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Kan. man enters plea in bomb hoax at Kansas City airport

Cain- photo Kans. Dept. of Corrections
Cain- photo Kans. Dept. of Corrections

KANSAS CITY -. – A Kansas City, Kan., man pleaded guilty in federal court this week to conveying false information as part of a bomb hoax at Kansas City International Airport in August 2014, according toTammy Dickinson, United States Attorney for the Western District of Missouri.

David James Cain, 35, of Kansas City, Kan., pleaded guilty before U.S. Chief District Judge Greg Kays to one count of conveying false information.

At approximately 5:30 p.m. on Aug. 31, 2014, Cain parked the truck he was driving in front of Terminal B at Kansas City International Airport. The truck remained parked along the curb in front of the terminal for approximately one hour. A KCI traffic control officer had the truck ticketed, and announcements were made over the loud speaker inside the terminal that the owner of truck needed to report or the truck would be towed.

After approximately one hour, Cain approached the Southwest Airlines ticket counter and told a ticket agent that there was a bomb in the truck. Cain repeated that there was a bomb in the truck, and then twice told the ticket agent’s supervisor the same thing. The customer service supervisor contacted law enforcement. The KCPD Bomb Squad and an FBI bomb technician searched the truck, and no bomb or explosive material was located.

As a result of Cain’s false statements, KCI evacuated and closed Terminal B for approximately two hours. Shutting down the terminal caused significant flight delays throughout the rest of the day.

If the terms of today’s plea agreement are accepted by the court at the sentencing hearing, Cain will be sentenced to 18 months in federal prison, followed by three years of supervised release. A sentencing hearing will be scheduled after the completion of a presentence investigation by the United States Probation Office.

This case is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Brian Casey. It was investigated by the FBI and the Missouri State Highway Patrol.

Extension food safety classes for volunteer events

Linda Beech
Linda Beech

Food is a great way to bring people together, and selling food is often a key way for nonprofit groups such as 4-H clubs, churches, school groups, and community organizations to raise funds for their activities. However, cooking the large quantities of food required for events such as fundraiser dinners, concession stands, community meals, family reunions, or funeral meals is different than cooking for your family.

Most of the cooks for these events are volunteers and the events generally do not have any regulatory oversight. Because volunteers for these organizations may not be accustomed to cooking in such large quantities and may not always have the proper equipment, serious food safety problems can occur if proper practices are not followed.

The Ellis County Extension Office will provide two food safety classes for those who handle food at volunteer community events. The first will be held on Thursday, January 28 at 7:00 pm at the Ellis Public Library in Ellis. A repeat program will be held at noon on Tuesday, February 16 at the Ellis County Extension Office, 601 Main Street in Hays. All who attend will receive a checklist for quantity cooking food safety at volunteer events.

Both programs are free, but registration is necessary to ensure adequate training materials. To register for the evening session in Ellis, call the Ellis Recreation Commission at 785-726-3718. Register for the February 16 noon-hour session in Hays by calling the Ellis County Extension Office, 785-628-9430.

Unfortunately, numerous cases of foodborne illness have been linked to community volunteer food events. In addition to the great remorse that an organization’s members would feel for making someone sick, such an occurrence also can lead to a tarnished reputation or even legal repercussions for the group.

The same food safety procedures that should be used when cooking for a family should be practiced when cooking for large groups. But, in addition, some extra steps are also necessary because of the large volume of food. If your organization serves food for large events, be sure that someone from your group plans to attend one of these helpful training sessions.

The program materials were developed by food safety specialists at Kansas State University. Plan to join us to learn the food safety do’s and don’ts for quantity food events. For more information, contact the Ellis County Extension Office, 785-628-9430.

Linda K. Beech is Ellis County Extension Agent for Family and Consumer Sciences.

CDC: 1 dead, others sick from listeria linked to packaged salad

Courtesy image
Courtesy image

NEW YORK (AP) — The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said one person died and about a dozen others were sickened from a listeria outbreak linked to packaged salads made at a Dole processing facility.

The salads were made in Springfield, Ohio, the CDC said. Those infected were spread in six states: Indiana, Massachusetts, Michigan, New Jersey, New York and Pennsylvania.

