This is simply one man’s perspective from the early 21st century (first written in 2010). I had to make a decision about crimes that occurred at locations that are inside the city today, but were outside our corporate limits at the time they occurred. I chose the latter.
Tom Casady's list of the 10 most infamous crimes in Lincoln history
- Lincoln Journal Star
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See the crimes former Public Safety Director Tom Casady on his blog listed as the 10 most notorious in the history of Lincoln.
Although his list was originally made in 2010, Casady said he doesn't think any more recent crimes rise to the level of those on this list.
Crimes of the times
No. 1: Starkweather
The subject of several thinly disguised movie plots and a Springsteen album, the Starkweather murders are clearly the most infamous crime in Lincoln’s history — so far. One of the first mass murderers of the mass media age, six of Charles Starkweather’s 11 victims were killed inside the city of Lincoln, and the first was just on the outskirts of town. I didn’t live in Lincoln at the time, but my wife was a first-grader at Riley Elementary School and has vivid memories of the city gripped by fear in the days between the discovery of the Bartlett murders and Starkweather’s capture in Wyoming.
The case caused quite an uproar. There was intense criticism of the police department and sheriff’s office for not capturing Starkweather earlier in the week after the discovery of the Bartletts' bodies. Ultimately, Mayor Bennett Martin and the Lancaster County Board of Commissioners retained a retired FBI agent, Harold G. Robinson, to investigate the performance of local law enforcement. His report essentially exonerated the local law officers and made a few vanilla recommendations for improving inter-agency communication and training.
No. 2: Lincoln National Bank
On the morning of Sept. 17, 1930, a dark blue Buick carrying six men pulled up in front of the Lincoln National Bank at the northwest corner of 12th and O streets. Five of the men entered the bank, while a sixth stood outside by the Buick, cradling a machine gun. Observing the unusual events, a passerby called the police. The officer who responded, Forrest Shappaugh, was casually instructed by the machine-gun-toting lookout to just keep going, which he wisely did. Returning with reinforcements, he found that the robbers had already made good on their getaway, netting $2.7 million in cash and negotiable securities.
Ultimately, three of the six suspects were arrested. Tommy O’Connor and Howard Lee were convicted and sentenced. Jack Britt was tried twice but not convicted by a hung jury. Gus Winkeler, a member of Al Capone’s gang, winged a deal with County Attorney Max Towle to avoid prosecution in exchange for orchestrating the recovery of $600,000 in bearer bonds. The following year, Winkeler was murdered in Chicago, the victim of a gangland slaying. The final two robbers were never identified.
No. 3: The Last Posse
My first inkling about this crime came when I was the chief deputy sheriff. One of my interns, a young man named Ron Boden (who became a veteran deputy sheriff), had been doing some research on Lancaster County’s only known lynching, in 1884. I came across a reference in the biography of the sheriff at the time, Sam Melick, to the murder of the Nebraska Penitentiary warden and subsequent prison break. Melick had been appointed interim warden after the murder and instituted several reforms.
No. 4: Rock Island wreck
The Aug. 10, 1894, wreck of a Rock Island train on the southwest outskirts of Lincoln was almost lost in the mist of time until it was resurrected in the public consciousness by author Joel Williams, who came across the story while conducting research for his historical novel, "Barrelhouse Boys."
No. 5: Commonwealth
Depositors gather outside of Commonwealth Savings Co. after it was closed by the state Department of Banking in 1983.
Journal Star file photoOn Nov. 1, 1983, the doors to Nebraska’s largest industrial savings and loan company were closed and Commonwealth was declared insolvent. The 6,700 depositors with $65 million at stake would never be fully compensated for their loss, ultimately receiving about 59 cents on the dollar for their deposits, which they all mistakenly believed were insured up to $30,000 through the Nebraska Depository Insurance Guaranty Corporation, which was essentially an insurance pool with assets of only $3 million.
The case dominated Nebraska news for months. The investigation ultimately led to the conviction of three members of the prominent Lincoln family that owned the institution, the resignation of the director of the State Department of Banking and the impeachment of the Nebraska attorney general and the suspension of his license to practice law. State and federal litigation arising from the failure of Commonwealth drug on for years.
No. 6: Candice Harms
Candi Harms never came home from visiting her boyfriend on Sept. 22, 1992. Her parents reported her as a missing person the following morning, and her car was found abandoned in a cornfield north of Lincoln later in the day. Weeks went by before her remains were found southeast of Lincoln.
