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State of Nebraska agrees to pay man $225K for 2016 crash

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — The state has agreed to pay a Lincoln man $225,000 for injuries and damages he received in 2016 when a Nebraska Game and Parks employee crashed into his car in Lincoln.

The Lincoln Journal Star reports that a lawyer for Josephus Pickett says Pickett was left with a traumatic brain and other injuries when Lyle Huston ran his state-owned pickup truck into Pickett’s car at a Lincoln intersection.

The crash totaled Pickett’s car and damaged another car in an adjacent parking lot.

Police ticketed Huston for failure to yield. He pleaded guilty and was fined $25.

Flooding likely in eastern Nebraska, Iowa after rains, ice 

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) – Forecasters say major flooding is likely in eastern Nebraska and western Iowa over the next couple days and some rural roads already had to be closed after being covered with water.

The National Weather Service says this week’s significant rain is especially problematic because much of the region is still covered by a blanket of snow and the ground is still frozen, so the rail flows right into streams and rivers.

The potential for flooding grows in places where chunks of ice often block the flow in ice jams.

In northeast Nebraska, the Madison County Sheriff’s office says it ran out of barricades after closing more than a half dozen roads, including U.S. Highway 275 near West Point.

 

NP police arrest 3 after receiving Crimestoppers tip

The North Platte Police Department arrested three people on drugs and weapons charges after receiving an anonymous tip via Crimestoppers.

On March 11, police received an anonymous tip through Crime Stoppers. It indicated that there was drug activity in the 800 block of South Sycamore Street.
On March 12, after further follow-up and investigation, a search warrant was requested and granted for that residence.
At 930 AM, officers served the search warrant. Inside of the residence was 29-year-old Sarah Waugh, 54-year-old Louella Bohman, 20-year-old Jayden Shannon, and another male (who was not arrested). Officers attempted to arrest Shannon and he began to struggle with officers. Shannon was tased and arrested without further incident.
Located in the residence were a handgun, 1.7 ounces of methamphetamine, approximately an ounce of marijuana, a bottle of alprazolam (a controlled substance) not prescribed to anyone at the residence, various items of drug paraphernalia, over $2000 cash, and an incendiary device.
Waugh was arrested for possession of a firearm by a prohibited person (class 1D felony), distribution of a controlled substance (class II felony), and possession of a destructive device (class IV felony). Waugh also had a Lincoln County warrant. She was incarcerated at the LCSO jail.
Bohman was arrested for distribution of a controlled substance (class II felony) and incarcerated at the LCSO jail.
Shannon was arrested for possession of a firearm by a prohibited person (class 1D felony), distribution of a controlled substance (class II felony), and resisting arrest (class 1 misdemeanor) and incarcerated at the LCSO jail.

Flights canceled for Denver as western blizzard approaches

DENVER (AP) — About 1,000 flights into Denver have been canceled as a winter storm hits the western U.S., with blizzard conditions expected to engulf parts of Colorado, Wyoming, Montana, Nebraska and South Dakota.

School was canceled Wednesday in many places where up to more than a foot (30 centimeters) of snow and winds as high as 80 mph (129 kmh) was possible.

State and local government workers in Denver and Wyoming were told to stay home and many colleges also closed for the day.

Parts of Interstates 80 and 25 were closed in Wyoming because of heavy snow and whiteout conditions.

Heavy snow was falling in northern Arizona and forecasters say dangerous winds in New Mexico are expected to make travel hazardous across much of the state.

EPA rules on issue pitting oil producers, corn farmers

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Trump administration is proposing to allow year-round sales of gasoline mixed with 15 percent ethanol, seeking to calm a dispute that has riled two politically important blocs — the oil industry and corn farmers.

Tuesday’s proposed rule change by the Environmental Protection Agency would fulfill a pledge that President Donald Trump made to U.S. corn farmers, for whom ethanol is an important driver of demand for their crops. Many environmentalists oppose any expansion of the ethanol industry, saying the increase in corn production has polluted waterways and destroyed habitat.

Federal law for more than a decade has mandated that oil refineries mix ethanol into their fuel. The Trump administration’s former EPA chief, Scott Pruitt, had angered lawmakers, growers and ethanol processors in Iowa and other key election states by granting a spate of exemptions sparing refineries from that mandate.

The dispute sparked a billboard campaign and at least one tractor rally by angry farmers in the Midwest last year, threatening to erode what has been a base of support for Trump.

Tuesday’s proposal would allow sale of fuel mixed with a higher blend of ethanol year-round, ending a summertime ban imposed out of concerns for increased smog from the higher ethanol blend.

The proposal “absolutely is moving in the right direction,” said Geoff Cooper, head of the ethanol industry’s Renewable Fuels Association. Ethanol supporters would “keep a watchful eye” on the EPA’s current administrator, Andrew Wheeler, as Wheeler weighs whether to grant future exemption requests from refineries, he said.

