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Another Democrat elected to lead Lincoln as mayor

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Another Democrat has been elected to lead the city of Lincoln.

Lancaster County says Leirion Gaylor Baird beat Republican Cyndi Lamm on Tuesday with more than 54% of the more than 61,000 votes that were cast in the officially nonpartisan race. Both are members of the Lincoln City Council.

Gaylor Baird will be replacing Mayor Chris Beutler, who is leaving after 12 years in office because of term limits.

Voters also approved a $9.9 million stormwater bond issue to help clear nearly 500 homes and businesses from a flood plain. Officials say the 20-year bond will add about $6 a year to the property tax bill on an average home, valued at $183,000.

Police: Driver fatally shot during chase in Council Bluffs

COUNCIL BLUFFS, Iowa (AP) — Authorities say one driver was fatally shot during a three-vehicle chase in Council Bluffs.

Police say officers were not involved in Monday evening’s shooting. Police say shots were fired from at least one vehicle into another during the high-speed chase. The wounded driver was taken to Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha, across the Missouri River from Council Bluffs. Police say he died there.

The names of those involved and other details haven’t been released.

Service confirms EF2 tornado struck west of downtown Lincoln

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) – The National Weather Service has confirmed that a tornado ripped through some buildings west-southwest of downtown Lincoln.

The service says the twister touched down at 5:38 p.m. Sunday and remained on the ground for about 2 minutes, traveling about a half-mile toward downtown. It was rated an EF2 tornado, with peak winds of about 120 mph (193 kph).

No injuries have been reported, but the tornado destroyed sheds, damaged homes and businesses and snapped trees.

The service says other Lincoln damage was caused by straight-line winds.

Teen indicted in death of friend killed in SUV crash

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — A 15-year-old boy has been indicted in the death of a 14-year-old who died in the December crash of a stolen vehicle.

The Lincoln Journal Star reports the 15-year-old was indicted Friday and made his first court appearance Monday by video from the Youth Services Center. He’s charged with manslaughter in the death of Zayne Yost, of Lincoln.

The crash came hours after a group of boys found a sport utility vehicle unlocked and running early on Dec. 26. Two boys took the SUV and then picked up Yost and another teen.

Police spotted the SUV but stopped a chase when the vehicle sped away. A Lancaster County deputy saw it again in downtown Lincoln and followed it onto Interstate 80, where the vehicle swerved into a ditch and rolled, throwing out the boys.

All were taken to a hospital, where Yost was pronounced dead .

The Associated Press typically doesn’t name juveniles charged with crimes.

Ex-teacher pleads guilty to sexually assaulting 3 girls

Gregory Sedlacek
OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — A former first-grade teacher at an Omaha elementary school has pleaded guilty to sexually assaulting three students.

The Omaha World-Herald reports 31-year-old Gregory Sedlacek pleaded guilty Monday to three charges of sexual assault of a child. Prosecutors dropped three other charges in return for the guilty pleas.

Sedlacek could be sentenced from 15 years to life in prison for each count. He’ll be sentenced in July.

Police arrested Sedlacek Dec. 3 on charges involving a 7-year-old girl. He then was charged with more counts after other incidents came to light. He has admitted to inappropriately touching six girls.

1 driver killed, 1 injured in Stanton County collision

NORFOLK, Neb. (AP) — Authorities say one driver was killed and the other injured in a collision near Norfolk.

The accident occurred just before 7 a.m. Monday on Nebraska Highway 24, about 2 miles (3 kilometers) east of Norfolk.

Stanton County Sheriff Mike Unger says a pickup truck driven by 19-year-old Ried Krutz, of Stanton, crossed the center line and struck an oncoming sport utility vehicle driven by 63-year-old Jim Hoff, of Norfolk.

Unger says Hoff was pronounced dead at the scene. Krutz was taken to a Norfolk hospital.

Woman pleads guilty in crash that killed 3 family members

HOLTON, Kan. (AP) – A Nebraska woman involved in a crash that killed three Kansans will be sentenced in June after accepting a plea agreement.

The Topeka Capital-Journal report s Jackson County Attorney Shawna Miller confirmed Monday that 49-year-old Maria Perez Marquez, of Omaha, pleaded guilty in April to three misdemeanor counts of vehicular homicide and one felony count of aggravated battery. She had originally been charged with three felony counts of involuntary manslaughter.

The November 2017 crash on U.S. 75 killed three family members of two Sabetha High School football players shortly after their team won a state title.

The Kansas Highway Patrol said Perez-Marquez was trying to pass another vehicle about 12 miles north of Holton when her vehicle hit a minivan driven by 42-year-old Carmen Ukele, of Sabetha. The crash killed Ukele, her daughter and her brother-in-law.

Omaha could soon roll out electric scooter pilot program

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Omaha pedestrians and drivers may soon have to make way for electric scooter riders on the city’s sidewalks and streets.

The Omaha World-Herald reports that the City Council will vote Tuesday on a pilot project to bring up to 1,500 dockless scooters to the city through November.

