We have a brand new updated website! Click here to check it out!

Iowan Gets Life in Prison for Murdering Nebraska Woman

Raymond Gonzales, Jr.
Raymond Gonzales, Jr.

DAKOTA CITY, Neb. (AP) — A 23-year-old Iowa man has been given life in prison for killing a northeast Nebraska woman.

Raymond Gonzales Jr. had been convicted of first-degree murder and a weapons crime. He was sentenced on Thursday in Dakota County District Court.

Police say Gonzales shot 28-year-old Bonnie Baker 16 times in her South Sioux City home on Dec. 15, 2013. His attorney, Todd Lancaster, of the Nebraska Commission on Public Advocacy, says he will appeal the verdict. Lancaster had argued during the trial that police focused only on evidence that pointed toward Gonzales.

Ex-Nebraska Inmate Who’d Been Released Early Complains to High Court

ne-supreme-courtLINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — A 40-year-old Beatrice man who had been released early and in error from prison got his day in the Nebraska’s highest court.

Kena Jackson was in the courtroom Thursday as his lawyer asked the Nebraska Supreme Court to rule that a judge didn’t have authority to send Jackson back to prison after the Department of Correctional Services had issued him a discharge certificate. Jackson was returned to prison without going before the judge or receiving a hearing.

Assistant Nebraska Attorney General James Smith told the judges that Jackson had no right to be free because “he was only free because of a negligent error.”

The court didn’t rule on Thursday.

Girl, 15, and Boyfriend, 23, to Be Charged in Parent Killing Plot

gavel-morePLYMOUTH TOWNSHIP, Mich. (AP) — A judge has ordered a 15-year-old Detroit-area girl and her boyfriend to stand trial on accusations they plotted to kill her family.

A judge ruled Thursday that there’s enough evidence to try the girl and 23-year-old Michael Rivera in Wayne County Circuit on attempted murder and conspiracy charges. Their next court date is Feb. 12.

The girl is charged as an adult. Her parents said she and Rivera were in a sexual relationship.

The Associated Press isn’t naming her or family members because prosecutors have said they may file sex charges against Rivera.

Prosecutors say she stabbed her brother Oct. 17 in their Plymouth Township home. Police say Rivera guided the girl from outside the house, advising her on whether the knife she had was enough to do the job.

Kansas Woman Delivers Twins on Side of Lincoln Highway

lincoln-highwayLINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — A Kansas woman rushing toward Lincoln after her water broke delivered twins on the side of the highway.

36-year old Laura Clark, of Barnes, Kansas, told her 39-year-old husband Kevin Clark to pull over Thursday morning and call 911, because one of the babies had already been born.

After placing the call, Kevin Clark says he wrapped the baby in a blanket and tied off the umbilical cord, and then the second one was born.

Lancaster County Sheriff’s Capt. Ben Houchin says rescue crews arrived shortly after the second birth and took the babies to Bryan Medical Center East Campus in Lincoln, where he says the newborn boy and girl are doing well.

The couple says they haven’t yet decided on names.

Officials Seize 21 Cats, 3 Dogs from Eastern Nebraska Home

nebhumaneWATERLOO, Neb. (AP) — Officials have seized 21 cats and three dogs from an eastern Nebraska home after a neighbor complained about a nauseating smell.

Court documents say 50-year-old Athena Nielsen, of Waterloo, was cited for improper living conditions and too many animals. Local ordinances prohibit residents from owning more than three dogs and five cats.

Nielsen initially avoided authorities when they responded to the complaint. At another visit, Nielsen told them she owned only seven cats and two dogs.

Police obtained a search warrant and returned on Jan. 30, when they found the 24 animals. They were taken to the Nebraska Humane Society in Omaha.

Officials say one dog was euthanized and some cats were sick, but most have been adopted.

Online court records don’t list an attorney for Nielsen.

911 Operator Told Teen to Stop Whining After Fatal Crash

911-ServicesWASHINGTON (AP) — Officials in Maryland say a 911 dispatcher told a 13-year-old girl to stop whining after a hit-and-run crash that killed her father.

Capt. Russ Davies, a spokesman for the Anne Arundel County Fire Department, said Thursday that the dispatcher has been reassigned to a position away from the public pending an investigation. He says the dispatcher could return to answering 911 calls after the investigation but could also face termination.

