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Program gives elementary kids some books to call their own

schoolOMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Each month, more than 2,100 elementary students in the Omaha area are given books to call their own.

The kids in kindergarten through third grade receive $7 worth of books at their reading level from a catalog. Teachers handle the paperwork, and United Way of the Midlands pays the bill.

The 10 schools from six districts involved in the Book Trust program were chosen based on their students’ families’ incomes and in part on the schools’ resources. The program began in September.

Data from the Annie E. Casey Foundation, a children’s welfare organization, show that students who can’t read proficiently by third grade are four times more likely to drop out of high school than their peers are.

Police: Omaha man shot in face walks 8 blocks for help

omaha-policeOMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Police say a man shot in the face Saturday at a northeast Omaha intersection walked about eight blocks for help.

Omaha police say 54-year-old Terry Hudson was outdoors just after midnight when he was shot.

Police Sgt. Owen Gregg says Hudson walked to a house a block to the west, and a person there called 911, but Hudson continued on. A trail of blood marked his path.

Officials say Hudson was soon taken in critical condition to Creighton University Medical Center. Police say his injuries were not believed to be life-threatening.

Gregg says it was not clear whether the assailant, fired while he was standing or from a vehicle. Police had not announced an arrest by midday Saturday.

Police say Lincoln woman provided alcohol to teen who shot himself

lincoln-policeLINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — A Lincoln woman has been cited on suspicion of giving a group of teenagers alcohol after a 16-year-old accidentally shot himself in the leg.

The teen was at a friend’s house with three other teens Thursday and wanted to show them a handgun.

Lincoln Officer Katie Flood says the group had been drinking and smoking marijuana when the shooting happened. The 16-year-old was taken to a local hospital and treated for injuries not believed to be life-threatening.

A 51-year-old woman was cited on suspicion of procuring alcohol to minors and child neglect. She is accused of buying the teenagers vodka, beer and a malt alcohol drink. The woman told police she didn’t know the boy, who was a family friend, had a gun.

Public defender appointed for Norfolk woman charged in death of daughter

Carla Montoya
Carla Montoya

MADISON, Neb. (AP) — A Norfolk woman accused of killing her daughter has had a public defender appointed to represent her.

22-year-old Carla Montoya appeared for a pretrial conference hearing Thursday in Madison County District Court. There, her previous attorney, Christopher Roth, said Montoya’s family, who had been paying her legal fees, had run out of money.

The Madison County Public Defender’s office will now represent Montoya.

Prosecutors say Montoya told police she had tossed her 4-year-old daughter, Caylee, into a bed three times on March 12 and that the girl may have hit her head on the bed frame or a wall.

Montoya has pleaded not guilty to intentional child abuse resulting in death.

Nebraska high court vacates blood test refusal conviction

ne-supreme-courtOMAHA, Neb. (AP) — The Nebraska Supreme Court has vacated the conviction of a Wayne man for refusing to submit to a blood test following his arrest on suspicion of drunken driving. The ruling cites a U.S. Supreme Court decision last year that places limits on such state laws.

But Friday’s opinion did not strike down the Nebraska law, which criminalizing a person’s refusal to submit to a blood test without a warrant. Defense attorney George Babcock says that goes against the U.S. Supreme Court ruling. Babcock said Friday he’s now considering appealing the ruling to the U.S. Supreme Court in an attempt to have the state law declared unconstitutional.

The case stems from the 2013 arrest of 55-year-old Ricky McCumber after he refused to submit to a preliminary breath test and blood test.

Lincoln woman gets probation for hording cats, other animals

gavel-and-scaleLINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — A 42-year-old Lincoln woman found hoarding dozens of cats and other pets in her home has been sentenced to 18 months’ probation and been barred from owning any pets for five years.

Autumn Rupert received the sentence Friday after pleading guilty to three counts of animal neglect.

In May, officers found dozens of cats and the house smelling strongly of urine and feces. Officials gave Rupert a week to clean up the house and on May 16 returned with animal control officers and removed nearly four dozen cats, a rabbit, three finches, two beta fish and 13 cages of tarantulas — as well as 10 dead kittens.

Of the 45 cats rescued, 28 were too sick to be saved and were euthanized.

Nebraska high court rejects Omaha man’s murder case appeal

Adrian Lester
Adrian Lester

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — The Nebraska Supreme Court has upheld the first-degree murder conviction and life sentence for an Omaha man who shot a teen to death during a 2014 robbery.

Prosecutors say Adrian Lester shot 18-year-old Tielor (TYE’-lur) Williams five times in the face and neck in April 2014 Gallagher Park. Police say Williams was shot after refusing to empty his pockets following a dispute over a marijuana deal.

In his appeal, Lester says his trial court improperly struck a prospective juror, excluded testimony offered to impeach a witness and denied his motion for a new trial. Lester also argued that there was insufficient evidence presented at trial to support his conviction.

The Nebraska high court on Friday rejected all of Lester’s arguments.

Counterfeit cookie dough: Omaha woman buys 5 boxes with bogus bill

girlscout-cookiesOMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Police are seeking a woman who passed a counterfeit $100 bill to buy five boxes of Girl Scout cookies in west Omaha.

Authorities say some Girl Scouts had set up outside a store Wednesday afternoon when the woman approached. She said wanted to buy five $4 boxes of the cookies but had only the $100 bill. A scout co-leader, Roni Gosch, gave the woman $80 in change, using her own money so the girls wouldn’t run short of cash to make change for other buyers.

Another of the women helping the girls soon suspected the bill was bogus. Police say it was.

Police have obtained pictures of the woman and the vehicle she arrived in from parking lot surveillance video. No arrest has been reported.

Teen accused of firing on Nebraska trooper charged as adult

gavel-moreOMAHA, Neb. (AP) — A teen accused of firing a gun at a Nebraska State trooper and fleeing the officer in a stolen car has been charged as an adult in Douglas County Court.

Prosecutors have charged 17-year-old Shane Kildow with four felony counts: attempted assault of an officer, use of deadly weapon, discharging a firearm from an occupied vehicle and theft.

Investigators say Kildow began firing when the trooper tried to stop him early Tuesday morning northwest of Omaha. Officials say Kildow crashed the stolen car he was driving in Valley, and then fled on foot before he was caught with the help of a police dog. The trooper was not injured.

A public defender appointed to represent Kildow on Thursday did not immediately return a phone message seeking comment.

Omaha woman gets 2-3 years for stabbing death of mother

Carletta Wells-Harris
Carletta Wells-Harris

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — A 26-year-old Omaha woman has been given two to three years in prison for stabbing to death her mother.

Court records say Carletta Wells-Harris was sentenced Wednesday in Douglas County District Court. She’d pleaded no contest to manslaughter after prosecutors dropped a second-degree murder charge and a weapons count.

Authorities say Wells-Harris killed 43-year-old Meredith Wells during a dispute at her home on July 5 last year.

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