White powder contained in a letter sent to a Lincoln attorney turned out to be flour.
The Lincoln Journal Star says the lawyer found the powder inside an envelope he opened Monday.
The lawyer, who specializes in debt collection, didn’t think the powder was dangerous but decided to call experts.
Lincoln Fire and Rescue Capt. Lloyd “Eddie” Mueller says police and firefighters responded, and the Lincoln-Lancaster County Health Department had the powder tested. It was just flour.
Police Capt. Jim Davidsaver says the letter included a return address and the name of an 86-year-old man. Davidsaver says the attorney is involved in a case against the man, but the man won’t be arrested because the letter didn’t include any threats.
Authorities are investigating the death of a Nebraska man whose body was found at a casino parking garage in Council Bluffs.
A U.S. Education Department study says the high school graduation rate nationally is the highest since 1976, but more than a fifth of students fail to get a diploma in four years.

The discovery of some 40-year-old bad math about the building housing the Fort Calhoun nuclear reactor in Nebraska is being scrutinized and could further delay resumption of operations at the plant.
State officials are urging Nebraskans working on their GED certificates to finish their task this year or they’ll have to start over next year with a new series.
The case of a Kansas sperm donor being sued by the state for child support underscores the confusing patchwork of laws that govern how assisted reproduction is regulated in the United States.
Abortion opponents are planning to deliver flowers to Nebraska state senators to mark the 40th anniversary of the U.S. Supreme Court decision that declared abortion legal.
For once, the drumbeats of division receded and Americans of every ornery opinion gathered to witness history in President Barack Obama’s second-term inauguration.