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Kansas man pleads guilty in girlfriend’s death

CourtTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A Topeka man pleaded guilty in the death of the mother of his child at their home.

Trevor William Adkins entered the plea Tuesday to intentional second-degree murder of 22-year-old Lacie Atchison.

Atchison was originally charged with premeditated first-degree murder after Atchison’s body was found at the top of a wheelchair ramp outside their home in September. Officers went to the home when neighbors reported seeing a naked man fighting with another man in the neighborhood.

Adkins also pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor count of battery of a neighbor.

As part of the plea, a charge of endangering a child was dismissed. The couple’s young daughter was inside the home but was not hurt.

 

KFIX Rock News: Janis Joplin Biopic Expected To Start Filming In Mid-2015

Janis_Joplin_seated_1970
“Janis Joplin seated 1970” by Albert B. Grossman Management (personal manager), New York

The long-gestating Janis Joplin biopic project finally appears to be ready to move forward, with Amy Adams set to portray the influential blues-rock singer.

Deadline reports that Dallas Buyers Club and Wild director Jean-Marc Vallee has agreed to take the helm of the movie, which has a working title of Get It While You Can and is slated to begin shooting in the middle of next year.

The production features a script by Ron and Theresa Terry, although Dallas Buyers Club screenwriters Craig Borten and Melissa Wallack are in negotiations to revise it, according to Deadline.

Adams has been attached to the project since 2010, when Fernando Meirelles, director of 2002’s acclaimed City of God, had been lined up to direct the flick.

The Oscar-nominated actress is planning to do her own singing in the film.

Last year, The Butler director Lee Daniels told The Hollywood Reporter that a Joplin biopic would be his next project, but those plans apparently have changed.

Numerous attempts to get a biographical film about Joplin off the ground have been made over the last decade or so.  Other actresses who reportedly have been attached to movies about the late Rock and Roll Hall of Famer singer over the years include Brittany Murphy, Renee Zellweger, pop star Pink, Zooey Deschanel and Tony Award winner Nina Arianda.

Copyright 2014 ABC News Radio

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Federated again teaming with Marines collecting Toys for Tots

By JONATHAN ZWEYGARDT
Hays Post

For more than 65 years the U.S. Marine Corps has been collecting and donating toys as Christmas gifts for less fortunate children as part of its Toys for Tots program.

toys for tots

Area Federated Auto Parts once again are helping to collect toys with locations throughout western Kansas and eastern Colorado.

Ryan Bickle, vice president of Sales at S&W Supply of Hays, is helping to coordinate the program locally and said Federated is hoping to collect more than the 1,500 toys collected last year.

Federated Auto Parts has 73 drop-off locations across the region, including six in Hays, and the will be collecting toys now through Dec. 8, when the toys will be presented to the Marines.

They will also collect donations at the Frost Fest Parade on Dec. 6.

The Marines will sort the toys and use the money donated to purchase more toys before delivery.

This is the third year Federated Auto Parts has helped with the collection, and Bickle said all three years students from TMP-Marian have held their own collection.

“For them to get kids involved at that age I think is awesome,” Bickle said.

Bickle said this year they sent TMP two large collection boxes, which were quickly filled, and the students requested additional boxes.

For more information or to request a toy, go to toysfortots.org.

You can also find out more about Federated Auto Parts collection HERE.

La Crosse woman pleads guilty to embezzling from Hays truck company

TOPEKA — A La Crosse woman pleaded guilty Monday to embezzling from the company where she worked, U.S. Attorney Barry Grissom said.

James Cross, spokesman for the U.S. Attorney’s office, said prosecutors offered evidence in court that the amount was more than $500,000, although her attorney said she only pleaded guilty to “transporting more than $5,000.”

“At sentencing, the judge will consider all relevant conduct, including the amount of money that was stolen,” Cross told Hays Post on Tuesday.

According to Grissom’s office, Crystal Lynn Jones, 34, La Crosse, pleaded guilty to one count of interstate transportation of stolen money. In her plea, she admitted the crime occurred from 2008 to 2013 while she was officer manager for Teel’s Trucks at 1200 Vine in Hays. Grissom’s office said she wrote unauthorized checks from Teel’s company accounts at Commerce Bank and the Bank of Hays for her personal benefit. She also conducted transfers on the Automated Clearing House electronic network from Teel’s accounts for her own personal benefit. She hid the thefts by altering entries on the company’s accounting software and by forging checks.

