WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A judge has reinstated convictions he had previously thrown out against a former Kansas doctor and his wife accused of a moneymaking conspiracy at a clinic linked to 68 overdose deaths.
The ruling Tuesday by U.S. District Judge Monti Belot could affect how long Stephen Schneider and his wife, Linda, remain in prison. The Haysville couple will be resentenced Sept. 24.
They were convicted in 2010 of conspiracy to commit health care fraud resulting in those deaths, unlawfully prescribing drugs, health care fraud and money laundering.
Belot agreed with prosecutors to vacate only the sentences on six counts.
The legal maneuvering comes in the wake of an unrelated U.S. Supreme Court decision that the victim’s drug use had to be the actual cause of death, not merely a contributing factor.
Myrtle Maxine Briand
Born: June 11, 1926
Died: September 15, 2015
Myrtle Maxine Briand, age 89, passed away on Tuesday, September 15, 2015 at Cedar Village, Ness City, Kansas. She was born on June 11, 1926 in Lincoln County, Kansas the daughter of Elmer and Martha (Tatkenhorst) Rosebrook.
She was a homemaker, a member of the First Mennonite Church and the VFW Auxiliary both of Ransom, Kansas.
On August 1, 1948 she married Sol Briand in Lincoln, Kansas. He preceded her in death on May 15, 2007.
She is survived by three sons, Gerald and Betty Briand, Ransom, Larry and Lisa Briand, WaKeeney, Kansas, and Wendell and Millie Briand, Olathe, Kansas; two daughters, Marge Tillitson, Ransom, and Joan Grover, Salina, Kansas; one brother, Douglas Rosebrook, Tescott, Kansas; 17 grandchildren and 29 great grandchildren. She was preceded in death by her parents and five brothers, Oscar, Paul, Lawrence, Roy, and Clarence Rosebrook.
Viewing will be on Thursday, September 17 from 9:00 A.M. until 9:00 P.M. with the family present from 7-9 P.M.
Funeral services will be at Fitzgerald Funeral Home, Ness City, on Friday, September 18, 2015, 10:30 A.M. followed by burial in the Arnold Cemetery.
Memorial contributions may be given to the First Mennonite Church, Ransom.
Words of sympathy and support may be left for the family by writing in the guest book.
SERVICES
Funeral Service
Friday, September 18, 2015
10:00 AM
Fitzgerald Funeral Home
207 North Pennsylvania Ave
Ness City, Kansas 67560
Peyton Nicole White (Photo courtesy Ellis Co. Sheriff’s Office)
A 13-year-old runaway girl from Catharine has been located.
According to Ellis County Sheriff Ed Harbin, Peyton Nicole White was found Monday in Wichita. Harbin would not release any other details.
The sheriff’s department said in a news release late last month that White had run away from state DCF care on Aug. 19.
“Despite having some contact with acquaintances through a Facebook account since Aug. 23, she has refused to return to her home in Catharine, Kansas,” the department reported in the news release.
Authorities believed White was in the Sedgwick, Ellis or Osborne county areas and she was not considered to be in danger.
WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Advocates for government transparency are questioning whether Sedgwick County violated state law during the selection of a new county manager.
The Wichita Eagle reports Sedgwick County appointed Brig. Michael Scholes on Sept. 2, but actually green-lit the job offer two weeks earlier in a closed meeting.
County officials contend their choice of Scholes over three other finalists on Aug. 19 was non-binding and did not violate an open meetings law.
The newspaper says it has asked District Attorney Marc Bennett and Kansas Attorney General Derek Schmidt to investigate whether commissioners violated the Kansas Open Records Act.
Acting county manager Ron Holt says that after winnowing the field from 85 applicants to four finalists, commissioners decided in an executive session to send Scholes a job offer.
MANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas City, Kansas, man has been sentenced to nearly 52 years in prison for participating in a deadly attack on a Manhattan man.
Anthony Nichols, 35, was sentenced Monday in Riley County District Court for attempted murder. He initially was charged with first-degree murder in the September 2013 death of 68-year-old John Burroughs.
Nichols shot Burroughs after going to a rural Manhattan trailer park with a woman. Later, the woman returned with 34-year old James McKenith of Manhattan. McKenith is serving a life sentence for stabbing Burroughs.
Riley County Attorney Barry Wilkerson described Nichols’ extensive criminal history in seeking a long sentence.
Nichols previously pleaded no contest to voluntary manslaughter in a Geary County killing that happened one day before Burroughs died.
