We have a brand new updated website! Click here to check it out!

Biologists busy investigating mountain lion reports across Kansas

2016-mountain-lion-reports_-kdwpt
(Photo from KDWPT)

KDWPT

PRATT – Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism biologists have been busy investigating a flurry of mountain lion reports lately. Three more mountain lion reports were confirmed in Kansas recently, bringing the total number of confirmed sightings for the year to four.

A hunter recently checked his trail camera on Fort Riley to find a photo of a mountain lion taken on Nov. 9. On Nov. 20, about 55 miles away, another hunter’s trail camera in Shawnee County snapped several photos of a mountain lion passing by at around 1 a.m.

Four days later and about 20 miles away, a couple of young raccoon hunters in Wabaunsee County were hunting with a single hound when it bayed “treed.” They were quite surprised when they shined their lights into the tree and found a mountain lion staring back at them. They had the presence of mind to take some video and snap a few photos for evidence, and even called a few friends and family out to see the lion for themselves. Biologists later visited the site and were able to recover a few hairs from the tree limbs. It is uncertain at this time whether sufficient material was present for DNA extraction, but if so, it can help biologists determine the animal’s sex, where it came from, where it has been, and where it may end up.

It is uncertain whether these recent confirmations are the result of a single or multiple cats. Young male mountain lions can wander great distances in search of a home range, and the proximity and timing of these latest sightings indicate a single lion is a possibility, but this is not a certainty. An additional sighting is still being investigated, and if confirmed, Kansas may have a record year for mountain lion sightings.

Since 2007, when the first mountain lion was confirmed in Kansas, 18 more have been added to the total. Most are presumed to be transient young male lions displaced from states north or west of Kansas. Consistent with this theory, the presence of arm barring on several of these recent confirmations is an indicator of a young (less than 3 year old) lion. A resident population, as indicated by the presence of kittens, adult females, or repeated documentations in the same vicinity, has not been observed nor confirmed.

Visit KSOutdoors.com > Wildlife & Nature > Wildlife Sightings for more information.

High school basketball scoreboard Dec. 9

High School Scoreboard WhitmoreBOYS’ BASKETBALL
Abilene 50, Augusta 49
Beloit 63, Republic County 36
Bishop Miege 87, McPherson 54
Buhler 68, Salina South 51
BV North 40, BV West 39, OT
Centralia 83, Axtell 43
Doniphan West 57, Clifton-Clyde 53
Girard 65, Baxter Springs 53
Goddard-Eisenhower 74, Andover 41
Halstead 56, Minneapolis 34
Hill City 59, Hays-TMP-Marian 53
Holly, Colo. 70, Johnson-Stanton County 28
Holton 48, Nemaha Central 45
Immaculata 51, McLouth 35
Jefferson North 38, Horton 36
Junction City 67, Great Bend 54
Lawrence Free State 68, Mill Valley 60
Linn 60, Wetmore 39
Maize 52, Derby 37
Maize South 51, Arkansas City 43
Marysville 58, Clay Center 37
Rock Creek 63, Council Grove 52
Royal Valley 45, Perry-Lecompton 39
Salina Central 58, Hutchinson 44
Shawnee Heights 68, Topeka West 51
Silver Lake 60, Riley County 39
Smoky Valley 48, Concordia 40
South Baca, Colo. 71, Rolla 53
Spring Hill 60, Labette County 24
Topeka Hayden 54, Basehor-Linwood 52
Topeka Seaman 68, Lansing 41
Troy 74, Hanover 63
Valley Falls 45, Oskaloosa 44
Valley Heights 58, Frankfort 39
Veritas Christian 63, Cornerstone Family 60
Walsh, Colo. 61, Greeley County 47
Wamego 72, Jefferson West 50
Washburn Rural 55, SM Northwest 50
Wichita Bishop Carroll 58, Wichita Northwest 47
Wichita Campus 57, Newton 56
Wichita Heights 49, Wichita West 15
Wichita South 69, Wichita North 38
Winfield 34, Clearwater 31
Bennington Tournament
Halstead 56, Minneapolis 34
Brewster (SageBrush)Tournament
Consolation Semifinal
Golden Plains 39, Heartland Christian 34
Wichita County 55, Weskan 43
Semifinal
Logan 52, Triplains-Brewster 46
St. Francis 63, Cheylin 30
Burlington Tournament
Burlington 71, Baldwin 61
Louisburg 75, Anderson County 49
Caldwell Tournament
Argonia 47, Norwich 37
Caldwell 62, Central Burden 57
Castle Rock Tournament
Dighton 56, Wheatland-Grinnell 40
First Round
Pool B
Hoxie 64, Ellis 43
Cattle Trail Tournament
Consolation Semifinal
Hitchcock County, Neb. 40, Oberlin-Decatur 39
Central Heights Tournament
Seventh Place
West Franklin 52, Central Heights 40
Championship Showdown
Consolation Semifinal
Olathe East 65, Southeast 61
Semifinal
Barstow, Mo. 59, SM East 41
St. James Academy 85, Bishop Seabury Academy 63
Chapman Tournament
El Dorado 56, Rossville 44
Salina Sacred Heart 70, Chapman 58
Cimarron Tournament
Semi-Finals
Cimarron 65, Satanta 42
South Gray 66, Minneola 30
Circle Tournament
Circle 70, Mulvane 61
DeSoto Tournament
Seventh Place
KC Turner 54, KC Bishop Ward 37
Emporia Tournament
Parsons 49, Coffeyville 46
Fairfield Tournament
Fairfield 44, South Haven 40
Otis-Bison 60, Flinthills 31
Goodland Tournament
Consolation Semifinal
Burlington 58, Wray, Colo. 50
Wallace County 44, Yuma, Colo. 33
Semifinal
McCook, Neb. 56, Goodland 47
Norton 57, Colby 29
Herington Tournament
Centre 51, Wichita Classical 46
Rural Vista 57, Herington 26
Humboldt Tournament
Erie 50, