All Episodes

February 13, 2026 41 mins
On today's terrifying show: Being Guthrie's neighbor, Lucy busting out of jail, Sheriff Hanson on a 42-yr-old cold case, Greg Wagner from NE Game and Parks, and more!
Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Once again staring at drone footage of Nancy Guthrie's house.
Nice house, like a lot of homes there in the
Phoenix area, swimming pool in the backyard, earth tones, beautiful property,
nice neighborhood, And I was thinking, she's not the only

(00:21):
one in that neighborhood. What are her neighbors doing? Are
they there? Are they home?

Speaker 2 (00:29):
How far away is your house? I mean, is it
like a neighborhood really close together?

Speaker 1 (00:33):
Yeah, well they're not real real close together. It's it's
rich people neighborhood. So there's it's not like the homes
are within ten feet of each other like where I
live and my say my lean to hovel. No, it's
uh there, But they're neighbors that people have to come
up and down the street. They're presumably kids, Well it's Phoenix,

(00:55):
grandkids might be coming over one to play over Grandma
and Grandpa's. And what are those neighbors doing?

Speaker 2 (01:04):
Well, clearly not watching her house every second? Yeah, but
I mean Drew does that though. Really, So they.

Speaker 1 (01:10):
Got to go to work where they I don't know,
they're the Titans of Empire. They got it, but they
got to go to work at Empire. Titan business and
uh meant, when the media has just fallen out, are
you an investigator? Do you have a backpack? Have you
seen any gloves? And they're just like, I'm remember it's me,

(01:30):
It's Wanda, I'm going to work. We just we did
this yesterday when I got home from work, and also
yesterday morning at the same time, I have not changed
my car. I am going I live here, this is
my house. Get out. Meanwhile, there's the guy that's still
like out there sunbathing, wearing a speedo. I don't care
if there's drones overhead. I have to look leathery otherwise

(01:53):
people are not going to recognize me.

Speaker 2 (01:55):
The sun's good for you.

Speaker 1 (01:57):
Sure every dermatologist would say so. So I just I
feel just gotta feel bad for those people. That's a
that's gotta be a weird deal. And now this entire
thing on the Nancy Guthrie abductor cases, So whether or
not they can find someone who owns a backpack, they're like, well,

(02:18):
it's a very specific backpack. It's the Ozark trail hiker backpack.
So they're trying to figure out who maybe bought an
Ozark trail Hiker backpack. Again, they're in Arizona. The Ozarks
are largely in Missouri, so they're saying, well, maybe we
can track down who bought the backpack.

Speaker 2 (02:38):
So it's seriously an Ozark area only backpack.

Speaker 1 (02:42):
No, it's just the name of the Okay, the backpack.

Speaker 3 (02:45):
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (02:46):
I guess you could probably buy one anywhere.

Speaker 2 (02:48):
Our news department says it's a Walmart brand?

Speaker 1 (02:51):
Is it so a Walmart? Thanks Craig our news department
aka Craig this morning. The Ozark Trail hiker backpack. And
if you're wondering, well, how many people have this very
specific backpack, I don't know. They've found like a billion gloves.

(03:12):
They're in the desert trails around Tucson, just billion people Like,
here's a glove. I didn't realize there's so many gloves
out there until suddenly people were looking for them. There's
gloves everywhere. They've had have had thirteen thousand tips to
the FBI in less than two weeks. I know a
guy with gloves and they have to follow up on them.

(03:37):
And you wonder like, is it because someone honestly knows
something that could be of assistance to the investigators, or
is that someone said I heard they're paying one hundred
thousand dollars for information that leads to an arrest. Hey,
this is better odds than playing Keno and you just
call them up and go Dan.

Speaker 2 (03:57):
From Unfortunately you probably do you have that.

Speaker 1 (04:00):
Yeah, a guy down the street that I've always thought
he was sketchy. His name is Dan. Check into Dan,
and then if Dan ends up being the guy, you
get one hundred thousand dollars. It's gotta be worth a
shot other than you're tying up FBI resources if you
have no idea what you're talking about. I also love

(04:22):
the idea that the FBI said, we've just doubled the
reward one hundred thousand dollars. Like someone was sitting there
knowing who took the sweet woman, so I'd tell the FBI.
But I'm not gonna do it for fifty thousand dollars.
Let's sweeten the pot a little bit. I don't get that.
It's a lot I don't get, and we'll reveal it

(04:44):
incrementally here throughout the morning. Well, our long statewide nightmare
is over. They have formally reprimanded Omaha State Senator Mikayla Kavanaugh.
This is the Omaha State senator who trans people. She
said so loudly and repeatedly over the span of about

(05:04):
three minutes a couple of years ago. We love trans people.
Trans people belong here. That was the chant that she
did there. But that was not what led to this
reprimand she is also the state senator who showed up
for work this year and saw some signs on the
wall of the Unicameral celebrating America's two hundred and fiftieth birthday.

