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

Ohio Teen Pleads Guilty in Killings of Two Brothers

gavel-and-scale(AP) — An 18-year-old man has pleaded guilty in the slayings of two teen brothers in northwest Ohio.

Michael Fay pleaded guilty to two counts of aggravated murder Tuesday morning in Putnam County.

He faces up to life in prison in the May 9 slayings of 14-year-old Blaine Romes and his 17-year-old brother, Blake Romes. Fay is due to be sentenced next month.

Prosecutors say Fay killed the brothers at the Ottawa mobile home he and his mother were sharing with the brothers and their mother.

The brothers were found dead after Fay was arrested in Columbus and pointed officers to them.

Pool at Omaha Medical Center Aimed at Therapy

alegent-creighton-health(AP) — A therapy pool at an Omaha medical center aims to help rehabilitation patients.

The 55-by-44-foot pool at Alegent Creighton Immanuel Medical Center has a floor that adjusts the water depth. The buoyancy of the 90- to 93-degree water also helps patients increase strength and muscle tone, as well as range of motion.

Outpatient classes help with conditions like arthritis, back pain, orthopaedic injuries, sports injuries and neurological or muscle deficit. Officials say the pool also benefits patients who use wheelchairs since the bottom of the pool can be raised and lowered.

The pool is open to the public.

Buffett Backs New Business Kits for Kids

Warren Buffett
Warren Buffett

(AP) — Earlier this year, Warren Buffett congratulated a group of three Kentucky kids for developing kits to help their peers set up businesses.

Now Buffett is teaching the young entrepreneurs how tough business can be by backing a competing product that will be sold exclusively in Toys R Us stores.

Both the new “Business in a Box” kits and the contest the Kentucky kids won in May are tied to “The Secret Millionaire’s Club” cartoon that features advice from an animated Buffett.

A spokeswoman for A Squared Entertainment says the company behind the cartoon started developing the “Business in a Box” kits more than three years ago, so there’s no link to the contest-winning idea.

The kids will likely have a hard time competing but their kits are $5 cheaper.

Booming Oil Towns Prepare for Inevitable Bust

oil-rig(AP) — In the oil fields of Texas and North Dakota, communities that are enjoying the most prosperous economic boom in a generation are increasingly thinking about the days after the surge in drilling is over.

Cities like Midland, Texas, are mindful that the runaway riches will eventually run out. So they are taking steps to ensure their towns make a soft landing.

Midland Mayor Wes Perry warns his neighbors not to “go overboard” because the good times can’t last forever.

When the energy market eventually declines, the town wants to avoid being burdened with crushing debt or too many employees. So sales tax revenue is used only for one-time projects, such as street repairs. Police officers are hired piecemeal, two or three a year, as the population increases.

Iowa Shooting Victim Dies; Standoff Ends

police-lights-red(AP) — Council Bluffs police say a woman shot during a domestic disturbance has died.

Police Sgt. Chad Meyers said Tuesday that 44-year-old Millisa Cox was pronounced dead at a Council Bluffs hospital.

A neighbor, Jennie Rolli, says Millisa Cox came outside around 8 a.m. Tuesday, sat by a tree and yelled for help. She was soon taken to the hospital.

Officers say a man inside the home refused to come out, and a negotiator and a SWAT unit were called in. The officers rushed into the house about 9:45 a.m. to end the standoff. They found the woman’s husband, 55-year-old Darwin Cox.

Meyers says Darwin Cox had shot himself in the head but the wound appeared to be superficial. He was taken to a hospital in nearby Omaha, Neb.

Council Bluffs Settles Wrongful Conviction Lawsuit for $6 Million

Terry Harrington
Terry Harrington

(AP) — The city of Council Bluffs will pay $6 million to settle a lawsuit with two Omaha, Neb., men who sued after the courts concluded they were wrongfully convicted and imprisoned for 25 years.

Terry Harrington and Curtis McGhee will be paid $2.3 million immediately and the remainder in six annual payments of more than $528,500. A final payment of just over $728,500 will be made in July 2020.

The agreement splits the money evenly between the two men in exchange for dismissal of the lawsuit.

The agreement specifies no admission of fault or liability by any party or implies wrongdoing.

Details, initially sealed on Friday, were ordered unsealed Tuesday after The Associated Press filed a freedom of information request under Iowa’s open records law.

Lincoln Stabbing Victim Returns to School

stabbing(AP) — The 17-year-old victim of an attack at a Lincoln high school has been warmly greeted as she returned to classes.

Ellen Kopetzky got a standing ovation Tuesday morning when she entered the gym at Pius X High School.

In brief remarks to teachers, administrators and fellow students, Kopetzky said it was “great to be back.”

She was attacked Oct. 7 in a school bathroom by another student. Kopetzky was released from a hospital the next day, after facial surgery.

The 16-year-old suspect fled the school and was found on Oct. 8 in southeast Kansas. She’s since returned and is charged as an adult. The Associated Press is not using the girl’s name because the AP generally doesn’t identify juveniles accused of crimes.

Lincoln Police Look Into Theft from Aviation Company

lincoln-police(AP) — Lincoln police are investigating the theft of $135,000 from an aircraft sales company.

The Lincoln Police Department says Duncan Aviation reported the theft Thursday after a shareholder said someone hacked into his email account and moved money within several bank transactions in late September and early October.

Police did not explain why $135,000 of company money was in the shareholder’s account. Company officials declined to comment.

Police are working with fraud investigators at the banks where the money was transferred. Officer Katie Flood declined to say whether authorities had a suspect.

Neb. Senator Holds Working Women Town Halls

Senator Amanda McGill
Senator Amanda McGill

(AP) — A Nebraska state senator says she is holding town hall meetings to talk with women about barriers to success in business including an income gap between men and women.

Sen. Amanda McGill has scheduled a meeting Tuesday at Omaha Security National Bank and another on Wednesday at the YWCA in Grand Island. A third meeting will be Oct. 24 at St. Paul’s Methodist Church in Lincoln.

McGill says she will examine barriers that face women as they struggle to reach their professional goals.

The town hall meetings will give women a chance to share their personal experiences with McGill on a variety of issues, including wage disparity, the balance of work and family, lack of women in Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics, and self-confidence roadblocks.

Woman Hurt in Fall from Horse in Lincoln

ambulance(AP) — A 68-year-old woman has been injured in a fall from a horse at the Lancaster Event Center on the east side of Lincoln.

The accident occurred about 1:30 p.m. Saturday. Lincoln Police Capt. Jim Davidsaver says the horse spooked, and the woman fell off onto concrete.

She was taken to a local hospital. Davidsaver says her injuries were not believed to be life-threatening.

Copyright Eagle Radio | FCC Public Files | EEO Public File