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Move Over violation leads to cocaine seizure


Troopers with the Nebraska State Patrol have arrested two people and seized two pounds of cocaine following a traffic stop near Hershey on Interstate 80.

At approximately 9:00 a.m. Thursday, February 28, an eastbound Cadillac Escalade failed to move over while a trooper was finishing another traffic stop on I-80. The trooper performed a traffic stop on the Escalade near mile marker 163.

During the traffic stop, troopers conducted a search of the vehicle and found two pounds of cocaine hidden inside the backrest of the driver’s seat.

The driver, Andrea Freeman, 36, and passenger, Victor Phillips, 30, both of Chicago, were arrested for possession of cocaine, possession with intent to deliver, and no drug tax stamp. Both were lodged in Lincoln County Jail.

Siblings’ deaths prompt bill to increase homeschool scrutiny

ATLANTA (AP) — The deaths of two homeschooled children who were found buried in their father’s backyard in Guyton, Georgia, have inspired a bill to increase the scrutiny of public school withdrawal requests.

The Savannah Morning News reports a House bill introduced Thursday would bar parents from removing children from public schools to avoid complying with attendance and discipline laws.

If a withdrawal request seeks to circumvent legal requirements, the school system must notify investigative authorities.

Sponsor Rep. Bill Hitchens says the bill seeks to prevent another case similar to that of Mary and Elwyn “JR” Crocker Jr. Elwyn was last seen alive in 2016, and his sister was last seen in October. Their bodies were discovered in December.

Reps. Jon Burns, Wes Cantrell and Ron Stephens are also sponsoring the bill.

Authorities: Man fired shot at Burt County deputy

TEKAMAH, Neb. (AP) — Authorities say a man has been arrested after officials believe he fired a shot at a Burt County sheriff’s deputy in northeastern Nebraska.

Omaha television station KETV reports that family members of a 23-year-old man called the sheriff’s office Wednesday night concerned about his well-being. A deputy sent to a rural farm to check on him says the man fired a shot at him when he was asked to get out of his vehicle. The deputy was not injured.

Officials say the deputy requested backup, and the 23-year-old man fled. He was later found in an outbuilding and arrested around 2:30 a.m. Thursday.

He was taken to a mental health treatment facility and is expected to face charges.

Inmate convicted of beating cousin who testified against her

Erica Jenkins

YORK, Neb. (AP) — A prison inmate has been convicted of assaulting a woman who’d cooperated with authorities in the prosecution of the inmate and her brother in their Omaha murder cases.

The York News-Times reports that jurors found 29-year-old Erica Jenkins guilty Wednesday of assault by a confined person but acquitted her of a weapons charge. Prosecutors say Jenkins punched and used a padlock in a sock to beat Christine Bordeaux in the York women’s prison cell they shared briefly in September 2016.

Erica Jenkins was convicted of murder in January 2015, accused by authorities of helping her brother, Nikko, kill a man in Omaha in 2013. Nikko Jenkins pleaded no contest to murder in that case and three others. Bordeaux was sentenced to 20 years for robbery in connection with Nikko Jenkins’ crimes.

Bordeaux is a cousin to the Jenkinses.

Farmers back Ricketts property tax plan; others opposed

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Farmers who have seen their property taxes surge rallied Wednesday behind Gov. Pete Ricketts’ property tax plan, but local governments voiced opposition to parts of the plan that would hamper their ability to collect extra tax revenue.

Ricketts acknowledged that his plan alone won’t fix all of the financial pressures on the state’s farmers and ranchers, but touted it as a starting point.

One part of the Republican governor’s package would prevent local government property tax collections from growing by more than 3 percent per year, unless voters approve a larger increase in a special election. Lawmakers wouldn’t pass the measure themselves but would place it on the ballot for voters to consider in the 2020 general election.

“If you don’t have that fiscal restraint, you’re not going to have that long-term tax relief,” he said in testimony to the Legislature’s Revenue Committee.

Sen. Lou Ann Linehan, the committee chairwoman, said she sponsored the measure for the governor as a way to force local governments to keep their spending increases below recent levels of inflation.

