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Troopers find over 110 pounds of marijuana in I-80 traffic stops

Troopers with the Nebraska State Patrol (NSP) arrested two people and seized more than 100 pounds of marijuana in two traffic stops in western Nebraska on Friday, March 8.

At approximately 1:30 p.m. MT, a trooper noticed an eastbound 2018 Mercedes coupe speeding near Kimball at mile marker 18. During the traffic stop, the trooper performed a search of the vehicle and discovered 35 pounds of marijuana in the trunk.

The driver, Kiara Mendez, 24, of Beulaville, North Carolina, was arrested for possession of marijuana – more than one pound, possession with intent to deliver, and no drug tax stamp. Mendez was lodged in Kimball County Jail.

Another seizure occurred at approximately 10:00 p.m. CT, when a trooper stopped an eastbound 2019 Ford station wagon for failure to stay in its lane on I-80 near Sutherland at mile marker 158. During the traffic stop, and NSP K9 detected the presence of a controlled substance in the vehicle.

A search revealed approximately 80 pounds of marijuana inside the vehicle. The driver, Stephen Demilta, 61, of Port Orange, Florida, was arrested for possession of marijuana – more than one pound, possession with intent to deliver, and no drug tax stamp. Demilta was lodged in Lincoln County Jail.

Drunk driver arrested following pursuit in Omaha

Troopers with the Nebraska State Patrol arrested an Omaha man for several charges following a pursuit Saturday evening, March 9.

At approximately 8:00 p.m., a trooper observed a Chevy Trailblazer traveling at 102 miles per hour on eastbound Interstate 80 at mile marker 450 near 60th street in Omaha. The trooper attempted a traffic stop, but the driver fled and continued traveling at more than 80 miles per hour. After exiting I-80 southbound on Highway 75, the suspect vehicle drove through neighborhoods before eventually coming to a stop at a residence at 4731 S. 16th street in Omaha.

The driver exited the vehicle and did not follow orders given by the trooper. A five-year-old juvenile exited the vehicle as well. The trooper then attempted to place the driver under arrest, but the driver again resisted. After a brief physical encounter the trooper was able to place the suspect in custody as other troopers and Omaha Police officers arrived on scene to assist.

The driver, David Chico, 31, of Omaha, was arrested for driving under the influence of alcohol, felony flight to avoid arrest, willful reckless driving, transporting a child while intoxicated, resisting arrest, obstructing a peace officer, open alcohol container, and speeding at greater than 36 miles per hour over the speed limit. The pursuit lasted approximately four minutes.

Chico was lodged in Douglas County Jail. The child was left with family.

Ice jams might be blasted to prevent river flooding

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Officials say ice jams could be blasted with dynamite to prevent river flooding in eastern Nebraska.

The Papio-Missouri River Natural Resources District in Omaha has arranged for a private contractor whose explosives experts would drop dynamite on jams from a helicopter. The deployment could occur as soon as Tuesday, if needed.

District general manager John Winkler says the rain and wind in the forecast will play a factor in whether an explosives crew can be flown over the rivers.

Winkler says people living along the rivers’ edges should elevate their possessions and move valuable boats and vehicles out of harm’s way.

Bill seeks to clarify Nebraska’s protective order process

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — A Nebraska bill seeks to clarify the state’s law on protection orders and require at least an initial hearing for all applicants.

The Omaha World-Herald reports that almost 930 of the 3,300 protection orders filed in Douglas County last year were immediately denied without a hearing and often without an explanation from a judge.

Sen. Machaela Cavanaugh says Nebraska is one of only two states that don’t require hearings for protection-order applications. Her bill seeks to require a hearing, clarify application details and create a standard renewal process for all three types of protection orders — domestic abuse, sexual assault and harassment.

The Nebraska Bar Association says lawmakers should be aware of the strain that would be placed on the judicial system if hearings are required within 14 days of an application.

Nebraska jobless rate 2.8 percent for 6th month in a row

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — The Nebraska Labor Department says the state’s unemployment rate was unchanged in January: 2.8 percent.

The department said in a news release Monday that the preliminary January rate is down a tenth of a point from the January 2018 rate of 2.9 percent.

The January Nebraska rate also was well below the national preliminary January figure of 4 percent — a tenth-of-a-point increase from December.

The preliminary nonfarm employment figure in January was nearly 1.01 million, compared with the adjusted December figure of 1.03 million.

The state says the year-over-year comparison figures for nonfarm employment and other data categories won’t be available until later this month because of the benchmarking process. The state describes benchmarking as the yearly process of aligning estimated data with known employment numbers.

Here are preliminary area labor market unemployment rates for January:

— Beatrice: 3.6

— Columbus: 2.9

— Fremont: 3.0

— Hastings: 3.4

— Kearney: 2.5

— Lexington: 3.1

— Norfolk: 2.8

— North Platte: 3.4

— Red Willow: 2.7

— Scottsbluff: 3.7

Nebraska among last states to approve ‘revenge porn’ law

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Nebraska has long been one of the few states without a “revenge porn” law, but new proposals being considered by lawmakers would end that status and make it easier to file charges against people who post pornographic images of others online without their permission.

Although prosecutors might have been able to find ways to file charges for posting such images under current law, Nebraska is among seven states that have not directly addressed the issue, according to the Cyber Civil Rights Initiative, a national nonprofit that tracks the issue in state legislatures.

