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Bill seeks to address violence against Native America women

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Nebraska could take new steps to address violence against Native American women if two state lawmakers have their way.

Sens. Patty Pansing Brooks of Lincoln and Tom Brewer of Gordon announced plans Wednesday to introduce a bill in next year’s session.

The proposal would require the Nebraska State Patrol to join forces with Indian tribes, the U.S. Justice Department and the Nebraska Commission on Indian Affairs to examine the problem and brainstorm solutions.

The bill was partly inspired by the unsolved 2016 murder of Sherry Wounded Foot, who was found unconscious behind an abandoned building in Whiteclay, near South Dakota’s Pine Ridge Indian Reservation.

Activists plan to visit Whiteclay on Saturday, the one-year anniversary of a Nebraska Supreme Court’s ruling that prevented the town’s maligned beer stores from reopening.

Officials warn of exposure to rabid bat at Omaha school

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Health officials in Omaha are notifying parents that some students at a city middle school may have been exposed to a rabid bat was found on school grounds.

The Douglas County Health Department said Wednesday that the bat was found on the ground at Morton Middle School on Friday afternoon. The bat was sent to a state lab and tested positive for the infectious disease.

A small group of students at the school were seen around the bat, and officials are urging anyone who had any physical contact with the bat to contact their doctor as soon as possible.

Rabies is a viral disease transmitted through the bite or scratch of an infected animal that affects people. It is almost always fatal if not treated before symptoms appear.

Prosecutors: Man admitted sexually assaulting, killing woman

Jeremiah Connelly
OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Prosecutors say a 39-year-old ex-convict accused of abducting and killing a 22-year-old woman told police he sexually assaulted the victim in his van before strangling her.

The Omaha World-Herald reports that Jeremiah Connelly was in court Wednesday when he was ordered held without bail on charges of first-degree murder and tampering with evidence in the killing of 22-year-old Jeanna Wilcoxen.

Deputy Douglas County Attorney Molly Keane said in court that Connelly told police that he spotted Wilcoxen in an Omaha park and forced her into his van because he was angry that she had cancelled an earlier meeting with him.

Wilcoxen’s death occurred about six weeks after Connelly had been released from prison, where he served a term for attempted kidnapping, robbery and other crimes.

Authorities release name of apartment fire victim

PLATTSMOUTH, Neb. (AP) — Authorities have released the name of a woman killed in a fire at a senior living apartment complex in eastern Nebraska.

The Nebraska State Fire Marshal Agency identified the woman Monday as 63-year-old Paulla Redding-Weeks. Preliminary autopsy results show she died of smoke inhalation.

The fire was reported around 9 p.m. Saturday at the South Park Apartments in Plattsmouth. Authorities say Redding-Weeks was pronounced dead at the scene, and several other residents were treated for smoke inhalation.

Several of the occupants used walkers or wheelchairs as they fled to safety.

The agency says investigators have determined that smoking materials caused the fire.

19-year-old charged with motorcyclist’s crash death

COLUMBUS, Neb. (AP) — A 19-year-old driver has been charged with vehicular homicide in the crash death of a motorcyclist in Platte County.

Court records say Daisy Gonzalez, of Madison, is due in court Wednesday for arraignment. The records don’t list the name of an attorney who could comment for her.

Platte County Sheriff’s Lt. Kevin Schuller said in an arrest warrant affidavit that the accident occurred Aug. 2 at the intersection of Nebraska Highway 91 and 490th Street. Schuller says Gonzalez was eastbound on 490th when she stopped at the intersection. He says she saw the oncoming motorcyclist on the highway but misjudged the distance and pulled into the intersection. Her minivan collided with the motorcycle driven by 22-year-old Joshua Gasper.

He died days later of his injuries. He lived in Columbus.

United Way to kick off campaign with chili cook-off

Mid-Plains United will be kicking off its 2018-19 Campaign announced Tom Willnerd, Mid-Plains United Way Board President.  This is the twenty-fourth year that First National Bank will help us kick off our campaign with a Chili Cook-Off, said Willnerd. This is one of only two fundraisers that we hold to support 15 area non-profit organizations that serve North Platte and the surrounding areas.