“I think we’re trying to focus people on the real issue, which is spending,” she said.

Another piece of the package would add $51 million a year to a Nebraska tax credit designed to reduce property tax bills, bringing the total to $275 million a year. Ricketts’ proposal would also lock in that amount to make it harder for future lawmakers to raid the fund.

“This is a straightforward approach to tax relief without a tax shift,” said Sen. Brett Lindstrom, of Omaha, who introduced the bill on the governor’s behalf.

Some farmers say their property tax bills have surged over the last decade, hampering their ability to stay in business. One family told lawmakers they moved their operation to Missouri because property taxes were lower there.

Frederic Oltjenbruns said he spent 50 years farming on family-owned land just north of Lincoln, but moved to Missouri after getting a $50,000 property tax bill in 2017.

“Lancaster County made more money off of my farm than I did,” he said. “… Moving out of your home state, that’s pretty radical stuff, and we didn’t take it lightly.”

Oltjenbruns said his property tax bill on his Missouri farmland was slightly more than $1,100.

Shane Greckel, a Bloomfield farmer and former legislative candidate, said his annual property tax bill has jumped from $800 in 2006 to $3,400 in 2017 on the same farmland.

“That’s (an extra) $2,600 I had to come up with just to keep the ground,” he said. “At this point it’s not just keeping the ground. It’s renting it from the government.”

Local school boards and cities objected to the proposed 3 percent cap on revenue growth.

LaVista Mayor Douglas Kindig said his city and others in fast-growing Sarpy County need the flexibility to serve their residents. Kindig said local governments sometimes use the extra revenue to build up their cash reserves or pay for large economic development projects.

The proposal could prompt local governments to raise sales taxes and fees to compensate for revenue they need to provide services, according to a brief from the OpenSky Policy Institute, a Nebraska tax policy think tank that frequently calls for more funding of K-12 public schools.

Some rural lawmakers said the larger issue is the state funding formula for Nebraska’s K-12 public schools, the biggest consumer of local property taxes. Sen. Mike Groene, of North Platte, said lawmakers need to go beyond what they’ve done in recent years to make a reduction property owners will notice.

“We just don’t want everyone to have a wine and cheese party, say ‘We provided property tax relief,’ and go home,” he said.

NP man arrested in string of car thefts

Anthony McEntee

A North Platte man has been arrested following a string of car thefts on Thursday morning.

On February 28, 2019,  at 1:30 AM, officers responded to the 1400 block of South Dewey in regards to a stolen vehicle. The victim reported they had left their vehicle running outside while they were inside the business shopping. When they came outside it was gone.

The following is a timeline of calls involving stolen vehicles.

At 753 AM, that vehicle was recovered at Airport Rd and Highway 30.
At 409 AM, a vehicle was reported stolen from the area of Rolling Hills and Thunderhead.
At 422 AM, that vehicle was recovered in the 2600 block of N Airport Rd.
At 428 AM, a vehicle was reported stolen from the 6000 block of East Thunderhead Drive.
At 808 AM, that vehicle was recovered at 1st and Hayes.
At 750 AM, a vehicle was reported stolen from the 2600 block of Wright Ave, and recovered at the same time in the 1900 block of Rodeo Rd.
At 724 AM, a vehicle was reported stolen from the 2000 block of West 15th St.At 842 AM, that vehicle was recovered from behind Bridge Street auto.
At 725 AM, a vehicle was reported stolen from the parking lot of the Lincoln Highway Diner.
At approximately 0930 AM, that vehicle was recovered in the area of 6th and McCabe.
At approximately 0920 AM, a vehicle was reported stolen from the 2000 block of East 4th. The caller observed the vehicle being stolen and followed the suspect, causing him to dump the vehicle approximately two blocks away. The caller was on the phone with 911 dispatchers the entire time, communicating the suspect’s actions.
Officers with the North Platte Police Department and the Lincoln County Sheriff’s office located the suspect, 23-year-old Anthony McEntee, in the area and he was arrested.
Charges are pending, and police say of the stolen vehicles have been recovered and there is no further danger to the public.