JACKSONSVILLE, Fla. (AP) — A young Florida man accused by the FBI of sending bomb-making plans to an informant for an attack at a 9/11 anniversary event in Kansas City will undergo psychological evaluation.
Joshua Goldberg appeared in federal court Tuesday in northeast Florida. The judge sent him to a mental health facility in North Carolina for 30 days.
The 20-year-old who lived with his parents was arrested last week after catching authorities’ attention earlier this year in online posts under the moniker “Australi Witness,” and others.
The FBI said Goldberg called for an attack on a contest for drawings of the Prophet Muhammad in Garland, Texas, and boasted about helping plan attacks on synagogues in Australia.
The FBI says Goldberg sent instructions to an informant showing how to make a pressure cooker bomb.
————————
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) — A Florida man accused of sending bomb-making plans to an FBI informant for an alleged attack in Kansas City on the 9/11 anniversary is due in federal court for a detention hearing.
Joshua Goldberg was arrested last week after catching authorities’ attention earlier this year in online posts calling for an attack on a contest for drawings of the Prophet Muhammad in Garland, Texas.
The government says Goldberg also used online aliases to boast about helping gunmen plan attacks on synagogues in Australia.
The 20-year-old is charged with distributing information relating to explosives, destructive devices and weapons of mass destruction. A criminal complaint says Goldberg told an informant how to build a bomb and suggested targeting a Sept. 11 commemoration in Kansas City. No bomb was produced.
Sitting down together at the family dinner table may seem hard to manage with the busy lives people lead these days. However, a family meal helps create an environment where parents and children can have a conversation. And that family interaction is an important factor to protect children from the dangers of smoking, drinking and drugs.
This month, the Ellis County Extension Office is teaming up with Papa Murphy’s and the Hays Kiwanis Club to offer a make-and-take pizza activity to encourage families to cook and eat together. Families with young children will have the opportunity to assemble a pizza from provided ingredients and take home a low-cost meal to enjoy together.
Family Make and Take Pizza Night will be held on Monday, Sept. 28, from 4:15-6:15 pm at the Ellis County Extension Office meeting room, 601 Main Street in Hays. (Enter the rear door from the north parking lot.) The cost is only $2.50 per pizza, with a limit of two pizzas per family. Quantities are limited, so registration is accepted on a first-come, first-served basis. Register and pay fees at the Ellis County Extension Office, 601 Main Street in Hays, 785-628-9430.
Papa Murphy’s will donate about 80 crusts for the make-and-take event and toppings are supported by funding from the Hays Kiwanis Club and Ellis County Extension. We’ll also provide a bag of baby carrots and a few pieces of fruit to balance your healthy family meal.
Volunteers are welcome to assist with this event. Call the Extension Office if you would like to help during one or both shifts: 4:00-5:15 pm and 5:15-6:30 pm.
The goal of Family Pizza Night is to create awareness that regular conversations between parents and children are an important prevention tool to help safeguard Kansas youth and that family meals are an important way to regularly engage in those conversations.
Parental influence is known to be one of the most crucial factors in determining the likelihood of substance abuse by teenagers. Research done by The National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse consistently finds that the more often children eat dinner with their families, the less likely they are to smoke, drink or use drugs. The statistics reveal that teens who almost always eat dinner with their families are 31 percent LESS likely than the average teenager to smoke, drink or use drugs, while teens who virtually never eat dinner with their families are 72 percent MORE likely than the average teenager to use illegal drugs, alcohol and cigarettes.
Kids like to eat dinner with their families, too. When a recent survey asked teens about family meals, 84 percent said they prefer to have dinner with their families than to eat alone.
Additionally, research shows that children who eat dinner often with their families are more likely to be emotionally content, do well in school, have positive peer relationships, have lower levels of stress and be bored less often. What amazing benefits from something as simple as a family meal!
This month, plan to make and take a pizza with your children on September 28 and think of ways you can schedule more family time to talk about what’s going on in your child’s world. After all, what your kids really want at the dinner table is YOU!
Linda K. Beech is Ellis County Extension Agent for Family and Consumer Sciences.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. – Fort Hays State Men’s Soccer moved up two spots in the latest NSCAA Division II National Poll, released on Tuesday (Sept. 15). After sitting at No. 14 in the previous two polls, the Tigers moved up to No. 12 after knocking off previously No. 12 ranked Colorado State-Pueblo this past Sunday.
After their first loss of the season on Friday at UC-Colorado Springs, the Tigers rebounded to defeat the No. 12 ranked team on its home field. FHSU defeated CSU-Pueblo 2-1 on Sunday, pushing both teams to 3-1 overall on the season.
