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Omaha woman charged after pit bull left to starve in kennel

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — An Omaha woman accused of letting a dog starved to death in a kennel inside her apartment has been charged with felony animal cruelty.

The Nebraska Humane Society says in a news release that that the Metro Fugitive Task Force arrested 25-year-old Ayeshea Colbenson on Wednesday in Omaha.

Officials say the pit bull carcass was seized Jan. 1 by animal control officers from Colbenson’s home after she called the Humane Society to report her dog had died. A necropsy showed it had starved.

Authorities say that when she was arrested, Colbenson already had obtained another pit bull, which was found along with a cat in her apartment. Both animals are being held by the Nebraska Humane Society.

Bill would help track missing Native American women

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Nebraska law enforcement officials need to unite behind an effort to track cases of missing Native American women and children, a problem that has gone virtually unnoticed until recently, a state senator said Thursday.

Sen. Tom Brewer, of Gordon, presented a proposal to a legislative committee that would require better tracking of such cases. The Legislature’s Judiciary Committee heard all-favorable testimony on the bill Thursday from Native American women and other advocates, but took no immediate action.

Brewer, a member of the Oglala Sioux Tribe, said law enforcement agencies don’t always communicate well with tribes or the U.S. Bureau of Indian Affairs.

“This failure to communicate between these agencies has left a no-man’s land where people can fall through the cracks,” Brewer said. “There’s not a way to track the numbers and have the accountability that we need.”

The bill would direct the Nebraska State Patrol to collect data on missing Native American women and organize meetings with law enforcement agencies, tribes and the Nebraska Commission on Indian Affairs. The patrol would report all of its findings to lawmakers by June 1, 2020.

Brewer’s original bill focused solely on women, but he said he hopes to expand it to include children.

More than 80 percent of Native American women have experienced violence in their lifetimes, according to a 2016 report from the National Institute of Justice. More than 56 percent of the women questioned in the nationally representative survey reported that they had experienced sexual violence, and nearly 56 percent reported physical violence by an intimate partner.

“The statistics are staggering about the number of missing Native Americans, and we know that this has to do with human trafficking as well as other issues of domestic violence and assault,” said Lincoln Sen. Patty Pansing Brooks, a co-sponsor of the bill.

The lack of information stems from a combination of factors, said Scott Shafer, an administrative assistant for the Nebraska Commission on Indian Affairs.

Shafer said some missing-persons cases involving Native American women go unreported, and in others, the woman’s race is misclassified. Sometimes, the women who go missing live transient lifestyles and their absences aren’t immediately noticed. Other cases slip through the cracks because of poor record keeping and a lack of communication between agencies, he said.

“It’s hard to fix the problem if you don’t have a true understanding of the full extent of that problem,” he said.

The bill was partly inspired by the unsolved 2016 murder of Sherry Wounded Foot, who was found beaten and unconscious behind an abandoned building in Whiteclay, a tiny Nebraska village that borders South Dakota’s Pine Ridge Indian Reservation. Wounded Foot died from her injuries 12 days later.

It’s modeled after a new Washington state law that requires the state patrol to figure out a way to identify more cases of missing Native American women. North Dakota lawmakers are considering similar legislation , and may expand it to include data on all missing people in that state.

The U.S. Senate unanimously passed a similar measure in 2017 in response to the death of a Spirit Lake Tribe member in North Dakota, but the bill stalled in the House.

April Marie Satchell, a Native American woman from Lincoln, said the measure highlights a seldom-noticed crisis plaguing many indigenous people. She said she is already working to teach her young granddaughter “the dangers of being Native American and female.”

“Right now, our lives don’t matter,” she said.

Husband of former public defender is sentenced for theft

Dale Waldron

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — The husband of a former York County public defender accused of theft has been sentenced for a crime in Lincoln.

Lancaster County District Court records say 64-year-old Dale Waldron, of Exeter, was sentenced last week to 280 days in Lancaster County Jail. He’d pleaded no contest after prosecutors lowered the charge.

The records say that between February 2015 and January 2017, while Waldron was employed at Lincoln Lumber Co., he had more than $6,500 worth of construction materials delivered to various parties and kept for himself their payments.

Nancy Waldron has pleaded not guilty in Fillmore County to accusations that she stole from two private clients.

Woman accused of stealing from co-op gets 3 years’ probation

BROKEN BOW, Neb. (AP) — A woman accused of stealing from a central Nebraska co-op has been given three years of probation.

Custer County District Court records say 51-year-old Holli Erstrom, of Callaway, was sentenced last week. She’d pleaded no contest to attempted theft. Prosecutors had lowered the charge in exchange for Erstrom’s plea.

Prosecutors say Erstrom stole money while working as manager for the Callaway branch of Country Partners Cooperative.

Station KCNI reports that prosecution and defense attorneys recommended that Erstrom be given probation, noting that she had no criminal history. The judge ordered Erstrom to make restitution of more than $17,600 in addition to the probation.

Man suspected of Bellevue slaying arrested in Omaha

Brian Faeller

BELLEVUE, Neb. (AP) — A man suspected of a fatal shooting in an Omaha suburb has been arrested.

