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Court documents Detailed examination of objects that remain on the highway near Bennington

Omaha, along. (Wowt) – The investigators of the Sheriff of Douglas County say that the man who was arrested on Monday on Monday in a series of bizarre accidents in Bennington was the person who reported every incident to the authorities.

His parents say that he suffers from ADHD and autism and has had a “fascination” with first aid, which has “some time” “a certain time” since a document by First Alert 6 Investigates on Tuesday.

The parents of the 23-year-old Spencer Rademacker informed the authorities that their son pursued the Bennington police on a scanner and sometimes appeared in their scenes, the records said.

Rademacker is charged with attempted first degree attacks, a class 2a crime. And criminal mischief, a crime of class 4.

Spencer Rademacker(Douglas County Sheriff's Office)

His parents told the investigators that Rademacker has to struggle the most at night when his medication left and frustrated the investigators about the situation. Text messages showed tense conversations between Rademacker and his mother about his activities and they asked him to return home.

His parents informed DCSO-investigators that they also pursue his location, which he shares with them with a popular app app app. And this bike macker sits in his car for a long time and gives you “bad” answers when you ask what he does.

The records show that at a later date, Rademacker gave the investigators that he sometimes parked his vehicle while he was on the phone and that he liked to spend time in the Bennington area. He also told the authorities that he had no good relationship with his parents and said that he was criticized a lot, which prompted him to “fly from the handle”.

Rademacker's parents also told the investigators that Rademacker called First Alert 6 in December to get a history of reporter Mike McKnight through the examination. The telephone data received by the investigators showed that he called four times and then removed the call files from his phone.

After the affidavit, Rademacker said when he was asked about VoiceMails on this matter, to a deputy: “My name does not have to be in the damn news.

While he was not even recognized in the reports, he told the MP that these people certainly not even present me if I didn't even get involved in this other crap. [when the news became involved]. “”

The court files show that, according to information about the Fremont Police Department, maneuver of the crash prevention, defensive driving, the effectiveness of the seat belt in the event of a crash, “minimum seconds for the following removal” and “steps to safely leave the highway”.

According to reports, Rademacker was also collected from a “scrap stack” at private property in Bennington in Bennington in Bennington in Bennington in Bennington in Bennington in Bennington in Bennington. He had also submitted a protective arrangement from a relative of the owner who allegedly followed Rademacker in the Omaha area.

Location data reports

The investigators of the sheriff collected mobile phone data, the Rademacker in the immediate vicinity in front of each of the four crashes in the immediate vicinity.

The court documents also provided further details about each individual:

On November 21, DCSO reacted to a crash at 7:49 p.m. near the 168th Street and Highway 36 after a driver had ran on a bike on the street. Records show that Rademacker reported the crash and said he noticed the bike on the street before the crash took place. The investigators say that the data from Rademacker's cell phone location data placed it at the scene about 13 minutes before the crash.

The following day at 8:36 p.m., the MPs responded to a crash at the same place – again reported by Rademacker. The investigators said that his location data for mobile phones showed him at 11, 33 and 45 minutes before the crash in the same environment.

A few weeks later, on December 6th, DCSO MEPs were called to the area of ​​the 157th and Bondesson Street after Rademacker reported an accident there at 8:36 p.m. This time the vehicle had a large piece of concrete on the street. The investigators said that the location data from Rademacker's cell phone had it 21 minutes before and three minutes before the accident in the same area in the same area.

Two days after this incident, at 9:05 p.m., December 8, the MPs were called to the 132nd street and the Highway 36 after a vehicle had met a “large metal object” on the street – again reported by Rademacker. When the MPs examined the crash, they approached a Blue 2021 Jeep Cherokee Trailhawk at Rademacker.

After the affidavit, the vehicle “made a quick turn” and drove away. He later told the investigators that he had traveled to Blair at that time, as court files.

When the MPs turned to Rademacker, he told them that he had been at the scene and saw a vehicle off the street to avoid that something that had been left on the street, according to the records. But the MPs did not find such debris and the victims of the crash said they hadn't removed anything from the street – as well as Rademacker as the documents show.

Three days later, DCSO followed with Rademacker, who said that he saw the vehicle going into the ditch while he was stopped on a nearby stop sign, but did not see MPs who tried to approach his vehicle at the scene. At that time, the report, he was asked about several accidents in the region. He said he calls 911 when he sees the crashes and he would pick up debris that he finds on streets and “put it in his trash”.

The court files also show that Rademacker told MPs about two further traffic incidents with which he had helped: one in the 156th street and in military road, and another while he traveled to Femont on Highway 36. No specific data for these incidents were included in the affidavit.

The recording states that in the first incident he pursued the investigators a trace of antifreeze on the highway and found a vehicle. Rademacker said he thought the vehicle hit a part on the street, told the authorities that he hadn't seen the crash.

In the second incident, he told the investigators that he had seen a vehicle on the roadside with flashing luminaires. Rademacker said that the driver spoke Spanish, so he used a translator app to ask the driver if she had risen a bike with her vehicle. Then he said he told her that the vehicle licked oil and to switch off the vehicle.

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