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No Joke: Chicken Crossing Road Blocks Traffic

odd-newsPORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — Portland, Oregon, police were told there was a chicken — and it was attempting to cross the road.

In fact, the citizen who called the police non-emergency line on Monday evening reported that the chicken’s efforts to cross a road in a north Portland neighborhood were bringing traffic nearly to a standstill.

He assured the dispatcher he was not joking.

The dispatcher chuckled — and asked a clarifying question.

“It’s just the one chicken?”

The caller said yes.

Sgt. Pete Simpson says responding officers were unable to locate the chicken.

And so, he notes, police “were unable to determine the chicken’s intent.”

Omaha Teacher Wins National Environmental Ed Award

epaOMAHA, Neb. (AP) — An Omaha teacher is one of 17 nationwide to receive an EPA award for environmental education.

The Environmental Protection Agency says Kristine Denton won a presidential innovation award for her work at Omaha’s King Science and Technology Magnet Middle School.

The honor comes with $2,000 for Denton’s professional development and $2,000 for environmental education at her school.

Denton has worked with King students to build indoor aquaponic farming systems and used those systems to raise produce to donate to a local homeless shelter.

Besides the 17 award winners, the EPA also named 15 teachers honorable mentions.

Mother Smiles Through Hearing Accusing Her of Killing Toddler, Injuring Teenager in Oregon

Jessica Smith
Jessica Smith

ASTORIA, Ore. (AP) — A woman accused of killing her 2-year-old child before trying to slit her teenage daughter’s throat has pleaded not guilty to murder and attempted murder.

Jessica Smith appeared by video in Clatsop County Circuit Court in Oregon on Tuesday.

She smiled throughout the hearing. When asked whether she understood that she would not be released before a Sept. 30 court date, she winked.

Police say the 40-year-old from Washington state drove her daughters to a resort in Cannon Beach, Oregon, before her husband prepared to seek custody of the children.

Smith checked in July 30, and a cleaning crew found the toddler’s body and the injured teenager Aug. 1.

Smith’s attorney says the case is complex and he needs time to prepare Smith’s defenses, including one potentially based on her mental health.

Official: Robin Williams Hung Himself with a Belt

robin-williamsSAN RAFAEL, Calif. (AP) — Sheriff’s officials near San Francisco say Robin Williams committed suicide by hanging himself with a belt at his home.

A sheriff’s lieutenant says Williams’ personal assistant found the actor yesterday in a bedroom at Williams’ home. Williams also had superficial cuts on his wrist, and a pocketknife was found nearby.

According to Sheriff’s Lt. Keith Boyd, Williams had been seeking treatment for depression. Boyd isn’t saying whether Williams left a suicide note.

The actor’s wife had last seen him the night before, and had left the home that morning thinking he was still asleep. Williams’ personal assistant later came to the home and became concerned when he knocked on the door and got no response.

It will take weeks to get the results of toxicology tests on whether Williams had any drugs or alcohol in his system.

Fans and friends have been leaving bouquets, candles and personal notes in front of the locked gates of the home. Neighbors say he had lived in the quiet, waterfront neighborhood for eight years, and that he was friendly and approachable.

Clerk Sentenced for Theft from Nebraska Reservation

dept.-of-justiceNIOBRARA, Neb. (AP) — The U.S. attorney’s office says a northeast Nebraska woman has been sentenced to probation and community service after her conviction for stealing money from the Santee Sioux Indian Reservation.

The attorney’s office announced Tuesday that U.S. District Court Judge Joseph F. Bataillon sentenced 53-year-old Lila Mechaley, of Niobrara, to five years of probation and 200 hours of community service. He also ordered her to repay $16,726 to the Village of Santee.

Mechaley was convicted of stealing the money from March 2010 through June 2012, when she worked as village clerk.

She had been writing checks to herself and forging the name of the village board chairman.

A village board official discovered the theft after reviewing bank statements and cancelled checks related to a grant awarded to the Village of Santee.

Kansas Plant Reopening After ‘Pink Slime’ Dustup

pink-slimeWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A shuttered Kansas processing plant that made a treated ground beef product critics dubbed “pink slime” plans to reopen next week with limited operations amid rebounding sales.

Beef Products Inc. said Tuesday it plans to start collecting fresh beef trimmings at its Garden City facility on Monday to support its Dakota City, Nebraska, operations.

The Kansas plant is the first to reopen since the South Dakota-based company closed three facilities over the 2012 controversy about the meat.

Beef Products will rehire 40 to 45 workers for two shifts of fresh beef trimmings collection and a third- shift cleaning crew at its Garden City location.

Some 236 workers at the Garden City plant lost their jobs in 2012 amid the dustup over a meat product called lean, finely textured beef.

Compromise Struck in Treatment of Omaha Killer

Nikko Jenkins
Nikko Jenkins

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — A judge has allowed a compromise that will see the state’s psychiatric hospital staff treat a man found too mentally unfit to undergo sentencing for killing four people.

But Nikko Jenkins will not be housed at the state’s psychiatric hospital. Instead, Lincoln Regional Center doctors will treat Jenkins at a Lincoln prison, where he will be housed.

Douglas County District Judge Peter Bataillon said at a hearing Tuesday that the hospital staff will be solely responsible for restoring Jenkins to competency so he can participate in a hearing before a three-judge panel that will determine whether he receives the death penalty.

Bataillon allowed the compromise after officials testified Tuesday that the Lincoln Regional Center lacked proper security to house a dangerous killer.

Omaha Schools See Influx from Central America

omaha-psOMAHA, Neb. (AP) — The Omaha Public Schools has had in the past two years a sharp increase in new students born in El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras.

Thousands of children from those countries have streamed into the U.S., saying they’re fleeing gang violence and poverty.

Records show that last year the Omaha district enrolled 100 students from those three countries who hadn’t enrolled in the district before and had been in the U.S. less than a year. That was four times as many as in the 2011-12 school year.

District officials say they don’t know whether the children entered the U.S. legally and can’t say for sure whether they are among the 214 unaccompanied minors that federal officials say came to Nebraska between Oct. 1 and June 17.

Northeast Nebraska Collision Victim Identified

fatal-motorcycle-crashOSMOND, Neb. (AP) — Authorities have released the name of a northeast Nebraska motorcyclist who died in a collision with a semitrailer.

The Pierce County Sheriff’s Office identified the motorcyclist as 36-year-old Anthony Higgs, of Plainview.

The crash occurred around 8 a.m. Monday on Nebraska Highway 121 just south of Osmond. Deputies say the northbound motorcycle struck the southbound semitrailer as the trucker was attempting to make a left turn off the highway.

The 61-year-old driver of the semitrailer was not hurt. He was identified as Daniel Hoffman, also of Plainview.

 

Nebraska Man Gets Probation for Resisting Officer

dept.-of-justiceWINNEBAGO, Neb. (AP) — A Winnebago man has been sentenced to probation for forcibly resisting a police officer last year.

U.S. Attorney General Deborah R. Gilg said in a news release Monday that Chief United States District Court Judge Laurie Smith Camp sentenced 59-year-old Richard Brownrigg to five years of probation. He must also pay a special assessment of $100.

Authorities say Brownrigg resisted the arrest of a Bureau of Indian Affairs police officer in November. Brownrigg was accused of leading the officer on a high-speed car chase before the officer stopped him.

Brownrigg was also accused of trying to drive away from the officer once he was stopped. Authorities say the officer dove into the vehicle and turned off the engine, and Brownrigg physically resisted the officer’s attempts to arrest him.

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