The Tigers are back to being the highest ranked team in the poll from the MIAA. Lindenwood jumped all the way from unranked to No. 7 in the last poll, but went 0-1-1 last week and dropped to No. 20 in the rankings this week. Northeastern State, previously No. 24, fell twice last week and dropped to the receiving votes list. Upper Iowa is still undefeated at 4-0, but is not referenced anywhere in this week’s poll.
The Tigers have one match this week as they host Lubbock Christian in their first home match of the season on Friday night (Sept. 18) at 7 pm.
Below is the NSCAA Division II Poll for September 15, 2015.
Rank
School
Prev.
W-L-T
1
Lynn University
1
2-0-0
2
University of Charleston
2
4-0-0
3
Southern New Hampshire University
4
3-0-0
4
Seattle Pacific University
5
3-0-0
5
Midwestern State University
9
4-0-0
6
Limestone College
8
3-0-0
7
Notre Dame College
11
5-0-0
8
Florida Tech
10
2-0-0
9
Quincy University
20
3-1-0
10
Merrimack College
17
4-0-0
11
Pfeiffer University
25
4-0-0
12
Fort Hays State University
14
3-1-0
13
Christian Brothers University
19
4-0-0
14
Sonoma State University
21
3-0-1
15
St. Edward’s University
22
2-0-2
16
Tiffin University
RV
3-0-1
17
East Stroudsburg University
RV
4-0-0
18
LIU Post
15
2-1-1
19
Wingate University
23
2-0-2
20
Lindenwood University
7
2-1-1
21
Palm Beach Atlantic University
NR
5-0-0
22
Rockhurst University
NR
2-0-1
23
California State University-Dominguez Hills
NR
3-1-0
24
Colorado School of Mines
NR
1-0-1
25
University of West Florida
NR
3-0-0
Also receiving votes: Young Harris College (17), Upper Iowa University (15), Millersville University (7), Cal Poly Pomona (5), Northeastern State University (4), Saginaw Valley State University (3), California State University Monterey Bay (1), Wilmington University (1)
Photo by Mercy Hospital Independence The planned closure of Mercy Hospital Independence could create new urgency around the Medicaid expansion debate in the Kansas Legislature.
By JIM MCLEAN
The scheduled closure of the hospital in the southeast Kansas community of Independence could create new urgency around the Medicaid expansion debate.
Advocates of expanding the Kansas Medicaid program — known as KanCare — say the additional federal money it would generate would help stabilize a growing number of struggling hospitals in the state and might have helped save Mercy Hospital Independence.
They point to estimates produced by the Kansas Hospital Association that showed expansion would have generated an additional $1.6 million in annual revenue for Mercy.
Rep. Jim Kelly, a Republican from Independence and chairman of Mercy’s board, said he hopes that the scheduled Oct. 10 closure of the hospital will spur a more serious discussion about expansion in the 2016 legislative session.
“For me and for some others, particularly in this section of the state, this will be kind of a poster that we can carry forward and say, ‘This is happening, and it’s going to spread if we don’t come up with a way to deal with health care in rural Kansas,’” Kelly said.
According to the National Rural Health Association, at least 55 rural hospitals across the nation have closed and another 283 are at risk, including as many as 15 in Kansas. The Mercy board had hoped to strike a partnership with the neighboring Coffeyville Regional Medical Center (CRMC) to maintain some hospital services in Independence, but those talks broke down earlier this month.
Mark Woodring, CEO of CRMC, said the proposed partnership would have been too large a financial risk for his hospital. “We explored every option possible, it just didn’t work out,” Woodring said.
However, he said, if the state had expanded Medicaid, a solution might have been possible. “The dollars that would have come back into (both) communities would have far exceeded the cuts that have already taken place,” Woodring said.
Starting in 2016, Kansas hospitals will lose nearly $132 million because of reimbursement reductions in Medicare and other federal programs, according to an analysis done by the hospital association.
However, the same analysis indicates that expanding KanCare would offset those reductions and generate a net gain of nearly $231 million annually.
“We as a state ought to be asking ourselves, ‘Are we doing everything we can to help maintain access to health care?’” said Tom Bell, president and CEO of KHA. “And I think you would guess that our answer is no, we haven’t been doing that.”
A coalition led by KHA has failed over the past three years to convince Gov. Sam Brownback and the Republican-controlled Legislature to pass a Medicaid expansion plan. Advocates succeeded in getting a hearing during the 2015 session on a bill that would have authorized Brownback to negotiate an expansion plan with federal officials, but lawmakers never voted on the proposal.
