the win with one inning of scoreless relief and Wade Davis got his seventh save.

Michael Chavis, J.D. Martinez and Rafael Devers homered for Boston.

Boston made it 4-all in the eighth on a pinch-hit single by Mitch Moreland.

Chavis led off the second with his seventh homer, a 451-foot shot to left that survived a video review ordered by crew chief Larry Vanover. Martinez and Devers added solo homers in the third to put Boston up 3-0.

Kyle Freeland got the start for Colorado on his 26th birthday and went six innings, allowing three runs on five hits, striking out seven and walking three.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Rockies: LHP Tyler Anderson (left knee inflammation) saw a specialist Monday and will consult with team doctors about potential surgery, Black said. “I think a decision on some surgery is in the works here probably within the next couple days,” Black said. … Colorado recalled 3B Pat Valaika from Triple-A Albuquerque and optioned 2B Garrett Hampson to the Isotopes.

Red Sox: 2B Dustin Pedroia (left knee) remained in limbo after a rehab assignment was postponed over the weekend. Cora said Pedroia and the Red Sox are being careful not to rush the 35-year-old’s return. “He’ll go out there and then take grounders and move around and we’ll decide what we do next,” Cora said. … LHP David Price (left elbow tendinitis) will likely throw another bullpen session Wednesday and could return to the rotation Saturday against Houston, Cora said.

UP NEXT

Rockies: RHP German Marquez (4-2, 3.43 ERA) has struck out 59 through 57 2/3 innings this season.

Red Sox: LHP Eduardo Rodriguez (4-2, 4.53) has won two straight starts and three of his last four.

Auburn vs. Oregon kicks off ABC’s Saturday Night Football

Auburn against Oregon on Aug. 31 at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas, will be the first ABC Saturday Night Football game this season.

ESPN announced Wednesday the first three games of the 14th season of Saturday Night Football. LSU at Texas on Sept. 7 will be the Saturday Night Football game in Week 2. Defending national champion Clemson at Syracuse on Sept. 14 will fill that spot in Week 3.

The start time for Saturday Night Football has been moved up 30 minutes this season to 7:30 p.m. ET.

The network also announced ABC will televise four conference championship games, starting with the Pac-12 on Friday, Dec. 6, at 8 p.m. ET. The following day ABC will air title games for the American Athletic Conference, Atlantic Coast Conference and Big 12.

Nebraska’s tax collections beat expectations in April

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — A new report says Nebraska state government collected far more in taxes than expected last month.The Department of Revenue said Wednesday that net tax collection in April totaled $660 million, which is 15.1% above the certified forecast of $573 million.

The department says net sales and use, individual income, corporate income and miscellaneous taxes were all higher than expected.

Nebraska has collected about $3.93 billion in the current fiscal year, which ends June 30. That’s 2.6% above the state’s certified forecast.

The forecasts are set by the Nebraska Economic Forecasting Advisory Board. State officials had predicted April’s tax collections would be higher because of many taxpayers filing their income tax returns.

Business incentive bill draws criticism from some lawmakers

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — A bill that would replace Nebraska’s largest tax incentive for businesses is drawing criticism from some lawmakers, but the sponsor says he has enough support to bring it to a vote.

Lawmakers passed over the measure without voting on it Wednesday after three hours of debate, but Sen. Mark Kolterman, of Seward, says he expects it back on the agenda next week.

The proposed “ImagiNE Nebraska Act” would replace the Nebraska Advantage Act, a state tax incentive program that’s set to expire in 2020. Kolterman says the new proposal offers greater accountability than the current program and will do a better job of ensuring that tax credits go to companies that offer high-wage jobs.

Some senators say the measure will crowd out money that should go toward lowering property taxes.

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