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Four local men charged with drug offenses

Nine men were arrested in a major drug bust Thursday, following an investigation by several law enforcement agencies including the North Platte Police Deptartment, Nebraska State Patrol,FBI,various Sheriff’s Departments and The Department of Homeland Security

Authorities said they seized Cocaine and Meth along with other drugs. More local arrests are anticipated

Arrested were:

Jared J. Rosencrants – 21- North Platte
Anthony J. Leverington – 25 – North Platte
Aaron L. Vieyra, 31, of North Platte
Andrew C. Lujan – 30 – North Platte
Peter T. Bailey – 24 – North Platte
Scott R. Sundstrom – 38 – North Platte
Bradley L. Peterson – 21 – Ogalalla
Billy A. Morrison – 19 – Lincoln
Ricky L. Garcia -40 – Lincoln

“Lucky Dog” found safe after Oklahoma Tornado

Disaster and devastation have dominated this week’s headlines after the killer storms. Here’s a story with a happy ending.

The Wood family of Piedmont, Oklahoma took shelter in a “safe room” on Tuesday afternoon as a tornado ripped apart their three-story home, but they weren’t able to round up their family pet, a boxer named Roxie.

After the storm passed, the Woods found their home in shambles and Roxie missing.

But a day later, they got some good news — and oil rig worker nearly two miles away had found Roxie in a field. The dog somehow managed to survive the storm with just a scratch on her front leg, much to the delight of eight-year-old Paisley Wood.

JOPLIN Tornado: Some unaccounted for people turn up alive and well

JOPLIN, Mo. (AP) — As emergency workers in Joplin searched Thursday for more than 230 people listed as missing after a tornado tore through the city, one was sitting on a wooden chair outside the wreckage of her home, cuddling her cat.

Sally Adams, 75, said neighbors rescued her Sunday after the storm destroyed her house and took her to a friend’s home. When The Associated Press told her she was on the missing list, Adams laughed and said “Get me off of there!”

Missouri officials had said they believed many of the missing were alive and safe but simply hadn’t been in touch with friends and family, in part because cell phone service has been spotty. The AP found that was the case with at least a dozen of the 232 still unaccounted for Thursday. They included two survivors staying at a hotel, six that a relative said were staying with friends and one that a former employee said had been moved from his nursing home.

Stephen Whitehead, of the Red Cross’ Safe and Well registry, which keeps track of the accounted-for, said that since the missing list came out earlier Thursday, he has learned that at least nine are people who are dead. Whitehead said he did not know whether those nine were among the known fatalities.

Adams said she lost her cell phone in the storm and had no way of contacting her family to let them know she was OK. She was placed on the missing list after relatives called a hot line and posted Facebook messages saying she was missing.

Her son, Bill Adams, said he told authorities his mother was alive after he learned she was safe, yet she remained on their unaccounted-for list Thursday afternoon.

Mike O’Connell, spokesman for the Missouri Department of Public Safety, said he wouldn’t call Adams’ listing a mistake and finding her is “a good thing.” He urged other survivors to check the list and call if they see their names.

The AP found Mike and Betty Salzer at a hotel being used by visiting journalists.

“Well, for Heaven’s sakes,” Betty Salzer, 74, said when the AP showed her the list.

The couple have been staying at the hotel since their home was destroyed Sunday. Betty Salzer said their names might have come from a Facebook message her daughter posted before they reached her Monday morning.

Not all of the stories of the missing will end so well.

Joplin City Manager Mark Rohr announced Thursday that the death toll had risen to 126.

Some of their families waited Thursday for their remains to be released. One victim’s funeral was scheduled for Friday morning in Galena, Kan., and other services were scheduled for the weekend.

But some of the bodies have yet to be identified. Andrea Spillars, deputy director and general counsel of the Missouri Department of Public Safety, said officials know some of the people unaccounted for are dead, but she wouldn’t say how many or when the names of the deceased would be released.

Chris Haddock, 23, said his father was one of the deceased on the missing list. A commercial truck driver found 62-year-old Paul Haddock’s body in his pickup truck behind a flattened Walmart.

“They found his wallet and his cell phone in his pocket,” Chris Haddock said. “That’s how they know it’s him.”

In another example of potential overlap, 12 residents of the Greenbriar nursing home are on the missing list. But nursing home administrators reported earlier that 11 people died in the tornado; only one was known missing.

