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NY Mom Charged with Threatening to Blow Up Daughter’s School

police-lights-redNEW YORK (AP) — Authorities say a mother got so angry when told that her daughter had failed a New York state exam that she threatened to bomb the school.

Karen Shearon pleaded not guilty when she was arraigned Friday on a misdemeanor aggravated harassment charge.

A court complaint says the 48-year-old told a Staten Island high school guidance counselor Tuesday she was “going to blow up the school.”

She says a school representative called her at work repeatedly that day.

The Staten Island Advance says Shearon says she “never made such a phone call” and suggested the school would have been evacuated if she had indeed made such a threat.

The city Department of Education said the school immediately notified police of the threat.

Vote Set for Trail Connecting Omaha, Council Bluffs

Google Maps
Google Maps

COUNCIL BLUFFS, Iowa (AP) — City leaders plan to vote on a proposed trail that would downtown Council Bluffs to Omaha, Nebraska, across the Missouri River.

The Council Bluffs City Council is scheduled to vote Monday on the plans and funding sources for the second phase of the Mid-City Trail, which is part of the West Broadway Corridor development project.

The western portion of the trail would hook up with the current River’s Edge Park/Iowa Riverfront Trail that allows trail users to go back and forth between Omaha and Council Bluffs on the Bob Kerrey Pedestrian Bridge.

Derailed Train Cars Cause 350-Ton Spill, Halt Traffic in Nebraska

Union-PacificNEBRASKA CITY, Neb. (AP) — Three derailed train cars caused a 350-ton coal spill and halted traffic at three intersections in eastern Nebraska.

Omaha Public Power District spokesman Mike Jones says no one was injured in the derailment that occurred Thursday morning just north of Nebraska City. He says the train was shipping coal to the company’s plant located south of the city.

Union Pacific spokesman Mark Davis says crews wrapped up track repairs and coal cleanup early Friday morning. He says the train was able to transport the remainder of the coal and the spilled coal would be shipped by truck.

Davis says he doesn’t know what cause the 135-car train carrying coal from Wyoming to the plant to derail.

 

Colorado Denies Right-to-Die Legislation

assisted-suicideDENVER (AP) — Colorado lawmakers rejected a proposal to let terminally ill patients choose when they die with the help of doctor-prescribed medications.

Lawmakers on a House committee Friday voted against the proposal 8-5 after about 10 hours of testimony.

The legislation would have required dying patients to get two doctors to sign off on their verbal and written requests to end their lives. The patients would have also needed to be found to be mentally competent, and able to administer the life-ending medication themselves.

Some doctors and religious organizations opposed the measure, saying it facilitated suicide and ended a patient’s hope of a possible recovery. But supporters argued terminally ill patients should have the option to choose when to die.

Five states allow patients to seek aid in dying.

Funeral Set for Teen Girl Killed by Denver Police

denver-policeWESTMINSTER, Colo. (AP) — Friends and family are planning to gather for the funeral of a 17-year-old girl shot to death by Denver police.

A funeral Mass for Jessica Hernandez will be held Saturday at a church north of Denver, near where she grew up.

Police say Hernandez was shot Jan. 26 after she drove a stolen car toward an officer in a residential alley in Denver. However, a teen passenger in the car says Hernandez lost control of the vehicle because she had already been shot and was unconscious. The shooting is still under investigation.

The shooting sparked protests and came amid a national debate about police use of force fueled by racially charged episodes in Ferguson, Missouri, and New York City. Hernandez’s family and others have called for an outside prosecutor to investigate what happened.

Cass County Adds Paramedics to Daytime Ambulances

ambulance-lightsOMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Many Nebraska communities rely on volunteers to provide emergency care on ambulances.

That’s true in Cass County, but officials there recently decided to hire two paramedics to supplement the volunteers especially on daytime calls.

The program is a partnership with the University of Nebraska Medical Center that state officials say might serve as a model for other counties.

Dr. Eric Ernst says getting quality care is crucial when a person is having a health crisis.

The new program that started Jan. 1 assigns one paramedic and one emergency medical technician to ambulance calls during the day when volunteers are usually working.

The county budgeted $356,000 to get the program started and pay for salaries and equipment.

Omaha Man’s 2 Murder Convictions Upheld

Terry Sellers
Terry Sellers

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — The Nebraska Supreme Court has found no fault with a lower court’s dismissal of an Omaha man’s appeal of his first-degree murder convictions without an evidentiary hearing.

Terry Sellers was convicted in 2007 and sentenced to two life sentences for the 2005 murders of Kevin Pierce and Victor Ford.

The high court upheld Sellers’ convictions on direct appeal in 2010. Sellers then sought post-conviction relief, which is typically filed once all other appeals are exhausted. Inmates often claim in the motions that their lawyers were ineffective.

That was Sellers’ claim, and he says a Douglas County District Court judge should have held a hearing on his claims.

But on Friday, the Nebraska Supreme Court disagreed, saying there was no merit to Sellers’ claims.

Omaha Couple Accused of Kidnapping Woman Set to Stand Trial

gavel-and-scaleOMAHA, Neb. (AP) — A judge has ordered an Omaha couple accused of kidnapping and torturing a woman last month to stand trial.

A Douglas County judge ruled Friday that there is enough evidence to try 25-year-old Shavontae Green and 33-year-old Ronald F. Ford Jr.

Police say Green and Ford kidnapped a woman on Jan. 15 and took her home, where they sexually assaulted and tortured her.

Green has been charged with kidnapping, false imprisonment, sexual assault, tampering with physical evidence and assault. Ford faces the same charges, as well as use of a deadly weapon to commit a felony and an additional count of sexual assault.

Online court records do not list an attorney for Green. An attorney for Ford could not be located.

Pepperidge Farm Recalls 46,000 Bagels Due to Allergy Risk

pepperidge-farmNEW YORK (AP) — Pepperidge Farm is recalling about 46,000 packages of bagels because they may contain peanuts or almonds that could set off a serious allergic reaction.

The company said Friday that no illnesses have been reported. It was alerted to the problem by a bakery that makes the bagels.

The recall includes plain, everything and cinnamon raisin bagels. Mini bagels, sold in whole wheat, cinnamon raisin and brown sugar with cinnamon flavors, are also being recalled. The affected bagels have sell by dates ranging from Feb. 7 to Feb. 12.

The bagels were sent to stores in 23 states. Customers can return the bagels to the store for a full refund.

Pepperidge Farm is owned by the Campbell Soup Co., based in Camden, New Jersey.

Woman Accused of Drowning Puppy at GI Airport Free on Bond

Cynthia Anderson
Cynthia Anderson

GRAND ISLAND, Neb. (AP) — Florida authorities have decided not to come to Nebraska now to retrieve a woman wanted on a Florida warrant alleging felony theft.

Nebraska authorities have charged 56-year-old Cynthia Anderson with animal neglect, accusing her of drowning a puppy in a Grand Island airport bathroom. She’s free on bond awaiting Nebraska action, now that she’s not being held for Florida authorities.

Hall County Attorney Jack Zitterkopf said when Florida officials learned they would have to come to Nebraska for Anderson, they decided it wasn’t worth the effort.

A spokesman for Florida’s 7th Judicial Circuit, Spencer Hathaway, said Friday that the Florida case will remain pending and a decision about any effort to return Anderson to Florida will be reviewed after the Nebraska case is completed.

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