Who We Are
Nebraska Injuries covers personal injuries, workplace accidents, and the recovery resources people often need when life is suddenly disrupted. We focus on the practical realities behind an injury story: what happened, who may be responsible, what systems are involved, and what support may help people move forward. Our reporting and explainers are grounded in Nebraska concerns and written for readers who want clear, useful information without unnecessary jargon.
We are a small editorial team of writers committed to accountability and transparency in the legal system. Our contributors include Gary Pflug, Tamika Williams, Wayne Jelinek, and Linda Kucera, each bringing a careful, research-driven approach to complex topics. We write with the belief that injury coverage should do more than repeat surface-level facts. It should help readers understand how decisions are made, where institutions succeed or fail, and why details matter.
Our philosophy is simple: people deserve honest, readable information at difficult moments. We aim to report with clarity, fairness, and respect for the human side of injury cases, while keeping a close eye on the systems that shape outcomes. Whether we are covering a workplace accident, a serious crash, or recovery options after an injury, we try to make our work thoughtful, direct, and worthy of our readers' trust.
The Team
Gary Pflug
Reports on vehicle accidents and insurance claims from Nebraska
Tamika Williams
Nebraska-based staff writer covering injury recovery and legal resources
Linda Kucera
Contributing journalist with a focus on accident law and driver awareness
Karen Beckmann
Has covered car accident aftermath and legal options across Nebraska for years
Mike Diederich
Has covered motor vehicle safety and crash prevention across Nebraska for years
Thi Tran
Writes about car accident aftermath and legal options in Nebraska
Dale Sievert
Reporter covering accident investigation and safety in Nebraska
Jessica Hoagland
Content writer focused on accident law and driver awareness across Nebraska