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Neighborhood heals 1 year after deadly standoff

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It's been nearly a year since a standoff and hostage situation turned deadly in Douglas County, northwest of Omaha.
 
Last year, near 140th and Miami, Kenneth Clark took his life after killing two brothers from Papillion while they were moving their sister’s, Julie Edward’s, belongings out of Clark’s home.
 
Edwards is Clark’s ex-girlfriend. 
 
Every neighbor we talked with say they’re willing to help Julie Edwards with anything she needs.
 
They say Edwards has been renovating Kenneth Clark's old house and is going to sell it to help her brothers' families. 
 
For neighbors, it’s been a long year since Feb. 12, 2016.
 
"About 9, 10 o'clock, that night before they finally went in and starting shooting, shooting teargas, they finally went in, I heard a couple shots that and was it," said Clark’s longtime neighbor Gene Ward. 
 
Ward saw everything unfold across the street from Kenneth Clark's old house.
 
Empty since the tragic standoff a year ago Sunday, Ward mows the lawn across the street.
 
"They had a court fight over the house,” Ward said. “She got the house. She intends to sell and give the proceeds to her brothers’ kids."
 
Ward is among several neighbors who say they'd do anything for Edwards.
 
Neighbor Gary Welker says he borrowed Edwards a trailer to renovate the house.
 
"They came up, thanked me,” Welker said. “I think they thanked us twice, brought us a big thing of Omaha Steaks. The whole neighborhood is that way. If somebody needs something you help them out." 
 
While neighbors say the area has been calm since, the neighborhood hasn't completely healed.
 
"I don't know if you ever get something like that out of your mind," Ward said.
 
Two GoFundMe pages created for Julie Edward’s brothers last year have raised more than $70,000.