
Category: News
Nebraska takes custody of dead baby’s 1-year-old sister
LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — State authorities have taken emergency custody of an infant whose 5-week-old sister was found dead in a Lincoln motel room.
An investigator wrote in a motion for temporary custody of the 1-year-old that the baby was pronounced dead Thursday at the Knights Inn after medics arrived. The parents told police that the child had fallen off a motel bed and then later was dropped by her father onto a bed. The parents say the tiny girl appeared to be OK, so they didn’t take her to a doctor.
The investigator says marijuana and suspected drug paraphernalia were found in the motel room. The girls, their parents and a family dog had been living in the motel for several weeks.
The baby’s parents haven’t been charged in the case.
Footsteps Camp: A healing journey will through grief
NORTH PLATTE, Neb. – Great Plains Home Health & Hospice along with Great Plains Health Care Foundation has set Saturday, June 11 as the date for 2016 for Footsteps Camp. Footsteps Camp is a day-long camp focused on children and teens, along with their guardians, who have experienced the death of a loved one. At the camp all participants will learn about grief and connect with others who have experienced the loss of a mom, a dad, a spouse or someone important to them. Kids and adults can develop friendships and find comfort in knowing others who have had experienced this grief.
“If I could say one thing about Footsteps it would be this – come to Footsteps,” said Renee Callaghan, hospice volunteer/bereavement coordinator. “It is a very emotional day, but it is also fun day. Your child will experience being around other kids who can relate to what they are going through and where they can tell their own grief story”.
The camp is free to all campers and is made possible by gifts to Great Plains Health Care Foundation. Lunch, snacks, activity supplies and T-shirts will be provided.
McDonald Elementary School
601 McDonald Road, North Platte, Neb
Check-in is at 9 a.m. and the event is 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
The registration deadline is June 7.
To register online, go to gphealth.org/footsteps-grief-camp or for more information contact Renee Callaghan at 308.696.7434 or callaghanr@gphealth.org.
Man serving life in prison resentenced in fatal Omaha theft

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — A judge has resentenced a man who was spending life in prison after being convicted of a fatal robbery in Omaha about 25 years ago.
Douglas County District Judge Mark Ashford resentenced 43-year-old Johnny Ray on Monday to a term that will make him eligible for parole by the time he’s 55 and for automatic release at age 69.
The sentence was prompted by a U.S. Supreme Court ruling that says judges must have the ability to sentence juveniles to something other than an automatic life term. Ray was 17 when he fired shots that killed 21-year-old Matthew Mallory.
Raymond Martin, the other man convicted in the incident, will continue is sentence of life in prison because he was 18 at the time of the crime.
Mom charged with child abuse for letting son, 11, drive golf cart

BALD HEAD ISLAND, N.C. (AP) — A woman says she was arrested, charged with child abuse and detained for hours for letting her 11-year-old son drive a golf cart during a family vacation on a North Carolina beach resort island.
Julie Mall said her son asked to drive the cart two blocks back to their rented cottage on Bald Head Island on July 26. Mall says a police golf cart pulled them over and an officer accused her of being drunk, which she denies. She says more officers showed up and she was arrested. Video shows a screaming Mall on the ground being handcuffed by an officer with a knee on her back.
The charges were later dismissed.
Village manager Chris McCall says it will be reviewing public safety policies and procedures.
Judge dismisses water lawsuits against Nebraska department
CAMBRIDGE, Neb. (AP) — A judge has dismissed two lawsuits filed against the Nebraska Natural Resources Department by Frenchman Cambridge District water users in southern Nebraska.
Judge James Doyle IV ruled last week that the arguments that the department failed to regulate groundwater did not include a cause of action necessary for the lawsuits to move forward.
The lawsuits sought damages for irrigation water lost in 2013 and 2014 when, the lawsuits say, the surface water irrigators’ allocations and rights to water were taken or misappropriated.
The lawsuits say the damages occurred because the department caused naturally occurring stream flows to be interrupted through diversion and groundwater pumping, and when state officials issued orders for water to be routed around Republican River basin reclamation projects.
North Platte Weather-May 24

Driver killed in Kearney County crash, Nebraska patrol says
MINDEN, Neb. (AP) — Authorities have released the name of a driver who died in an accident about two miles north of Minden in Kearney County.
The Nebraska State Patrol says the rollover crash occurred around 7:15 p.m. Sunday on O Road. Officials say 35-year-old Christopher Burns, of Kearney, was pronounced dead at the scene.
Authorities say Burns lost control of the vehicle, veered off the side of the road and the vehicle rolled over. Authorities found the car submerged in an irrigation pit. Burns was not wearing a seat belt.
Home improvement project leads to second degree domestic assault charges

On May 22, 2016 at approximately 5:48 PM, North Platte police officers responded to the 2400 block of East E St. on the report of a disturbance between a man and woman. The reporting party said the man threw the woman to the ground.
Upon arrival, officers determined that the couple was working on a home improvement project when they started arguing. The woman quit helping and the male became upset. The victim reported being kicked, thrown to the ground and being struck in the head with a large construction level. She had injuries consistent with her statement.
The male, Wesley Hawkins, was taken into custody for 2nd degree domestic assault and use of a weapon to commit a felony. He was incarcerated at the Lincoln County Detention Center.
Don’t move a mussel; NPPD encourages boaters to clean, drain, and dry their boats

Columbus, Neb. – Don’t move a mussel!
That’s the message Nebraska Public Power District is sending to recreational boaters and fishermen to help prevent the spread of the invasive zebra mussels into lakes and waterways of Nebraska. Moving a mussel can result in problems for both the body of water and its uses for utilities and recreational activities.
The zebra mussel is one of many invasive species that has clogged cooling intake structures of power plants and other utilities along the Great Lakes as well as inflicting millions of dollars in damage to recreation, water systems and fisheries. Over the past few years, zebra mussels have been found in or near Nebraska waters, most recently in 2015 at Lewis & Clark Lake along the Nebraska-South Dakota border.
Why is this important to NPPD? The District utilizes water in the generation of electricity at several locations including Gerald Gentleman Station by Sutherland Reservoir, at the North Platte Hydroelectric Plant, and at Cooper Nuclear Station near Brownville along the Missouri River. Keeping these aquatic invasive species at bay and preventing clogging of intake lines is the better way to provide low cost, reliable electricity rather than spending ratepayers’ money to control the species.
“We have been fortunate over the past few years that we have not been impacted at any of our power plants, but we need boaters to be aware of the potential of unknowingly transporting aquatic hitchhikers,” NPPD Environmental Manager Joe Citta explained.
Citta says boaters should follow three steps to make a difference in keeping Nebraska waters free from zebra mussels and other invasive species. “They need to clean the boat, drain the boat, and dry the boat,” he said. “If it’s done properly, and systematically, this can be accomplished in a short amount of time.”
The Nebraska Invasive Species Program recommends the following:
• Clean after boating and before leaving the launch to remove all visible plants, animals, fish and mud from the boat, trailer or other equipment and dispose of the debris in a suitable trash container or on dry land. Power washing the boat and trailer is another option.
• Drain after boating and before leaving the launch by draining water from the bilge, live wells, ballast tanks and any other equipment holding water. If draining water not an option, using a cup of diluted bleach will kill off the zebra mussel.
• Dry your boat, trailer, and all equipment completely before arriving at the next launch ramp to go boating or fishing.
Tips for preventing zebra mussels being introduced into Nebraska bodies of water are available through the Nebraska Invasive Species Program at www.neinvasives.com.