Sentencing is set for March 2. She faces a maximum penalty of 10 years in federal prison and a fine up to $250,000. Grissom commended the FBI and Assistant U.S. Attorney Rich Hathaway for their work on the case.

Story was clarified Nov. 25.

Stanford stepping down from DHDC

DHDC news release

HAYS — The Downtown Hays Development Corporation announces Traci Stanford has resigned as the Executive Director due to unexpected health reasons. “I am so blessed to have been able to work for the DHDC and to give back to the heart of the community,” stated Stanford, “Downtown is my absolute favorite thing about Hays, and this was not an easy decision, but I have to do what is best for me and my family.”

Stanford’s last day will be Dec. 11. The DHDC would like to thank Stanford for her dedication to the community. “Though we are saddened to lose Traci as Executive Director of the DHDC we wish her the best. She has done an exceptional job and made a positive impact during her time with us,” stated DHDC President Stacey Smith, “The application process is now open and the Board of Directors is committed to finding the best candidate for Downtown Hays. We look forward to continue advocating for the heart of our community.”

The DHDC is a non-profit organization whose mission is to foster awareness and promote Downtown Hays as a vibrant center of commerce, recreation, arts, government and history that serves the people of Hays, the surrounding region and visitors from around the world. The DHDC will work to prevent the deterioration and enhance the viability of the community’s cultural centers, historical landmarks and public infrastructure important to the community’s economic and cultural well-being.

 

Plan announced to keep Medicare reimbursements at state mental hospital

Screen Shot 2014-11-25 at 10.18.11 AMBy Andy Marso
KHI News Service

TOPEKA — State officials have a three-pronged plan to ensure Osawatomie State Hospital maintains its Medicare reimbursements after a federal agency announced last week they are in jeopardy. Meanwhile, mental health advocates say the situation at that hospital underscores the need for legislators who hold the state’s purse strings to allow the executive branch to follow through on reforms that are still in their early stages.

The corrective plan for the Osawatomie hospital, according to Angela de Rocha, a spokesperson for the Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services, includes regular “fire watch” room checks when the facility is over its Legislature-approved capacity, or census. It also includes nursing reforms and better pharmacy coordination.

The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services gave state officials until Dec. 8 to address deficiencies identified by Kansas Department of Health and Environment surveyors in a visit to the hospital last month. The public notice from CMS warned that the facility would suffer termination of its Medicare benefits, which make up about 23 percent of the hospital’s total budget, if the shortfalls weren’t corrected.

De Rocha said it was a routine letter.

“The hospital is working closely with CMS to implement a plan of correction that increases the quality of care delivered at the hospital,” de Rocha said.

De Rocha said that following an inspection, the fire watch was initiated to address concerns from KDHE and the state fire marshal.

The watch entails two staff members checking each hospital room once an hour when the facility is above its 206-patient census. When the public notice from CMS was sent, the hospital was at 221 patients. De Rocha said Friday the facility was at 210 with eight discharges scheduled. The day before, she said, the facility was below the census threshold.

De Rocha said the surveyors also identified “immediate jeopardy” issues related to nursing and pharmacy during their visit.

“Immediate steps were taken to remedy these deficiencies and the hospital was afforded the opportunity to construct a plan of correction,” de Rocha said.

That plan includes a nursing assessment upon admission to determine if new patients are at risk for edema, rashes, pressure ulcers or other conditions. Additionally, the pharmacy staff is to work more closely with others at the facility to improve “clarity and accuracy in medication orders and follow up.”

Osawatomie State Hospital is the largest of the state’s two inpatient facilities for adults with severe and persistent mental illnesses. Prior to admission, most of the hospital’s patients have been declared a danger to themselves or others.

Mental health advocates say they hope legislators will follow through with the funding for Gov. Sam Brownback’s wider plan to improve delivery of mental health care.

Kyle Kessler, executive director of the Association of Community Mental Health Centers of Kansas, said federal incentives that discourage the institutionalization of people with mental illnesses had contributed to a lack of beds within community facilities and put more pressure on state hospitals.

“The reduction in community beds has really caught up with us, and I think the state is working to reduce the census in a safe and appropriate manner,” Kessler said.

Kessler said that effort includes changing Rainbow Mental Health Center to a short-term “sobering” and crisis stabilization facility, which allows doctors to triage patients and reserve Osawatomie for those who are “really sick.”