(05:28):
She said, nope, IM not going to have signs celebrating America.
Not from Prager University. That's conservative stuff. And so she
gleefully went through the hallway ripping these signs off the walls.
Several people were injured, children had to see counseling. Was

(05:50):
it was awful. I lost several nights of sleep, And
then the state patrol had to look into it. Is
this the person who may have taken these things down? Yes,
she videotaped herself doing it and posted the pictures on
her social media. This was what you call an open
and shutcase. She apologized for doing it. Uh, And so

(06:11):
now the Unicameral had to be like, all right, what
do we do with Mikayla which is a regular question
there at the unicamer So they decided that they were
going to publicly reprimand her. They had a vote, We're
going to reprimand Mikayla. What does that mean that we
remove her from office? No? Does she have to shut

(06:31):
up the rest of it?

Speaker 3 (06:32):
And no?

Speaker 1 (06:33):
Does it mean anything?

Speaker 3 (06:34):
No?

Speaker 1 (06:35):
Is it even a slap on the wrist. Does someone
get to slap her on the wrist? No, don't, please
don't strike the state senators. So they just had to a
vote say Mikayla, stop that, and she apologized again, and
then we moved on to more important issues like who's
going to go in what bathroom and what definition of

(06:56):
anti Semitism might be used in various bills. By the way,
those are two actual things worming their way through your
Nebraska state legislature. We are now on the precipice of
another government shutdown. I completely agree with Democrat former House
Majority Leader Stenny Hoyer, a Democrat from Maryland, who says,

(07:20):
quote the normalization of shutdowns, Stenny is stupid. Stupid. Bye Stenny.
I see Stenny says it's stupid, and I agree with Stenny,
it is stupid. So thank you for that. Now. Of course,
the question then is, well, whose fault is that? I mean, technically,

(07:40):
the shutdowns right now are the fault of the Democrats.
When you are in the minority, as they are in
the House and Senate, the only power you have in
the Senate, well, the only power you have is for
the House to do what the House is going to do.
Republicans do a straight majority and it moves on to
the Senate. Senate have these rules. Well, if we don't

(08:01):
have a filibuster proof majority that we don't actually enforce,
we don't make them do an actual filibuster, then it
has to meet a certain threshold to vote sixty votes.
We're never going to get that on anything. So Democrats
just fold their arms and go me And if we
aren't able to then fund something like the Department of

(08:22):
Homeland Security, then the government can shut down portions of
the government. This is I think this is the partial,
partial government shut down. But who's an impact TSA Coastguard,
Coastguard FEMA, as there are several areas of the country
that got walloped by winter weather. As we've been sitting

(08:44):
here in San Diego, Nebraska for the last couple of weeks,
they're getting hammered. They're well below zero, well above average snow.
FEMA's been out there trying to deal with that stuff.
The Democrats are like, they don't need the money, and
because they want to defund ICE and this is already funded, yeah,
for the rest of the year through the big beautiful bill.
This is this is really hard for me to to

(09:07):
process Scott.

Speaker 4 (09:08):
And then when I listened to Chuck Schumer, who probably
needs to take a long vacation, he says, overwhelmingly the
country wants ICE to be abolished, to be defanged, take
away the guns, take away the handcuffs, mask, you know,
basically walk out there like Hansel and Gretel.

Speaker 1 (09:27):
That's what he wants.

Speaker 4 (09:28):
And yet in the next sentence he votes down the
Save Act even though overwhelmingly Americans want.

Speaker 1 (09:35):
A photo ID for people who vote great points. So
what is this guy? Do you listen to yourself? Well,
they also said we want we want American people. He said,
we want Ice to go away. They said we want
him to wear body cams. And then they said, all right,
they got body cams and now they're complaining, Well, the
bodycam footage is going to be used to identify violent protesters.

(09:57):
And arrest them. Yes, that's what law enforcement does. Quit
trying to murder the members of ICE or obstruct law
enforcement operations, and you won't have a problem. I don't
have any issue with ICE wearing bodycam footage because I'm
at work, or i me at my kid's basketball game,
or I'm having a drink with a friend, and generally

(10:19):
I'm not interrupting ICE wall doing those things.

Speaker 4 (10:22):
To quote our good friend Michael Savage, in my day,
Chuck Schumer would be running a Tom McCanns shoe store
and Lower Manhattan. This is the guy, this is the
voice in the face of the Democrat Party in the
United States Senate, and this is what they believe. They
believe that you shouldn't have to produce an ID to vote,
and that a criminal illegal should not be apprehended by

(10:45):
law enforce.

Speaker 1 (10:46):
And what a face that of Chuck Schumer looks like.

Speaker 4 (10:49):
To say nothing of how twenty years ago he was
saying we have to get all on the floor of
the United States House of Representatives, where he was serving
at the time, we have to get all the criminal
illegal out of the country. Yeah, twenty years ago he
was saying that in front of a live microphone. See,
this is why people don't trust government. This is why
people have raided Congress with about a nineteen percent approval

(11:11):
rating because these guys say these things, and what are
we supposed to believe?

Speaker 1 (11:16):
What do you really want done?

Speaker 4 (11:18):
He knows deep down inside that they have to have
a voter ID, and he knows deep down inside that
they have to arrest criminal illegals, But he's trying to
win points with his base, and he's trying to raise money.
Eight years this is what raises money in our campaign culture.

