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Nebraska lawmakers flooded with requests for special plates

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Nebraska motorists who want to support veterans, ornate box turtles or prostate cancer exams could donate to those causes and others with a new license plate, if some state lawmakers have their way.

Members of a legislative committee heard pitches Tuesday for nearly a dozen new specialty plates, adding to the growing number approved in recent years.

‘”I think we just set the record for the number of license plate bills heard in one day,” said Sen. Curt Friesen, chairman of the Transportation and Telecommunications Committee.

The number of new plates surged after the surprising success of Nebraska’s mountain lion conservation plates, which have generated $225,000 for youth wildlife education — far more than expected — since they were created in 2016.

Sen. Ernie Chambers, of Omaha, previously blocked all efforts by lawmakers to approve specialty plates on grounds that they detracted from the purpose of helping law enforcement identify vehicles.

But he changed his mind after former state Sen. Charlie Janssen suggested in 2014 that lawmakers create a mountain lion license plate — honoring an animal Chambers has tried to protect from hunters.

Some new proposals would create special plates for animals such as sandhill cranes, bighorn sheep, cutthroat trout and ornate box turtles.

Others would honor veterans of the U.S. wars in Afghanistan, Iraq, the Persian Gulf and Vietnam, and establish a new “Support our Troops” plate to boost funding for a state veteran employment program.

“There are still many Vietnam veterans who have never been welcomed home properly and deserve this recognition,” said Sen. Carol Blood, of Bellevue, the sponsor of the military plates bill.

Yet another proposed plate would highlight the importance of spaying and neutering pets. Revenue from the $40 plate would go to a grant program to help low-income families spay and neuter their pets, said Sen. Anna Wishart, of Lincoln.

Wishart said other states have passed similar laws, and “the benefits are already evident. More cats and dogs are being spayed and neutered, resulting in fewer animals entering overburdened and underfunded municipal and nonprofit shelters.”

One proposal would divert revenue from an existing pediatric cancer awareness license plate into a fund to pay for pediatric cancer research at the University of Nebraska Medical Center. Those plates currently generate about $25,000 annually, but the road goes into a state road construction fund.

Deana Thuer, whose daughter was diagnosed with a form of brain cancer, said shifting the money would encourage more people to buy plates, thus raising critical research money and awareness.

“We will buy the license plates, we will do the 5Ks, we will do anything to find a cure for our children,” she said.

Prostate cancer awareness advocates urged lawmakers to create plates for their cause, modeled after breast cancer awareness plates in 2017.

“We have lost many of our friends and loved ones because they were not aware of prostate cancer,” said Jeff Shapiro, a representative for the Nebraska Prostate Cancer Alliance.

Sen. Machaela Cavanaugh, of Omaha, said a bill recognizing ornate box turtles would generate money for state officials to preserve their natural prairie habitats. The turtle is one of just two that are native to Nebraska.

“A new plate for the ornate box turtle is sure to be both beautiful and foster interest in Nebraska as a tourist destination,” she said.

Attorney: ICE kept arrested farm employee from seeing lawyer

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — A lawyer for a farm supervisor arrested in an immigration raid at O’Neill says federal agents and prosecutors wrongly kept the man from seeing his attorney.

Lincoln attorney John Berry tells the Lincoln Journal Star that his firm was hired to represent Elkhorn River Farms supervisor Eric Beringer the day of the August raid. Berry says a lawyer was immediately sent to a Grand Island detention center where those arrested were taken, but that an Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent wouldn’t allow the lawyer to see Beringer. The agent and an assistant federal prosecutor insisted Beringer didn’t have a right to counsel until the next day.

Berry says Beringer had a constitutional right to counsel because he had already been indicted on suspicion of harboring people in the country illegally.

Berry is now moving to suppress any statements Beringer made because he was denied his right to a lawyer.

A message left Tuesday for ICE was not immediately returned. Assistant U.S. Attorney Mike Norris said his office believes there are “many factual inaccuracies” in Berry’s motion, but said he could not elaborate until prosecutors files a reply to it.

Twitter critic site gone after Nebraska school district sues

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — The Twitter account that has been criticizing about a southeast Nebraska school district since last fall disappeared shortly after the district filed a lawsuit seeking the critic’s identity.

The person behind the anonymous @friend_bulldog account on Twitter posted another critical comment about the Friend School District Tuesday morning, but the account was gone by midday.

The school district filed a lawsuit last week because officials want to learn who is behind the account. The district’s lawyer, Justin Knight, said the site has made false and defamatory statements about Superintendent David Kraus and other school officials.

Knight says the district plans to continue pursuing the lawsuit .

A Twitter spokeswoman didn’t immediately respond to questions about whether the social media company had removed the account.

NP teen placed in emergency custody after attempting suicide by train

Police said a North Platte teen is in protective custody after reportedly attempting to commit suicide by train.

On Tuesday morning, Post staff received numerous reports that a toddler had been running on the tracks near moving train cars Monday.

Law enforcement did respond to an emergency call at the railroad, however, it was in reference to a 15-year-old female who was attempting to commit suicide by walking in front of a moving rail car, police said.

According to North Platte Police, Union Pacific Special Agents were able to apprehend the female and she was placed in emergency protective custody.

