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Patrol IDs 2 killed in wrong-way I-80 collision in Nebraska

MILFORD, Neb. (AP) — Authorities have identified two people killed in a wrong-way crash earlier this week on Interstate 80 in eastern Nebraska.

The Nebraska State Patrol says the crash Monday afternoon killed the wrong-way driver, 56-year-old Cesar Perez-Lopez of Columbus, and the driver of the pickup truck he hit, identified as 39-year-old Ronald Fersch of York.

The patrol says Perez-Lopez was driving a sport utility vehicle east in the westbound lanes of I-80 near Milford when he hit the pickup driven by Fersch. The pickup then hit a westbound semitrailer.

Both Perez-Lopez and Fersch were declared dead at the scene. The semi driver wasn’t injured.

Nebraska man imprisoned for sex assault of runaway teen 

Joe Lockett

FREMONT, Neb. (AP) – An Omaha man has been imprisoned for sexually assaulting a 15-year-old girl who’d run away from her Iowa home.

Dodge County District Court records say 38-year-old Joe Lockett was sentenced Wednesday to 20 years to 20 years and a day. Lockett had pleaded guilty in January after taking a plea deal.

The Fremont Tribune reports that Lockett was arrested in October 2018 after a traffic stop in Fremont. Lockett told officers that the girl with him was a friend of his daughter. But a court document says the girl actually was a runaway from Iowa.

The document says she told officers that Lockett was attempting to prostitute her out.

Confirmation students won’t join church, citing LGBTQ rules

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) – Eight middle-school confirmation class members have decided against joining an Omaha Methodist church in protest at the denomination’s renewed ban on same-sex marriage and gay clergy.

The Omaha World-Herald reports that the eight were scheduled to become part of the congregation Sunday at First United Methodist Church. But the seventh- and eighth-graders declined and issued a written statement instead.

It says that if they were to join now, that would send the inaccurate message that they approve of the United Methodist Church’s “immoral” policies on LGBTQ clergy and same-sex marriage.

On Friday, the denomination’s judicial council upheld key portions of a plan adopted in February by the church’s legislative assembly and designed to strengthen the bans on same-sex marriage and ordination of LGBTQ pastors.

Man shot by US marshal gets 5 years in prison 

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) – A man shot while trying to flee officers in Lincoln has been imprisoned.

Lancaster County District Court records say 27-year-old Thomas Sailors, of Blue Springs, was sentenced Tuesday to five years in prison. He’d pleaded no contest in March to assaulting a police officer and operating a motor vehicle to avoid arrest. The judge credited Sailors with 476 days already served in custody.

Lincoln police say two of its officers and a federal marshal tried to serve Sailors with a warrant Jan. 5, 2018, while Sailors was in a sport utility vehicle in an apartment building parking lot. Police say that as Sailors drove away, he hit at least four cars, including one driven by the U.S. marshal. The marshal then fired shots into the SUV, wounding Sailors.

Parts of downtown Davenport, Iowa, flood as barrier fails

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Crews evacuated people from some buildings and cars Tuesday afternoon after a flood barrier failed along the Mississippi River, sending floodwaters rushing into downtown Davenport, Iowa.The National Weather Service sent an alert around 4 p.m. of a flash flood emergency in Davenport, urging people downtown to immediately seek higher ground. Public works officials reported that a temporary flood barrier had failed and that many people sought shelter on the rooftops of downtown buildings.

“It was just the one barrier, so we’re not expecting the flooding to spread beyond what we’re seeing now,” Davenport Public Works Director Nicole Gleason said. “That could change with heavy rain.”

Gleason said crews and volunteers scrambled Tuesday afternoon to fill sandbags for other downtown businesses looking to keep the floodwaters out of their buildings.

The breach hit as communities in Iowa, Illinois and Missouri prepare for record or near-record crests along the river. The National Weather Service already issued flood warnings for areas directly on either side of the river in 10 states, “all the way to the Gulf of Mexico,” said meteorologist Mike McClure in Davenport.