Speaker 1 (11:34):
Eight years under President Obama with Tom Homan as the
border security guy, they gave ICE a record amount of funding.
But now it's out of bounds. Let's see here, Lucy,
put yourself in the slippers here of the person getting
up and getting ready to go this morning. Have they
already eaten breakfast on average? Are they going to eat breakfast?

(11:55):
Is this a quick granola bar on the way out
the door? And maybe an otis spunk? I are muffin
in an hour from now? If I if I play
the audio of a high ranking government official that makes
people a little squeam this year? Is this am I
ruining people's breakfast? Actively?

Speaker 2 (12:10):
At this moment, you're saying, is the general public eating breakfast?

Speaker 1 (12:15):
Yet not the general public, only the thirteen or fourteen
people still listening to this radio show. Since okay, we're okay,
all right, great. Here is our Secretary of Health and
Human Services R FK. Junior on a podcast the other
day and I said, I'm not scared of a germ.
You know, I used to smart cocaine off a toilet disease.

(12:37):
There we go, wow, r FK. Junior, And he's in
charge of America's healthcare.

Speaker 2 (12:42):
That's an isolated comment.

Speaker 1 (12:44):
Yeah, Oh, I'm sure in context it's probably worse. I
don't I don't know. I have not and I will
not take the time to delve any deeper. He's said
in the past. Oh, he's admitted behavior, not the cus lifestyle,
going back several years, but several Yeah. The quote there, Yeah,

(13:05):
the quote there, I'm not scared of a germ. I
used to snort cocaine off of toilet seats. And I'm
thinking I have a lot of questions, is what I'm thinking.
Did you happen to go in the stall and go
who left their cocaine on here? I mean, at some
point someone had to put the cocaine someplace, and you

(13:28):
looked around and decided, here's good.

Speaker 2 (13:32):
It was the seventies, So what happened was he.

Speaker 4 (13:36):
Had the cake cocaine, he put it on the toilet seat,
went into a stall, yeah, and did it. And he
did so in a place where anybody walking by would
think he's just throwing up into the toilet.

Speaker 1 (13:48):
Okay, that that was the whole deal.

Speaker 4 (13:50):
But I thought Kennedy family has a very, very creative
lifestyle choices in the sixties, seventies, eighties, and nineties.

Speaker 1 (13:57):
Pardon my ignorance, having not done a lot of cocaine
in my life, Can you not put it in your
hand like it? Okay, let me say. Let me talk
about something you're looking which with I am familiar, and
that is I like peanut M and MS. We got
a little jar right there in the kitchen of peanut eminem's.

(14:17):
My wife keeps it stocked because she knows I like
peanut M and MS. So if I want some peanut
M and MS, just I grab some in my hand,
I put it in my mouth. Is there not a
similar situation with cocaine, Like, hey, my wife keeps the
cocaine jar stocked. If I want some cocaine, I put
it in my hand, throw it up my nose.

Speaker 2 (14:34):
Have you never put peanuts M and m's on the
back of a toilet seat and en them? You know
you don't know what you're missing.

Speaker 1 (14:40):
No, I guess I haven't see That's what I'm thinking.

Speaker 4 (14:43):
I made the M and ms off of strange places
over the years, right so far, not off a toy.

Speaker 1 (14:47):
If I want peanut M and ms, I'm not looking around,
going where's the nearest surface that is maybe the most
disgusting thing anywhere around here? Oh, here's fine? Is this
at his house? It's your If it's in a public restroom.

Speaker 2 (15:03):
You know, nothing like a cocaine party on a cocaine
party on a toilet.

Speaker 1 (15:08):
I gotta tell you, Please tell me. I got that
clip isolated Friday morning.

Speaker 4 (15:13):
And I'm not really sure that K, if he's fifty
thousand watch signal that takes us to the Pacific Ocean,
is really enraptured by rfk's recreational proclivities.

Speaker 1 (15:22):
Just a suggestion. Well, that would have been nice to
know before we started down this road here. But here
we are, here, we are camping out in RFK Junior's
former restroom has rehab. I mean he's he's cleaned up
his act.

Speaker 4 (15:36):
He's he's fairly stable with this wife, which would be
I think two or three for him. He can do
more pull ups than a guy a third his age
do more than I can. And he's a really smart dude.
He's cleaned it up. This is the mess is cleaned up.
This is a great message for the kids. You know,
you think like, hey, drugs are fun, drugs are cool.

(15:59):
No drugs lead you into a public restroom with cocaine
and a toilet seat, and that's your only option. And
when you think your only option, when you're in a
confirmation hearing to become secretary of Department of Health and
Human Services, it comes up.

Speaker 1 (16:12):
I'm just surprised that we had this behavior from a Kennedy.
I shocked, and be here that family tree insert sarcasm here,
getting some Gary Sadlemeyer references here in the Zonkers custom
was inbox this morning Scott at kfab dot com. Bill says,
dear Scott and Jim, and Lucy says, we're two months

(16:34):
out from Gary's retirement and Valentine's Day is tomorrow, so
I believe it is appropriate to nominate Gary for sainthood today.
Since I'm a Protestant, this is legal for Gary to
become a saint. Normally it's done posthumously and automatically, but
I wanted to get this out there early. God bless
and have fun today, guys. Oh, no problem there. Bill

(16:57):
and Lewisville emailing that one. Bill, thank you so much
for listening. Saint Saddlemeyer. I know it's usually Saint Gary,
but I'm a fan of alliteration. Howard emails says, I
heard you guys talking about that GOT three case and
the backpack, the Ozark Mountain backpack or whatever it's called.
He says, I just bought one from Walmart here on Lincoln.