No other details of the incident were released and Union Pacific has not responded to a request for a statement on the incident.

No injuries were reported.

Kearney police searching for mother of abandoned twins

Police in Kearney are seeking the mother of two twins who were abandoned at a Kearney hospital.

On February 4, 2019, at 1:09 p.m., officers were dispatched to CHI Good Samaritan Hospital in Kearney regarding infant male twins who had been born at the hospital on February 2, 2019.

Hospital officials reported that the mother of the twins had apparently departed the hospital, abandoning the twins.

The two male infants were placed in the custody of Health and Human Services.

Police are working with CHI Good Samaritan and Health and Human Services to identify the mother of the twins, who apparently, gave false information upon admittance to the hospital.

If you have any information, contact the Kearney Police Department at 308-237-2104.

Former employee pleads guilty to defrauding Omaha hospital

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — A former pharmacy director has pleaded guilty to stealing more than $4.6 million from an Omaha hospital.

Federal prosecutors said Monday that 49-year-old Lisa Kwapniowski, of Omaha, pleaded guilty to committing wire fraud. She’s scheduled to be sentenced April 29. The prosecutors say Kwapniowski will be ordered to pay restitution as part of her sentence.

Court records say that sometime before 2010, Kwapniowski submitted to Children’s Hospital & Medical Center fraudulent invoices from legitimate pharmaceutical suppliers. She later submitted reimbursement requests utilizing fraudulent invoices from a company she fraudulently created.

Prosecutors say she also submitted fraudulent invoices that appeared to come from a legitimate drug vendor and used fraudulent means to obtain payments.

She was fired in June after accusations arose.

Nebraska school district sues to identify its Twitter critic

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — A southeast Nebraska school district wants a court to help it learn who is behind a Twitter account that has targeted the district and superintendent.

Friend Public Schools says the unknown person behind the Friend Bulldog account has made false, libelous and defamatory statements accusing Superintendent David Kraus or the district of public indecency and other offenses. The account has been active since last fall.

In a Jan. 7 post, Kraus’ face was positioned over actor Jim Carrey’s in a poster for Carrey’s movie “Liar Liar.” Another post from September of last year compared Kraus to Adolf Hitler.

The district’s attorney, Justin Knight, also said in the lawsuit filed last week that the Twitter account might be mistaken for the district’s official one because it uses a picture of the Friend Bulldog mascot.

“The goal is to clear the reputations of the individuals that have been targeted in the account,” Knight said.

District officials made other efforts to contact the online critic and resolve the issue — including an open invitation from the school board — but those weren’t successful. Knight said the district didn’t decide to file the lawsuit until after several other district employees were singled out. The district in Friend, Nebraska, is about 40 miles southwest of Lincoln.

The Lincoln Journal Star reported on the lawsuit first.

On Saturday, the person behind the Twitter account posted, “The name’s Doe, John Doe.” The individual later added, “I can’t believe you guys guessed my real name!”

The person didn’t immediately respond to a Twitter message that The Associated Press sent Monday seeking comment.

A spokeswoman for Twitter said Monday she was looking into the case and couldn’t immediately comment. But the social media company describes online how it handles legal requests for user information. Twitter says it tries to notify users about a request and then reviews the request before deciding whether to comply or object to it.

VA buys land to expand western Nebraska cemetery

MAXWELL, Neb. (AP) — The Department of Veterans Affairs says it’s bought land to expand a national veterans cemetery in western Nebraska.

The VA announced Monday that Fort McPherson National Cemetery in Maxwell will be expanded to nearly double its current size. The VA says it bought 18 acres (7.3 hectares) on the north side of the 20-acre cemetery, providing room for at least 15,000 more graves.

The VA says it paid Donna Sundstrom nearly $116,000 for the land.

Fort McPherson National Cemetery was established in 1873. The VA says there are two more national cemeteries in Nebraska: Omaha National Cemetery, which is in Sarpy County on the south side of Omaha, and Forest Lawn Cemetery Soldiers’ Lot, in Omaha.

There are also state veterans cemeteries at Alliance and in Grand Island.

Police suspect Iowa inmate in 2013 killing in Omaha suburb

Ricardo Paul Escobedo Jr.
RALSTON, Neb. (AP) — Police have issued a murder warrant for an Iowa inmate in connection with the 2013 killing of a woman whose body was found in her apartment in an Omaha suburb.

Police in Ralston said Monday they had issued the first-degree murder warrant for Ricardo Paul Escobedo Jr., who was serving time in the Iowa State Penitentiary for a drug charge.

He’s charged in the Oct. 28, 2013, killing of Aimee Kearns, who was shot-to-death in her apartment, apparently because she owed money for illegal drugs.

Police say the arrest came after authorities matched DNA from blood found at the Ralston apartments to Escobedo’s DNA.

The 27-year-old Escobedo is expected to be transferred to the Douglas County jail.

Authorities say one or two others could be involved in the killing.

Police investigating fatal shooting in Omaha

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Authorities are investigating a fatal shooting in Omaha.

Police were called to Creighton University Medical Center-University Campus a little before 10 p.m. Sunday after the wounded person arrived at the hospital. Police say he died after he was transferred to Creighton University Medical Center-Bergan Mercy.

He was identified as 28-year-old Robert Williams Jr.

No arrests have been reported.

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