The floodwaters had overtaken vehicles and the first floors of some buildings on the river’s edge, and rescue crews could be seen launching boats into the floodwaters to retrieve people stranded by the sudden surge.

Mayor Frank Klipsch said there were no reports of injuries. He asked that people stay away from downtown while officials work to evacuate the area.

“This is a couple blocks of one part of our city. It’s, fortunately, a relatively small area being flooded,” Klipsch said.

In Iowa, some cities on the river’s banks — including Davenport and Muscatine — had already closed some low-lying streets and erected flood walls and sandbag barriers.

Flood watches have been issued for larger tracts around in the river in Iowa, Illinois and Missouri, as well as sections of Kansas, Oklahoma and Arkansas, as heavy rain that began in some places Monday was set to continue into Wednesday.

The rain comes as the Mississippi River is set to reach record or near-record crests in Iowa, Illinois and northern Missouri.

In suburban St. Louis, the river is expected to reach 9 to 10 feet above flood stage Saturday at several locations in northeast Missouri and at Quincy, Illinois. With up to 4 inches of rain possible in the region through Friday, the weather service cites a high risk of flash flooding and warns that river forecasts could rise even higher.

If the river reaches the projected 24.2 feet in Louisiana, a town of 3,300 residents some 90 miles  north of St. Louis, roads and highways will be covered, railroad tracks will be swamped, and the Champ Clark Bridge crossing the river will have to close, Pike County, Missouri, Emergency Management Director Al Murry said.

Water that high also could threaten levees that protect thousands of acres of farmland.

“The potential for cropland damage if you have a levee burst — that’s a really big deal,” Murry said.

At 5 p.m., the Mississippi River at Davenport was recorded at 21.88 feet — the fifth highest for the spot ever recorded, according to the National Weather Service. That’s approaching the record crest of 22.6 feet set in July 1993.

The river’s expected to crest Wednesday evening a few inches short of the record.

The gauge in nearby Muscatine showed the river just under 3 feet below the July 1993 record of 25.6 feet (7.8 meters). It’s expected to crest a little more than a foot under the record at Muscatine, where officials have placed new berms and are diverting downtown traffic.

Former employee accused of setting fire at chicken operation

TECUMSEH, Neb. (AP) — A former employee has been accused of starting a fire that killed around 20,000 chickens and destroyed a barn at a poultry operation in southeast Nebraska.

Johnson County Court records say 52-year-old Kimberly Bohling is charged with 10 felony counts, including arson and burglary. A phone listed for her in Tecumseh was not in service Tuesday. Her attorney didn’t immediately return a call from The Associated Press.

The records say Tecumseh Poultry had fired Bohling on Jan. 23 and that the first incident occurred Feb. 2 at the company site 3 miles (5 kilometers) north of Tecumseh. Someone turned on heaters and turned off fans at two poultry barns, imperiling the chickens.

Similar incidents occurred Feb. 23, March 30 and on April 5, the night one of the barns was set on fire.

Wrong-way driver collision claims 2 lives near Milford

Two people are deceased following a three-vehicle crash on Interstate 80 near Milford.

The crash occurred just before 5:30 p.m. Monday evening on I-80 near mile marker 381. A Jeep Grand Cherokee was driving the wrong way in the westbound lanes when it came over a hill and struck a westbound Chevrolet Silverado. The Silverado then struck a westbound semi, disabling the semi.

The drivers of the Grand Cherokee and Silverado were both pronounced deceased on the scene. Those drivers were the sole occupants of those vehicles. The semi driver was not injured.

The Nebraska State Patrol is investigating the crash, with assistance from the Seward Police Department and the Seward County Sheriff’s Office. Names of those involved are being withheld pending notification of next of kin.

Californian man imprisoned for looting Nebraskans’ account

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) – A California man has been imprisoned for looting a bank account of three Nebraska residents.