(17:19):
I saw another one in a sporting good store. I've
seen them at a goodwill. Good luck to authorities trying
to track down who may have purchased one. By the way,
I like what you're doing with the Morning show.

Speaker 3 (17:30):
But I miss Gary.

Speaker 1 (17:32):
Yeah, I miss Gary. Look, Howard, I miss Gary too,
Yeah really we did. Oh yeah, I miss Gary all
the time.

Speaker 4 (17:40):
Just a second. Let me see him, Jim every day.
Tell people how much you miss Gary. Otherwise it's your
I miss Gary.

Speaker 1 (17:47):
I know I miss Gary too.

Speaker 4 (17:49):
And then Gary is fine. Gary is doing fine. He
pops in from time to time. He's not coming in today.
He's on a little vacation. He's on a big vacation.
He's probably listening to me.

Speaker 2 (18:01):
He's not listening.

Speaker 1 (18:02):
Yeah, listen, I'm getting Texas and he's got a helicrafter
shortwave on that freaking ship just so he can hear us. Look,
I fully admit it was probably a bad decision on
my part, my part to force Gary out and take
over the show, and the bloody coup way that I
did it was, I admit in twenty twenty hind sate,

(18:22):
hindsight retrospect, that was maybe not the best decision, but
it happened, okay, and we're not going back. Luke email
says Scott. You know it's bad when Jim Rose has
to shut down a conversation and say, kf abe listeners
to serve better. Yes, thank you, Luke. Hey appreciate that.
I'm always put you people first. It doesn't seem like

(18:44):
it buy half. Look, I'm not the one that made
RFK Junior say this, and I said, I'm not scared
of a germ. You know, I used to smart cocaine
of a toilet. I didn't make him say that and
make me replay it at a time when kids are
going to school. I didn't do any of that. Do
we want to have fun with audio? This is yesterday's
congressional hearing? What exactly was the topic yesterday? Was it

(19:07):
Epstein or were they talking about ice or just whatever
Democrats wanted to slam Attorney General Pam Bondi over Jasmine Crockett,
the Texas Democrat and MENSA member was saying, how come
you guys are redacting Trump's name? He's in the Epstein
files the bazillion times something like that, how come you

(19:30):
guys won't mans it Trump? And then Bondi had a
chance finally to respond.

Speaker 5 (19:34):
I find it interesting that she didn't even want to
try Congresswoman Crockett to ask any questions, because she certainly
did not condemn her leader, Hakim Jeffries for taking money
from Jeffrey Epstein after Epstein was convicted. And I will
be brief to give you your time, Congressman, this is

(19:54):
what she didn't want to talk about. Texas from Cuba
convicted homicide, arson weapon offense, condicted, So what We're talking
about convict some of these perpetrators, right, these women.

Speaker 1 (20:09):
So she's the attorney General. Pambondi is holding up pictures
of illegal immigrants who have been detained by ICE out
of Texas. Well. Jas mccrockett's trying to defund that agency.
And that was some of the sum of what we
heard during the day long hearing there with Pambondi.

Speaker 4 (20:25):
There was a minimal amount of decorum on Capitol Hill
yesterday on both the House and Senate side.

Speaker 1 (20:30):
That was from a House hearing.

Speaker 4 (20:32):
Over on the Senate side, the Department for the Committee
for Homeland Security got access to Keith Allison, the Attorney
General of Minnesota. Yeah, and in the wake of the
ICE issues up there forgetting that four thousand bad guys
have been arrested by ICE in Minnesota as they begin
to draw down there. But this was a shouting match,

(20:53):
This was finger pointing, this was this was anything but
the behavior of mature people. And we only have five
hundred and thirty five out of three hundred and thirty
million people. We have five hundred and thirty five who
are elected to the United States Congress. You would hope
that they would have an ounce of restraint, a little
bit of discipline, and you would hope that the people

(21:15):
who are there would behave and perform in a way
that would be exemplary to young people.

Speaker 1 (21:19):
Just the opposite had no chance.

Speaker 4 (21:21):
And when you have, when you literally have in our
country today, Scott, two people looking at exactly the same
piece of evidence and seeing one hundred percent diametrically different things,
I don't know where we go from here. I don't
know how you move away from partisanship. If this is
now how you fund your campaigns, This is now how
you recruit candidates by having outrageous things be recorded onto

(21:45):
video and then used as campaign commercials and at campaign fundrais.

Speaker 1 (21:49):
If you have President Trump, say today is Friday and
the Democrats go, it's Saturday, Eve, you lying criminal? Then
I don't know how we where you go build from there?
And I'll go to the KFAB Certified Transmission Sports Brief
with Jim Rose.

