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Nebraska Stops Yield Nearly $560 in Suspected Drug Money

lancaster-county-sheriffLINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — A Nebraska sheriff says deputies have seized nearly $560,000 in suspected drug money in recent traffic stops.

The money was confiscated in three separate stops in Lancaster County.

The biggest bust came on Saturday, when a deputy stopped 31-year-old Matthew S. Crothers of Palos Heights, Illinois, and 50-year-old Jeffrey A. Larkin of Orland Park, Illinois. Authorities say a search of their pickup yielded nearly $439,000 in a spare tire and a small amount of marijuana.

Deputies also seized nearly $54,000 in a Sunday stop, and arrested 33-year-old Wing Lun Lau of Minneapolis.

On Friday, they confiscated $67,000. The sheriff says deputies arrested 21-year-old James Milton Atkinson of Mankato, Minnesota, and 22-year-old Erik Joseph Felsheim of Waseca, Minnesota.

Wisconsin Studies Music and Memory Program

musicUNION GROVE, Wis. (AP) — The University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee is leading a new study on whether music can help dementia patients.

Similar studies will be done in Utah and Ohio on the Music and Memory program, which is in hundreds of nursing homes across the U.S. and Canada. The study in Wisconsin is the largest in the program.

Researchers are monitoring the responses of 1,500 Alzheimer’s and dementia patients who were given iPods at Wisconsin nursing homes through the program.

Their mental state will then be compared to the same number of people in 100 other nursing homes who haven’t received iPods.

Program founder Dan Cohen says he hopes the study will inform the health care system, but also encourage families and friends to visit dementia patients more often.

Former Employee Sues Merrick County Sheriff

lawsuit-settlementCENTRAL CITY, Neb. (AP) — A former office manager at a Nebraska county sheriff’s office is suing the sheriff after she was acquitted of a theft charge.

Lori Sautter and her attorneys announced the lawsuit on Wednesday.

Sautter alleges that Merrick County Sheriff Kevin Campbell invaded her privacy and painted her in a false light within the community. She appeared a news conference with Dane Sullivan, a write-in candidate for sheriff.

Sautter was charged with theft after a 2012 state audit found nearly $17,300 missing from the department. All but about $5,900 was later found.

Sautter was declared not guilty in May. She is seeking more than $56,000 in back pay, court costs of more than $4,000 and more than $6,000 for the loss of personal items.

Campbell says the lawsuit isn’t warranted.

Cemetery Near Beatrice to Be Privately Operated

File Image
File Image

BEATRICE, Neb. (AP) — A small pioneer cemetery near Beatrice will be reopened and privately run under a new Nebraska law.

Beatrice radio station KWBE reports that the Gage County Board of Supervisors approved a special permit Wednesday to let a family reopen the Sparks Cemetery.

The cemetery sits on land about six miles west of Beatrice. It’s expected to be the first such cemetery reopened under a law that allows private associations to operate closed cemeteries that have been maintained by counties.

Gage County resident Dan Crawford worked with state Sen. Norm Wallman of Cortland to pass the law. Crawford says he wanted to lay his late mother to rest in the small cemetery, but couldn’t do so until the law was changed.

Graves in the cemetery date back to 1824.

Maine Nurse Defies Ebola Quarantine with Bike Ride

kaci-hicoxFORT KENT, Maine (AP) — All but daring Maine health authorities to go to court to have her confined, nurse Kaci Hickox went out on a bike ride Thursday in defiance of the state’s voluntary quarantine for medical workers who have treated Ebola patients.

It was the second time in two days that she left her home in remote northern Maine, along the Canadian border. On Wednesday evening, Hickox came out and briefly spoke to reporters, even shaking a hand that was offered to her.

State officials planned to go to court Thursday to have her confined against her will in what is shaping up as the nation’s biggest test case yet in the struggle to balance public health and fear of Ebola against personal freedom.

Hickox, 33, told reporters that she hoped for a compromise with health officials, but her actions indicated she had no intention of remaining in isolation for the remainder of the 21-day incubation period for Ebola that ends on Nov. 10.

“I really hope that we can work things out amicably and continue to negotiate,” she said as she and her boyfriend rode on a dirt path in this town of 4,300 people.

A state police cruiser followed Hickox on her hour-long bike ride, but police could not take action to detain her without a court order signed by a judge.

After returning from Africa, where she treated Ebola victims in Sierra Leone, Hickox stepped into the media glare last week when she became subject to a mandatory quarantine in New Jersey.

After being released from a hospital there, she returned to this small town, where she was placed under what Maine authorities called a voluntary quarantine.

