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Neighbor charged with 10 felonies in connection to four murders in small Nebraska town | Crime-and-courts

The 42-year-old man suspected of killing four of his neighbors in the small northeast Nebraska town of Laurel has been charged with 10 felonies — including four counts of first-degree murder — for his alleged role in the crimes that rattled the town’s 1,000 residents about 40 minutes west of Sioux City, Iowa.

Investigators arrested Jason A. Jones, who has lived on Elm Street in Laurel since at least 2019, after a pair of receipts and a gun left at the scene of two Thursday morning house fires were linked to him, according to an affidavit for a search warrant filed in Cedar County.

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Authorities found the first of four bodies at about 3 am Thursday after responding to a reported explosion at 209 Elm St., according to the Nebraska State Patrol.

Michele Ebeling, a 53-year-old resident, was found dead of two gunshot wounds in the home, according to the patrol.

Another fire was reported three blocks away at about 9:30 am, according to court filings, though Col. John Bolduc, the state patrol’s superintendent, said the fires are thought to have been started at about the same time.

At the scene of the second fire, authorities found Gene Twiford, 86; his wife Janet Twiford, 85; and their daughter Dana Twiford, 55. All three lived in the home at 503 Elm St. and were found dead with apparent gunshot wounds, State Patrol Investigator Michael Henry said in the affidavit for the search warrant.

At Ebeling’s house, where authorities first responded, investigators found three receipts — including one for gas at the local Rath’s Mini Mart, another for a six-gallon gas canister at a Sioux City retail store. The credit card used for both purchases belongs to Jones, Henry said in the affidavit.

At the Twifords’ house, police found a Ruger .57 caliber pistol, a firearm magazine and a Molotov cocktail, Henry said. Investigators determined Jones is the registered owner of the gun. I have purchased it in February 2021.

Security footage from the Mini Mart showed Jones filling two gas canisters there at about 8 pm Wednesday, Henry said in the affidavit.

Police arrested Jones, who lived across the street from Ebeling, at his home at about 2:30 am Friday, Bolduc said at a morning news conference in the town’s fire station. No one else was in the home when Jones was arrested.

Bolduc said Jones had serious burns over “a large part of his body” upon his arrest, apparently stemming from the pair of fires set at the victims’ homes. He was taken by helicopter to CHI St. Elizabeth in Lincoln, where he remains in serious condition.

State Patrol spokesman Cody Thomas said he is not aware of any previous contacts law enforcement might have had with Jones before his arrest Friday.

Prosecutors have formally charged Jones with the four counts of first-degree murder, along with two counts of first-degree arson and four counts of use of a firearm to commit a felony.

A Cedar County judge appointed the Nebraska Commission on Public Advocacy to represent Jones. The commission’s lead attorney offered no comment Friday.

Any connection between the victims and Jones — aside from their proximity along the tree-lined street — remains unclear. At Friday’s news conference, Bolduc declined to share a suspected motive.

“I want to acknowledge the indescribable grief that this community is experiencing right now,” Bolduc said.

“And that’s gonna be compounded by the betrayal of trust that they’re gonna feel, because a community member here is alleged to have committed these crimes.”







Nebraska State Patrol: Suspect linked to 4 deaths arrested

A Nebraska State Patrol cruiser sits in front of the home in Laurel where three people were found dead Thursday morning. The murders of four people in two separate homes have rocked the small community.


Margery A. Beck, Associated Press


Keith Knudsen, the town’s mayor who spent his Friday fielding calls at his day job at a Laurel bank, said the tight-knit community, which he described as an extended family, had taken the day’s news with a sense of both sadness for the loss and relief for Jones’ apprehension.

He said he was surprised by the news Friday morning that the alleged killer was a local resident, the latest in a string of developments that have shocked the town since 3 am Thursday.

“It’s a tragic thing to happen in a small community,” he said. “It’s all still pretty fresh.”

Bolduc saluted the efforts of first responders and, specifically, thanked the fire crews who said “preserved the evidence that led us directly” to Jones.

It’s unclear if Jones, who lived at 206 Elm St., ever left Laurel in the aftermath of the crimes. Bolduc faced scrutiny from reporters Friday for authorities’ unclear guidance on whether local businesses should enter a lockdown.

“We were limited to the facts that we had at the time,” he said Friday. “Certainly, with 60-plus law enforcement officers in town yesterday, we felt like the community was pretty safe.”

Bolduc also walked back his agency’s Thursday warning about a Black man who they said was seen driving a silver sedan away from Laurel in the aftermath of the incident. Jones, the State Patrol confirmed, is white.

“We don’t believe that’s the same person,” Bolduc said. “But we would like to talk to that person as a witness if we are able to identify them. But, certainly, as the information has developed, that lead became less significant.”

Journal Star reporters Lori Pilger and Chris Dunker contributed to this report.

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Reach the writer at 402-473-7223 or [email protected].

On Twitter @andrewwegley

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17-year-old killed, 4 hurt in stabbings on western Wisconsin river, authorities say | crime

ASSOCIATED PRESS

SOMERSET — A Minnesota teenager died and four other people were seriously hurt after being stabbed while tubing down a western Wisconsin river, authorities said.

St. Croix County Sheriff Scott Knudson the victims and suspect, a 52-year-old Prior Lake, Minnesota man, were all on the Apple River when the attack happened Saturday afternoon. Knudson said investigators were working to determine what led to the stabbings and whether the victims and suspect knew each other. They were tubing with two different groups that included about 20 people.







River Stabbing Wisconsin 2

Water Recovery authorities combed the Apple River with metal detectors after five people were stabbed while tubing down the river Saturday in Somerset.


ALEX KORMANN, STAR TRIBUNE VIA AP


“We don’t know yet who was connected to who, who knew each other or what precipitated it,” Knudson said.

The knife attack happened on a difficult-to-access section of the river near the town of Somerset, which is about 35 miles east of Minneapolis. The suspect was arrested about an hour and a half later while getting off the river downstream.

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“Thank goodness a witness had taken a photo of him,” Knudson told the Minneapolis Star Tribune. “Another witness located him at the exit of the tubing area, where he was taken into custody.”

A 17-year-old boy from Stillwater, Minnesota, died. Two of the other victims were flown to a hospital in St. Paul, Minnesota, and two others were taken there by ambulance. The sheriff’s office said Sunday that the condition of all four surviving victims — a woman and three men in their 20s — ranged from serious to critical. They suffered stab wounds to their chests and torsos.

The sheriff’s office didn’t name the victims, but did provide a few details about them. The victims included a 20-year-old man and a 22-year-old man from Luck; a 22-year-old man from Elk River, Minnesota; and a 24-year-old woman from Burnsville, Minnesota;

The name of the suspect wasn’t immediately released, but St. Croix County jail records show a 52-year-old man was being held without bond on suspicion of first-degree homicide, four counts of aggravated battery and four counts of mayhem.

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