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Former Student Sentenced for University Computer Breach

computer crime cyberUnited States Attorney’s Office

United States Attorney Deborah R. Gilg announced Thursday that Daniel Stratman, age 23 of Omaha, Nebraska, was sentenced  in Lincoln, Nebraska, to 6 months in prison by United States District Judge John M. Gerrard for one count of Fraud and Related Activity in Connection with Computers. 
Stratman will be allowed work release while serving his prison sentence, and will then be required to serve a 3 year term of supervised release.  He is also ordered to pay $107,722.58 in restitution.
 
A security breach of the University of Nebraska and the Nebraska State College System database was discovered in May of 2012.  Investigation led law enforcement to Stratman, a senior at UNL at the time of the intrusion.  A search warrant of his residence and forensic examination of his computers verified that Stratman had damaged the integrity of the protected computer systems and records maintained by the University of Nebraska and the Nebraska State College Systems.
This case was investigated by the University of Nebraska Police Department, the Lincoln Police Department, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and the Office of the Inspector General, United States Department of Education.

Larks close out league play with win

NCKTech-Summer14
The Hays Larks overcame a 3-0 first inning deficit to win their final Jayhawk League game of the season 10-5 over the Dodge City A’s Thursday night at Larks Park. The Larks have won eight straight and 12 of their last 14 to improve to 28-13 and 21-13 in the Jayhawk league where they finish seven games behind first-place Wellington who lost their league finale to Derby. The A’s end their season at 18-24 and finish last in the league with a 10-24 mark.

The Larks strung together four straight hits with two outs in the second to tie the game 3-3. Evan Gruener started the rally with a double, Thomas Clay followed with a triple. Matt Leuty then doubled scoring Clay. Nate Olinger singled driving in Luety.

Brooks Balisterri gave the Larks the lead for good with a two-out RBI double in the fourth. Tyler Leffler followed with a double for a 5-3 lead.

Nate Olinger’s two-run single highlighted a three-run fifth and gavre Hays an 8-3 lead. The A’s rallied with two in the sixth. The Larks answered with runs in the sixth and seventh for the final margin.

The Larks pound out 13 hits, seven of them for extra bases. Olinger finished 3-for-4 and drove in three runs. Derek Birginske was one of five Larks pitchers and picks up the win allowing all three runs on five hits.

The Larks close out the regular season Friday night at home against the Junction City Brigade. Free admission for the seven o’clock game courtesy of Freddy’s Frozen Custard, Crawford Supply and Horizon Appliance and Electronics.

Vacant building collapses in downtown Kingman

 

downtown Kingman
Downtown Kingman

KINGMAN, Kan. (AP) — Engineers are trying to determine why a vacant building partially collapsed in downtown Kingman.

City manager Emily Graf says no one was injured when a south wall and part of a west wall of the building collapsed Thursday.

No surroundings buildings were damaged.

Graf says the building was constructed in 1890. The block has been closed to protect the safety of citizens.

Kingman is about 45 miles west of Wichita.

 

Advocates for decriminalization turn in petitions

marijuana arrestWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Advocates of reducing penalties for possessing small amounts of marijuana in Wichita turned in petitions to the city seeking to have the question put on the November ballot.

Petition organizers say they collected more than 5,800 signatures, more than twice the number needed to put the issue to a vote.

The proponents want to reduce the penalty for possession from the current maximum of a year in jail and a $2,500 fine to a $25 fine with no jail time. They also want to change possession of pot or paraphernalia from a criminal misdemeanor to a minor civil offense like a building code violation.

The Wichita Eagle reports city officials have some questions about the measure’s wording but don’t currently plan to try and block it.

Indians’ Kluber perfect into 7th inning, but Royals prevail in 14

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) – After four hours, 23 minutes and a dozen pitchers combining to throw 397 pitches, Nori Aoki gave the Kansas City Royals a win.

Aoki singled home Lorenzo Cain in the 14th inning to lift the Royals to a 2-1 victory over Cleveland after Indians starter Corey Kluber carried a perfect game into the seventh inning on Thursday night.

Cain opened the 14th with an infield single and stole second before Aoki delivered the winning hit off John Axford on a full-count pitch with one out.

