Nebraska Attorney General Mike Hilgers will again ask lawmakers to ban the THC products that have been sold in dispensary-type shops statewide for nearly four years.
Joined by Senators Kathleen Kauth and Tanya Storer, Hilgers highlighted proposals aimed at tackling the rise of synthetic cannabinoids and easing the burden on law enforcement responding to mental health crises in rural areas.
A bill was introduced during Friday's legislative session that would address one of the Nebraska Attorney General’s top concerns.
Younger Nebraska kids could be detained for a serious crime, at age 11, or charged as adults sooner, at age 12.
Nebraska Attorney General Mike Hilgers is on a mission to end the synthetic delta-8 crisis in the state. He said it has disastrous harm for children as well as adults.
Nebraska Attorney General Mike Hilgers declared victory Tuesday in his fight with California over electric trucks.
For the third year in a row, Nebraska Gov. Jim Pillen proclaimed January as Human Trafficking Awareness Month, calling the crime "the darkest possible sin taking place in Nebraska."
Governor Jim Pillen and Attorney General Mike Hilgers unveiled a trio of bills on ... Other states have enacted similar measures, and Hilgers expressed confidence in Nebraska's proposed bills. "The state has control of restricting any harmful goods from ...
One of the bills would make sure predators who use artificial intelligence to produce sexually explicit content of children are punished. Sen. Brian Hardin of Gering said this bill catches the law up with the technology. Another requires age verification to open a social media account and minors would need parental consent.
Nebraska Gov. Jim Pillen will ask lawmakers to bar minors from joining social media apps without parental consent and restrict cellphone usage in schools across the state, he announced Monday.
Nebraska Gov. Jim Pillen (R ) urged state lawmakers to support a new bill that would require parental consent for children looking to create social media accounts during a Monday news conference.
Governor Jim Pillen joined Attorney General Mike Hilgers and state senators Monday afternoon to introduce a trio of bills aimed at protecting children online.