BILLINGS, Mont. (AP) – A Canadian company that wants to build a massive pipeline linking Alberta’s oil sands to U.S. refineries says it would include safety measures to prevent a spill like the one that fouled the Yellowstone River last month. TransCanada executives visiting Montana on Tuesday offered that pledge to shore up support for its $7 billion project assailed by environmentalists as too risky. The U.S. State Department plans to release its final analysis of the Keystone XL pipeline this month. Opponents say approval could lead to more spills like the Exxon Mobil pipeline rupture in July that spewed an estimated 1,000 barrels of oil into the Yellowstone. TransCanada president Alex Pourbaix says the line would be buried at least 25 feet beneath major river crossings to lower the risk of spills.
LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) – Nebraska death row inmate Carey Dean Moore wants to question Attorney General Jon Bruning and other officials over attempts to go forward with his execution when they didn’t have a legal drug on hand to put him to death. The Lincoln Journal Star reports that Moore’s attorney, Jerry
Soucie, says it was cruel and unusual punishment to allow Moore to think his execution was looming when the state had no way to carry it out. Soucie made the argument in a court filing in Douglas County. Moore was to be executed in June for the 1979 slayings of two Omaha cabbies. The Nebraska Supreme Court issued a stay while Soucie challenged the purchase from an Indian company of one of the drugs used by Nebraska to carry out lethal injections.
NORTH PLATTE, Neb. (AP) – Work has begun to reopen Buffalo Bill Ranch State Historical Park and its recreation area. The area was closed in early June because of potential flooding from the North Platte River. It was feared river floodwaters would spill over into Scout Creek, which runs through the park. On Monday morning, workers began removing berms surrounding Buffalo Bill’s historic mansion, barn and outbuildings. Park superintendent Aric Riggins says he hated turning away people. He estimated the park lost more 20,000 visitors and $25,000-$30,000 in income. Riggins says he’s certain the whole park will be reopened by next week.
Jennifer Dominianni along with her daughter, Natania, look at a memorial in front of the Grandstand at the Indiana State Fair in Indianapolis, Monday, Aug. 15, 2011. The memorial is set-up for those who were killed when a stage collapsed Saturday night. (AP Photo/Darron Cummings)
Name: WILLIAMS,-JIMMY-DUANE Charges: Fail to Appear (FTA) Bond: $10,000.00
Name: HUGHES,-SHAWN-UDELL Charges: Driving Under Influence Liquor, Possession of Drug Para (AFIS/Narc Equip) Bond: No bond listed
Name: JONES,-FREDDIE-SIPPO Charges: Probation Violation, Driving Under Suspension(Mis), Possession of Controlled Substance Bond: $25,000.00
Name: LAHM,-KERRINE-JANETTE Charges: Heroin-Possess, Possession of Drug Para (AFIS/Narc Equip) Bond: No bond listed
Name: LAUBER,-MICHAEL-JAMES Charges: Bond Revocation Bond: No bond listed
Eric Nevon Loving: Felony Driving Under the Influence of Liquor (3rd), Felony Refusal to Submit to a Chemical/Breath Test
Name: NEDLEY,-JAMES-FRANK Charges: Obstructing Police Officer, Heroin-Possess Bond: No bond listed
Name: SELF,-JEREMIAH-GENE Charges: 3rd Degree Assault Bond: No bond listed
Name: SIGWING,-SHAREE-LARAE Charges: Driving Offenses No Operators License, Driving Under Suspension (Felony) (Mis), 3rd Degree Assault Bond: No bond listed
This information is not criminal history. All individuals included in this post are innocent of crimes until proven guilty in a court of law. The North Platte Post assumes no legal liability or responsibility for the accuracy, or completeness, of this information. Any person who believes information provided is not accurate may submit a complaint to[email protected].
HASTINGS, Neb. (AP) – Family members and friends are remembering a 29-year-old Marine from Nebraska who was killed in Afghanistan earlier this month. The funeral for Sgt. Joshua Robinson will be held Tuesday in Hastings. The Hastings Tribune reports that Robinson’s body arrived in Hastings Sunday, and more than 100 Patriot Guard Riders escorted his body from the Grand Island airport to Hastings. Robinson was killed Aug. 7 while on patrol in Afghanistan. Robinson’s wife, Rhonda, and two sons, ages 4 and 5, have been living in Bennington, Neb., so they could be close to family. Robinson lived on a farm near Oak, Neb., when he was a child. His mother said Robinson decided to enlist in the Marines in 2003 because of the threat the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks represented to the country.
LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) – The U.S. Department of Agriculture says
cooler weather and rain brought some relief for “challenging growing conditions” in Nebraska.