The CDC said the packaged salads made by Dole are the likely source of the outbreak. The salads are sold under several brands, including Dole, Fresh Selections, Simple Truth, Marketside, The Little Salad Bar and President’s Choice. The manufacturing code on the package starts with the letter “A.” The CDC says customers should not eat those bags.

Dole stopped all production at the Ohio facility on Thursday, the CDC said.

Sen. Moran: The United States should not be paying a dime to Iran

MoranWASHINGTON – U.S. Senator Jerry Moran (R-Kan.) introduced legislation (S. 2452) this week to limit the president’s ability to transfer funds to Iran. S. 2452 directs the U.S. government to put justice for American victims of Iranian terrorism ahead of compensation for the Iranian regime.

“The United States should not be funding governments that openly violate human rights, proudly disregard U.N. Security Council resolutions, and call for the destruction of America and its allies,” Sen. Moran said. “This bill directs the U.S. government to put justice for American victims of Iranian terrorism ahead of compensation for the Iranian regime. Rather than incentivize state-sponsored kidnapping, the administration should remind the government of Iran that terror and hostage taking is not a for-profit enterprise.”

The bill prohibits the transfer of funds for the payment by the United States of amounts awarded by the Iran-United States Claims Tribunal to Iran or nationals of Iran until Iran has paid certain compensatory damages awarded to United States persons by United States courts.

Click here to read the full text of this legislation.

Kan. man arrested after allegedly threatening woman with a knife

Burdine- photo Kansas Dept. of Corrections
Burdine- photo Kansas Dept. of Corrections

SALINA – Law enforcement authorities in Saline County are investigating a suspect for allegedly threatening a woman with a knife.

Police say Douglas Burdine, 26, Salina, went to a home of a woman he knew on Thursday afternoon and held a knife to her throat.

Burdine then allegedly pushed the woman into the house. She cried for help and left through a back door of the residence.

A neighbor heard her scream and called police.

Burdine was arrested and faces charges of battery, criminal restraint and aggravated assault.

He has previous convictions in Pawnee County for Domestic Battery, Criminal Threat and for writing worthless checks, according to the Kansas Department of Corrections.

KFIX Rock News: New Album Reuniting Classic ’70s Santana Lineup Due in April

santanivinIt’s official. A long-in-the-works album that reunites most of the members of Santana’s classic early-’70s lineups is on its way.

Santana IV, due April 15, brings together Carlos Santana, guitarist Neal Schon, singer/keyboardist Gregg Rolie, percussionist Michael Carabello and drummer Michael Shrieve for the first time since 1971’sSantana III.

The album will feature 16 all-new tracks written by the band, two of which will feature guest vocals from The Isley Brothers’ Ronald Isley. And the band promises fans will be excited about extended guitar fireworks from Santana and Schon, particularly on what is being described as a “British blues-tinged” tune, “Shake It,” that features two lengthy solo workouts. Rounding out the group’s lineup for the project were two current Santana members — bass player Benny Rietveld and percussionist Karl Perazzo.

The new record — which features a modern image echoing the classic roaring-lion artwork that appeared on Santana’s 1969 self-titled debut — has been nearly three years in the making, with rehearsals and writing sessions beginning in 2013, and recording continuing through 2014 and 2015.

“It was magical,” Carlos Santana says in a statement. “We didn’t have to try to force the vibe — it was immense. From there, we then needed to come up with a balance of songs and jams that people would immediately identify as Santana.”

“Carlos and I feel more connected than ever,” adds Schon, who along with Rolie left Santana in 1972 to formJourney. “We get super-aggressive when we play, but also melodic and poetic. We have an incredible dialog with each other on our guitars.”

The album’s lead single, the Rolie-penned “Anywhere You Want to Go,” will be available starting February 5.

Santana IV will be released on CD, as a two-LP 180-gram vinyl set and in downloadable formats, and fans at select shows on Santana’s upcoming Luminosity tour will get a copy of the album with every pair of tickets purchased.

