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Nebraska governor’s son loses smartphone to Omaha mugger

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Police say the Nebraska governor’s son has been mugged near his family’s home in Omaha.

A police report says 19-year-old Roscoe Ricketts was robbed at gunpoint around 9 p.m. Sunday as he was walking. The robber took Ricketts’ smartphone and then left the area in a white car. Police say Ricketts was not injured. No arrest has been reported.

He has appeared in election television ads for his father, Gov. Pete Ricketts.

Ricketts said Monday he doesn’t think the mugging was politically motivated and doubts the perpetrator knew who his son was. He says his son is doing fine, and he thanked Omaha police for their professionalism.

The state provides a home for the governor in Lincoln, but the family has maintained its Omaha residence.

Relatives drop lawsuit prompted by Lincoln house explosion

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — The children of a Lincoln couple killed in a house explosion have withdrawn a lawsuit filed against the city, Lancaster County and the home’s natural gas provider.

The lawsuit was dropped after police said that Jim Jasa intentionally triggered the explosion that killed him and his wife, Jeanne. An attorney for the family said in a statement Monday that relatives chose not to pursue the lawsuit because they want a sense of closure.

Jeanne Jasa died about two weeks after the Aug. 14, 2017 explosion that destroyed their home and damaged nearly three dozen more in their neighborhood. Lincoln police have said Jim Jasa died May 2 in hospice care.

Investigators weren’t able to interview Jeanne Jasa or her husband before they died.

Bill would make Homestead National Monument a national park

BEATRICE, Neb. (AP) — A Nebraska congressman is seeking to reclassify the Homestead National Monument in southeastern Nebraska as a National Historical Park.

Republican Rep. Adrian Smith, who represents Nebraska’s vast rural 3rd District, announced his bill Thursday in a news release. Smith says the bill in intended to ensure the cultural and historical value of the 100-acre site just west of Beatrice.

The monument commemorates the Homestead Act of 1862, which allowed any adult citizen or intended citizen, who had never fought against the U.S. government, could claim 160 acres of surveyed government land. They had to improve the land by putting up homes and farming it, too. After five years, the filers were entitled to the land.

America gave away 270 million acres between January 1863 and 1976 under the act.

Trick-or-treating, fall activities found at state parks

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Halloween and favorite fall activities are already taking place at state parks around Nebraska.

The Nebraska Game and Parks Commission says several Halloween-themed events in October are being held at state park areas to bring families outdoors.

Besides trick-or-treating, parks also offer pumpkin carving, campsite decorating, hayrack rides, hikes, crafts, pumpkin rolls, and other activities.

Several parks — including those in Gering, Ponca, and Shubert — are starting this weekend, with candy, decorating and spooky attractions being offered Saturday.

More information on the events can be found online at www.outdoornebraska.gov/parkevents. A park entry permit is required of each vehicle entering a state park area.

Concrete truck driver in fatal crash found not guilty

PAPILLION, Neb. (AP) — The driver of a loaded concrete truck that last year tipped onto a car near Omaha, killing two people, has been found not guilty of two misdemeanor motor vehicle homicide counts.

Television station KETV reports that a jury found 21-year-old Austin Holloway, of Fremont, not guilty on Friday.

Holloway was on trial for the Oct. 25 deaths of Michael Dearden and Phillip Hertel, both 23, who were killed when Holloway’s truck tipped while turning at a La Vista intersection.

Prosecutors argued that Holloway was going too fast for the turn. But Holloway’s attorneys said Holloway’s employer, Consolidated Concrete, overloaded the truck, causing it to tip. They also showed the truck hadn’t been cleaned of dried concrete in months and that the company had ignored Holloway’s written complaints before the crash that the truck was unsafe.

Special deer hunts scheduled at Nebraska parks, rec area

Mahoney State Park
LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — The Nebraska Game and Parks Commission is offering special antlerless deer hunts at Eugene T. Mahoney and Platte River state parks as well as Schramm Park State Recreation Area.

Successful applicants will get a special permit that allows them to hunt antlerless deer in designated areas of a park on certain dates, using specific equipment. Those applicants and interested alternates must attend an orientation session to receive the permit.

Applications are limited to one per person and will be accepted through 5 p.m. on Oct. 31. A drawings will be held Nov. 6 if officials receive more applications than they can accommodate.

Applications are available at www.outdoornebraska.org or by calling Mahoney at 402-944-2523, Platte River State Park at 402-234-2217, Ak-Sar-Ben Aquarium at 402-332-3901, or the Lincoln district office at 402-471-5431.

Lincoln police chief concerned about Omaha recruiting effort

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Lincoln’s police chief is concerned that the Omaha Police Department is actively recruiting officers from Lincoln as part of an aggressive effort to bolster the Omaha ranks.

Lincoln Police Chief Jeff Bliemeister told The Lincoln Journal Star that his officers have received emails and phone calls attempting to lure them to Omaha. Bliemeister says he’s worried his department will see an “exodus” of officers. Four Lincoln police officers joined the Omaha department last year.

Omaha police officials hope to increase the number of officers from about 820 to 900 by 2019. Lincoln has about 350 officers, Bliemeister said.

Bliemeister said Lincoln, which has seen violent crime decline by nearly a third in the past decade, may not need to pursue a similar massive hiring effort. The city could have a difficult time keeping pace with the Omaha department, he said.

“We would have to hire 185 officers today, which is impossible,” Bliemeister said.

Recruiting that many officers could cost up to $16 million annually, and there aren’t enough interested people. A decade ago, 680 people applied to the department’s recruiting class, with 30 hired as officers, Bliemeister said. Applications have dropped this year and the department doesn’t want to compromise hiring standards, he said.

Bliemeister told the Lincoln Chamber of Commerce at a recent luncheon that the community can help by encouraging talented people with an interest in service to consider becoming a police officer.

“Send them to us,” he said.

Over 50,000 without power in eastern Nebraska after snow

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — More than 50,000 utility customers are without power after heavy, wet snow blanketed eastern Nebraska.

The Omaha Public Power District says 51,000 customers lacked power at 5 p.m. Sunday. That was down from a peak of about 56,000.

In Lincoln, about 5,000 utility customers lost power.

Between 2 and 3 inches of snow fell across most of eastern Nebraska.

It’s not clear yet how long it will take to restore power.

OPPD spokeswoman Laura King-Holman says people who lose power should try not to open their fridges and freezers, so food will last as long as possible.

Teen killed in early morning crash in Omaha

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Police say a teen has died in a crash on a southwest Omaha street.

Police say the crash happened just after 6:30 a.m. on South 192nd Street when a southbound car crossed into the northbound lane, left the roadway and hit a utility pole.

Police say the driver and lone occupant of the car was 17-year-old George Gervase, of Omaha. Police say he was declared dead at the scene.

The cause of the crash in under investigation.

Judge to decide University of Nebraska records dispute

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — A judge will decide whether the University of Nebraska-Lincoln must turn over any records withheld from a fraternity that was suspended following accusations of hazing, alcohol abuse and inappropriate behavior.

The Lincoln Journal Star reports that the university’s records director, Erin Bush, has withheld nearly 1,700 records from Phi Gamma Delta, which is suspended until 2020. Members had been accused of making vulgar comments to women during last year’s Women’s March in Lincoln.

Administrators say an investigation into the Women’s March allegations led to a discovery of broader conduct issues.

Bush says most of the records are being kept confidential because they were part of Title IX investigations.

The fraternity seeks more information on investigations into members’ alleged wrongdoing. Attorney Brian Brislen says UNL didn’t appropriately exercise its redaction capabilities.

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