Andy Marso is a reporter for Heartland Health Monitor, a news collaboration focusing on health issues and their impact in Missouri and Kansas.

Amy Campbell, lobbyist for the Kansas Mental Health Coalition, also praised the effort at Rainbow. Legislators are looking for places to cut the state budget, but Campbell warned that if they do anything to impede the Brownback administration reform effort, it will lead to further problems at state hospitals like Osawatomie.

“That’s why this is important,” Campbell said. “We have been so encouraged by what this administration is doing to address these very specific problems, but we’re only in the beginning of those efforts.”

‘Mockingjay – Part 1’ is passable but unnecessary

James Gerstner reviews movies for Hays Post.
James Gerstner reviews movies for Hays Post.

The biggest problem with “The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 1” is that it should not be a film. Here are the lengths of the final books of well-known Young Adult novels: “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows” -197,651 words, “Breaking Dawn” from the “Twilight” series – 192,196 words, and “Mockingjay” the concluding novel of “The Hunger Games” trilogy – 100,269 words. For context, the much revered novel “To Kill a Mockingbird” clocks in at 99,121 words. While I admit that I have not yet read “The Hunger Games” novels, a book the length of “To Kill a Mockingbird” has no business being more than one movie. The decision to split it in two was undoubtedly a business decision; which is unfortunate, because good business far too often gets in the way of good art.

Serving as the third of four films, “Mockingjay” suffers very notably as an extended set-up piece. The rebellion that has been brewing under the surface over the “Hunger Games” movies finally came to a head at the end of “Catching Fire,” which is, by far, my favorite entry in the series. Calamitous events transpired and the war against the oppressive Capitol had finally begun. Enter “Mockingjay” and an hour-long restart to a war that should have already been in progress. Regardless of how well “Mockingjay – Part 1” syncs to the first half of the novel “Mockingjay,” there are extended pieces that feel bloated.

There’s a strong comparison to be made to how different ages of people eat the cereal Lucky Charms. When I was a kid, I thought I had it all figured out. I would eat all of the cereal first and save all of the marshmallows for the end, which is the strategy that the producers of “Mockingjay” must have employed. When I eat Lucky Charms now, which is still delicious by the way, I mix the marshmallows in with every bite that way there’s an even balance and I don’t waste half of my bowl of cereal choking down bland, marshmallow-“ess cereal in a misguided attempt to make a second half that is marshmallow-packed. Much like two part movies dividing set up and pay off by a full year in an effort to sell double the tickets.

“Mockingjay’s” place in the universe notwithstanding, it does have its moments. It toys with interesting ideas about revolution, freedom and the tortured souls that often shift the world between the two. Jennifer Lawrence and the rest of the cast perform admirably; however, a cast of this magnitude comes to the table with truly outstanding films under its collective belt. That being the case, it’s not hard to imagine that they weren’t overly challenged by “Mockingjay.”

While I have great disdain for “Mockingjay’s” business decisions, I did not dislike the film as a piece of art and I look forward to seeing it finally completed next year.

4 of 6 stars

Thanksgiving travel woes? There’s an app for that

phone  cell phoneJUSTIN PRITCHARD, Associated Press

Traveling by plane, train or automobile can be a headache. Mixing in Thanksgiving can make it a throbbing migraine. Technology provides some pain relief in the form of apps to let you know which roads are clogged, what gate your flight leaves from and whether trains are running on time.

The American Automobile Association forecasts that the Wednesday through Sunday period will see more than 46 million Americans travel at least 50 miles from home — the most Thanksgiving road warriors since 2007. About nine in 10 are expected to drive — or be driven — with about 3.6 million flying.

Here are some ways to make the journey a bit less taxing.

PLANES

FlightAware tracks not only your flight’s status but also any delays or cancellations, even gate changes. Set it up for a specific trip and it will send alerts so you don’t have to keep checking for changes.

Seats matter, especially if you’re traveling with kids. The ExpertFlyer app has a feature called “seat alert,” which informs you when a seat you want to snag becomes available.

If you have the pleasure of a connecting flight, consider FlightBoard. Every five minutes, it updates with the latest from airport departure boards at over 3,000 airports worldwide. If you’re picking up at the airport, it’s one way to find out whether the flight will land on time.