Next year, hospitals and other expansion advocates will introduce a more specific blueprint for lawmakers to consider, Bell said. It likely will be modeled after plans considered in other conservative states. Generally, these so-called red state plans use federal Medicaid funds to help low-income adults purchase private coverage.
Many also require recipients to share in their health care costs in ways that traditional Medicaid doesn’t.
Thirty states and the District of Columbia have approved Medicaid expansion and Utah continues to discuss it.
Senate Vice President Jeff King, an Independence Republican, could play a key role in the expansion debate going forward. Last session, he said he didn’t believe the state’s rejection of expansion was the main reason that some Kansas hospitals were struggling.
“Expanded Medicaid is not the silver bullet,” he said in April. But when contacted last week to discuss the closure of the Independence hospital, King said he is open to considering a more conservative approach to expansion.
“I don’t want to expand Medicaid just copying the Affordable Care Act, but want to take the model that we’ve seen in Arkansas, seen in Indiana, that Pennsylvania attempted, to have a Kansas-based Medicaid program that expands to meet the needs of those it currently isn’t covering,” King said.
KanCare now covers about 425,000 children and low-income, disabled and elderly adults. But that number includes relatively few non-disabled adults. Adults with dependent children can participate in KanCare, but only if they have incomes below 33 percent of the federal poverty level, annually $7,870 for a family of four.
Adults without children aren’t eligible for coverage no matter how poor they are. Expansion would cover all Kansans with incomes up to 138 percent of poverty – annually $16,105 for an individual and $32,913 for a family of four.
Estimates vary, but expansion would extend coverage to between 140,000 and 170,000 Kansans. Opponents of expanding KanCare eligibility have said they’re concerned about the potential long-term cost to the state, even though the Affordable Care Act requires the federal government to cover no less than 90 percent of expansion costs beginning in 2017.
In addition, conservative political groups have threatened to target Medicaid expansion supporters in next year’s election. “We certainly plan to hold accountable any legislator who supports this misguided scheme,” said Akash Chougule, a senior policy analyst in the national office of Americans for Prosperity.
Chougule made the comment during his testimony at the hearing on expansion conducted last session by the House Health and Human Services Committee.
Jim McLean is executive editor of KHI News Service in Topeka, a partner in the Heartland Health Monitor team.
WICHITA- Law enforcement authorities in Sedgwick County have identified a suspect wanted in connection with the sexual battery of a girl in a high school bathroom.
According to a police report the suspect identified as Guy D. Harris, 28, walked into East High School on Wednesday just before 11 a.m. and went into the girl’s restroom.
The report indicated the suspect touched the teenage student as she attempted to leave.
Photo Wichita Police
Harris was not located but a security camera took his picture.
Police reported in a media release that Harris is also wanted on two felony warrants and one misdemeanor City bench warrant.
Police are asking for the public to help locate him.
Alzheimer’s disease – currently affecting the lives of 20 million Americans, with 5 million being afflicted, and 15 million more working as care givers – can be crushing to anyone affected. The Fort Hays State University National Student Speech Language Hearing Association is doing their part raising funds for their team set to participate in the Saturday, Oct. 10, 2015, Walk to End Alzheimer’s.
The event will begin at 11 a.m. at the Robbins Center on the FHSU campus.
“As a future SLP (speech language pathologist) it is within our scope of practice that we will potentially see people with Alzheimer’s,” said Savannah Stevens, team captain of the FHSU NSSLHA. “It’s also in our scope of practice that we engage in prevention and advocacy activities.”
The group has taken that charge seriously with their participation this year, having already raised almost half of their group’s fundraising goal.
“We thought it would be a great way to get involved in something that is dear to us,” Stevens said. “It’s really important to raise awareness and help raise funds.”
In just over two weeks the group has raised $460 of its $1,000 goal.
“This is something new (for us) this year,” Stevens said. “We did this last minute, so that’s really awesome so far.”
Nationally, the Alzheimer’s Association Walk to End Alzheimer’s is the largest fundraising event in the nation and works to raise awareness and fund Alzheimer research.
While the group is actively recruiting from within their own, outside help is sought as well.
“We’re welcoming anyone that would like to participate,” Stevens said. “Outside people can walk as well.”
If people are interested in helping out, but are unable to participate in the walk, donations can also be accepted through the group’s donation page here.
The NSSLHA was founded in 1972 and serves as the national organization for students in the study of normal and disordered human communication.