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Man accused in deadly Kansas crash ordered to prison

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Authorities say a man accused of driving drunk and killing two people when he crashed into a van that was transporting people with developmental disabilities has been ordered to serve 15 months in prison for a probation violation.

The Wichita Eagle reports that 56-year-old Bret Blevins was under probation after thefts last fall. The items stolen included a 6-foot-tall bronze eagle statue taken from in front of a Boy Scouts of America council building in Wichita.

Blevins admitted Wednesday in Sedgwick County District Court that prosecutors had enough evidence to prove he violated the probation terms because of the hit-and-run crash this spring that killed Dirk MacMillan and Leonard Atterbery and injured four others. He faces multiple charges, including two counts of involuntary manslaughter while driving under the influence.

Kimberly Ann Niernberger

Screen Shot 2016-09-15 at 8.08.26 AMKimberly Ann Niernberger, age 48, of Hays, passed away Wednesday, September 14, 2016 at the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City.

Funeral services will be 10 AM Saturday, September 17, 2016 at North Oak Community Church, 3000 Oak Street, Hays.

Visitation will be Friday 6 PM – 8 PM at Brock’s-Keithley Funeral Chapel and Crematory 2509 Vine Hays, KS 67601 and Saturday 9 AM until service time at the church.

A complete obituary is pending.

Matthew Myron Wellbrock

Screen Shot 2016-09-15 at 8.06.52 AMMatthew Myron Wellbrock, age 3, of Victoria, Kansas died Tuesday, September 13, 2016, at Wesley Children’s Hospital Wichita, Kansas. He was born on February 8, 2013, at Plainville, Kansas to Curtis Wayne and Jeanna Renee’ (Wolken) Wellbrock. He was a member of St. Boniface Catholic Church Vincent, Kansas.

Survivors include his parents, Curtis and Jeanna Wellbrock; his brothers and sisters, Christian, Levi, Lucas, Ann and Elizabeth, all of the home; grandparents, Wayne and Diane (Leiker) Wellbrock, Vincent, KS; Myron and Becky (Hanson) Wolken, Beloit, KS; great grandparent, Anna Marie Wolken, Garnett, KS.

Services are at 10:00 A.M. Saturday, September 17, 2016, at The Basilica of St. Fidelis Victoria, Kansas. Burial in St. Boniface Cemetery Vincent, Kansas.

A vigil service followed by a rosary will be at 7:00 P.M. Friday, at The Basilica of St. Fidelis Victoria, Kansas.

Visitation will be from 4:00 to 9:00 P.M. Friday and from 9:00 to 10:00 A.M. Saturday all at The Basilica of St. Fidelis Victoria, Kansas.

Memorial to the Wellbrock Family in care of Cline’s-Keithley Mortuary, 412 Main Street, Victoria, Kansas 67671.

Condolences can be left by guestbook at www.keithleyfuneralchapels.com or via e-mail at [email protected].

Elaine A. Bittel

Elaine A. Bittel, Ellis, passed away Thursday, September 15, 2016 at Hays Medical Center.

Arrangements are pending with Keithley Funeral Chapel of Ellis.

MADORIN: See You at Oktoberfest

Karen Madorin
Karen Madorin

This fall’s HPPR’s Radio Readers has a Kansas-pertinent theme focusing on borders and migration. Recent ads posted in papers as well as on the internet and bulletin boards reveal that local communities joyously celebrate immigrant legacies. If you adopted our region, join the fun and learn our stories. Our area is home to many cultures, and folks rooted here reap the benefit of tradition.

Summer is over so if you missed Nicodemus’s annual gathering of descendants and guests, you’ll have to wait til next July to enjoy their remembrance of Juneteenth and what that meant to their ancestors. Consider attending the upcoming celebration where you can sit on a curb to enjoy a small town parade or treat your taste buds to amazing southern barbecue or fried catfish. If you hang around long enough, you’ll meet local legends and listen to Blues with riffs that make you ache to your toenails.

Add to your dose of local culture and head to Wilson the last weekend in July. The signature, gigantic Czech-inspired decorated egg will dazzle you. Downtown, you’ll find lovely lasses and handsome lads festooned in bright Bohemian clothing and discover fresh-baked kolaches to tempt your taste buds. Those who love stone buildings will enjoy roaming the streets to find one of the most interesting old jails in the region and the renovated Midland Hotel. Sit a spell in its lobby and listen to old-country tunes playing down the street while you pay homage to ancestors who sailed to America and worked hard to realize their dreams.