Study: US pedestrian deaths hit highest number since 1990

DETROIT (AP) — The number of pedestrians killed on U.S. roads last year was the highest in 28 years, according to a report from a safety organization.

Using data reported by states, the Governors Highway Safety Association estimates that 6,227 pedestrians were killed last year. That’s up 4 percent from 2017 and 35 percent since 2008.

The association blames the increase on factors that include distracted or impaired drivers, more people walking to work, and more SUVs on the road, which cause more severe injuries in collisions with people on foot.

It also says most deaths happen on local roads at night and away from intersections, and it called for safer road crossings. Night crashes accounted for more than 90 percent of the increased deaths over the past decade.

“While we have made progress reducing fatalities among many other road users in the past decade, pedestrian deaths have risen 35 percent,” Jonathan Adkins, the association’s executive director, said in a statement issued Thursday. “The alarm bells continue to sound on this issue.”

The report also called for law enforcement and safety education campaigns to make sure drivers and walkers can safely coexist, as well as for road safety audits.

It said that 23 states saw declines in pedestrian deaths during the first half of last year, with six states reporting double-digit drops.

Eligible hunters may apply for auxiliary mountain lion permits

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LINCOLN, Neb. – Applications for an auxiliary mountain lion hunting season will be accepted by the Nebraska Game and Parks Commission from March 1-5.

Up to four permits will be drawn for the auxiliary season in the North Subunit of Nebraska’s Pine Ridge, which is March 15-31. Only hunters who held a North Subunit permit but did not harvest a mountain lion during the earlier North Subunit season may apply.

From 1 p.m. Central Time on March 1 through 11:59 p.m. on March 5, eligible North Subunit permit holders may apply for the auxiliary season permit drawing at outdoornebraska.gov/mountainliondraw. The bag limit for each permit is one mountain lion.

The auxiliary season will close once up to four mountain lions, or two females, are harvested. The number of permits to be drawn will be equal to the auxiliary season’s harvest quota, which cannot exceed four. The quota will be determined following the Feb. 28 close of the North Subunit season.

The North Subunit is the area of the Pine Ridge north of Highway 20 and west of Highway 27. Hunting on public land will not be allowed during the auxiliary season, but dogs may be used. All other mountain lion hunting rules remain the same.

Once open, the status of the season will be posted on Game and Parks’ mountain lion harvest season webpage (outdoornebraska.gov/mountainlionhunting) and 1-800 number that hunters are required to check before hunting mountain lions each day.

No more than eight mountain lions will be harvested in Nebraska this year. Three males and one female lion already have been taken during the South Subunit season in January.

A harvest will allow the mountain lion population to remain resilient and healthy, while halting growth or moderately reducing the population size. This will reduce the population density in the Pine Ridge to one similar to that of other states that allow mountain lion hunting.

To read more mountain lion hunting regulations, go to outdoornebraska.gov/mountainlionhunting.

Senators advance bill to add judge in Douglas County

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — A bill that would add another judge to Nebraska’s largest county to help with a growing caseload has won first-round approval in the Legislature.

But the measure advanced on Wednesday but won’t pass until lawmakers figure out a way to pay for it while balancing the state budget.

The measure by state Sen. Steve Lathrop, of Omaha, would bring the total number of district court judges to 17 in the fourth judicial district, which encompasses Douglas County. Supporters say adding a judge is necessary to adjust to the large number of court cases that are handled in Omaha each year.

Lawmakers advanced the bill on a 35-0 vote. Two additional votes are required before it goes to the governor.

Sigma Kappa Delta members donate books to Lincoln County Detention Center

Detention Officer Vince Garcia and Cpl. Willie Purvis watch as Sigma Kappa Delta members Ashley Linke, of Cozad, and Nathan Snider, of North Platte, load books onto a cart Tuesday. North Platte Community College’s Rho Zeta chapter of Sigma Kappa Delta collected more than 500 books for the Lincoln County Detention Center and other organizations around North Platte. (Courtesy Photo)
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