w/ Chris Parks
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OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — The U.S. Attorney for Nebraska says 13 people have been accused in a federal indictment of conspiring with a Mexican drug cartel to deal methamphetamine in Omaha — including the owner of a south Omaha auto dealer. U.S. Attorney Deborah Gilg (gihlj) said Thursday that 12 of those indicted have been arrested or were already behind bars for other offenses. She said six are in the U.S. illegally. The indictments were announced the same day that officers from eight different law enforcement agencies in eastern Nebraska and western Iowa executed search warrants in the case, including one at Gomez Auto Sales. Gilg says authorities seized 30 cars from the lot, believed to be a front for the drug ring. If convicted, those indicted face up to life in prison.
BERNICE M. BAIER, 88, of Atlantic, died Thu., Aug. 23rd, at the Atlantic Nursing & Rehab Center. Funeral services for BERNICE BAIER will be held 2-p.m. Tue., Aug. 28th, at Zion Lutheran Church in Atlantic. Hockenberry Family Care Funeral Home in Atlantic has the arrangements.
There is no visitation.
Burial will be in the Atlantic Cemetery.
BERNICE BAIER is survived by:
Her husband – George Baier, of Atlantic.
Her son- Lynn (Barb) Baier, of Atlantic.
Authorities are investigating the robbery of a bank in Council Bluffs. According to Bluffs Police, a black male wearing a gray hooded sweatshirt, blue sweatpants and a ski mask walked into the American National Bank at 2650 W. Broadway at around 10-a.m. The man, brandishing a gun, jumped over the counter and demanded money from a teller before leaving through the bank’s east doors. He got away with an undetermined amount of cash. One of the bundles contained a dye-pack that exploded as the suspect was on foot.
Police officers found a several yards long money trail along Avenue A, and followed it back toward West Broadway, but they were unable to locate the suspect. The incident remains under investigation.
The Iowa State Patrol says a Nebraska man was arrested Tuesday night after he crashed his motorcycle into a ditch. Officials say 55-year old Glenn Allen, of Omaha, was traveling at a high rate of speed on his 1996 Ducati M900 cycle when he lost control. The bike crashed at around 9:50-p.m., and came to rest in the west ditch off of Interstate 29 southbound, about 4.5-miles north of Council Bluffs. The cycle was totaled in the crash, with the damage estimated at $4,000. Allen refused medical treatment at the scene. He was charged with OWI/1st offense, Failure to Maintain Control, and Failure to have a Valid License or permit to operate a motor vehicle.
JOYCE ANN MAREAN, 78, of Guthrie Center, died Wed., Aug. 22nd, at the Guthrie County Hospital. Funeral services for JOYCE MAREAN will be held 10-a.m. Tue., Aug. 28th, at the 1st United Methodist Church in Guthrie Center. Twigg Funeral Home in Guthrie Center has the arrangements.
Visitation at the funeral home will be held from 4-8pm Mon., Aug. 27th.
Burial will be in the Bear Grove Cemetery in rural Guthrie Center.
Officials with the Iowa Department of Public Health (IDPH) say even though the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has declared the recent West Nile virus outbreak as the largest ever seen in the U.S., Iowa West Nile virus case reports have been consistent with recent years. The (IDPH) says it has received five confirmed cases of the mosquito-borne illness and several additional cases are currently being investigated. The five confirmed cases include one each in Grundy, Linn, Lyon, Page, and Plymouth counties. All patients have recovered.
While overall mosquito activity has been lower this year, likely due to the extremely dry spring and summer, officials say the cases illustrate West Nile virus is circulating and causing illness. IDPH Medical Director, Dr. Patricia Quinlisk says “Iowans may think the use of mosquito spray while outdoors is unnecessary because there seem to be few mosquitoes bothering them.” But Quinlisk says they’re urging residents and visitors to continue the use of insect repellent with DEET while outdoors, to protect against mosquitoes which may be carrying the West Nile virus, and ticks, which may carry Lyme disease.
The best way to prevent West Nile virus is to eliminate mosquito breeding areas and to use insect repellent when outdoors. Iowans should take the following steps to reduce the risk of exposure to West Nile virus:
While West Nile virus case reports so far have been consistent with recent years, there has been a slight increase in Lyme diseases case reports. 113 cases of Lyme disease have been confirmed thus far in 2012. There were 100 confirmed cases in 2011.
Online court records indicate two former Nodaway Valley High School wrestlers arrested last year in connection with a hazing incident have plead guilty to harassment and serious assault charges. Judge Paul Huscher, Tuesday, sentenced 18-year-old Michael Fieck and 18-year-old Jacob Wayne Schliessman to a total of 90-days each in the Adair County Jail, followed by two-years probation. They were facing two-years in jail. The men each plead guilty to two counts of first-degree harassment and two counts of serious assault. They had originally been charged with second-degree sexual abuse.
The charges were later changed to two counts each of felonious assault. Last March, Feick and Schliessman, who was 17 at the time of the incident, both entered pleas of not guilty to the charges of two counts of felonious assault, and waived their right to a speedy trial.
The incident which led to their arrest happened in December 2011, and pertained to the hazing of a fellow student on the Nodaway Valley wrestling squad. The unidentified student had said the assault happened when he missed a practice session. A subsequent investigation by the Greenfield Police Department indicated there may have been as many as three victims of hazing. Both of the accused teens were expelled from the school.