Federal prosecutors say 60-year-old Robert Goldman, of Palm Desert, California, was sentenced Monday to 27 months in prison. He also was ordered to pay restitution of more than $221,000. U.S. District Court records say he’d pleaded guilty to one count of wire fraud.

FBI investigators say Goldman fraudulently obtained the personal bank account information. The investigators say Goldman made about 180 unauthorized wire transfers from the bank account to Goldman’s credit card account between January 2016 and August 2017.

Sheriff seeks dismissal from lawsuit over anti-protest laws

By BLAKE NICHOLSON Associated Press

A western South Dakota sheriff is seeking to be dismissed from a lawsuit challenging new state laws that target disruptive demonstrations by anti-oil pipeline activists.

Attorney Rebeca L. Mann said Pennington County Sheriff Kevin Thom must enforce state laws but isn’t responsible for defending them.

“Pennington County is not a proper party to defend the constitutionality of state statues nor should it be burdened with the expense of defending statutes it has no power to change,” Mann argued in court documents filed last week.

Pennington County is one of eight South Dakota counties along the route of TransCanada Corp.’s planned Keystone XL pipeline to move Canadian crude through Montana and South Dakota to Nebraska, where it would connect with lines to Gulf Coast refineries. The $8 billion project has the backing of President Donald Trump but is being fought in the courts by opponents.

Activists and American Indian tribes also plan on-the-ground protests against construction. Such protests against the Dakota Access oil pipeline in North Dakota in 2016 and 2017 resulted in 761 arrests and cost the state and Morton County $38 million. Texas-based pipeline developer Energy Transfer Partners also is seeking to recover millions of dollars in protest-related damages from Greenpeace, an effort the environmental group is fighting.

In March, South Dakota Republican Gov. Kristi Noem and GOP leaders passed legislation allowing officials to pursue criminal or civil penalties from demonstrators who engage in “riot boosting,” which is defined in part as encouraging violence during a riot. Noem has said the law is meant to address problems caused by “out-of-state rioters funded by out-of-state interests.”

The American Civil Liberties Union and tribes contend the law stifles free speech, and the ACLU is suing Noem, Attorney General Jason Ravnsborg and Thom in federal court on behalf of activists.

Thom is named as a defendant because he’s sheriff in the county in which the activists are working, according to Courtney Bowie, legal director for the ACLU of South Dakota, North Dakota and Wyoming. Plaintiffs include the Rapid City-based NDN Collective nonprofit, which advocates for indigenous peoples and climate change awareness.

Mann argued, “there is no jurisdictional basis for suing Sheriff Thom to challenge the constitutionality of state statutes.” She also argued more broadly that since activists have pledged peaceful protests against Keystone XL, there is no “realistic fear of prosecution.” Attorneys for Noem and Ravnsborg made a similar argument earlier this month.

Plaintiffs’ attorneys have not yet responded to Thom’s argument, but Bowie in a statement to The Associated Press said: “our complaint alleges a chilling of free speech, which is itself an injury that our clients have suffered and continue to suffer.”

“They do not have to wait for prosecution to bring a claim and, with the way the laws are written, they are subject to later civil or criminal liability for their organizing work,” Bowie said.

The law states that people who solicit or pay someone to break the law or be arrested would be subject to paying three times the amount that would compensate for the detriment caused. The ACLU maintains it fails to adequately describe the speech or conduct that could subject protesters and organizations to penalties.

Man convicted in parking lot slaying of former girlfriend

Marcus Wheeler
OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — A man who shot to death his former girlfriend in a parking lot just north of Omaha has been found guilty.

Jurors convicted 20-year-old Marcus Wheeler on Monday of second-degree murder. Prosecutors say he killed 21-year-old Kay Nelson on April 18 last year.

Prosecutors say Wheeler shot Nelson as she sat in the driver’s seat of her vehicle and her 2-year-old son sat in a car seat in the back. Police say he had been fighting in the parking lot with a brother of Nelson’s new boyfriend before grabbing a gun and shooting her.

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