Speaker 4 (22:04):
Okay, Team USA was killer and hockey at the Olympics
five to one over Latvia, and Jake Ginzill played a
lot u ando guy now probably the best scoring forward
in the NHL. The women's hockey team plays Italy in
the quarterfinals, today at about two o'clock Omaha time. The
world of figure skating is not letting go of that
dreadful judging. At the Olympic Games, the French judge and
the ice dancing competition awarded a French pair a score

(22:28):
of nearly eight points higher than the American pair of
Madison Chock and Evan Bates, even though five of the
nine judges favored the Americans, who then missed out on
the gold medal by just one point four to three points.

Speaker 1 (22:40):
But our guys stayed classy. Here's baits.

Speaker 6 (22:43):
We haven't studied it in depth, but we didn't speak
to our coach, and we didn't talk to each other,
and we know how we felt on Center Ice after
we skated. We felt like we delivered our absolute best
performance that we could have. It was our Olympic moment.

Speaker 4 (22:56):
A giant online petition on change dot org is ripping
the Olympics. This seems like an easy fix to me.

Speaker 1 (23:02):
As a judge.

Speaker 4 (23:03):
Your score is dropped when your countrymen are competing hoops
un O U and O U and O and ninety
eight ninety four over Saint Thomas last night, best win
of the year, Jay's Tomorrow hosting Villanova, Husker's host Northwestern.
Despite the losses lately, the national pundits still love this
ball club. Here's Brent Stover four kf CBS forecasting the

(23:25):
fate of several NCAA tournament bound teams, including Nebraska.

Speaker 3 (23:29):
All right, Brent, I'm in the team.

Speaker 7 (23:30):
You tell me how far they're gonna make it in
this year'stormament.

Speaker 8 (23:32):
You got it.

Speaker 7 (23:33):
Alabama Elite eight, Kansas Sweet sixteen, Elite eight, much Biowa
State easy, Final four, Houston Final four, Round of thirty two,
Kentucky Round of sixty four, Arizona Final four, Nebraska.

Speaker 1 (23:51):
National title game. Wow, Elite eight, Illinois National champion.

Speaker 4 (23:57):
All right, So they've got Nebraska playing Illinois for the
national title of college basketball this year, and Iowa stayed
in the Final four. Basketball getting to the Final four
this year will be so huge for all of us.
But in particular Matt Rule, the Nebraska women are leacn oil.
Now his seventh loss in nine games, eighty four to
sixty seven at Minnesota. This is not the time of

(24:18):
year to go into the greater ditch. The NCAA got
slamm dunked by a judge yesterday overturned its denial of
a sixth year of eligibility for ole Miss quarterback Trinidad Chambliss.
Really good player who was one of the top stories
in the game last season. He wanted an extra year
because he lost a year due to injury. The NCAAA said, well,
you could have had surgery and played anyway. The judge said,

(24:41):
are you out of your minds?

Speaker 1 (24:43):
He plays this year.

Speaker 4 (24:45):
Sports his news on Nebraska's news weather traffick station KFAB
News Time of the morning, seven twenty four, on the.

Speaker 1 (24:50):
Subject of the combine, We've got this email from Dennis
as NFL combine Nebraska's two, Iowa has nine. It says
to me that rule is a subpar, overpaid coach. That's
what it says to Dennis. Sent to Scott at KFAB
dot com. It's a growing sentiment. Welcoming back to the program.
Here to news radio eleven ten KFAB. Douglas County Sheriff

(25:12):
Aaron Hanson. A couple of stories here we want to talk. First,
let's go back to nineteen eighty four. Lucy is wearing
a Stenham or a denim stonewashed jean jacket with an
Reo Speedwagon button. Same one she has on today Reagan
is running for reelection. Was a time here in Omaha,
just north of town by Humble Park in the Ponka

(25:35):
Hills neighborhood that a family was in distress and all
these decades later, still looking for answers. Sheriff fill in
the gaps here.

Speaker 3 (25:43):
Yeah, very very sad story. So, you know, we're talking
about forty two years ago, young twenty one year old
woman Michelle Lamir, she went by Mickey. She was actually
the sister of Frank Lamire, a well known activist leader
in the Winnebago Tribe community here in Nebraska, in South Dakota.

(26:04):
She was found dead murdered on Shangaska Road in the
morning in Ponka Hills and the Dougast County Sheriff's Office
conducted the investigation, and unfortunately that case was never solved.
And the other part that's very unfortunate is that the
media at the time painted a rather unflattering picture of

(26:24):
this young lady who was a mother, she was a sister,
you know, beloved family member, member of that community. The
local media painted her at the time has been someone
that was maybe living a lifestyle which was not consistent
with what the rest of us would consider to be
an average lifestyle. But she was a victim nonetheless, and
so I'm really proud of my investigative team. Forty two

(26:46):
years later, they've cracked open the books and I think
they're on track, hopefully to try to bring justice to
the Mere family and in that entire community who felt
you know, I think probably abandoned.

Speaker 1 (27:01):
Yeah, meteor parts at the time though, so that she
was you know, at some of her favorite hangouts down
downtown to midtown that night, but well north of there,
north or Humble Park is where she was found and
detective said it looked like a late night hit and run.
What is causing you, now these years later to describe
it as murder?