Bellevue police say the man was found Wednesday night in Omaha and taken into custody. Sarpy County Court records don’t show the man’s been formally charged in the slaying of 23-year-old Brian Faeller. He also was known as Brian Faeller-Crom.

A court record says his girlfriend reported that he’d been shot a little before 9 p.m. on Jan. 15 after opening the door at a Bellevue apartment. He was pronounced dead later at an Omaha hospital.

Omaha hospital denies malpractice allegations

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — An Omaha health center has denied accusations from two surgeons that malpractice at the hospital led to the death of a 7-month-old child.

Children’s Hospital and Medical Center filed court documents Wednesday saying Dr. Jason Miller, a plastic surgeon, and pediatric neurosurgeon Dr. Mark Puccioni weren’t in the operating room and haven’t reviewed the child’s medical records.

The surgeons filed a lawsuit earlier this month against the hospital, hospital CEO Dr. Richard Azizkhan and another pediatric neurosurgeon. The lawsuit alleged that the doctor’s incompetence led to the death of a 7-month-old child.

“For those familiar with the events in question, the unfounded nature of these allegations was clear from the beginning,” the hospital said in its filing.

The lawsuit also contends that Children’s suspended Miller and Puccioni’s privileges to practice there after they questioned the neurosurgeon’s skill and competence. Miller and Puccioni allege that they were intentionally driven away from the hospital and had their reputations attacked.

The hospital said the two surgeons are making false accusations to protect their business interests, and that the surgeons “have callously and intentionally used the tragic death” of a child to make their case.

Puccioni said he and Miller are happy to have the opportunity to tell the truth about the situation.

“Our only desire is to take care of the children of Nebraska in the safe and secure manner,” Puccioni said.

Miller is a board-certified plastic surgeon with training in craniofacial plastic surgery. He has held privileges for more than 10 years at several Omaha-area hospitals. Puccioni, a board-certified pediatric neurosurgeon, has had privileges at several local hospitals for over 17 years.

Falls City man sentenced to prison for child pornography

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — A Falls City man has been sentenced to federal prison for receiving and distributing child pornography.

Federal prosecutors for Nebraska say 32-year-old Corey Hayes was sentenced Wednesday to 9 1/2 years in prison. He must also register as a sex offender.

Officials say Hayes in late 2015 engaged in an online chat and sent pornographic pictures to someone he believed was a 13-year-old, but who was actually an undercover Homeland Security agent. Federal agents say a search of Hayes’ home in 2016 found more than 150 files on electronic devices containing child pornography.

Woman accused of stealing more than $36K from aid agency

GRAND ISLAND, Neb. (AP) — A Grand Island woman is accused of stealing more than $36,000 from an organization that helps people with developmental disabilities.

Hall County Court records say 39-year-old Kellie Murphy is charged with felony theft. The records don’t list the name of an attorney who could comment for her. Her preliminary hearing is scheduled for March 12.

Police say Murphy is suspected of taking the money between Jan. 3, 2017, and Sept. 3 last year while working for Integrated Life Choices.

Man in fraud case told to pay more than $130K in restitution

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — A 61-year-old Hastings man has been sentenced to a year and a day in federal prison for committing health care fraud.

Federal court records say Randy Kirby was sentenced last week and ordered to pay restitution of more than $130,000.

Prosecutors say Kirby operated a mental health practice called Transitions Counseling. Prosecutors say that between September 2013 and September 2016, Kirby submitted to Nebraska Medicaid false claims for reimbursement for services that he couldn’t show he’d rendered.

He pleaded guilty last October.

Nebraska housing program helps rural workers

WAKEFIELD, Neb. (AP) — A couple in northeast Nebraska is the first to find housing through the state’s rural housing program, which aims to help rural communities increase housing opportunities to better retain workers.

The state’s $7 million Rural Workforce Housing Fund gives nonprofit development organizations matching grants to construct or rehabilitate housing in rural parts of the state.

The goal is to create housing options for middle-income workers who don’t qualify for other housing assistance programs but don’t have enough for a down payment.

Adrian and Maria Ruiz were renting a home in Emerson as they struggled to find housing eight miles away in Wakefield, where Adrian Ruiz works. The couple was finally able to purchase a $185,000 home in Wakefield after receiving a no-interest loan through the program, which helped them afford the down payment needed for the three-bedroom home.

“It’s just a great feeling now being part of the community of Wakefield,” Adrian Ruiz said. “Now maybe we can give something back.”

Officials in Wakefield and nearby Wayne said the area lacks homes in the $80,000 to $150,000 range. Many workers have to commute from other cities, which makes it difficult for employers to retain workers.

“We’ve had employers tell us that the retention rate would be higher if there was more housing here,” said Megan Weaver, executive director of the Wayne Community Housing Development Corporation, which applied for the housing grant and administers it. “In these small communities, if you don’t have some kind of incentive for people to live here, they’re going to go live somewhere else.”

The two cities have raised $750,000 in local matching funds for the housing program. Three other homes are planned to be built in Wakefield, along with four rehabilitation projects. A triplex has been constructed in Wayne, and two single-family homes are being planned.

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