Local business will be cooking up their favorite chili recipes to share with the community.  There will be voting tickets for everyone to vote for best chili and best-decorated booth.  The team with the best chili will get an award and bragging rights.   You will receive four voting tickets and try as much chili as you would like for only $6, additional voting tickets can be purchased.  We would like to invite the public to join us on October 5th from 11:30-1:30vPM at the Platte River Mall.

All proceeds will benefit the Mid-Plains United Way.

Nebraska patrol releases name of pedestrian killed on I-80

GREENWOOD, Neb. (AP) — Authorities have released the name of a man who was fatally struck by a vehicle after he walked into a traffic lane on Interstate 80 between Lincoln and Omaha.
The Nebraska State Patrol identified him Monday as 46-year-old Inocente Perez-Sanchez, who lived in Schuyler.

The Cass County Sheriff’s Office says the driver of the vehicle that hit Perez-Sanchez called 911 around 2:30 a.m. Sunday to report what happened just east of the Greenwood interchange.

College system trustees to interview 4 chancellor finalists

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — The Nebraska State College System trustees intend this coming Sunday and Monday to interview the four finalists to be the next system chancellor.

Chancellor Stan Carpenter is retiring after 18 years of service to the system, which has campuses in Chadron, Peru and Wayne.

Among the four is state Sen. John Kuehn, a veterinarian who represents District 38 in the Legislature. He teaches biology at Hastings College.

The other three are Thomas Chesney, president of Brookhaven College in Farmers Branch, Texas; Rusty Monhollon, who is assistant commissioner for academic affairs, Missouri Department of Higher Education; and Paul Turman, who is system vice president for academic affairs for the South Dakota Board of Regents.

Couple get probation in Christmas pot presents case

YORK, Neb. (AP) — A California couple who said the marijuana they were hauling through Nebraska was intended for Christmas gifts have been given probation and conditional jail time.

York County District Court records say 71-year-old Barbara and 80-year-old Patrick Jiron were sentenced Monday to three years’ probation. They’ll be supervised at their Clearlake Oaks, California, home by California authorities.

The judge also sentenced them to three 30-day jail stints that can be waived if they comply with probation terms.

When the Jirons were arrested Dec. 19, they said they didn’t know it was illegal to transport marijuana through Nebraska. They told authorities the 60 pounds (27 kilograms) of pot was intended as presents for family in Vermont and Massachusetts.

Each pleaded no contest to possession of more than a pound of marijuana.

WWII code breaker buried in Nebraska with UK military honors

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — A 92-year-old woman has been buried in Nebraska with British military honors for a secret that she held for decades: her World War II service as a code breaker of German intelligence communications.

The Union Jack was draped over Jean Briggs Watters’ casket during her burial Monday, the Omaha World-Herald reported. Watters died Sept. 15.

The tribute honored Watters for her role decoding for a top-secret military program led by British mathematician Alan Turing, who was the subject of the 2014 Oscar-winning film “The Imitation Game .” Watters was among about 10,000 people, mostly women, who participated in the Allied effort to crack German communication codes throughout the war.

She operated an electro-mechanical machine , known as a “bombe,” to decipher signals the German armed forces sent out from its sophisticated Enigma encryption machines. The effort at Britain’s famed codebreaking center, Bletchley Park, saved lives and helped bring an end to the war. But it was kept classified until the 1970s.

“She never told anyone,” said Watters’ son, Robin Watters. “She was fully aware of the gravity of what she was doing. It was haunting to her, what might happen if she made a mistake.”

Jean Briggs Watters was 18 when she enlisted in the Women’s Royal Naval Service. She had attended an art school in Cambridge, England, before joining the Allied war cause.

She met her husband, a U.S. Army Air Corps pilot named John Watters, during the war and they married soon after. She and her husband retired to the U.S. in 1969.

Watters was placed Monday in a burial plot next to her husband, who died in June at age 101.

“She had a seriousness, and a sense of duty,” Robin Watters said. “She was a really special lady. But she was tough. She did the hard things.”

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