Speaker 3 (27:22):
Well, you know, I think that the case was investigated
as a murder from the very beginning, and there were
witness accounts at the time which which would lead investigators
to believe that it was a homicide a murder. But today,
you know, we had the benefit of advanced technology that

(27:43):
we did not have at that time. Our investigator, investigator
Colin Driscoll, who's really committed to opening up these cold cases,
along with some of his fellow investigators, they've reinterviewed witnesses,
and we're starting to get a different picture painted today
based on a reevent evaluation of the physical evidence and
witness accounts. And so what we need from the public is,

(28:04):
if you remember this case, if you've heard something about
this case or someone bragging about this case over the
last forty two years, please get a hold of us
at the Sheriff's office at four h two four four
four six thousand. You know, we want to give this
family and that community closure injustice.

Speaker 1 (28:20):
Yeah, witnesses were I don't know if this was then
or now, but now we have a picture of a
woman matching her description hanging out the passenger side of
a car, yelling for help. Was that then or is
this something that now the investigation is either revealing or
looking back at.

Speaker 3 (28:41):
That was witness accounts back at the time of the crime,
back at the time of the initial investigation, and so
that's what led investigators at that time to believe that
this was more than just a fatal hit and run,
that this young twenty one year old pregnant was killed intentionally.

(29:04):
And so investigator Driscol has conducted more recent interviews which
is painted even more light on the events forty two
years ago and hopefully, hopefully we can be able to
present a case to the county attorney to render a
final decision.

Speaker 1 (29:21):
Yeah, going back to eighty four, that part of town
here in north of town, Poka Hills, driver of a
blue sedan, white male between twenty and thirty, heavy set, beard, mustache, long,
shaggy shoulder length, red colored light red colored hair. That's
I don't know why that case went cold. I'm glad

(29:42):
you guys picked it up there in your office as
we talk here with Douglas County Sheriff Aaron Hanson, just
a moment left here with Sheriff Hanson. You guys are
also calling attention to the fact that some of these
homeless encampments might have sex offenders in there who are
able to skirt the sex offender registry because you've got
to check on them at their last known address. If
they don't have an address, how do you check on them.

Speaker 3 (30:05):
Yeah, it's a conundrum for sure, because we know, you know,
not every sex offender is going to be a recidivist,
but the data shows that, especially when you talk about
the highest risk sex offenders, that there's recidivism rate is
concerningly high. And that's why we have the sex Offender Registry.
And so when you look at who needs to register

(30:27):
as a sex fender and check in with the Sheriff's office,
you know, sometimes it's once a year, sometimes it's every
six months, sometimes it's every three months, depending on your severity.
Unless you declare yourself as a transient, you claim you
have no home, they have to come in and register
once a month. And we've got seventy five individuals in
Douglas County that claim to be transient sex offenders. Uh

(30:52):
seven of those currently are abscondin on the run, and
we don't know where they are. And so we've created
a web page at the Sheriff's Office at the DCSO website,
and it has got a list of every reported transient
sex offender as well as the absconded sex offenders, and
we hope the public will check that and if they

(31:15):
see someone they recognize and go, well, that's Joe. He's
not living in a tent behind an elementary school. He's
actually living down the block from me at this house.
That's information we want because that's a felony crime to
lie on the registry. But Likewise, if you do see
someone that you recognize as a transient sex offender living

(31:36):
in a tent and cammate living in a box or
living under a bridge, that's also information we would like
to know, because unfortunately the law does not mandate that
they have to tell us exactly where they're staying if
they register monthly as a transient Our apologies.

Speaker 1 (31:52):
If your name is Joe. The website Sheriff dot Douglas
countyshne dot gov slash transient dash, sex dash offenders, it's
right to just do a search for Douglas County, Nebraska Sheriff.
You'll find that on the page. Sheriff Aaron Hanson, Douglas County.
Always appreciate the time, Thank you very much, and have
a good weekend.

Speaker 3 (32:12):
Thanks.

Speaker 1 (32:13):
Thanks for getting spicy at the Olympics. You got accusations
of favoritism by the judges and then crazy stuff happening
in some of the news conferences with some of the
American skaters.

Speaker 6 (32:25):
Maxims last issue Chas Michael Michaels is figure skating.

Speaker 1 (32:35):
So yeah, thank Lady's and Glory.

Speaker 4 (32:37):
There a stupid movie that was very very funny and
and and just it just it's a way to decompress
for two hours. There is no cultural or artistic value
to that movie whatsoever. No other then it gives you
a chance to forget about everything else in the world
for two hours and just shake your head and laugh.

Speaker 8 (32:58):
Nancy Carrigan's caring, that's a great movie. Official here, all right,
that's enough. You've officially real quick here round the horn
pitbull ban. Let me try that again, pit bull band
and council bluffs, thumbs up, thumbs down. The Mayor Council bluffs, saying,
maybe we can eliminate the pit bull ban in CB.

Speaker 4 (33:19):
Well, there's nothing there's nothing wrong with the pit bull terrier.
The problem is the owner. The problem is the person
who doesn't manage and husband the dog. You can't blame
a dog for being what it is, that is an
aggressive fighting animal.