If you missed these earlier opportunities to celebrate western Kansas diversity, mark your calendar to attend upcoming Oktoberfests. You don’t have to love beer to have a great time. These festivities remind us of old European revels where neighbors gathered to rejoice in the harvest and to have one last hurrah before winter drove them inside their homes. While modern life may require less hard labor for most of us, our busy schedules often prevent us from connecting to our communities. Thank goodness, these local commemorations help us foster neighborly relationships.

Besides meeting, greeting, and sipping a brew, you’ll sample the best food in the new world. Local cooks have perfected bierocks, galuskies, spitzbuben, hertzen, noodles, and other delicacies to a degree that would make Guy Fieri of Diners, Drive-Ins, and Dives high-five the chefs constant knuckle bumps. If he spent October in Kansas savoring traditional foods, he’d need a bigger wardrobe before he could go home in November.

Did I mention local music? If you have toes, they’ll tap out polka tunes long after the last accordion squeezes out its final bit of air. Even folks who prefer rock and roll can’t resist jiggling a knee or bouncing a toddler to these vibrant melodies. Watching multiple generations enjoy the performers and the dancing is one of the best parts of the day.

These annual fests remind us that we descend from stout souls brave enough to begin life in a new land. They brought favorite foods and recipes, fashion, and music and passed them to their descendants. Joining these celebrations encourages us to maintain and share family customs. They link our past, present, and future.

Native Kansan Karen Madorin is a local writer and retired teacher who loves sharing stories about places, people, critters, plants, food, and history of the High Plains.

NUSS: Kansas Supreme Court proud to show support for military families

Kansas Supreme Court Chief Justice Lawton Nuss
Kansas Supreme Court Chief Justice Lawton Nuss
By Chief Justice Lawton Nuss
Kansas Supreme Court

Ask most Kansans what they know about our state Supreme Court, and you likely will hear something about the cases we decide. After all, making those decisions is one of our most important duties. But we have many other responsibilities that few Kansans outside of the legal community know about. The people’s Constitution grants us “general administrative authority over all courts in this state,” a responsibility that includes the entire judicial branch of government and its nearly 1,900 judges and court employees.

One of our other responsibilities is to establish rules for admitting persons to practice law as attorneys in Kansas courts, to supervise their conduct, and to discipline them. This week we announced a significant new rule about attorneys.

The new rule allows attorneys living in Kansas who are spouses of military service members stationed here to temporarily practice law without taking the state-administered uniform bar exam. Those attorneys must first be admitted to practice in other states. Before the court adopted this rule, attorneys who came to our state with their military spouses had to pass our bar exam in order to join the more than 11,000 attorneys licensed to practice law here, even though their stay was not permanent.

My fellow justices and I believe that a person married to a member of the military should not have to sacrifice a legal career to be with a spouse. Similarly, a member of the military should not have to leave such a spouse behind to continue his or her legal career. As a former Marine Corps combat engineer, I am especially proud of this show of support of the men and women — and their families — who pledge their lives in service to our country.

And as for deciding cases? More than 3,000 of them have been decided by the Supreme Court since I became a justice in 2002. Many Kansans know of only a few. But more Kansans are learning about these other cases by attending court sessions we have conducted in 12 Kansas communities since early 2011.
Our next session to familiarize Kansans with our work will be at Hutchinson Community College the evening of October 4. And someday, perhaps a lawyer spouse of a military member stationed in Kansas will be arguing one of those cases in front of us – and you.

Ellis Co. restaurant and lodging inspections, 9/05 – 9/11

agriculture kansas
Last week’s inspection results from the Kansas Department of Agriculture:


Larue Distributing 2816 Augusta, Hays – Sept. 9

A licensing inspection found no violations.


Casey’s General Store 1600 E. 27th, Hays – Sept. 8

An inspection following a complaint found three violations.

