When to call 911 and when to use non-emergency lines Jul 6, 2026 Jul 6, 2026 Updated 30 mins ago 0 Papillion Mayor David Black on new Scooter's facility FIFA World Cup 2026: Day 27 Dodgers' Shohei Ohtani's Knee Scare Sparks World Series Concern Reiters rebuild Nolan Wells’ Best Friend Says His Case Is 'Not a Whole Race Thing' Fitzpatrick: 'It's nice to have played well in some links golf' - on fourth place finish last year Man dead after check welfare call with Omaha police Making volcanoes at Power Camp Author Cassie Eickhoff reads from her novel at the book signing Sam GIS Trump says he deserves Nobel Peace Prize after claiming he ended eight wars Young neo-Nazi who planned mass gun attack jailed for more than 13 years Prefer us on Google Learn More This video explains the importance of knowing when to call 911 for emergencies and when to use non-emergency lines for less critical situations. As featured on Affidavits reveal details about Matthew Bishop assault; suspects being held on $500K bond A verbal argument turned physical, affidavits say, with Matthew Bishop apparently hitting his head on the concrete after several blows. Latest video Former U.S. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg speaks during campaign event for Denise Powell in Nebraska's Second Congressional District Rory McIlroy explains why he doesn't care about his legacy 'I feel at peace, excited to get out there' - Scheffler ahead of Open Championship title defence. RAW: KAZAKHSTAN: SPACECRAFT LAUNCHES FOR ISS 'Missing a cut the most frustrating thing' - World No.1 Scheffler ahead of 154th Open Championship RAW: FILE: BUFFETT EXCLUDES GATES FOUNDATION FROM DONATIONS Protests break out in Maine after ICE agents fatally shot man Colorado Buffaloes discuss taking one game at a time Facebook Twitter Bluesky WhatsApp SMS Email Print Copy article link Save 0 Comments
Affidavits reveal details about Matthew Bishop assault; suspects being held on $500K bond A verbal argument turned physical, affidavits say, with Matthew Bishop apparently hitting his head on the concrete after several blows.
Former U.S. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg speaks during campaign event for Denise Powell in Nebraska's Second Congressional District