Speaker 1 (33:33):
So you're saying send the band.

Speaker 4 (33:35):
I'm saying you need to lock up owners, all right, animal,
you lock up owners. Suddenly that that fence gets a
lot taller and that leash gets a lot stronger.

Speaker 1 (33:44):
Animal husbandry Jack Tremondo, Oh wait.

Speaker 4 (33:47):
It's about it's about it's about responsible animal ownership.

Speaker 1 (33:51):
For a second there, I thought this was the McLachlan group,
elan or Cliff pro con Council bluffs, pit bull band.
What do you think lifted around the horn? Here we go,
we're talking, here we go.

Speaker 2 (34:06):
I'm gonna say that I check check check what okay?

Speaker 1 (34:11):
I say If you want to have a pit bull
at your own business, if you have one around a kid,
that's a terrible idea. If you have one around a
kid and the kid gets the malled, you do time. Now, Lucy,
if you ever go to jail, please request and I'm
looking out for you, because we all know it's going
to happen. At some point, they will find you. They
will convict you of your multiple crimes. You cannot get

(34:31):
away with this forever. I've always said, turn yourself in.
So when someday you end up going to jail, request
that you're transferred to a Georgia prison. In the last
couple of years, we've had three major breakouts of jail.

Speaker 3 (34:46):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (34:47):
And these guys are all like murderers. It's not like
all right, graffiti tagger, like no I was hired to
paint this overpass. Yeah right, come on, go to jail.
We're talking about murderers, some really dangerous people. A few
years ago, four men escaped to Central Georgia jail. They
were on the loose for a while. A couple of
months ago, he had the three inmates escape from a

(35:09):
jail east of Atlanta, and they drove to Florida before
they were captured and now here. Last week they finally
now recaptured two murder suspects who escaped from a county
jail over the weekend. And they finally got them just
a couple miles away last night. And these guys said
that they were able to escape through the roof. What

(35:34):
do you mean, like they got up on the roof
and then what thrones flew away?

Speaker 2 (35:38):
Drones picked them up.

Speaker 1 (35:39):
Drones picked them up like they were Amazon packages. And
no one I thought they had like sniper posts up there.
Is this not how they do it anymore. I watch
a lot of movies, and that's how they do it
in the movies. But they said, we're looking ato the
mechanical failures on some of the locks. Okay, even if
you get to the roof, right, you got a long

(36:01):
jump over that fence and plummet forty feet to the ground. Okay,
I'll go first. No wonder they were only a couple
miles away. Their legs must have been broken. I don't
know how they got out of there, Lucy, I almost
forgot the significance of this day as it pertains to.

Speaker 2 (36:17):
Me, A Friday the thirteenth.

Speaker 1 (36:21):
That's exactly right. This is a day when I was
a kid. Remember the phone book? Anyone remember a phone book?

Speaker 2 (36:31):
Yes, I used to read it.

Speaker 1 (36:34):
Lucy would memorize the phone book. Do the c's That's
where you'd find Chapman, fake radio name. Uh So on
Friday the thirteenth, people would look in the phone book
and find Voorhe's in there and call my house and
ask if Jason was there, and I'd say just a second,

(36:54):
Jason popping up somebody with a chainsaw and yeah, hang
up and machete in the background. Now, yeah, I hate
these movies now. As a kid, i'd watch them, of course,
being grossed out and scared like everyone else. The first
one I saw, because of my age, and this is

(37:16):
what we rented for this particular slumber party and fifth
or sixth grade was Friday the thirteenth, Part six. I
found it hard to follow, having not seen the first five,
but I was scared out of my mind.

Speaker 2 (37:30):
Wasn't that the musical long Time?

Speaker 1 (37:32):
Yeah, that was the thing.

Speaker 2 (37:32):
You were scared half out of your mind.

Speaker 1 (37:33):
There was no sleeping at the slumber party.

Speaker 3 (37:35):
There never is.

Speaker 1 (37:36):
That was Friday the Thirteenth, Part six. Jason sings.

Speaker 2 (37:40):
You know what happens when you have Friday the thirteenth
in February, don't you? No, you have Friday the thirteenth
in March, except.

Speaker 1 (37:50):
Leaper, except leapier. We're not in the leapier. Yep, we're
me too.

Speaker 2 (37:54):
Back to back.

Speaker 1 (37:55):
Wow, that's right.

Speaker 3 (37:57):
Cool.

Speaker 1 (37:57):
Well, we'll have this conversation again in a month from now.
Do we have superstitions, Lucy, Jim anyone's particularly superstitious? Do
you do you believe in bad voodoo, bad luck? Not
based on not.

Speaker 4 (38:10):
Based on this year's Nebraska basketball team. All of my
superstitions are gone. See my superstition just kicked in. I
think that you've jinxed it. I think you and Brett
Stover on the CBS have jinxed it. And here we
are on Nebraska's morning news news radio eleven ten kfa
B with Jim Rose, Craig Evans, Lucy Chapman, I'm Scott Boar.