Beyond increasing the amount of ethanol allowed in vehicle fuel, the EPA is proposing regulatory changes in the ethanol program.

A group representing oil refiners and other oil industry partners, the Fueling American Jobs Coalition, spoke positively of the EPA proposal.

The Trump administration was striking “a careful balance between the need to maintain jobs and investment in the vital refining sector and the desire of some in the biofuels sector to expand the use of higher blends of ethanol,” the oil industry group said in a statement.

Only a small fraction of U.S. gas stations currently sell the higher-ethanol blend, called E15. The rule, if the administration puts it into effect, isn’t expected to have any big immediate effect on ethanol sales, but would signal the marketplace to take another look at the fuel blend in the longer term, Cooper said.

Environmental groups contend the U.S. Clean Air Act prohibits year-round sales of E15, and court challenges are expected.

Conservation advocates and some researchers say the ethanol mandate has been unexpectedly devastating for the environment. The increased demand for corn led farmers to plow millions of additional acres of land —depriving monarch butterflies and countless other species of habitat. Farmers also upped their use of nitrate-containing fertilizers, which pollute waterways.

Any future expansion of ethanol use “would expand corn production, resulting in more nitrogen fertilizer use, more pollution of waterways, and more losses in habitat,” said Aaron Smith, a professor of agricultural and resource economics at the University of California, Davis.

Nebraska man banned from selling securities in Iowa

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — A Nebraska man already convicted in his home state of securities fraud has been ordered to refrain from selling unregistered securities in Iowa.

The Iowa Insurance Division issued that order Tuesday against Bruce Billesbach, of Blair, Nebraska. Billesbach also was ordered to pay $100,000 in restitution and another $25,500 in penalties and costs for swindling two Iowa couples out of more than $100,000.

Court records show Billesbach convinced the couples to invest $50,000 each in his investment firm, but deposited most of the money into his personal account. Investigators say he strung the couples along for a few years; when they demanded itemized investment performance paperwork, Billesbach announced in 2016 he was closing the firm and that the money was all gone.

Last year, Billesbach pleaded guilty in Nebraska to two counts of securities fraud and no contest to two counts of making fraudulent statements and sentenced to five years’ probation.

Fremont man claims $1 million Powerball prize

FREMONT, Neb. (AP) — A Fremont man has claimed his $1 million Powerball prize from the Nebraska Lottery.

Zach Norenberg’s winning ticket had five of the winning numbers but didn’t match the Powerball number in the March 6 drawing. He bought the ticket at a Hy-Vee gas station in Fremont. Another $1 million ticket was sold in Texas.

Norenberg told lottery officials that he bought some tickets on a whim while dropping off his daughter before he went to work. He says he picked numbers based on the birthdays of family members.

He and his wife plan to use some of the money to pay off their student loans and their mortgage.

Ricketts declares emergency for looming snowstorm, flooding

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Gov. Pete Ricketts has issued an emergency declaration in preparation for an impending winter storm in western Nebraska and anticipated flooding in other parts of the state.

The declaration on Tuesday allows the Nebraska Emergency Management Agency to coordinate response and recovery activities with local governments and other state agencies and groups. It also allows local governments to request assistance from the state if they need it.

The National Weather Service has issued a winter storm warning for the Nebraska Panhandle with forecasts of 18 to 24 inches of snow possible and 50-60 mph winds.

The governor’s office says travel is not recommended during the storm, and motorists should exercise care.

Significant flooding is also possible along the Loup, Platte, Elkhorn and Missouri rivers.

Massage therapist takes plea deal in sex assault case

Melvin Buffington Jr

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — A 63-year-old massage therapist accused of sexually assaulting at least 19 women has taken a plea deal in Omaha.

Douglas County District Court records say Melvin Buffington Jr. pleaded no contest last week to two counts of felony attempted sexual assault. Prosecutors dropped 21 other charges — most of them misdemeanors. He faces up to 40 years in prison at his sentencing May 14.

Authorities say Buffington started working at Oasis Massage & Spa in August 2016. Women eventually began talking to police and the spa about Buffington inappropriately touching them or making suggestive moves with his body. At least one woman sued the spa.

Police say the spa cooperated with investigators.

Authorities release name of woman killed by a house fire

HARTINGTON, Neb. (AP) — Authorities have released the name of a woman whose body was found in the charred remains of a house in northeast Nebraska.

Station KCAU reports that the woman was identified as 62-year-old Lori Burton. Authorities say an autopsy showed Burton died of smoke inhalation.

The fire was reported around 2 p.m. Thursday at the home, which sits about 6 miles (10 kilometers) southwest of Hartington in Cedar County. The cause hasn’t been determined.

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