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

Lincoln Police Search for Speed Bump Thieves

lincoln-policeLINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Lincoln officials are searching for the people who stole about $5,500 worth of speed bumps that were recently installed to prevent drag racing.

The thieves removed 48 pieces of rubber weighing a total of 2,400 pounds along McCormick Drive in northeast Lincoln earlier this month. City traffic operations manager Scott Opfer says they were secured to the concrete with 300 6-inch bolts.

Public Works employees installed the speed bumps in June after a request from police. The bumps were strategically placed throughout a half-mile strip that’s popular for racing. The area’s speed limit is 25 mph.

Opfer says the theft was well-planned.

Omaha-Area Pastor Accused in Child Sex Case

Jail-Bars-and-Cuffs_mediumPAPILLION, Neb. (AP) — A 61-year-old Omaha-area pastor has been charged with felony sexual assault of a child.

Sarpy County prosecutors say Clifton Wells, of Papillion (puh-PIHL’-yuhn) inappropriately touched a 14-year-old girl several times in July when he gave the girl a ride to pick up a job application. Wells told investigators he’d been counseling the girl about her misbehavior at school, and he denied that any sexual assault occurred.

A phone listing for Wells couldn’t be found. Online court records don’t list the name of his attorney.

Clergy Seek Pardon of Colorado Inmate Released 90 Years Early

john-hickenlooper
Gov. John Hickenlooper

DENVER (AP) — Faith leaders are asking Gov. John Hickenlooper to pardon a Colorado convict who was sent back to prison after being mistakenly released 90 years early and creating a new life.

In a letter to Hickenlooper dated Tuesday, clergy members urged the release of Rene Lima-Marin, who was sentenced in 2000 to a total of 98 years in prison for robbery, kidnapping and burglary after he and another man robbed two video stores at gunpoint. But a clerk’s mistake allowed him to be paroled in 2008.

He held a job, married and had a son before authorities realized the mistake.

The letter says Lima-Marin’s children are losing a role model. Supporters also held a vigil Tuesday.

A spokeswoman for Hickenlooper did not return a call for comment.

House Passes ‘No Welfare for Weed’ Bill

weedWASHINGTON (AP) — The House has passed a bill that could make it a little harder for people to use government welfare payments to buy marijuana in states where the drug is legal.

Supporters call it the “no welfare for weed” bill.

The bill would prevent people from using government-issued welfare debit cards to make purchases at stores that sell marijuana. It would also prohibit people from using the cards to withdraw cash from ATMs in those stores.

The House passed the bill Tuesday evening on a voice vote.

Pot smokers, however, could still use their benefit cards to get cash at other locations and then use it to buy marijuana.

A 2012 federal law already prevents people from using welfare debit cards at liquor stores, casinos and strip clubs.

 

Colorado Teen Accused of Stealing Car, Running Over Officer

police-lights-redGRAND JUNCTION, Colo. (AP) — Police say a 13-year-old Colorado boy stole his parents’ car, ran over an officer’s leg and rammed three patrol cars before being struck with a stun gun and arrested.

The officer was treated for ankle injuries and released after the pursuit in Grand Junction on Tuesday.

An officer shot the boy with a Taser as police tried to remove him from the car. He was evaluated at a hospital and taken to a juvenile jail. Authorities say charges are pending.

His parents reported shortly after 9 p.m. that their car had been stolen. Police pursued the boy around the neighborhood until he parked in front of his home. Police say he then drove off, striking the officer before he stopped and was arrested.

Ebola Patient in Nebraska Regains His Appetite

Dr. Rick Sacra
Dr. Rick Sacra

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — The American doctor battling the Ebola virus has regained his appetite as he continues to improve at the Nebraska Medical Center.

Debbie Sacra said Tuesday her husband, Dr. Rick Sacra, scarfed down every bite of the enchiladas he ordered Monday.

Debbie Sacra says she’s glad to hear President Barack Obama is sending additional help to West Africa where more than 2,200 deaths have been reported in this Ebola outbreak.

Fifty-one-year-old Rick Sacra contracted Ebola while working at a hospital in Liberia. He has been hospitalized in Omaha since Sept. 5.

Debbie Sacra says her husband has been visiting on the phone a lot this week.

Another American aid worker is being treated for Ebola at Emory University Hospital in Atlanta, and two other doctors were treated for Ebola there previously.

Bellevue Woman Convicted of Sexually Assaulting Her Son

ne-supreme-court-gavelPAPILLION, Neb. (AP) — A jury has found a Bellevue woman guilty of sexually assaulting her son.

Jurors convicted the 33-year-old woman Tuesday in Sarpy County District Court on charges of first-degree sexual assault, incest, two counts of visual depiction of sexually explicit conduct and child abuse. She pleaded guilty earlier to a charge of indecency with an animal in connection to the case.

Defense attorneys said the woman was forced by her husband to sexually assault the boy. Prosecutors argued the woman’s claims were not a legal defense for such actions.

The woman’s husband, also the boy’s father, has pleaded no contest to first-degree sexual assault, visual depiction of sexually explicit conduct and child abuse. He is scheduled to be sentenced in October.

Good Samaritan Injured in Northeast Nebraska

stanton-county-sheriffNORFOLK, Neb. (AP) — A 57-year-old man has been injured while changing a tire for two stranded motorists in northeast Nebraska.

The accident occurred about 7 p.m. Sunday on U.S. Highway 275 east of Norfolk. Stanton County Sheriff Mike Unger says a van had stopped with a flat tire in the outside westbound lane of the highway. Jeffrey Bethards, of rural Pilger (PIHL’-gur), had stopped his vehicle behind the van before getting out to help the two motorists.

Unger says a westbound car driven by Nick Beckman, of Norfolk, struck Bethards’ vehicle, then him and then sideswiped the van. Bethards was flown to Mercy Medical Center in Sioux City, Iowa. The two motorists were taken to a Norfolk hospital. Beckman was treated at the scene.

US Tobacco Growers Brace for Tougher Competition

tobacco-taxDANVILLE, Va. (AP) — Starting next month, America’s remaining tobacco growers will be totally exposed to the laws of supply and demand.

The very last buyout checks go out in October to about 425,000 tobacco farmers and landowners. They’re the last holdovers from a price-support and quota system that had guaranteed minimum prices for most of the 20th century, sustaining a way of life that began 400 years ago in Virginia.

Cigarette makers will have paid $10 billion to compensate growers for surrendering their quotas. Growers got another $5 billion from the companies as part of their 1998 settlement of state lawsuits over smoking-related health care costs.

When the last checks are cashed, surviving growers will be on their own, forced to find profits in a tremendously competitive global market.

Street Gangs Tone Down Use of Colors, Tattoos

bloodsHARTFORD, Conn. (AP) — Law enforcement officials from coast to coast say street gangs are shying away from wearing their colors and are covering up or even altering their tattoos to avoid detection by police.

Hartford, Connecticut, Police Sgt. Johnmichael O’Hare says gone are the days when the Bloods wore red from head to toe. All you’ll see now, he says, is maybe a red handkerchief sticking out of a back pocket.

Police say gangs have learned from past mistakes and are responding to stronger laws. Authorities say gang members also want to avoid more restrictive prison conditions imposed on gang members.

Los Angeles Detective William Nunn says there’s another reason gangs aren’t so flashy these days — they’re committing more credit card and identity theft crimes and don’t want to be easily identified.

Copyright Eagle Radio | FCC Public Files | EEO Public File