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Nebraska couple arrested, accused of running pot business

GRETNA, Neb. (AP) — Eastern Nebraska officials say a Gretna husband and wife who run a glass pipe shop have been arrested after the shop and their homes were raided.

The Sarpy County Sheriff’s Office says deputies served a warrant Thursday night at NE-Thing Smokin’ Glass Shop in Gretna and found a pound of marijuana, a pound of THC wax, psychedelic mushrooms, several ounces of hashish and three loaded handguns.

Authorities say a subsequent search of the couple’s home turned up a marijuana growing operation, with nine mature plants, processed marijuana, grow lights and equipment to make THC wax.

Officials say two children were at the home when it was searched. In addition to possession with intent to deliver charges, the couple also faces child abuse counts.

Bellevue teacher arrested at school on child porn suspicion

Roger Jaeger
BELLEVUE, Neb. (AP) — A suburban Omaha middle school teacher has been arrested after police say hundreds of images of suspected child pornography were found on a computer he had taken to a shop for repairs.

Police say 46-year-old Logan-Fontenelle Middle School science teacher Roger Jaeger was taken into custody Friday morning on suspicion of possessing child pornography. Police say the shop where Jaeger’s computer was being repaired called police to investigate.

Police seized the computer Friday morning and arrested Jeager at the school without incident. Omaha television station KETV reports that Jaeger has been placed on administrative leave.

Jaeger has been booked into the Sarpy county Jail. His case does not yet appear in online court records, and he could not be reached for comment.

Omaha school principal arrested in teacher molestation case

Eric Nelson
OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — An Omaha elementary school principal who had been placed on leave after a teacher at the school was charged with abusing students has now been arrested.

Omaha television station KETV reports that police took Eric Nelson into custody on Friday on suspicion of felony child abuse. Police say Nelson did not report suspected abuse by Greg Sedlacek, who was a first-grade teacher at Fontenelle Elementary. State law requires educators to report suspected abuse of children.

The 30-year-old Sedlacek has been charged with multiple counts of sexually assaulting 6- and 7-year-old girls, who were students in his classes. He was arrested in early December after other teachers reported seeing him molest a 7-year-old girl on the school’s playground.

Nelson was placed on leave a week later.

Ex-boyfriend sentenced for cyberstalking Air Force woman

Kevin McRae
OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — An Oklahoma City man who cyberstalked a woman based at Offutt Air Force Base near Omaha has been sentenced to five months in prison.

Federal prosecutors say 48-year-old Kevin McRae was sentenced Friday in Omaha’s federal court. He had pleaded guilty in September to one count of cyberstalking.

Prosecutors say McRae and the woman had a relationship when both were based in Japan. She ended it in 2015 as she was assigned to Offutt. Prosecutors say that for about 10 months afterward, McRae stalked the woman on the internet by posting sexually explicit photos of her on several websites. He retired from the Air Force prior to being prosecuted.

He told investigators that his motivation was anger at the woman.

Nigerian man sentenced in Nebraska to prison for email scam

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — A Nigerian man convicted of scamming at least two Nebraska victims out of thousands of dollars has been sentenced to federal prison.

Federal prosecutors say 32-year-old Adewale Aniyeloye was sentenced Friday to eight years in prison for wire fraud. Restitution will be determined and ordered at a later date.

Prosecutors say that from about February 2015 to September 2016, Aniyeloye and other co-conspirators engaged in a form of email fraud called spoofing. Aniyeloye used hijacked email accounts that appeared to be legitimate to thousands of business employees across the United States who had accounting responsibilities and would direct the recipients to complete wire transfers. The business employees, thinking the requests were legitimate, would comply.

In 2016, Aniyeloye was arrested when he traveled to the U.S. Prosecutors say businesses lost more than $6 million in the scam, including two in Nebraska that lost more than $163,000.

County gets proposal to boost federal drug case prosecutions

GRAND ISLAND, Neb. (AP) — The state’s U.S. attorney wants Hall County’s help to boost prosecution of drug cases in central Nebraska.

Joe Kelly pitched the idea Tuesday to the Hall County Board of Supervisors, asking for the county’s participation in hiring an additional assistant U.S. attorney to prosecute central Nebraska traffickers. Kelly said his office would hire the attorney and that person’s salary would be paid through a federal Drug Enforcement Administration program called High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas.

The federal program guidelines require that the funding go to the Nebraska State Patrol and then to either state or local government — in this case Hall County, The Grand Island Independent reported .

“Your chore in our proposal would simply be to pay the salary and then be reimbursed,” Kelly told the board members.

The new attorney would work almost exclusively on cases that the Central Nebraska Drug and Safe Streets Task Force or local and federal agencies generate in the area and that need to be prosecuted in federal court.

A deputy Hall County attorney had been sworn in to serve in the special assistant role to work with the task force, Kelly said, but that hasn’t been the case since Marty Klein, now the Hall County attorney, last served in that position about a year ago.

“Does that mean there have been no prosecutions in federal court for this area since Mr. Klein left that position? No,” Kelly said. “But does it mean we haven’t had a focus on this area with a little more energy than we normally would have had? Yes,” he said.