”I was just trying to stay aggressive,” Aoki said. ”It wasn’t like I was trying to go the other way or anything like that. I was just looking for a pitch to hit, and if I got that pitch, swing hard.”

Aoki was mobbed by his teammates at second base.

”It was one of the best feelings, and hopefully we have more of those moments the rest of the season,” he said.

Aaron Crow (5-1), the seventh Kansas City pitcher, earned the victory – striking out the side in a perfect 14th.

Left-hander Mark Rzepzynski (0-3), who gave up the hit to Cain, took the loss.

Kluber held the Royals to two hits, retiring the first 19 batters he faced before Omar Infante, who was in a 0-for-16 skid, lined a single to center with one out in the seventh.

”I think it’s hard to rate one performance against another,” Kluber said. ”I got in a good groove, and when they got a runner on we were able to catch him stealing.”

Mike Moustakas doubled and scored on a throwing error by left fielder Ryan Raburn in the eighth inning to give the Royals a 1-0 lead. Moustakas hit a fly ball down the left-field line that Raburn nearly caught.

When Raburn tracked down the ball in foul territory, he spiked a throw that rolled into center field.

”How about that,” Moustakas said. ”I got a 2-0 fastball that I popped up to left, and Raburn tried to make a good play on it and it ended up hitting off his arm or shoulder.

”I just saw him drop it. I was headed to second. I saw him try to throw the ball in, and I just started running to third base. When I saw the ball kind of floating in left field and doing what I can to get over to third, and Jirsch (third base coach Mike Jirschele) waved me in.”

Raburn was miffed about how the play unfolded.

”It was a freak play,” he said. ”I was trying to hold up. I saw our infielders going toward third, and I tried to hold up. I couldn’t and of course the ball rolls halfway to center field.”

The Indians tied it in the ninth off Greg Holland, who blew his second save in 28 chances. Holland walked Carlos Santana leading off the inning, and pinch-hitter Chris Dickerson bunted him to second. Yan Gomes’ two-out single to center scored Santana.

”It was one of those rare occasions when I didn’t have command,” Holland said. ”I threw 12 balls and nine strikes. You never want to walk the leadoff hitter in the ninth inning.”

After Infante’s hit, Kluber got out of the inning when Alex Gordon struck out, and Infante was thrown out trying to steal second.

Kluber, who allowed only one unearned run in nine innings, struck out 10 and walked none.

”I wish we’d had some runs so we could sit back and really enjoy it, because that was special,” Indians manager Terry Francona said of Kluber’s performance. ”You can use all the adjectives you want. He had dominating stuff.”

Royals starter Danny Duffy, who was 1-5 in his previous six starts, gave up two singles – both to Santana – in seven scoreless innings. Duffy, who also walked two, was pulled after 108 pitches.

Duffy lowered his earned run average to 2.47. He is the only American League pitcher with a losing record with an ERA less than three.

Wade Davis, who replaced Duffy, pitched out of a bases loaded jam in the eighth. With one out, he permitted singles to Jose Ramirez and pinch-hitter David Murphy sandwiched around a walk to Jason Kipnis. Davis then got Michael Brantley to ground into an inning-ending double play.

NOTES: The Royals sent Jimmy Paredes, who was designated for assignment on July 16, to the Orioles for cash considerations. Paredes appeared in nine games with Kansas City, going 2-for-10. He hit .305 with Triple-A Omaha. … Indians SS Asdrubal Cabrera wasn’t in the lineup for the third consecutive game because of back spasms. … Royals 1B Eric Hosmer was held out of the lineup for the third time in four games with a right hand bruise. He entered in the ninth inning as a defensive replacement. … Aoki was the DH for the first time in his career. … The Indians plan to recall RHP Zach McAllister from Triple-A Columbus, where he is 5-0 with a 2.23 ERA in six starts, and start him Saturday against the Royals.

2 NW Kansas teens hospitalized after ATV accident

Screen Shot 2013-05-26 at 9.27.46 AMKANORADO- Two girls were injured in a Thursday ATV accident in Sherman County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2010 Arctic Cat ATV driven by Melissa Lopez, 14, Kanorado, was northbound on Walnut Street two miles north of U.S. 24. The ATV attempted to turn east on Lamborn Street and took the corner too fast and rolled the ATV.

