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Russian President Says Boston Bombing Shows America’s Mistake

vladimir-putinRussian President Vladimir Putin says that the Boston bombing should spur closer security cooperation between Moscow and Washington but it also proves that the West was wrong in supporting militants in Chechnya.

Putin said the two ethnic Chechen brothers accused of staging the explosions — and who have only briefly lived in Chechnya as children — have “proven the correctness of our thesis” about the need to pool efforts in the fight against terrorism.

Putin criticized the West for refusing to declare Chechen militants terrorists and for offering them political and financial assistance in the past.

The U.S. has urged the Kremlin to seek a political settlement in Chechnya and provided humanitarian aid to the region during the two separatist wars that began in 1994.

NE Lawmakers Advance Health Exchange Oversight Bill

ne-legislature-13Lawmakers are moving ahead with a commission that would keep watch on the federal government while it creates a health insurance exchange for Nebraska.

Lawmakers voted 28-0 to advance the measure, which would let the state offer recommendations to the federal government as the health care law moves forward.

Gov. Dave Heineman opted to let the federal government create and manage the exchange because he says it would cost Nebraska taxpayers too much if the state created it.

The commission would ensure there’s transparency as the federal government creates the exchange. It will also give oversight and recommendations regarding implementation of the exchange.

The panel would be made up of Nebraska residents, a small business owner, and others from the health and health insurance industries.

Surviving Boston Bomber Admits Role in the Attack

Dzhokhar Tsarnaev
Dzhokhar Tsarnaev

Two U.S. officials say the surviving suspect in the Boston bombings acknowledged his role in the attacks to FBI investigators. But the officials say this occurred before authorities advised him of his constitutional rights, including the right to consult with an attorney and not to incriminate himself.

It was not clear whether the admission by Dzhokhar Tsarnaev would be admissible in a criminal trial, since it came before he was read his Miranda rights. It’s also unclear whether prosecutors would need the admission to secure a conviction since physical evidence has already been uncovered in the investigation.

The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the ongoing case.

Tsarnaev’s two lead defense lawyers did not immediately return phone and email messages.

Omaha Man Convicted for Aiming Laser Pointer at OPD Helicopter

opd-heliAn Omaha man has been convicted by a federal jury for aiming a laser pointer at an aircraft.

United States Attorney Deborah Gilg stated in a news release that Michael A. Smith, 30, was arrested after being identified as the person using a laser pointer to strike Abel 1, the Omaha Police Department’s (OPD) helicopter unit.

The helicopter patrol received a report in the early morning hours of July 11, 2012, that a Southwest Airlines flight scheduled for landing in Omaha had been struck by someone using a laser pointer.

Abel 1 responded and was struck by a laser beam seconds after becoming airborne.  As the helicopter approached the area of 152nd Street in Northwest Omaha, the cockpit was repeatedly struck by a laser, to the point of causing the pilots to be distracted and “temporarily blinded” by the laser beam.

After being struck as many as six to seven times, the pilots were able to determine the area from which the laser originated.

A Douglas County Deputy responded to the area, where he found Smith in his back yard, aiming the laser in the direction of the helicopter.

Smith will be sentenced in July, and faces up to five years imprisonment and/or a $250,000 fine.

Omaha Police Standoff Ends with No Injuries

omaha-policeA police standoff in Omaha ended with no injuries after authorities used chemical munitions to force a suspect out.

The Omaha Police Department says 36-year-old Frederick Patterson refused to come out of a house Wednesday morning. Additional officers and a SWAT team were called in for assistance.

Officers deployed chemical munitions into the residence several hours later. Patterson’s brother, who was not being held against his will, first exited the house. Authorities then took Patterson into custody.

Officials say Patterson was booked into Douglas County Corrections for a parole violation. He also was booked on a felony warrant from Sarpy County and a misdemeanor warrant from Douglas County.

Records do not list an attorney for Patterson.

Father Pleads Guilty in Death of Girl Locked in Footlocker

Gavel_booksThe father of a 10-year-old Arizona girl who died after authorities say another relative padlocked her in a footlocker has pleaded guilty to an attempted child abuse charge.

Fifty-three-year-old David Martin Deal isn’t charged in the July 2011 death of his daughter Ame Deal. But he admitted Wednesday to putting her into the plastic box and throwing the box into a pool on another occasion.

He faces up to 16 years in prison for guilty pleas to attempted child abuse and marijuana possession charges.

Authorities say Ame Deal died after a man who’s married to the girl’s cousin padlocked her in the footlocker as discipline for having stolen popsicles.

The child’s aunt has already pleaded guilty to abuse charges.

Two others are charged with first-degree murder.

Fired Omaha PD Officers Fight for Their Jobs

omaha-policeTwo Omaha police officers fired in an excessive force investigation have filed notices of appeal, indicating they intend to fight to get their jobs back.

Omaha police said Tuesday that the city’s human resources department upheld the firings. Those fired who filed notices of appeal are former officers Bradley Canterbury and Justin Reeve. The Omaha World-Herald says the others fired were former Officer James Kinsella and Sgt. Aaron Von Behren.

Police Chief Todd Schmaderer (SHMAH-dur) fired the officers earlier this month after a March 21 incident involving police was secretly recorded. The video showed an officer grabbing 28-year-old Octavius Johnson from behind, violently throwing him to the ground and punching him while he was restrained. Other officers were seen chasing Johnson’s brother, who was recording the arrest, into his house.

Omaha Man Dies After Being Trapped Under a Car

ambulanceAn Omaha man has died after being pinned under a car.

Police say officer were called to an area in north-central Omaha around 6 a.m. Wednesday for a personal injury accident. When officers arrived, they found 60-year-old William Larsen pinned under the front driver’s side tire of a vehicle. Larsen was declared dead at the scene. Police say there was no sign of foul play in his death.

But police also determined that the vehicle had been involved in a hit-and-run accident Tuesday night.

Police did not release any other details of that crash or of Larsen’s death.

U.S. Drug Czar Outlines Drug Policy Reforms with Treatment Focus

Gil Kerlikowske
Gil Kerlikowske

The nation’s drug czar will outline drug policy reforms that will emphasize public health to fight addiction and focus on diverting non-violent drug offenders into treatment instead of prisons.

Gil Kerlikowske, director of the National Drug Control Policy, is scheduled to release President Barack Obama’s 2013 blueprint for drug policy on Wednesday at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine in Baltimore.

Kerlikowske said in an interview Tuesday that millions of Americans who have not had access to drug treatment will be able to get it under federal health care reform.

He says many criminal justice experts recognize the nation can’t arrest its way out of the problem of drug addiction.

Kansas Doctor Charged with Operating Pill Mill

pill-millA Kansas doctor has been charged with operating a pill mill for pain killers and antidepressants after Fort Riley officials raised concerns about soldiers who overdosed.

The U.S. attorney’s office alleged in a criminal complaint Tuesday that 53-year-old Michael P. Schuster conspired to illegally distribute controlled substances.

The affidavit says the investigation began last year when police received reports that Schuster was issuing high-dosage prescriptions based on limited physical examinations, leading to several overdoses. Medical staff at Fort Riley also reported that Schuster had treated active duty soldiers and family members who died from overdoses. More than 500 prescriptions were written while Schuster was out of the office.

A phone message left for Schuster’s attorney, Barry Clark of Manhattan, wasn’t immediately returned.

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