We have a brand new updated website! Click here to check it out!

Former police chief arrested in drunken driving case

PAPILLION, Neb. (AP) — A former police chief in an Omaha suburb who’s facing drunken driving charges has bonded out of jail.

Officers arrested 58-year-old Leonard Houloose on Thursday and booked him into Sarpy County Jail. He bonded out in less than two hours. A phone listed for Houloose rang unanswered Friday. Court records don’t list the name of an attorney who could comment for him.

Papillion (puh-PIHL’-yuhn) officers stopped their former chief Sunday afternoon after receiving a tip that he was driving drunk.

He’d served 22 years in the Papillion force, including 14 as chief. He left the department in 2015 and is employed by the city as director of the Tara Hills and Eagle Hills golf courses.

Former employee accused of theft from county program

COLUMBUS, Neb. (AP) — A former Platte County employee has been accused of stealing from the county while in charge of the county’s adult diversion program.

Court records say 43-year-old Traci Nelsen is charged with two counts of theft and one of tampering with evidence. A woman who answered Friday at a phone listed for Nelsen in Monroe said Nelsen doesn’t live there. Online court records don’t list the name of an attorney who could comment for Nelsen.

Prosecutors say more than $10,000 is missing from the diversion program. Nelsen’s next court date is Oct. 18.

Task force brainstorms ideas for next high school in Lincoln

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Residents, teachers, principals and students in Lincoln are brainstorming ideas for what the local school district’s next high school should look like.

Lincoln Public Schools Superintendent Steve Joel says the goal is to address dramatic enrollment growth at the high school level.

He says high school enrollment is at 106 percent. District officials expect another 5,000 students to enter the district in the next five years.

In addition to a new high school, the district’s 10-year plan calls for four new elementary schools and two new middle schools.

Joel says a traditional high school would cost about $80 million. He says it wouldn’t be feasible to build more than one new high school because the district wouldn’t be able to address space needs in elementary and middle schools.

___

Garland man sentenced to probation for fiery crash death

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — A Garland man who pleaded no contest to misdemeanor vehicular homicide has been sentenced to two years’ probation.

68-year-old Gary Jacobsen was sentenced Friday in Lancaster County Count.

Prosecutors say Jacobsen was driving a truck loaded with rock on Dec. 6, when he pulled across U.S. Highway 77 just north of Lincoln and hit a southbound semitrailer. The semi rolled onto its side and erupted into flames, killing 21-year-old driver Brandon Gerdes, of Osmond.

Jacobsen was also ordered to perform 120 hours of community service in 30-hour blocks during the weeks of June 26 and Dec. 6 — the weeks of Gerdes’ birth and death.

Woman charged in road rage incident that injured Lincoln man

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Police have arrested a woman they say was in a car in Lincoln that intentionally hit a man, then sped off in a road rage incident.

It was 21-year-old Shaniece Turner’s car that hit Steven Collins on Aug. 31. Police say she had let Deaubre Gardner drive the car when the incident happened.

Gardner is charged in a warrant with first-degree assault and another count. Police have not found Deaubre.

Police say both men got out of their vehicles following a crash, then Gardner got back into Turner’s car and intentionally hit Collins, severely injuring his leg. The leg had to be amputated at a hospital.

Turner has been charged with being an accessory to a felony. She remained jailed Friday on $50,000 bond.

2 hospitalized after Omaha school bus collides with 2nd vehicle

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Authorities say two people were taken to a hospital after a school bus collided with another vehicle in Omaha.

The accident occurred around 6:50 a.m. Friday on the northeast side of the city.

Authorities say it isn’t immediately clear whether the two are students and how the accident occurred.

OSHA says Nebraska worker died after plant accident

WAKEFIELD, Neb. (AP) — Federal officials say a worker has died in a fatal accident at a northeastern Nebraska food processing plant.

A worker at Michael Foods Egg Processing was fatally injured Tuesday morning when a dock leveler dropped unexpectedly. A dock leveler is used to span the distance between a loading dock and transportation truck.

The federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration says its Omaha office is investigating. Officials have not yet identified the man killed.

Michael Foods said in a written statement that the company is “deeply saddened by the loss” and offered condolences to the man’s family.

Michael Foods produces, markets and distributes specialty eggs, refrigerated potatoes and some dairy products.

Grand jury clears officials in death of Nebraska jail inmate

WAHOO, Neb. (AP) — A grand jury has found no wrongdoing by officials in the death this summer of an inmate at the Saunders County Jail.

In a news release Wednesday, Saunders Count Attorney Steven Twohig says the grand jury came to the decision in the case of 45-year-old Robert Imus, who died July 29 at a hospital after being found unresponsive in his cell.

Imus had been arrested in Dodge County on drug charges and later taken to the Saunders County Jail. Officials say Imus’ death was determined to have been caused by a methamphetamine overdose.

Nebraska law requires a grand jury investigation whenever someone dies in custody.

Nebraska county reserves beds in Kansas county jail

BEATRICE, Neb. (AP) — Gage County has reserved beds at a jail across the state line in northern Kansas and at a jail in south-central Nebraska.

The Gage County Board of Supervisors approved a contract Wednesday for 10 beds in the Washington County, Kansas, jail and five at the jail in Nebraska’s Dawson County. Both one-year contracts call for a rate of $45 a bed per day, regardless of whether they’re used by inmates from Gage County.

Contracting with other jails intensified this summer as the number of inmates reached double the Gage County jail’s capacity of around 27. The overflow inmates were housed at up to seven different counties at one time, causing transportation problems for jail workers.

___

Omaha proposal would address panhandling on street medians

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — A proposed ordinance would ban people from being on certain types of medians at many Omaha intersections for any reason except for crossing the street or doing construction work. The proposal doesn’t mention its primary target: panhandling.

Mayor Jean Stothert (STAH’-thurt) and city attorneys hope the wording will head off any complaints about violating anyone’s rights to free speech. The mayor says federal courts have said panhandling is free speech and thus is protected by the Constitution. The ordinance wouldn’t apply to sidewalks, street corners or medians that don’t meet the criteria spelled out in the proposal.

The mayor submitted the proposal Tuesda

Copyright Eagle Radio | FCC Public Files | EEO Public File