Scott Barney and Roger Bjorklund were convicted in her abduction and murder. Barney is in prison serving a life term. Bjorklund died in prison in 2001. Intense media attention surrounded the lengthy trial of Roger Bjorklund, for which a jury was brought in from Cheyenne County as an alternative to a change of venue. I have no doubt that the trial was a life-changing event for a group of good citizens from Sidney, who did their civic duty.
No. 7: Jon Simpson and Jacob Surber
A parent’s worst nightmare unfolded in September 1975 when these two boys, ages 12 and 13, failed to return from the Nebraska State Fair. The boys were the victims of abduction and murder. The case was similar to a string of other murders of young boys in the Midwest, and many thought that these cases were related -- the work of a serial killer. Although an arrest was made in the case here in Lincoln, the charges were eventually dismissed. William Guatney was released and has since died.
No. 8: John Sheedy
Saloon and gambling house owner John Sheedy was killed outside his home at 1211 P St. in January 1891. The case of Sheedy, prominent in Lincoln’s demiworld, became the talk of the town when his wife, Mary, and her alleged lover and accomplice, Monday McFarland, were arrested. Both were acquitted at trial. The Sheedy murder is chronicled in a great interactive multimedia website, Gilded Age Plains City, an online version that builds upon an article published in 2001 by Timothy Mahoney of the University of Nebraska.
No. 9: Patricia McGarry and Catherine Brooks
The bodies of these two friends were found in a Northeast Lincoln duplex in August 1977. Their murderer, Robert E. Williams, was the subject of a massive Midwest manhunt during the following week. Before his capture, he committed a third murder in Sioux Rapids, Iowa, and raped, shot and left for dead a victim who survived in Minnesota. He is the last man to be executed in Nebraska, sent to the electric chair in 1997.
No. 10: Judge William M. Morning
District Court Judge William Morning was murdered in February 1924. He was shot on the bench by an unhappy litigant in a divorce case. His court reporter, Minor Bacon, was also shot, but a notebook in his breast pocket deflected the bullet and saved his life.
Many other crimes
Wesley Peery, shown in this May 1978 file photo, was identified as an early suspect in the Nancy Parker case. After he was convicted of killing Marianne Mitzner in a Havelock coin shop in 1975, he confessed to his attorney that he had killed about a dozen people, including Nancy Parker.
Journal Star file photoChoosing Lincoln's 10 most infamous crimes was a challenge. Although the top two were easy, the picture quickly became clouded. We tend, of course, to forget our history rather quickly. Many of the crimes I felt were among the most significant are barely remembered today, if not completely forgotten.
Some readers will take issue with my list. In choosing 10, here are the others I considered, in no particular order. They are all murders:
Locations
Related to this collection
The man's federal conviction for cyberstalking was a first in Nebraska.
The Department of Correctional Services summoned a plumbing service to the 152-year-old penitentiary to fix leaky pipes. In the meantime, inmates and staff are using bottled water and portable toilets.
"This was undoubtedly a completely, reckless act, and it's truly tragic when good people do bad things," the judge said. "But there was a young man who lost his life here because of your recklessness."
The Lincoln Police Department's call summary indicated the man was struck with a hammer and required surgery. He remained hospitalized as of Friday morning, according to police.
LPD still isn't sure why the men were in Lincoln, nor does the department have a description of another vehicle that may have been involved in the shooting. "We need the public's help," Assistant Police Chief Jason Stille said.
Chief Deputy Ben Houchin declined to say how or how long the nurse went about delivering narcotics: "We don't want other people to learn and try to do the exact same things. They're talented enough without us helping them."
The 61-year-old shooter returned only 15 minutes after he was terminated from Agrex, according to officials. The whole shooting lasted about 20 seconds.
In a series of posts on Yik Yak, the social media app that allows users to engage in anonymous discourse, an 18-year-old freshman is alleged to have made veiled threats toward Chancellor Ronnie Green.
The trooper fired one round toward the 27-year-old, Lancaster County Sheriff Terry Wagner said. Four days later, that shot proved fatal, the sheriff announced Monday morning.
The 24-year-old called Lincoln police at around 5 a.m. Wednesday and said his money, jewelry and shoes were stolen.
"This wasn't a slash, a small cut, a puncture wound. This was a deliberate and intentional stab wound to a vital part of Mr. Lane's body," the deputy Lancaster County attorney said. "It was meant to be fatal, and it was just that."
The 4-month-old baby was admitted to CHI St. Elizabeth for "immediate life-saving care" after investigators found the child to be severely malnourished, according to the affidavit.
The 45-year-old man was leaving the clinic near 48th Street and Old Cheney Road when an organizer with Sidewalk Advocates for Life approached him, according to the affidavit for his arrest.
