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Gretna, she’s not glad she met ya…

GRETNA, Neb. (AP) – A Gretna city official whose spending was questioned by the state auditor has been fired, and she has been arrested on a separate allegation.
Colleen Lawry was fired after a City Council vote on Tuesday and was arrested around 10 p.m.
Investigators say she took anywhere from $500 to $1,500 from the Gretna Senior Citizen Fund.
A Sarpy County jailer said Lawry remained in custody on Wednesday. It’s unclear whether Lawry has a lawyer. Online court records don’t yet list the case.
State Auditor Mike Foley last week said his auditing team found several instances in which Lawry used her city card for personal purchases. Foley says Lawry paid back the city but the purchases were barred by state law.
The audit didn’t cover the senior citizen fund.

 

Trial delayed for Neb. man in child sex case

Abraham Richardson

GRAND ISLAND, Neb. (AP) – The trial of a Grand Island man accused of sexually assaulting a 4-year-old girl has been delayed.
Twenty-six-year-old Abraham Richardson is suspected of abducting the girl from a Grand Island apartment last October and sexually assaulting her. His trial, which had been set for June, is now set for October in Hall County District Court.
Richardson is charged with first-degree sexual abuse on a child under age 12, kidnapping and first-degree assault.
Richardson also faces federal child pornography charges. A plea hearing in that case is scheduled for Wednesday.

 

Note to self…don’t commit insurance fraud

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) – A man who cheated Medicare, Nebraska Medicaid and private insurers out of $1.3 million has been given three years in federal prison.
Mark Koehler, of Norfolk, had made a plea deal with prosecutors.
A news release from the office of U.S. Attorney Deborah Gilg says that at Koehler’s sentencing on Tuesday, he also was ordered to pay restitution and serve five years of supervised release after he leaves prison.
Koehler, the former business manager at Heartland Physical Therapy in Norfolk, was charged in December with bank fraud and health care fraud. Prosecutors say he submitted false claims for reimbursement between 2007 and 2010, and used phony billings to obtain a $500,000 operating loan from BankFirst in Norfolk.
Koehler also must pay back the $500,000.

 

Hello 911? Someone stole my roommate’s pot…and our vacuums!

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) – Lincoln police are looking for a robber who forced his way into a house and took marijuana and two vacuum cleaners.
The robbery happened Monday night near the University of Nebraska-Lincoln campus. Police say the suspect rang the doorbell and when a man answered, the suspect forced his way inside.
Police the robber took nearly $600 worth of pot and drug paraphernalia, plus the vacuum cleaners.
The victim’s roommate called police.
Authorities cited and released the victim for possession of drug paraphernalia that was still in the house.

 

Columbus woman accused of starting blaze

COLUMBUS, Neb. (AP) – A 27-year-old woman has been arrested, accused of starting a fire at the house she rents in Columbus.
Authorities say Ebtihal Albaiaty was arrested at the scene early Monday morning.
Columbus Fire Chief Dean Hefti says Albaiaty lived alone in the house and was not injured by the blaze, which took firefighters about an hour to extinguish.
A Platte County jailer said Albaiaty remained in custody on Tuesday. Online court records don’t list the case. It’s unclear whether Albaiaty has a lawyer.

 

A.G.: Gering violated open-meetings law

Jon Bruning

GERING, Neb. (AP) – The Nebraska Attorney General’s Office says Gering violated state law on open meetings last fall.
Questions were raised about the council’s Oct. 14 meeting. Among them was whether the council could go into a closed session regarding a complaint against Mayor Ed Mayo.
Mayo said the complaint had been made about his request for inventory audits from city department heads. The mayor says a closed “personnel session” couldn’t be held because he wasn’t technically one of the city’s “personnel.”
Bruning’s office says the violation was rectified in December when the council took action in open session.

 

Neb. couple pleads no contest to animal cruelty

FREMONT, Neb. (AP) – A Nebraska couple who pleaded no contest to animal cruelty charges won’t be allowed to own animals for five years as part of a plea agreement.
Daniel and Ellyn Newcomer entered the plea to six misdemeanor counts on Monday in Dodge County Court. The Newcomers, who currently live in Wahoo, were arrested earlier this year after authorities removed nine dogs, three cats and a pot-bellied pig from their home in Fremont.
County Attorney Oliver Glass says he sought the six misdemeanors because six of the dogs had to euthanized, and he wants to make sure they don’t legally own pets for five years. Sentencing is June 11.
Glass says authorities won’t seek charges against the Newcomers for seven dogs that were found in February inside a storage unit they rented. Those dogs were taken to an animal shelter.

 

Dawes County attorney injured in wreck

Chadron Police Department

CHADRON, Neb. (AP) – Dawes County Attorney Vance Haug is recovering after a motorcycle accident over the weekend in Chadron.
Eagle Radio station KQSK says police say Haug and his passenger were injured on Sunday when Haug’s motorcycle was hit by a car on U.S. Highway 385.
Police say Haug was heading south when he turned in front of northbound car, which hit the motorcycle Haug and his passenger were taken to a hospital with what police say were non-life-threatening injuries. Hospital officials on Monday declined to release any information.
The driver of the car and a passenger weren’t injured.
Police say Haug was cited for failure to yield the right of way.

 

Iowa woman sent to Neb. prison for dog dumping

GRAND ISLAND, Neb. (AP) – An Iowa woman has been ordered to serve 90 days in a Nebraska prison for dumping 23 dead or dying dogs in a cornfield.
Hall County District Judge William Wright said during Friday’s sentencing hearing that Denise Withee surrounded herself with animals to help her cope with depression. Wright ordered the prison to evaluate Withee, of Mapleton, Iowa, and report back to him so he can make a final determination on her sentence.
Withee said during her animal cruelty trial that she was taking the dogs to someone in Nebraska when she became sick, pulled over and passed out. She said that when she awoke, most of the dogs were dead from the heat. She said she panicked and dumped them near Grand Island.

 

Lakers returns to politics with run for regents

Mark Lakers

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) – Mark Lakers, best known for dropping out of the 2010 race for governor amid a campaign finance scandal, is again seeking elected office.
This time, Lakers is making a quiet run for a seat on the University of Nebraska Board of Regents.
Two years ago, Lakers appeared to be on track to give Nebraska Democrats a viable shot at taking the governor’s office but he later dropped out of the race and then admitted in court to falsifying 51 of 80 campaign pledges on his finance reports. He pleaded guilty to one count of abusing public records and was fined $500.
Now, Lakers says he wants to focus on improving Nebraska’s university system, which he argues has long been underfunded and is pricing students out of a college education.

 

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