The 911 call came in Sunday after a car hit 38-year-old Rick Warrick of Washington, D.C. and his fiancee as they changed a tire on a highway between halfway Washington and Baltimore. The dispatcher twice tells Warrick’s daughter to stop whining during the call.

Warrick was killed. His fiancee, 28-year-old Julia Pearce, was in fair condition Thursday.

Nebraska Troopers Escape Injury After Shots Fired at Patrol Vehicle

state-patrol-logoTwo Nebraska State Patrol troopers escaped injury and two people were taken into custody after shots were fired at their patrol car during an attempted traffic stop in Omaha.

Just after midnight on Thursday, Feb.5, a trooper attempted a traffic stop of a 2002 Hyundai Accent, for a broken taillight, near the Interstate 680/I80 split. The vehicle traveling at a slow speed failed to stop continuing northbound onto I680. The vehicle continued at a slow speed turning east onto Center Street, before turning south on 108th Street. As the vehicle turned south, a male leaned out of the passenger side window and fired shots from a shotgun striking the patrol car.

The trooper driving the patrol car took evasive action stopping the unit. The suspect vehicle continued on before being stopped by another trooper near 110th and I Streets.  The female driver of the vehicle was taken into custody. The male suspect was not in the vehicle.

A perimeter was established in the area and the male suspect was located a little more than an hour later hiding in a vehicle near Prairie Hills Drive and Oak Street. He was taken into custody without incident.

The driver of the vehicle, Marissa D. McCormack, 27, of Omaha, was lodged in the Douglas County Corrections on charges of Accessory to felony, Flight to Avoid Arrest and Obstructing Law Enforcement

The passenger, Daniel J. Huerta Campbell, 34, of Council Bluffs, was lodged in the Douglas County Corrections on charges of  Assault on a Police Officer, Use of a Firearm to Committed a Felony, Felon in Possession of a Firearm, Obstructing an Officer.

The two troopers riding in the Patrol car were not injured. The Nebraska State Patrol was assisted by the Omaha Police Department.

Nebraska Teacher Accused of Providing Alcohol for Teen

sarpy-co.-sheriffOMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Eastern Nebraska authorities say a teacher has been arrested on accusations he trespassed into a Girl Scout camp with a teenager and gave her alcohol.

Sarpy County deputies responded Tuesday night to Camp Maha in reference to a vehicle that drove down a restricted road and had gotten stuck in the snow. They found the 38-year-old behind the wheel with the 18-year-old girl inside.

The man was arrested on suspicion of contributing to the delinquency of a minor and procuring alcohol for a minor. He also was cited for trespassing.

Springfield Platteview Community Schools says the school employee has been placed on administrative leave. He is a sixth-grade teacher at Springfield Elementary School and a basketball coach at Platteview High School.

College Freshmen Partied Less Than Their Parents in High School, Report Low Emotional Health

college-partySAN FRANCISCO (AP) — A new survey of the nation’s college freshmen shows that teenagers across the United States are spending much less time partying and socializing with friends during their last year of high school than their parents’ generation did.

The annual survey released Wednesday, conducted by the Higher Education Research Institute at UCLA, also found that first-year college students’ sense of emotional well-being is at its lowest level since the institute first asked incoming freshmen to rate their mental health in 1985.

Kevin Eagan, the institute’s managing director and an assistant professor at UCLA, says the results indicate the millennial generation faces greater pressure to succeed academically and has less time to have fun.

Other survey trends show that students are increasingly drinking less alcohol as high school seniors, submitting more college applications and reporting they feel overwhelmed.

Texas Company Postpones Northeast Nebraska Plant Project

tejas-tubularLINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — A Texas-based company that makes piping and casing for oil and gas drilling has postponed plans to build a manufacturing plant in northeast Nebraska.

Tejas (TAY’-hahs) Tubular Products President Maximo Tejeda (teh-HAY’-duh) said he remains committed to building a mill next to Nucor Steel in Norfolk.

But Tejeda says uncertainty in the oil market has delayed his company’s aggressive timetable and forced adjustments in its growth plans.

Officials have said the $100 million plant would have employed 200 people.

Tejas Tubular headquarters is in Houston.

Copyright Eagle Radio | FCC Public Files | EEO Public File