Both riders were thrown off the vehicle

Lopez and a passenger on the ATV Adriana Gonzalez,15, Kanorado were transported to Goodland Regional Medical Center.

The KHP reported they were not wearing helmets.

In a world of sectarian violence, what can be done?

Charles C. Haynes is director of the Religious Freedom Center of the Newseum Institute.
Charles C. Haynes is director of the Religious Freedom Center of the Newseum Institute.

Last week, the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria – the extremist movement now occupying large swaths of territory in the region – forced the last Christians out of the Iraqi city of Mosul.

Images of desecrated churches, looted homes and ruined lives now serve as the obituary for one of the world’s oldest Christian communities.

If the world barely noticed, it’s not surprising. The fate of Christians in Mosul is only one of many competing news stories of religious and ethnic violence across the globe, from northern Africa to the Middle East to the Ukraine.

Tragically, people in many parts of the world are drowning in rivers of blood shed in the name of one ethnic or religious group against another. Even where religious communities have peacefully co-existed for years – Christians and Muslims in Africa, for example – the lid is off and the knives are out.

The causes of the current worldwide epidemic in sectarian violence are complex, with each region plagued by a volatile mix of religious, ethnic, economic and political differences with deep historical roots.

“Religion” is often the trigger – or the excuse – for power struggles that have less to do with faith and more to do with national or tribal identify and political power.

Consider Myanmar (Burma) where the Buddhism of the majority is so defined by national identity that it spawns hatred for the Rohingya Muslim minority – in clear contradiction to traditional Buddhist teachings. Muslims are condemned by extremist Buddhist monks as strangers in their own land, aliens who must be attacked and driven out.

As a result, Rohingya Muslims – who claim to be indigenous to Myanmar – are one of the most persecuted minorities in the world. Over the past two years, more than 100,000 Rohingyas have been forced to flee Myanmar and many thousands more have been put in camps with no access to basic services such as health care, clean water or sanitation.

Similar perversions of religion fuel “religious” conflicts in many other places, including Nigeria where terrorists kidnap children and murder innocents “in the name of Islam” and the Central African Republic where “Christian” militias butcher Muslims “in the name of Christ.”

What makes many of these conflicts so intractable is, in a word, indoctrination. Young people in far too many places are taught to hate and fear the “other,” passing ancient divisions rooted in religious and ethnic identities from one generation to the next.

From textbooks in Saudi Arabia that disparage Jews to training camps of terror in Yemen, young minds are prepared to continue the battle – often in the name of one religion over another.

In the short term, of course, the only recourse is to combat sectarian conflicts with some combination of political, diplomatic, humanitarian and military action – a juggling act of mind-boggling complexity.

But for the long term, the best answer to schools of hate and violence are schools of respect and understanding – schools where students learn how to engage people of different religions and beliefs with civility and respect.

One avenue to creating such schools is Face to Faith, an education program offered free to schools by the Tony Blair Faith Foundation. Now active in more than 30 countries – including nearly 200 public and private schools in the United States – Face to Faith uses videoconferencing and secure online community to connect students directly with their peers in classrooms across the world. (Disclosure: I serve as advisor to Face to Faith in the U.S.)

Launched just five years ago, Face to Faith has already engaged more than 60,000 students in civil dialogues that range from exchanges about personal values and beliefs to discussions of global issues of shared concern. The aim is not only to educate young people about religions and cultures, but also to inspire them to work together for the common good. (www.facetofaithus.org)

Schools implementing Face to Faith are on the front lines in the ongoing struggle for the hearts and minds of the next generation. When students are able to build bridges of trust and understanding, they’re better prepared to resist voices of hate and violence.

Face to Faith won’t stop the rivers of blood overnight. But it’s a very good start.

Charles C. Haynes is director of the Religious Freedom Center of the Newseum Institute, 555 Pennsylvania Ave., N.W., Washington, DC 20001.  [email protected]

Regents ask universities to start early on tuition

board of regentsLAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Public university leaders in Kansas are being encouraged to start working on next year’s tuition proposals now, rather than wait until the spring semester.