Here is the complete track list of Santana IV:

“Yambu”
“Shake It”
“Anywhere You Want to Go”
“Fillmore East”
“Love Makes the World Go Round” (featuring Ronald Isley)
“Freedom in Your Mind” (featuring Ronald Isley)
“Choo Choo”
“All Aboard”
“Suenos”
“Caminando”
“Blues Magic”
“Echizo”
“Leave Me Alone”
“You and I”
“Come as You Are”
“Forgiveness”

Copyright © 2016, ABC Radio. All rights reserved.

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Images courtesy PRNewsFoto/SANTANA

Little Texas to headline at 2016 Ellis County Fair

little texas

Submitted

Each year, the Ellis County Fair provides seven nights of family entertainment. It includes two nights of races at the RPM Speedway, two nights of rodeo action, a truck and tractor pull, demolition derby and a concert.

This year, the Ellis County Fair Association Board of Directors is pleased to announce that our concert headliner will be Little Texas. Little Texas began performing in the early ‘90s, bringing a new, energetic sound to country music. Early in their career, they opened for Clint Black; then traveled with Travis Tritt and Trisha Yearwood. After that, they set out on their own.

The group has received many accolades and awards through the years, breaking a record in country music history in 1994 by having “three different songs on three different charts with three different lead singers, all at the same time.” That year, they also received the Academy of Country Music Award for “Vocal Group of the Year.”

They recently released their 8th album, Young For a Long Time, which they say runs the gamut of everything they’ve ever done, while taking them down some new roads as well. This album includes the song “Slow Ride Home,” which they wrote to pay tribute to Hays native Bryan J. Nichols, who was killed in Afghanistan in 2011, and to all who serve in our armed forces. (CLICK for more.)

“This song has given Little Texas a special place in the hearts of many Ellis County residents and, especially, fair association board members,” said Jill Pfannenstiel, President of the Ellis County Fair Association. “We are excited to be able to bring them to the 2016 Ellis County Fair.”

Little Texas will perform Friday, July 22, 2016, at the fairgrounds with local artist Ricky Fugitt opening for them. Ricky is a well-known artist in Texas, Oklahoma and Kansas. He has released numerous singles, including the theme song for a show on the Sportsman’s Channel, and more recently has released an album.

Watch the fair website – www.elliscountyfair.com – for details and ticket information.

Diana Marie (Rome) Waldschmidt

Diana Waldschmidt- Paper Picture 

Russell, Kansas – Diana Marie (Rome) Waldschmidt, age 70, died Sunday, December 13, 2015, at Hays Medical Center.

She was born July 25,1945, in Hays, Kansas to Wilmer J. and Valeria (Wittman) Rome.

She married Ronald J. Waldschmidt on May 14,1966, at Victoria, Kansas.

She grew up in Victoria and attended Victoria High School. She worked at Duckwalls Department Store in Russell for 15 years and was  a homemaker. She was a member of St. Mary’s Queen of Angels Catholic Church, Russell and the St. Fidelis Christian Mothers Altar Society, Victoria.  She enjoyed spending time with her family, friends and her beloved  pets, Molly, Chloe and Cody.

Survivors include her husband, Ronald J. Waldschmidt, of the home; one daughter, Amy Jenkins and husband, Ron, Kansas City, MO; her father, Wilmer J. Rome and Jeanette Brown, Victoria, KS; one brother, Randy Rome and wife, Julie, Landisville, PA; four sisters, Sherri Windholz and husband, Floyd, Victoria, KS; Dorothy Taylor and husband, Leonard, Rapid City, SD; Donna Lovelady and husband, Stan, Plainville, KS; Betty Hansen and Roger Ferland, Hays, KS.

She was preceded in death by her mother, Valeria Rome, and a brother-in-law, Richard Waldschmidt.

A memorial service is at 11:00 A.M. Saturday, January 30, 2016, at St. Mary’s Queen of Angels Catholic Church Russell, Kansas.  Inurnment will be at St. Ann’s Cemetery  Walker, Kansas.

The family will receive friends from 10:00 to 11:00 A.M. Saturday, at the Church.

Memorials are to the Ronald J. Waldschmidt family.  Cline’s Mortuary of Hays, 1919 East 22nd Street, Hays, Kansas 67601 is in charge of arrangements. Condolences can be sent via email to [email protected].