Witnesses told police the teen drove his red Ford Escort through the restaurant's drive-thru, shouting and yelling at his 15-year-old ex-girlfriend, before entering the business where she worked.
Police found the gifts inside a Honda Pilot, stolen Dec. 20 and recovered Monday near 16th and Washington streets. The presents had been stolen from a white Honda Accord six days later, Sgt. Chris Vigil said.
Authorities entered the home Tuesday morning and found 40-year-old Thomas Sharp deceased with a self-inflicted gunshot wound, according to the State Patrol.
Nicole Eliker, who had been employed by the Nebraska women's prison since 2012, has resigned, according to a prison spokeswoman.
Majdal Elias, an admitted drug dealer, already is serving 19 to 33 years in prison on drug and gun charges. Now, at his sentencing in May, he'll face another 33 years to life for the 2019 murder of 15-year-old Ali Al-Burkat.
When he approached the car in the parking lot near 27th and Cornhusker, the 35-year-old began striking it with his hands and asking about his missing dog, according to police.
The company alleged the man stole 6,000 pounds of copper wire and a flatbed trailer, wrongfully used the company's credit card, submitted false timesheets and directed employees to work at his Pleasant Dale home on the clock.
The man entered the raceway and ran to the west grandstands, where a trooper deployed a taser and took the man into custody, the sheriff's office said.
An Ohio man caused $7,500 in damage to vehicles parked near the Lincoln Amtrak station on Saturday afternoon after police said he was booted from a train.
The Nebraska Supreme Court upheld the dismissal of a suit filed by the family of a "Cops" TV show sound tech who was killed when police officers fired at a man with a gun.
After a weeklong trial, a jury found a 25-year-old Omaha man guilty of two counts of first-degree murder in the March 2021 killings of two men.
A pedestrian accident in northwest Omaha left one man dead after he was hit back to back.
Omaha police have arrested a 71-year-old Omaha man accused of sexually assaulting a girl 19 years ago and another within the last year.
The man walked to the side of her and grabbed the backpack that was attached to her walker with a carabiner, pulling the bag, the walker and the woman across the porch, police said.
A Lincoln businesses owner has recovered his briefly stolen vehicle and helped police put the alleged thief behind bars, according to authorities.
The 51-year-old was arrested and charged with terroristic threats after an ongoing dispute with his wife and a 50-year-old man who lives nearby ended with a self-inflicted gunshot wound Thursday afternoon, police said.
"We got justice for Ali, and we are really happy," Ali Al-Burkat's aunt, Dunia Al-Musa, said outside the courtroom after Majdal Elias was sentenced Wednesday.
The police chief said investigators don't believe there's an ongoing threat to the public but acknowledged they "can never be sure" as suspects in a pair of shootings remain unidentified and at large.
At the time of Russell Harms' trial, psychiatrists said he suffered from paranoid schizophrenia and at times from visual and auditory hallucinations.
Police said 45-year-old Rodney Badberg punched the man three times and kicked him once before fleeing the area on foot, leaving the man bleeding on the sidewalk.
A Bellevue man who pleaded no contest to one count of third-degree sexual assault and 10 counts of misdemeanor child abuse was ordered to spend a year in jail.
Residents along the O Street corridor said the constant noise of racing and burnouts is not just the soundtrack to Memorial Day but persists year-round. And despite decades of police enforcement efforts, that hasn't changed.
The man's first accuser told Bryan West staff that Delbert Taylor had sexually abused her as a child, and later told Lincoln Police the abuse began when she was around 6 years old, the investigator said in the arrest affidavit.
Soon after his son's wheelchair and debit cards were stolen Sunday afternoon, a Lincoln dad got text alerts indicating the stolen cards been had used along West O Street, leading him to the suspected thieves, police said.
Investigators alleged Terran McKethan, 43, posed as a 17-year-old on Snapchat while meeting young girls and offering them marijuana in exchange for sex acts. He won't be parole eligible until 2072.
A shooting in South Omaha Friday night left one person dead and injured three others.
Police are investigating a pair of early morning shootings, including one that injured three people near a bar in Omaha's Old Market Saturday.
The state found he used $14,000 in city funds to buy personal items such as fishing equipment.
Guadalupe DeLaCruz turned himself into the Nemaha County Sheriff's Office early Friday morning, nearly a week after a shooting last weekend in the 1200 block of Sixth Street in Peru, the state patrol said.
Ryan Long will tack close to another decade onto his stint in Tecumseh after a judge sentenced him to prison for shooting his then-girlfriend during a Halloween-night fight in 2019.