Kansas Board of Regents chairman Kenny Wilk says the revenue stream from tuition is too significant to wait until the last minute to get it figured out.

The Lawrence Journal-World reports the regents traditionally have received tuition and fee requests from the universities in May before approving them in June.

Regents say they’d like schools to have a more definite idea of what they would request before the board formulates its budget proposal for Gov. Sam Brownback and the Legislature.

Universities in recent years have had to rely more on tuition from students as state funding has decreased.

Kansas issues public health warnings for 7 lakes

Screen Shot 2014-07-25 at 5.12.10 AMTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Health officials are alerting the public about potentially harmful algae blooms in Kansas lakes.

The Kansas Department of Health and Environment has issued warnings for high levels of the toxic algae in seven lakes.

Those include Chisholm Creek Park Lake in Sedgwick County, Memorial Park Lake in Barton County and Jewell State Fishing Lake in Jewel County. Warnings also have been issued for Lake Warnock in Atchison County and South Park Lake in Johnson County.

In addition, the Milford Reservoir and parts of the Marion Reservoir also are under a public health warning.

A public health warning indicates that water conditions are unsafe and people should avoid any direct water contact such as wading, swimming or skiing.

 

Three hospitalized after Thomas County rollover accident

Screen Shot 2014-07-03 at 5.13.15 AMOAKLEY– Three people were injured in an accident Thursday evening in Thomas County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2008 Dodge Durango driven by, Natasha Maria Anderson, 21, Ponca City, OK., was westbound Interstate 70 four miles north of Oakley in the right lane.

The vehicle blew its right rear tire.

The driver lost control of the vehicle. It entered the median and rolled 2 to 3 times and came to rest on its wheels in the right lane on eastbound Interstate 70.

Anderson and passengers in the vehicle Nehra Awe, 19, Tulsa, OK., and Akasha A. Anderson, 17, Ponca City, OK., were transported to Logan County Hospital.

The KHP reported Akasha Anderson was not wearing a seat belt.

Huckabee endorses Roberts in Kansas Senate race

RobertsTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Former Republican presidential candidate Mike Huckabee has endorsed Kansas Sen. Pat Roberts as he battles an aggressive GOP primary challenge from tea party candidate Milton Wolf.

Huckabee announced his endorsement Thursday. He described Roberts as a conservative warrior and said he’s fought tirelessly for lower taxes and federal government spending.

Huckabee is a former Arkansas governor who now has a talk show on cable’s Fox News Channel. He ran unsuccessfully for the Republican presidential nomination in 2008 but won Kansas’ caucuses.

Roberts is seeking his fourth, six-year term. Wolf is a Leawood radiologist and has the backing of national tea party groups ahead of the state’s Aug. 5 primary.

Wolf spokesman Ben Hartman said Roberts won’t stop his slide in the polls no matter how many endorsements he receives.

 

Double fatal Interstate accident UPDATE

7-24 McPherson County fatal 1

Pictures from Kansas Highway Patrol
Pictures from Kansas Highway Patrol

MCPHERSON-  The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2014 Nissan Rogue driven by Pamela D. Pierce, 56, Hutchinson, was in the driving lane on northbound Interstate 135 just north of McPherson.  The driver attempted to pass another vehicle cutting in front of a 2004 Ford Explorer driven by Kay Dianne Pautz, 69, Alexandria, MN.

The Ford struck the rear of the Nissan causing the Ford to swerve. The Ford then rolled across the median and into the southbound ditch.

Pautz and a passenger in the Ford Gary Walter Pautz, 70, Alexandria, MN., were pronounced dead at the scene. They were transported to Sedgwick County Regional Forensic Science Center. No other injuries were reported. All were properly restrained at the time of the accident.

——

MCPHERSON-  Two people were killed in an accident on I-135 Thursday afternoon. The accident happened just north of McPherson around 5 pm.

Troopers with the Kansas Highway Patrol said a northbound SUV hit the back of another SUV driving north.

The trailing vehicle crossed the median, crossed the southbound lanes, rolled several times then caught fire in a ditch on the west side of the interstate. The driver and a passenger were killed. Southbound traffic was backed up near the crash site.

Check Hays Post for additional details as they become available.

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