Judge rejects death penalty challenge in 4 Nebraska killings

FILE - A small memorial sits outside the home of Gene Twiford, 86, Janet Twiford, 85, and Dana Twiford, 55, Aug. 5, 2022, in Laurel, Neb. The three were among four people found dead the day before in two burning homes in this small community in northeastern Nebraska, authorities said. On Thursday, March 30, 2023, a Nebraska judge rejected a challenge to the death penalty in the case of a man charged in the killings of four people last summer in the small town of Laurel in the northeastern corner of the state. (AP Photo/Margery A. Beck, File)

A Nebraska judge has rejected a challenge to the death penalty in the case of a man charged in the killings of four people last summer in a small town in the northeastern corner of the state.

Judge Bryan Meismer said in a ruling late last week that the lawyers representing Jason Jones, 42, didn’t prove that Nebraska’s death penalty law is unconstitutional, and it’s too soon to determine if that penalty is appropriate in this case because it is still early in the process. Jones has yet to officially enter a plea in the case.

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