A Blair man pleaded guilty in U.S. District Court to threatening to kill a federal wildlife officer who was investigating him for poaching.
A 23-year-old man forced his way into the apartment and accused the residents of owing him money before producing a handgun and using it to strike two men in the head.
The 15-year-old girl told investigators she had been living with the 30-year-old man in his car "and had sex with him regularly."
The 22-year-old victim, of Greeley, Colorado, was flown to an out-of-town hospital because medical personnel couldn’t stop his bleeding.
A 24-year-old Omaha man who drove drunk and caused a crash that killed a mother of four children has been sentenced to 16 to 20 years in prison.
Sheriff Terry Wagner said there were no signs of forced entry into the pickup, but he couldn't definitively say the Chevy was left unlocked. "So somebody could have had a Slim Jim," he said.
A Fremont man was arrested Monday after he allegedly stole a Mercedes SUV, led sheriff's deputies on a high-speed pursuit in Seward County and crashed in west Lincoln.
An Omaha man charged with first-degree murder and sexual assault of a 58-year-old woman was ordered to be held without bail.
The traffic stop followed a tip from a trucking company, which told authorities the truck was believed to be in Nebraska about 12 minutes before troopers located the semi.
In Lincoln, investigators have used phone records to link three people to a south Lincoln vandalism site, where vandals caused $104,000 in damage in late July.
A Lincoln woman is being held on $500,000 bail after being charged with motor vehicle homicide in connection with a crash that led to the death of a Greenwood woman.
Victor Osuna-Velize, 28, now faces up to 50 years in prison on a charge of first-degree sexual assault at his sentencing next month.
The Omaha Police Department has yet to comply with the FBI’s National Incident-Based Reporting System, which requires agencies to report much more in-depth data.
Omaha police said one person died and six other people were wounded in a shootings at a large gathering early Sunday in North Omaha.
Prosecutors dropped two gun charges Shantrell Hickey was facing and amended the second-degree murder charge to manslaughter. In exchange, Hickey pleaded no contest.
Adolfo Ortiz shot and killed his father, 48-year-old Adolfo Lemus Aguado. But, throughout the 23-year-old's letter to the judge and his pre-sentence interview, "we never really hear why," the prosecutor said.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Steven Russell said Frederick Voight, who moved to the Houston area, swindled hundreds of investors, including several Nebraska residents.
A former Omaha police officer was scheduled to plead guilty to child pornography charges, but he instead hired a new attorney and asked a judge to set a trial date.
Daqwan Hickey pleaded no contest to possession of a firearm by a prohibited person and attempted terroristic threats and possession of a firearm a month earlier.
"From this case it is clear to me you victimize vulnerable children that you happen upon at a gas station," the judge said.
In court records, police described a large fight outside the party that preceded the shooting and two men firing shots, one into the air and the other into a group.
"'It was either him or me,'" defense attorney Jon Braaten told the jury of Brian Adams' own words to Lincoln police within hours of Trevious Clark's death.
The jury Wednesday found Brian Adams Sr., 52, guilty of second-degree murder, rather than first-degree murder, as the state had alleged. He now is set for sentencing in June.
A 58-year-old Lincoln woman is in jail after she tried to con her mother, who has dementia, into transferring more than $80,000 into an account in her name
Lincoln authorities arrested a woman who has been wanted in Texas since 2021 — though Los Angeles police believed they previously caught her in a case that prompted a lawsuit.
A Lincoln woman is accused of lying about her family's income on government benefit applications to obtain thousands worth of assistance that her family didn't qualify for.
The Guatemala teen found in Lancaster County told investigators she was made to do housework for all the residents in the house — not just her alleged abuser.
Kyvell Stark, the man at the wheel in a crash that killed two and injured 20 along Lincoln's O Street on Memorial Day 2022 pleaded guilty on Wednesday.
The man who was shot Tuesday by Omaha police officers is expected to survive multiple gunshot wounds as an investigation continues.
An Omaha man was found guilty Wednesday of four felonies for firing multiple shots into a birthday party from a nearby parking lot.
At around 6 p.m. Thursday, five inmates, including the 27-year-old, intentionally set fires inside of their cells on a housing unit, according to the Nebraska Department of Correctional Services.
A 68-year-old Omaha woman told police she was scammed out of $15,000 by a man who claimed he was Johnny Depp.
"Judge, we see this all the time. Addiction is what really kills people," his attorney said. "This is extremely sad. ... No one wanted this to happen. Certainly not Mr. Mach."
