A decades-old cold case involving the 1969 murder of a Nebraska teenager is being re-examined, while other news stories unfold across the nation. Mary Kay Heese, a 17-year-old high school junior, was found murdered on the side of a road outside of Wahoo, Nebraska, on March 25, 1969, after she never returned home from school. The case, which has haunted the community for over five decades, is the longest unsolved cold case in Nebraska history, according to CBS News.
Investigators at the time were unable to determine who was in the car with Heese, despite a witness seeing her get into a vehicle with two men. The murder, which involved Heese being beaten and stabbed to death, remained unsolved for decades. The community felt the loss of innocence, according to Jennifer Joakim, Saunders County attorney, as reported by CBS News.
In 2015, a new investigation was launched, bringing the case back into focus. The story is featured in "The Girl from Wahoo," an episode of "48 Hours" airing on CBS and streaming on Paramount, according to CBS News. Richard Register, deputy county attorney, stated that the murder "needed to be resolved," as reported by CBS News.
In other news, the search for 84-year-old Nancy Guthrie, the mother of "Today" show host Savannah Guthrie, is intensifying after she was reportedly kidnapped from her Tucson, Arizona, home on February 1. The FBI released photos and videos of an armed person in a mask in front of her home, appearing to tamper with a security camera, according to ABC News.
Additionally, a judge ordered the Trump administration to facilitate the return of Any Lucia Lopez Belloza, a 19-year-old college student who was deported over Thanksgiving, despite a court order blocking her removal. U.S. District Judge Richard Stearns directed the government to return Belloza within 14 days, stating that "redemption may be found by acknowledging and fixing our own errors," as reported by ABC News.
Meanwhile, Hillary Clinton spoke about immigration at the Munich Security Conference in Germany, stating that migration "went too far" and "needs to be fixed in a humane way," according to Fox News. Clinton called for "secure borders that don't torture and kill people" during the panel.
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