Scooter companies Lime and Spin say they could make the electric scooters available as early as Wednesday.

The scooters are equipped with GPS so users can track them down for rent through a smartphone app.

Many officials have expressed support for the project but there’s some hesitation about how the scooters are operated and parked.

Council member Chris Jerram is concerned about scooters being left on streets, in parking spots or near business entrances.

The company plans to educate renters about proper parking.

Microsoft offers software tools to secure elections

Microsoft announced an ambitious effort it says will make voting secure, verifiable and more transparent with open-source software. Two of the three top U.S elections vendors have expressed interest in potentially incorporating the software into their voting systems.The software kit is being developed with Galois, an Oregon-based company separately creating a secure voting system prototype under contract with the Pentagon’s advanced research agency, DARPA.Dubbed “ElectionGuard,” the Microsoft kit will be available this summer, the company says, with early prototypes ready to pilot for next year’s general elections. CEO Satya Nadella announced the initiative Monday at a developer’s conference in Seattle.Nadella said the program’s software would help “modernize all of the election infrastructure everywhere in the world.”

Three little-known U.S. companies control about 90 percent of the market for election equipment but have long faced criticism for poor security, antiquated technology and insufficient transparency around their proprietary, black-box voting systems. They are Election Systems & Software of Omaha, Nebraska; Dominion Voting Systems of Denver and Hart InterCivic of Austin, Texas.

ES&S and Hart InterCivic both expressed interest in partnering with Microsoft for ElectionGuard. A spokeswoman for Dominion said the company looks forward to “learning more” about the initiative.

Microsoft officials said the ElectionGuard development kit will be provided free of charge as part of its Defending Democracy Program. They also announced a cut-rate Office 365 application suite for political parties and campaigns at a 75 percent discount, the price the company charges nonprofits. Both Microsoft and Google provide anti-phishing email support for campaigns.

ElectionGuard is designed to work as a standalone product or alongside existing election systems, said Josh Benaloh, a senior cryptographer at Microsoft Research and key contributor to the ElectionGuard project. “It can be used with a ballot-marking device. It can be used with an optical scanner, on hand-marked paper ballots.”

Benaloh helped produce a National Academies of Science report last year that called for an urgent overhaul of the rickety U.S. election system, which faced serious threats from Russian hackers who in 2016 attempted to infiltrate voting administration systems in several states.

That report called for all U.S. elections to be held on human-readable paper ballots by 2020. It also advocated a specific form of routine post-election audits intended to ensure that votes are accurately counted. While U.S. officials say there is no evidence of hackers tampering with election results, experts say systems used by millions of U.S. voters remain susceptible to tampering.

ElectionGuard aims to provide “end-to-end” verification of voting in two ways, Benaloh said. First, it lets voters confirm that their votes are accurately recorded. Second, the unique coded tracker it produces registers an encrypted version of the vote that keeps the ballot choice itself secret while ensuring votes are accurately counted. Outsiders such as election watchdog groups, political parties, journalists and voters themselves can verify online that votes were properly counted without being altered.

The system would also allow for reliable post-election audits and recounts. Microsoft executives say they also plan to build a prototype voting system for reference.

A spinoff of Galois called Free & Fair developed the sophisticated postelection audits , known as “risk-limiting,” for Colorado, which was the first U.S. state to require the audits recommended in the National Academies of Sciences report.

ElectionGuard is not designed to work with internet voting schemes — which experts consider too easily hackable — and does not currently work with vote-by-mail systems.

ES&S told The Associated Press via email that it was exciting to partner with Microsoft and “still exploring the potentials” for incorporated the software kit its voting systems.

Hart InterCivic, the No. 3 vendor, said it planned a pilot project with Microsoft to “incorporate ElectionGuard functionality as an additional feature” layered over its core platform.

A spokeswoman for Dominion, the No. 2 vendor, said: “We are very interested in learning more about the initiative and being able to review the various prototypes that are being planned, along with hearing more about other federally-supported efforts in the elections space.”

Edgardo Cortés, a former Virginia elections commissioner now with New York University’s Brennan Center, welcomed additional private sector support for election systems.

“I think it’ll take a while to catch on and see how beneficial (ElectionGuard) ends up being,” he said. “But I think it certainly does have a great deal of potential.”

Columbia University will be partnering with Microsoft to audit the pilots.

Possible tornado flattens food stand in Lincoln

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) – A possible tornado demolished a Lincoln food stand shortly after workers at the business scrambled into a storm cellar.

The Lincoln Journal Star reports the storm hit about 6 p.m. Sunday and flattened the C & L Dairy Sweet, just after workers sought safety, leaving a cheeseburger on a grill.

The storm also damaged the roof of a Lincoln motorcycle dealership, part of a car wash and a plane at the Lincoln Airport. Electricity was knocked out to about 4,000 homes and businesses.

No injuries were reported.

A National Weather Service team will examine the damage and determine of the storm was a tornado or straight-line winds.

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