That could change under either of two bills scheduled for a legislative hearing Wednesday.

“This happens every day to people,” said Sen. Megan Hunt, who introduced one of the bills. “It happens to high schoolers. It happens to college kids. I think you’d be hard-pressed to find anybody under 30 who doesn’t know somebody who has been affected by this.”

The bill from Hunt, of Omaha, would bar people from transmitting or posting sexual photographs online without the permission of the person who’s depicted.

First-time violators could face a misdemeanor charge, while repeat offenders could be charged with a felony. Perpetrators also would have to register as a sex offender if they were 19 or older at the time and the victim was younger than 18 years old.

Another bill by Sen. Adam Morfeld, of Lincoln, would impose felony charges on anyone who knowingly distributes pornographic footage or photos taken without consent.

Hunt said the prevalence of text messaging and social media and a lack of education about healthy sexual relationships make younger people especially susceptible. The images can haunt victims for years anytime employers, relatives or romantic partners search for their name online.

Morfeld said technology and online dating have evolved so quickly that state laws haven’t kept pace.

“We need to create the expectation that sending explicit photos of somebody without their consent is a serious crime,” he said.

Domestic violence and sexual assault groups have seen an uptick in such reports over the last few years.

Many cases involve men who threaten to release pornographic images for leverage in a custody battle or if their girlfriend or wife is trying to leave them. In others, men share pornographic images months after a relationship has ended and the material spreads on its own.

“It’s been on our radar for quite a while as something that needs to change,” said Robert Sanford, legal director of the Nebraska Coalition to End Sexual and Domestic Violence. “In the last year, it has come up much more consistently.”

Forty-three states and the District of Columbia have passed laws cracking down on revenge porn, according to the Cyber Civil Rights Initiative. The list includes all of Nebraska’s neighboring states except for Wyoming.

A survey conducted by the group in 2017 found that nearly 16 percent of women and 10 percent of men reported that they had been threatened or victimized by nonconsensual pornography.

Former Missouri Gov. Eric Greitens signed that state’s revenge porn law last year, hours before he left office amid allegations that he threatened to distribute a nonconsensual photo of a partially nude woman with whom he had an affair. Greitens acknowledged having the affair in 2015 but denied criminal wrongdoing.

Last month, Nebraska football running back Maurice Washington III was charged in California on accusations that he possessed and distributed video of his former girlfriend allegedly being sexually assaulted by two people in 2016.

Pond owners advised to check for winterkill after ice gone

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Pond owners are being advised to check for winterkill after the ice is gone.

Jeff Blaser with the Nebraska Game and Parks Commission says the prolonged winter and recent frigid weather are keeping ponds covered with snow and ice well into March, creating conditions for winterkill.

Snow and ice covering a pond prevent the water from exchanging oxygen with the air. The snow and ice allow little sunlight penetration, so plants can’t produce much oxygen. If the cover persists, the plants die. Subsequent decomposition, along with respiration by various aquatic organisms, can completely deplete the oxygen supply. The fish die.

Blaser suggests owners check the status of their ponds’ fish populations this spring. The findings could indicate whether the ponds are candidates for restocking

Pond owners can contact Blaser at 402-471-5435 for suggestions on handling major fish kills.

Entry deadline March 31 for Nebraska Handwriting Contest

KEARNEY, Neb. (AP) — The entry deadline is March 31 for this year’s Nebraska Handwriting Contest.

The contest is aimed at promoting and encouraging good penmanship and is open to Nebraska residents in four age categories: 12 and younger, ages 13-16, ages 17-49 and ages 50 and older.

It is administered by the Teacher Education Department at the University of Nebraska at Kearney.

Contestants will be provided text to copy for their entries, which must be written in any of the various styles of cursive handwriting and not printed. Rules and text to be copied is available online.

Entries should be mailed to: Nebraska Handwriting Contest, Attention: Julie Agard, University of Nebraska at Kearney/Department of Teacher Education, Kearney, NE, 68849.

Contact Agard at 308-865-8556 for more information.

Lingering winter slows sandhill crane migration in Nebraska

KEARNEY, Neb. (AP) — The lingering snow and bitter winter in Nebraska has put a damper on the annual sandhill crane migration this year.

March is typically the prime time to see the roughly 500,000 sandhill cranes that stop along the Platte River as part of their annual migration.

But this year the crane numbers have been much lower because of the tough conditions.

Andrew Caven with the Crane Trust nature center told the Omaha World-Herald the number of migrating birds may not take off until sometime between mid-March and mid-April. But once it begins the cranes may gather in impressive numbers.

Every year, about 80 percent of the world’s sandhill crane population visits Nebraska to forage for food before continuing north to their breeding grounds.

Endangered whooping cranes and other rare birds also sometimes make an appearance.

U of Nebraska-Lincoln offers pre-college business programs

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — High school juniors with an interest in business are encouraged to apply for two summer programs hosted by the University of Nebraska-Lincoln’s College of Business.

The Accounting Summit and the Dreambig Academy provide insight into potential careers in the world of business and a preview of life at the university.

It’s scheduled for May 29-31. The students will stay in residence halls, work on projects with university accounting students and network with industry professionals during tours of local companies.

Go online by March 31 to apply for the Accounting Summit.

The Dreambig Academy is set for July 21-25. It emphasizes leadership, networking skills and success in the business world.

Anyone can go online by Friday to nominate a student.

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