  • A spray bottle that was being stored in the chemical storage area in the kitchen had a light blue liquid present was not labeled.
  • Two of eight rubber scrappers had imperfections and deep cuts present
  • One container of Nexium Medication had a date of 12/15. Two containers of Tylenol Cold and Flu had a date of 12/15 Three containers of Bayer had a date of 5/16.

Western Beverage 2100 Old Hwy. 40 Bypass, Hays – Sept. 8

A routine inspection found no violations.


Chartwells – Memorial Union 600 Park, Hays – Sept. 6

A routine inspection found 11 violations.

  • “Outtakes” Snack mix had limited labeling. “Outtakes” Cookie had limited labeling. (Created four code violations).
  • A spray bottle that was holding a clear liquid was not labeled.
  • In the chemical storage area, there was a hand soap and rinse aid that was being stored directly next to single use towels.
  • “Outtakes” Snack mix had limited labeling. There were nuts present in the snack mix with no Allergy Warning. “Outtakes” Cookie had limited labeling. Peanut Butter was in the cookie and no Allergy Warning was present.
  • The walk in cooler two, in the main kitchen, had cut bib lettuce that had the date of 8/19/16.
  • Two rubber scrapers stored in a food table drawer had frayed and loose edges.  Two Food grade plastic containers had cracks on the bottom of the container.
  • Mixer in the bake shop prep area had dried food particles present on the guard.
  • The McCall four-door cooler in the main kitchen had sliced ham that had no date of when it was prepared.

 

1 dead, 1 critically injured in Kansas house fire

Fire crews on the scene of Wednesday's fatal fire -photo courtesy KWCH
Fire crews on the scene of Wednesday’s fatal fire -photo courtesy KWCH

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Authorities say a Wichita house fire has left one person dead and another critically injured.

The fire was reported Wednesday night in the brick, two-bedroom 1946 home. Wichita Fire Chief Ron Blackwell says a woman who lived in the home met firefighters as they arrived and told them a man was in the basement. Blackwell says a search-and-rescue team found the man quickly, but he died.

The person critically injured in the fire is being treated in the burn unit of a Wichita hospital. Two firefighters also required medical treatment — one for an injured ankle and the other for heat and physical stress.

The cause of the fire wasn’t immediately known.

This weekend’s Hays-area garage sales

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Hays-area garage sales

Scroll to the bottom for a map of garage sale locations. Hays Post offers FREE garage sale listings weekly. Having a sale next weekend? Click HERE for details.

Address: 1901 A, East 24th, Hays
Saturday September 17. 8am-12pm

Items for sale: Baby and Kid items Garage Sale
Girls clothes newborn to 9 months
Boys clothes some newborn all the way to some boys larges
Kids shoes
Baby gear: car seat and bases, activity centers, bouncer seats, tummy time toy, crib bumper pad , crib mobile
Antique wooden high chair and retro square play pen.

——————

Address: 2510 Pine Street, Hays
Saturday 8:00 am to 2:00 pm

MULTI FAMILY
Items for sale: Elliptical – Like New
Furniture
Microwave
Women’s Clothes – ALL Sizes Including Plus Sizes
Small Appliances
Pots and Pans
Dishes
Many Items Too Numerous To Mention

——————

Address: 3112 and 3114 Eldorado Lane, Hays
Friday 8:00 AM to 7:00 PM Saturday 8:00 AM to ??

Items for sale: Christmas galore and other seasonal decorations. Jewelry, chair, children’s and adult clothing. Toys, bike with training wheels, and lots of miscellaneous items.

——————

Address: 2918 Vine Street, Hays
Friday, September 16 – 9:00 – 7:00 and Saturday, September 17 – 9;00 – 5:00

Items for sale: HUGE 7 family sale in the old Fashion Bug at the Hays Mall! Friday 9/16/16 9am – 7:00 pm, Saturday 9/17/16 9:00 am – 5:00 pm. You don’t want to miss it! Tools, lots of brand new items, mattress set, S&P shaker sets, oak desk, tv entertainment center, Christmas trees & holiday decor, bedding, toy organizer, toys, kids clothes, roaster, recumbent exercise bike, horse tack, fish tank & accessories, bikes, breast pump, rugs, books, antiques, power lift chair, recliner, tons of household items, home decor, Premier jewelry, clothes for almost everyone! Way to much to list! More being added daily!
THIS IS A CASH ONLY SALE!