The proposal wasn’t an action item on the board agenda, but it’s expected to resurface for a vote at the next board meeting, Feb. 18.

“It looks to me like we don’t have much to lose,” said Supervisor Dick Hartman in reaction to Kelly’s request. “I don’t see any reason why we wouldn’t get the show on the road.”

April trial set for driver accused of killing pedestrian

HASTINGS, Neb. (AP) — A trial is scheduled to begin April 1 for a driver accused of killing a pedestrian in Hastings.

Adams County District Court records say the date was set Tuesday after 46-year-old Nen Lam, of Hastings, pleaded not guilty to vehicular homicide while driving under the influence and driving under the influence, two prior convictions.

The accident occurred around 3:40 a.m. on Oct. 14. Police say 27-year-old Anthony Epp was fatally struck as he was either walking or skateboarding on a street. He lived in Hastings.

State shutters Omaha day care after abuse allegations

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Nebraska health officials have ordered an Omaha day care closed after the operator was charged this week with child abuse.

The Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services issued the emergency closure Thursday of Catarina Lopez’s in-home day care in south Omaha. That comes after Lopez was charged Tuesday with child abuse resulting in serious injury.

Investigators say a 16-month-old child who attended Lopez’s day care sustained multiple bone breaks in various stages of healing to her shoulders, arm and wrists and had an acute fracture and dislocated left arm. The child’s mother noticed the injury Jan. 20 and contacted police. Police say Lopez acknowledged during an interview that she had forcefully pulled the child up from the floor by an arm, causing the injury.

Nebraska woman sentenced for role in death of Rosalie man

Jenna Merrill
WEST POINT, Neb. (AP) — A northeastern Nebraska woman has been sentenced to two years in prison for her role in the death of a Rosalie man.

The Sioux City Journal reports that 32-year-old Jenna Merrill, of Oakland, Nebraska, was sentenced Thursday after pleading guilty in November to one count of being an accessory. Investigators say she gave false information to authorities investigating the 2017 death of 64-year-old Ernest Warnock, whose body was found in the burned rubble of his home.

Prosecutors say Warnock was stabbed to death after a father and son went to his home to retrieve property belonging to Becky Weitzenkamp and a fight broke out.

The father, Jody Olson, has pleaded guilty to second-degree murder. His son, Derek Olson, is also charged with second-degree murder and other counts.

Weitzenkamp was sentenced in October to 18-20 years on an accessory conviction.

Ricketts pitches military retirement tax plan to lawmakers

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Gov. Pete Ricketts told lawmakers Thursday that his proposed tax break for military retirees was necessary to keep skilled, highly motivated workers in Nebraska.

Ricketts presented the proposal to the Legislature’s Revenue Committee along with dozens of veterans, including some he hired during his time as a TD Ameritrade executive.

The bill would exempt half of the benefits paid to military retirees who stay in Nebraska. It would apply to an estimated 13,000 retirees and cost the state an estimated $16.9 million in lost revenue in its first two years.

Ricketts said he views it as a workforce development bill to address Nebraska’s statewide employee shortage.

“This bill is about retaining those veterans in this state and making sure they contribute to this state going forward,” he said.

Ricketts said several managers he worked with at TD Ameritrade rose quickly through the company’s ranks because of the skills and work ethic they honed while serving at Offutt Air Force Base in Bellevue.

Nebraska already offers a smaller exemption to military retiree but gives them a complicated choice: They can choose between exempting 40 percent of their retirement pay over a 7-year period after their service ends, or 15 percent for the rest of their lives once they turn 67. It also excludes retirees who left the service before January 2015.

Ricketts has said the current law is “clunky” and his proposal would streamline the process and benefit all retirees.

Nebraska is already losing retirees from Offutt Air Force Base to neighboring Iowa, which exempts 100 percent of military benefits from taxation, said Sen. Tom Brewer, of Gordon, who introduced the bill on the governor’s behalf.

Brewer said Kansas also exempts all military retirement income, while neighboring South Dakota and Wyoming don’t impose an income tax. Missouri and Colorado provide greater tax benefits to military retirees than Nebraska currently does.

“This bill takes a substantial step toward solving a serious problem I believe we’ve had in Nebraska for a long time,” said Brewer, a military retiree who spent 36 years in the Army.

Some lawmakers questioned whether the bill would provide enough incentive to keep retirees. Even if the bill passes, Nebraska’s neighboring states would still provide more tax benefits.

“If we give 50 percent, is this going to stop them from going to Iowa?” said Sen. Mike Groene, of North Platte.

Brewer said the benefit could be one of many factors retirees consider when deciding where to move.

Two Nebraska tax-policy think tanks spoke neutrally on the bill, warning lawmakers that the tax break could divert money from other priorities such as broader tax cuts or funding for roads and K-12 public schools.

“Lowering the taxes for military retirees is just part of the equation,” said Sarah Curry, policy director for the Platte Institute.

Renee Fry, executive director of the OpenSky Policy Institute, said lawmakers should be mindful of the need to pay for existing state services.

“We’re concerned that as we continue to give a little bit here to this person and a little bit there to that person, we’ll continue to put those high-quality services in jeopardy,” she said.

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