

Nelson told investigators he dumped the remains on a manure pile and hid the barrels on his property, about 70 miles (110 kilometers) northeast of Kansas City, Missouri. He told authorities he put the men’s bodies in 55-gallon barrels and burned them. Prosecutors said Nelson shot the brothers and drove their pickup truck off of his farm. When the Diemels asked for their money back, Nelson intentionally sent a damaged check to Nicholas Diemel, which prompted the brothers’ visit to his farm.
#KANSAS CITY RADAR IN MOTION FULL#
The animals were neglected and many died but Nelson charged the family full price, according to court documents. The Diemel family sent livestock to Nelson’s farm to be cared for and sold between 20. Nelson was supposed to be caring for cattle for the brothers, according to court records. The brothers’ father reported them missing July 21, 2019, after they didn’t return from a visit to Nelson’s farm, where they had gone to collect a $250,000 debt. In 2020, one of Nelson’s defense attorneys said the state planned to seek the death penalty if Nelson was convicted in the killings. In exchange for his plea, charges of abandonment of a corpse, tampering with physical evidence, armed criminal action and tampering with a motor vehicle were dropped. He was given two life sentences without parole, which will run consecutively. Garland Nelson, of Braymer, pleaded guilty to two counts of first-degree murder in the deaths of 24-year-old Justin Diemel and 35-year-old Nicholas Diemel, of Shawano County, Wisconsin. (AP) - A northwest Missouri man pleaded guilty Friday to killing two brothers from Wisconsin after they came to his farm in 2019 to collect a debt from a cattle contract. Date/s of access or download.HARRISONVILLE, Mo. BirdCast, live migration map date and time (most easily accessible from image file name/s). To cite live migration map graphics, please use the following syntax:ĭokter, A. The BirdCast project was created by grants from the National Science Foundation and supported by additional grants from Leon Levy Foundation. Rose Postdoctoral Fellowship, and Amazon Web Services. Support for this research came from NASA, Edward W. The migration traffic rate indicates the number of birds per hour that fly across a one kilometer line transect on the earth’s surface oriented perpendicular to the direction of movement of the birds.Ĭornell Lab of Ornithology currently produces these maps. the Rockies) have obstructions that restrict radar coverage, providing the appearance of no migration where migration may be occurring.īrighter colors indicates a higher migration traffic rate (MTR) expressed in units birds/km/hour. Note that many radars in mountainous areas (e.g. Green dots represent radar locations for which data are available red dots represent radar locations with no data available. Orange arrows show directions to which birds flew. Areas with lighter colors experienced more intense bird migration. When present, the red line moving east to west represents the timing of local sunset, the yellow line represents the timing of local sunrise. All graphics are relative to the Eastern time zone. Real-time analysis maps show intensities of actual nocturnal bird migration as detected by the US weather surveillance radar network between local sunset to sunrise.