Last minute deal averts vote on impeaching head of IRS

John Koskinen, IRS Commissioner
John Koskinen, IRS Commissioner

WASHINGTON (AP) — A last-minute deal between conservatives and GOP leaders in the House has averted votes expected Thursday on a measure to impeach the commissioner of the IRS.

Instead, IRS Commissioner John Koskinen will testify before Congress next week.

The conservative House Freedom Caucus celebrated the development as a win late Wednesday, as conservatives had unsuccessfully pushed for hearings.

But the development came only after conservatives predicted that their impeachment resolution was going to get sidelined by Democratic and Republican opposition Thursday.

Conservatives say Koskinen obstructed the House GOP’s investigation of the treatment of tea party groups seeking tax exemptions.

But House Republican leadership balked on moving forward on election-year impeachment proceedings, so the Freedom Caucus had used a procedural maneuver that would have forced a floor vote.

Kansas man arraigned on stolen vehicle, weapons charges

Ford
Ford

HUTCHINSON— A Kansas man facing charges associated with a high speed chase in August was bound over for trial in another case on Wednesday.

Christopher Ford, 30, Hutchinson, was bound over for trial for being in possession of stolen property and criminal possession of a firearm.

The arrest came in Haven after a police officer discovered the tag on the vehicle the suspect was driving did not match the vehicle.

Police also discovered that the vehicle had been reported stolen in Wichita and may have been involved with an aggravated burglary in Sedgwick County.

Police also found a 9mm handgun on the driver’s side floor board of the vehicle.

Ford claimed he had the gun legally, but it was later learning he had prior felony conviction for being in possession of methamphetamine in 2010.

Magistrate Judge Cheryl Allen found there was enough evidence to send the case to arraignment and possible trial on Oct. 3.

Ford was arrested in August month for felony flee and elude after a Reno County Sheriff Deputy tried to initiate a traffic stop in the 3100 block of East Blanchard.

As the deputy attempted to stop the vehicle, Ford allegedly drove down into the ditch, accelerated out, continued traveling east on Blanchard and ran a stop sign at Yoder Road.

During the pursuit, he ran an additional seven stop signs and was speeding during that time.

The vehicle was eventually abandoned near the intersection of Acres Street and South Elm in Hutchinson.

After a search, police found and arrested Ford.

The case is pending a preliminary hearing.

Alonso, Semien hit 2-run doubles; A’s top Royals

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Yonder Alonso and Marcus Semien hit two-run doubles as the Oakland Athletics beat Kansas City 8-0 for the third straight game on Wednesday night to further ruin the Royals’ postseason chances.

The 2015 World Series champion Royals are five games out in the American League wild card with 17 games left and would have to climb over five teams.

A’s rookie left-hander Sean Manaea (5-9) picked up his first career road victory, retiring 13 of the final 14 batters he faced in five scoreless innings, striking out five and walking one. Manaea, who had not pitched since Aug. 29 when he left in the fourth inning with a strained left rhomboid, was removed after 67 pitches. The A’s acquired Manaea from the Royals in July 2015 as part of the Ben Zobrist trade.

Alonso’s broken-bat double in the first scored Danny Valencia and Stephen Vogt.

Attorney: Kansas man to use mental defect as defense in murder trial

Edwards-photo Geary Co.
Edwards-photo Geary Co.

By Dewy Terrill

GEARY COUNTY – The trial of a Kansas man accused in the murder of a Junction City woman is far from beginning.

In December, Daniel E. Edwards, 34, Junction City, pleaded not guilty to the murder of Sharon Moody, 52, Junction City.
She was found dead at her 1015 West Ninth Street residence on March 15, 2015.

In addition to 1st Degree Premeditated Murder, Edwards is faces an alternative count of Felony 1st Degree Murder, plus Aggravated Robbery and Theft by Deception.

The defendant has filed a notice of intent to rely upon mental disease or defect as a defense, according to Geary County Attorney Steve Opat.

“They presented an expert report. We’re going to have to hire, I think, our own expert to review their report and probably examine the defendant before trial. That will delay the start of the trial until next year,” said Opat.

The murder trial is now scheduled for January 30, February 3, of 2017.

Edwards remains in the Geary County Detention center on a $1 million bond.

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