Or, if you want to keep it simple, get the app of the airline you’re flying. That will typically let you do things such as get a boarding pass or — gulp — rebook your flight.

TRAINS

While Amtrak has an app that lets you make or change reservations and check the status of your train, local and regional public transit doesn’t have the same range of resources as air travel.

At least 70 percent of larger transit agencies have apps that offer real-time travel information, according to Darnell Grisby, director of policy development and research at the American Public Transportation Association. As for using your phone to buy and manage tickets — that’s not as common an option, but some agencies offer it.

AUTOMOBILES

Traffic apps are a familiar friend for many commuters. Some, such as Sigalert, offer color-coded highway maps — red for “jammed up,” yellow for “slow,” green for “full speed ahead.” Sometimes the data that inform the maps are just outdated enough that they can lead a driver onto a freeway that may have been traffic-free five minutes ago, but now has a building bottleneck.

The popular app Waze tries to solve that problem by asking drivers to report traffic and other problems, which the app then shares with other users.

AND JUST IN CASE

Should everything go sideways, and you’re suddenly stranded, Priceline and Hotel Tonight can help you find a room nearby.

State postpones vote on agro-defense project

NABFMANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) — Gov. Sam Brownback and top legislative leaders agreed to delay a vote on issuing bonds needed for the proposed agro-defense plant in Manhattan.

The State Finance Council decided Monday to postpone issuing $231 million in bonds for the National Bio- and Agro-Defense Facility.

Republican Senate President Susan Wagle, of Wichita, told the council final action on the bonds could occur in December. She wants the state’s investment in NBAF to be legally capped at $307 million.

The $1.2 billion federal laboratory at Kansas State University is planned for research on dangerous animal-borne illnesses.

The Topeka Capital-Journal reports  the state initially agreed to invest $105 million and about three-fourths of that bonding authority has been used.

HPD activity log, Nov. 24

AOBB-Logo-Main11

The Hays Police Department conducted xx traffic stops and received 21 animal calls on Monday, Nov. 24, according to the HPD activity log.

Abandoned Vehicle, 300 block West 13th, 2:54 a.m.
Burglary/residence, 400 block West Sixth, 9 a.m.
Found/Lost Property, 100 block West 13th, 9:44 a.m.
Abandoned Vehicle, 500 block Fort, 10:14 a.m.
Animal At Large, 20th and Oak, 1:07 p.m.
Motor Vehicle Accident/Private Property, 2300 block East Seventh, 3:22 p.m.
Found/Lost Property, Hays, 3:33 p.m.
Shoplifting, 4300 block Vine, 3:30 p.m.
Animal At Large, 2400 block General Custer, 3:38 p.m.
Suspicious Activity, 500 block East Eighth, 5:17 p.m.
Found/Lost Property, 100 block West Seventh, 6:01 p.m.
Abandoned Vehicle, 3600 block Canal, 10:47 p.m.

Mazda recalls cars to fix tire pressure monitors

RecallDETROIT (AP) — Mazda is recalling nearly 100,000 midsize cars in the U.S. to fix a problem with the tire pressure monitoring system.

The recall affects certain Mazda6 cars from the 2014 and 2015 model years.

The company says in documents posted Tuesday by U.S. safety regulators that if the air pressure drops on all four tires at the same time, the monitoring system may not warn drivers of the problem. Low air pressure can cause a sudden tire failure.

Dealers will update the tire pressure monitoring software at no cost to owners.

Mazda will notify owners by letter. The recall is expected to start on Dec. 5.

 

Ellis County’s McCue appointed to statewide board

TOPEKA – Gov. Sam Brownback today announced recent appointments to boards and commissions.

“I’d like to thank these individuals for sharing their time and talents with the people of Kansas,” Brownback said.

The Governor’s Office is always looking for qualified, interested Kansans to serve the state on commissions and boards in their areas of expertise.  If you are interested in serving on a commission or board, click HERE.

Kerry McCue, Hays, is being appointed to serve a three-year term on the 911 Coordinating Council. He received his bachelor’s degree from the University of Kansas and his MPA from the University of Missouri. Currently, he serves as director of Ellis County Emergency Medical Services.

The 911 coordinating council monitors the delivery of 911 services, develops strategies to improve to the 911 system and distributes available grant funds to city or county operated public safety answering points. The council comprises 26 members, all of whom are appointed by the governor to three-year terms.

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