She said she is following the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommendation of daily monitoring for fever and other signs of the disease. But she said she is no threat to others because she has no symptoms.

“I’m not willing to stand here and let my civil rights be violated when it’s not science-based,” she said Wednesday evening.

States have broad authority under long-established law to quarantine people to prevent the spread of disease. But legal experts said there are differences here that could work in Hickox’s favor in court: People infected with Ebola are not contagious until they have symptoms, and the virus is not spread through casual contact.

In Hickox’s case, she has tested negative for Ebola so far. But it can take days for the virus to reach detectable levels.

Official: At Least 2 Dead in Kansas Airport Crash

ambulance-lightsWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Officials say at least two people are dead after a small plane reported losing engine power and crashed into a building at a Kansas airport.

Wichita Fire Chief Ronald D. Blackwell says at least four other people were taken to a hospital and five more are unaccounted for after the Thursday morning crash at Mid-Continent Airport, from which huge plumes of black smoke could be seen for miles around the city.

Blackwell says only the pilot was on the plane and that both people confirmed dead were found inside the building.

Federal Aviation Administration spokesman Tony Molinaro says a twin-engine Beechcraft King Air reported trouble just after takeoff Thursday morning.

Molinaro says the plane crashed into the building on airport property while attempting to return to the runway.

Lincoln Police Arrest 3 in Connection to Shooting

lincoln-policeLINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Authorities in Lincoln have arrested three men in connection to the August shooting death of a man.

Nineteen-year-old Joshua Nootenboom-Carr and 23-year-old Derick Lewis each face charges of first-degree murder and attempted robbery in the death of 21-year-old Maurice Lamont Williams. Nootenboom-Carr also faces other citations.

Twenty-three-year-old Jason Holmes faces charges of accessory to first-degree murder and conspiracy to commit robbery. Police say Holmes was waiting in a car when Nootenboom-Carr and Lewis entered an apartment for a robbery.

Police say Williams was shot in the chest during the home invasion. He was pronounced dead at a local hospital.

Holmes was arrested Wednesday. Nootenboom-Carr and Lewis were already incarcerated on unrelated charges. Court records do not list attorneys.

Halloween Cancelled as Manhunt Continues for Suspected Cop Killer

Eric Frien
Eric Frien

CANADENSIS, Pa. (AP) — There won’t be any trick-or-treating in the northeastern Pennsylvania area where authorities continue searching for suspect accused of killing a state trooper.

Officials in rural Barrett Township canceled the beloved Halloween ritual and the annual parade because of the police manhunt for Eric Frein (freen).

But kids did get to “trunk or treat” over the weekend. The event held at a school parking lot included candy, a costume contest and car trunks decorated for the spooky holiday.

Organizers called it a success, saying hundreds of children and adults attended. Still, Halloween parade chairwoman Betty Oppelt says the community is missing a major tradition this year.

Frein is charged with opening fire outside the Blooming Grove barracks on Sept. 12, killing Trooper Bryon Dickson and seriously wounding Trooper Alex Douglass.

 

Wastewater Powering Innovation Campus Heating

UNLLINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Lincoln’s wastewater is helping heat and cool a building on the University of Nebraska-Lincoln’s Innovation Campus.

About 70 percent of Lincoln’s wastewater is treated at the Theresa Street facility that’s near the campus.

The campus uses a renewable energy system that captures heat from the wastewater that’s funneled to the plant. It helps power heating and cooling systems for the Nebraska Innovation Commons and Conference Center.

Executive Director Dan Duncan of the Innovation Campus says the Centralized Renewable Energy System will eventually reduce heating and cooling costs for Innovation Campus partners by up to 30 percent. It’s also expected to be a way to attract companies needing office space but looking to reduce their carbon footprint.

Omaha Killer Mentions Congressman in Outburst

Nikko Jenkins
Nikko Jenkins

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Convicted Omaha killer Nikko Jenkins, whose release from prison last year has been dragged into the race for Nebraska’s 2nd House District, mentioned the Republican incumbent in a courtroom appearance.

Jenkins said loudly Wednesday as he entered a courtroom, “Vote for Lee Terry, guys. Best Republican ever.”

Jenkins awaits sentencing for killing four Omahans in August 2013.

Terry and Republicans have accused Democratic challenger Brad Ashford, a state lawmaker from Omaha, of supporting a state law that allows criminals like Jenkins to be released from prison early.

At the hearing Wednesday, Jenkins’ public defender renewed a request for Jenkins to be transferred to a state psychiatric hospital, instead of having doctors treat him at the Lincoln prison where he’s being held. The judge did not rule on the request Wednesday.

 

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