The USDA in its weekly crop report on Monday says below normal temperatures and above normal precipitation eased the stress caused by weeks of hot and humid weather. Storms brought high winds, hail and heavy rain that caused damage to crops and property in isolated locations. Over 3 inches of rain fell during the week in parts of north central and east central Nebraska. Grasshopper numbers remain a concern in western Nebraska. The USDA says 75 percent of the corn crop and 78 percent of the soybeans are in good to excellent shape. The third cutting of alfalfa is at 53 percent, behind the 78 percent average.
Highway 281- Grand Island (photo courtesy of Matt Dixon/Grand Island Independent)
Hall County Attorney Mark Young released only a one-paragraph statement saying law enforcement agencies are investigating an apparent murder-suicide that took place in Grand Island Monday morning. However, interviews with people living in the 200 block of North Grace indicate the incident started in that block and likely ended near Highway 30 and Highway 281, where traffic was blocked for several hours Monday morning and into the early afternoon. Young’s written statement said:
“Names of the parties will not be released until the families have been notified. The Hall County Attorney’s Office will have no further comment, because a grand jury may be convened to investigate the incident.”
Nebraska law requires a grand jury investigation whenever someone dies in police custody or while being apprehended.
While Young released almost no information on the circumstances of the murder-suicide, law incident summaries from the Grand Island Police Department showed domestic disturbance being reported at 212 N. Grace Ave. at about 4:57 a.m. and suspicious activity being reported at 211 N. Grace, Apt. 4, at approximately 5:03 a.m.
A friend of Margarita Rodriguez told The Independent Monday afternoon that Margarita was shot and killed by her estranged husband, Antony Rodriguez.
The woman said Antony kicked in the door at 212 N. Grace and shot her in the leg. He then dragged her outside, where Margarita briefly escaped and ran across the street to an apartment building at 211 N. Grace. However, Anthony caught up with her and shot her inside the door of the apartment
Cindy Buettner, who lives at 218 N. Grace, two doors north of the Rodriguez residence, said she arrived home about 6:30 a.m. after getting off work and found the 200 block of Grace blocked off by wooden barricades.
Numerous police cruisers were in the area.
Buettner said police officers told her there had been a domestic disturbance at 212 N. Grace but that “both parties were accounted for.”
Because the barricades stopped her from driving down the street, Buettner said, she parked her car in an adjacent block and walked home. She said she later saw Hall County Attorney Mark Young at 212 N. Grace. Buettner said police crime scene tape also was placed at both 212 N. Grace and 211 N. Grace for part of the day on Monday.
When The Independent went to 212 N. Grace late Monday afternoon, a work crew was at the residence replacing a door.
Kacie Miller, who lives in Apt. 4 at 211 N. Grace, said her fiancé woke at about 5 a.m. to what may have been a banging, then he heard what he thought was moaning and rubbing. She said her fiancé looked outside and saw a person in the stairwell “in bad condition.” Miller said her fiancé could not tell at that point whether the injured person was a man or a woman.
Miller said her fiancé called 911. She said when police officers arrived, they told everyone to stay inside their apartments.
Miller said she had heard that the woman across the street was going through “a bad divorce.” She said she did not know many details because the woman spoke mostly Spanish.
Miller said she had also heard rumors that the woman may have once lived at 211 N. Grace, perhaps even in the apartment where she and her fiancé now live, although she did not know that for a fact.
When asked, Miller said a portion of carpet on the landing and on three steps leading to the downstairs had been removed because of blood stains.
Miller said she never expected something like a fatal shooting to happen in her neighborhood.
Later in the day, law enforcement had Highways 281 and 30 blocked off. Police officer Butch Hurst was asked if the area had been blocked off because of a shooting in that area. He said he could not answer that question, but said blocking off those sections of highway should not cause any immediate concern for the public.
Story courtesy of Harold Reutter, Grand Island Independent
It went down to the wire, and then a little bit beyond, but Bubba Starling signed on the dotted line and will play professional baseball, spurning his football scholarship from Nebraska. Starling agreed to a deal with the Kansas City Royals, who made him the fifth overall pick in July’s Major League Baseball Entry Draft. The deal includes a 7.5 million dollar signing bonus that will be spread out over three years. According to the Royals front office, negotiations between the team and Starling didn’t heat up until the last few minutes before the 11 PM central time deadline for teams to come to terms with their draft picks. The signing bonus is the largest ever given to a draft pick by the Royals. Starling’s departure from the Nebraska football program means the Huskers will enter the 2011 season with only two scholarship quarterbacks: Taylor Martinez and Brion Carnes.
Bo Pelini released a statement regarding Starling’s decision:
“Everyone associated with our football program at Nebraska wishes Bubba nothing but the best in his future with the Kansas City Royals organization. I know this decision has been very difficult for Bubba and his family, as it would be for anyone in his position. In the end, Bubba was in a win-win situation regardless of his choice, and we respect the decision he has made. I personally will root for Bubba in every game except when he plays against the Indians!”