Kansas Supreme Court says no to Wichita marijuana ordinance

Marijuana

 

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The highest court in Kansas has struck down a Wichita voter-approved ordinance that reduces penalties for possessing small amounts of marijuana.

The Kansas Supreme Court issued its ruling Friday. The case has been closely watched by activists in other Kansas communities who are considering similar voter-led initiatives if state lawmakers continue to block reform of marijuana laws.

Kansas Attorney General Derek Schmidt argued the ordinance conflicts with state law.

Wichita voters approved the ordinance in April, with 54 percent in favor.

The city council says it put the measure on the ballot because 3,000 people signed a petition for it.

The Supreme Court had earlier put the measure on hold while considering its legality.

——————–

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — The highest court in Kansas is expected to rule whether a Wichita ordinance that reduces the penalties for possessing small amounts of marijuana is legal.

The Kansas Supreme Court is slated to issue its decision Friday on the measure in the state’s largest city. The issue has been closely watched by activists in other Kansas communities who are considering similar voter-led initiatives. The Kansas Legislature has repeatedly rejected efforts to liberalize marijuana laws.

Kansas Attorney General Derek Schmidt is asking the court to strike down the ordinance, saying it conflicts with state law.

Wichita voters approved the ordinance in April, with 54 percent in favor of the measure.

The Supreme Court had earlier put the measure on hold while it considered its legality.

Nation watches as court considers abortion ban in Kansas UPDATE

abortionTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The latest on the Kansas Court of Appeals decision on whether to allow the state’s first-in-the-nation ban on a common second-trimester
abortion method (all times local):

12:15 p.m.

A national abortion-rights group says the Kansas Court of Appeals has issued a groundbreaking ruling in blocking enforcement of a ban on a common second-trimester abortion procedure.

The New York-based Center for Reproductive Rights noted that the Friday decision was the first time an appellate court in the conservative state said the Kansas Constitution protects abortion rights independently of the U.S. Constitution.

The decision was 7-7, allowing a trial-court judge’s injunction against the 2015 law to stand.

Other abortion rights advocates also hailed the decision. Julie Burkhart, founder of the group Trust Women and the South Wind Women’s Center, says she’s elated.

Burkhart says “women deserve the right to access necessary reproductive health care without undue governmental interference.”

___
11:15 a.m.

An anti-abortion leader and a top Kansas legislator are dismayed by a Kansas Court of Appeals ruling that blocks enforcement of the state’s first-in-the-nation ban on a common second-trimester abortion procedure.

David Gittrich of Kansans for Life said his group will work to oust Kansas Court of Appeals judges in elections later this year. Gittrich says the judges aren’t accountable to voters, but “they will be accountable to God.”

Kansas Senate Majority Leader Terry Bruce says he can’t imagine a scenario where the framers of the Kansas Constitution meant to legalize abortion.

Appeals court judges split 7-7 in a ruling Friday over whether the Kansas Constitution protects abortion rights independently of the U.S. Constitution. The split means a lower court judge’s injunction blocking the law remains in effect.

___

10 a.m.

The Kansas Court of Appeals ruled in a split decision that the state’s constitution protects a woman’s right to an abortion independent of the rights granted by the U.S. Constitution.

The court made the statement Friday in a 7-7 ruling that maintains a temporary hold on the state’s first-in-the-nation ban on a common second-trimester abortion method.

Tie votes from the appeals court uphold the lower-court ruling being appealed. That means seven judges agreed with a lower court judge, who ruled that the Kansas Constitution’s Bill of Rights has general statements about personal liberties that create independent protections for abortion rights.

___

9:40 a.m.

The Kansas Court of Appeals has refused to allow the state’s first-in-the-nation ban on a common second-trimester abortion method to take effect.

The court released the ruling Friday, the anniversary of the U.S. Supreme Court’s Roe v. Wade decision.

A lower court put the law on hold last year. The state’s second-highest court upheld that decision Friday, though an appeal to the Kansas Supreme Court is expected.

The case comes in a lawsuit filed by two abortion providers who say the 2015 law unconstitutionally burdens women seeking abortions.