One of the 12 is Dorothy Hartman, an Alzheimer’s patient. Pamela McBroom, 49, who lives near the nursing home, said one of her daughters used to work there, developed a soft spot for Hartman and introduced them. Hartman was frail “but very positive and full of life,” she said.

McBroom said she and her 16-year-old daughter were hiding in a closet when the tornado tore their walls and roof away. Her walls gone, McBroom could see the mayhem at Greenbriar.

“I could see people flying out of the nursing home by my house,” McBroom said. “I could hear them screaming. Just screaming. It was horrible.”

Nursing home officials haven’t said whether Hartman was one of the 11 killed.

Identification of the deceased has been slow because officials have taken extra precautions since a woman misidentified one victim as her son in the chaotic hours after the tornado hit, Newton County coroner Mark Bridges said.

“That’s the reason why we didn’t release anybody else until we at least had dental records,” Bridges said.

A federal forensics team of 50 to 75 disaster mortuary specialists has been at work in six refrigerated trucks, collecting DNA samples for testing, taking fingerprints and looking for tattoos, body piercings, moles and other distinctive marks. Bridges expected as many as 19 bodies would be released Thursday.

He said he’s been explaining the reason for the delays to grieving families “all day long.”

“It breaks my heart,” he said.

 

By NOMAAN MERCHANT and JIM SALTER
Associated Press

Photo Credit Charlie Riedel

Bike and Hike Fridays

With the weather getting warmer, North Platte residents are encouraged to walk or  ride their bike to work, or on an errand. It’s an idea that can save you money on gas and get you active with exercise.

Have you participated in Bike and Hike Friday yet this  year?

North Platte Prepares for Flooding : VIDEO

Video of the current flooding situation in North Platte.

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) – North Platte is preparing for record flooding even as most snowmelt from Wyoming has yet to swell the North Platte River.

Lincoln County emergency manager Jim Nitz says the city is has surpassed record flood stage but the real problems could start with heavy mountain runoff.

University of Nebraska-Lincoln climatologist Al Dutcher says if the weather over the Rockies stays cool, snow will melt slowly and lessen the risk of flooding. But, he says, if there are warmer temperatures over the Rockies or heavy rain in the river basin it will be hard for reservoirs in Wyoming and Nebraska to hold all the runoff.

Reservoirs have been releasing water to make room and avoid heavy flooding when the snow starts melting. That’s contributing to high water in North Platte.

JOPLIN: Rising From The Ruins

JOPLIN, Mo. (AP) – Less than a week after a tornado wiped a big chunk of Joplin off the map, the city is beginning to shift its focus toward the next challenge: rising from the ruins.     And the town that gained fame as a stop along Route 66 can use the road maps drawn by other storm-savaged communities that have endured the same long journey.     Not far from Joplin, tiny Pierce City and Stockton rebuilt piece by piece after tornadoes in 2004 reduced much of them to rubble. Greensburg, Kan., did the same, starting over after a 2007 twister leveled the town.     Those towns didn’t face the same scale of death and decimationas Joplin, and their rebirths took years of hard work. But they offer hope that comebacks are possible.

47 Year Old Crete Man Convicted on Child Porn Charges

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) – A 47-year-old Crete man has been given six years in prison for possessing child pornography.     The U.S. attorney’s office in Omaha said in a news release that Jay Stinson had pleaded guilty on March 1. He was sentenced on Wednesday. Stinson must also serve five years of supervised release after he leaves prison.   Court documents say Stinson received child pornography between October 2008 and June 2010, at which time he was also in possession of  sexually explicit material. His computers contained more than 1,000 digital images and videos containing child pornography.

Convict flees justice.. Busted 8 years later

COLUMBUS, Neb. (AP) – A man who fled Columbus eight years ago before sentencing on a drunken-driving charge and prosecution for an assault has been given 18 months for those crimes.     Court records say 51-year-old David Bowerman was given a year for the 2002 DUI and 180 days for the 2003 assault. Bowerman had been convicted of the DUI before fleeing Nebraska. Since his capture last month, he pleaded no contest to the assault.     Bowerman was captured after he got off a train in Holdrege, having traveled from California to help his son move.     A Holdrege officer helped Bowerman at the station on April 15. The officer checked Bowerman with a national crime clearing house and learned that Bowerman was sought in Platte and Dodge counties.

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