Speaker 1 (38:31):
He's with Greg Wagner Boys with the cut. We should
have a more romantic song though here than this Hillbilly
Jim classic I've pulled from the w w F archives.
But it's Valentine's Valentine's Day tomorrow, So what do we

(38:53):
have in store for a romantic state park giveaway? Greg?

Speaker 9 (38:57):
Well, Uh, we have Valentine's Meals specials going on Venison
no Venice Venison and Trout no Venicon and Trout domestic
offerings only. So Mahoney State Park, Platte River State Park,
We've got I think some Valentine's Day hiked up at
Ponka State Park, and we have a lot of other

(39:17):
assorted things going in the state park.

Speaker 1 (39:20):
So it's gonna be a nice Valentine Yeah, are you
guys like anyone else that engages in outdoor recreation going?
We got to find employees to come back and clean
stuff up and get things ready. I guess, I guess
we're moving. I guess we're doing this year with this weather.

Speaker 9 (39:36):
Yeah, you know, our staff, our seasonal staff obviously is
not there, but we have plenty of staff to keep
things clean, groomed and everything. Of course we're not in
the growing season, but no we're open grounds available, trails available.
Come on out and see us like a trail. Yeah,
great weather.

Speaker 1 (39:56):
What do you recommend here doing outdoors at our state
parks this weekend? Or if you're hunting or fishing.

Speaker 9 (40:02):
Yeah, I'd hike a trail. I like Shram Park, I
like Platte River State Park. The trails in those two
places are fantastic. You know, we mentioned it last week.
If you're a hunter, I'd probably be out hunting for
shed antlers.

Speaker 1 (40:15):
Just get the kids out.

Speaker 9 (40:16):
It's a scavenger hunting nature. It's a lot of fun.
See what bucks survived the hunting season with fishing mostly
ice covered. Right now we're still mostly ice covered. But
if you can find any splotches of open water, maybe
do a little bank fishing. If you're allowed to use
minnows there, use them. If not, use some cut baits
and maybe pick up a catfish, a crappie or another

(40:40):
game fish.

Speaker 1 (40:41):
But yeah, ice on the water, but we're not ice fish.
Oh no, no, no ice fishing, no, and oh not
that kind of ice on No truestion. And what's going
on in the outdoor bulletin board, Greg, Well you've heard
it here, big Omaha International Most Sports and Travel Show
next week Thursday through some day Saturday. I'll be there.

Speaker 9 (41:01):
You're stuck with me all day at the Game in.

Speaker 1 (41:03):
Parks Exhibit What. It's a lot of fun. What do
you do out there?

Speaker 9 (41:07):
Talk to people, tell them the expanded version of KFAB
Great outdoors all right? What about going out and looking
at birds? Lots of bald eagles. Lots of bald eagles.
You'll see them at Flaming and there's a pair of
bald eagles. I've been seeing them out every day.

Speaker 1 (41:22):
Just be careful out there because it is so dry
right now.

Speaker 9 (41:26):
Terribly dry. Fire danger is high, especially in the afternoons.
Frost in the mornings, but the afternoons.

Speaker 1 (41:33):
Don't park or.

Speaker 9 (41:34):
Drive in the tall grass or cropstable From Nebraska Game
of Parks you that is Greg Wagner.

Speaker 1 (41:39):
Thank you very much to buddy. Always a pleasure,
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

Betrayal Season 5

Betrayal Season 5

Saskia Inwood woke up one morning, knowing her life would never be the same. The night before, she learned the unimaginable – that the husband she knew in the light of day was a different person after dark. This season unpacks Saskia’s discovery of her husband’s secret life and her fight to bring him to justice. Along the way, we expose a crime that is just coming to light. This is also a story about the myth of the “perfect victim:” who gets believed, who gets doubted, and why. We follow Saskia as she works to reclaim her body, her voice, and her life. If you would like to reach out to the Betrayal Team, email us at betrayalpod@gmail.com. Follow us on Instagram @betrayalpod and @glasspodcasts. Please join our Substack for additional exclusive content, curated book recommendations, and community discussions. Sign up FREE by clicking this link Beyond Betrayal Substack. Join our community dedicated to truth, resilience, and healing. Your voice matters! Be a part of our Betrayal journey on Substack.

Crime Junkie

Crime Junkie

Does hearing about a true crime case always leave you scouring the internet for the truth behind the story? Dive into your next mystery with Crime Junkie. Every Monday, join your host Ashley Flowers as she unravels all the details of infamous and underreported true crime cases with her best friend Brit Prawat. From cold cases to missing persons and heroes in our community who seek justice, Crime Junkie is your destination for theories and stories you won’t hear anywhere else. Whether you're a seasoned true crime enthusiast or new to the genre, you'll find yourself on the edge of your seat awaiting a new episode every Monday. If you can never get enough true crime... Congratulations, you’ve found your people. Follow to join a community of Crime Junkies! Crime Junkie is presented by Audiochuck Media Company.

Stuff You Should Know

Stuff You Should Know

If you've ever wanted to know about champagne, satanism, the Stonewall Uprising, chaos theory, LSD, El Nino, true crime and Rosa Parks, then look no further. Josh and Chuck have you covered.

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2026 iHeartMedia, Inc.