The law prohibits doctors from using forceps or similar instruments on a live fetus to remove it from the womb in pieces. The Center for Reproductive Rights says the procedure is the safest and most common second-trimester abortion method in the U.S.

___

1 a.m.

The Kansas Court of Appeals is deciding whether to allow the state’s first-in-the-nation ban on a common second-trimester abortion method.

The court is expected to release its decision Friday, the anniversary of the U.S. Supreme Court’s Roe v. Wade decision.

The lawsuit was filed by two abortion providers who said the 2015 law unconstitutionally burdens women seeking to end their pregnancies. A lower court has temporarily put the law on hold.

At issue is whether the Kansas Constitution’s broad language about individual liberty protects abortion rights.

The law prohibits doctors from using forceps or similar instruments on a live fetus to remove it from the womb in pieces. The Center for Reproductive Rights says the procedure is the safest and most common in the U.S. in the second trimester.

Kan. bill: No food stamps, cash assistance for lottery winners

Rep. Daniel Hawkins
Rep. Daniel Hawkins

BY MEGAN HART

A proposed bill would cross-check Kansans receiving cash assistance, food stamps or subsidized child care with a list of lottery winners who received more than $10,000, Republican lawmakers said Thursday.

Sen. Mary Pilcher-Cook, a Republican from Shawnee who spoke at a Statehouse news conference about the bill, said she wasn’t aware of any cases in Kansas where a lottery winner continued to collect assistance, but similar incidents in other states generated widespread anger.

“This is very important to protect the taxpayers,” she said.

The bill, which has yet to be introduced in the Legislature, also would require state agencies to verify the identities of any adults in a household that receives one or more of those three forms of assistance, said Rep. Dan Hawkins, a Republican from Wichita.

It also would require people who receive cash assistance or subsidized child care to participate with fraud investigations and monitor “excessive” lost benefit cards, which could be a sign the recipient is giving the cards to someone else, he said.

Hawkins said the bill also contains “cleanup” language related to work requirements and lifetime cash assistance limits in the Hope, Opportunity and Prosperity for Everyone (HOPE) Act, which the Legislature approved last year.

He said he couldn’t specify the language at the moment. The act limited cash assistance to 36 months, down from 48 months, and required food stamp recipients to work at least 20 hours per week or participate in job training.

It also prohibited cash recipients from using their benefit cards at movie theaters, swimming pools, jewelry stores and tattoo parlors, among other places.

Republican lawmakers pointed to the HOPE Act as a success, saying the number of non-disabled adults receiving some form of assistance had fallen by 70 percent, and that adults receiving food stamps who didn’t have a disability were three times more likely to be working than before. As of October, 459 Kansans receiving cash assistance had reported they were newly employed, with average wages of $9.67 per hour and an average of 30.5 hours of work per week.

If a person worked 52 weeks per year at those averages, it would mean an annual income of $15,336, which would be above the federal poverty line for a single person but below the line for a family of two.

Rep. Willie Dove, a Republican from Bonner Springs, said he had used welfare while living in New Jersey. Helping people to develop work skills would be the “most compassionate” way to assist them, he said.

“The future is dark when you’re given everything on a platter with no responsibility,” Dove said.

Megan Hart is a reporter for KHI News Service in Topeka, a partner in the Heartland Health Monitor team. You can reach her on Twitter @meganhartMC

FHSU has highest student numbers who don’t meet minimum rules

photo FHSU
photo FHSU

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A report for the Kansas Board of Regents says a total of 815 students who don’t meet minimum admission requirements are enrolled in the state’s universities.

Fort Hays State University had the highest rate, with 6.9 percent of in-state freshmen and 9.7 percent of out-of-state freshmen.

Wichita State had the lowest percentage of exceptions, with two-tenths of a percent of in-state freshmen and 1 percent of out-of-state freshman.

The report says the exceptions to the standards made up between a fraction of 1 percent up to 7 percent of each university’s 2014-2015 in-state freshman class. The exceptions comprised between 1 percent and 10 percent of universities’ out-of-state freshmen admissions.

The annual report on admissions is forwarded to the Kansas Legislature.

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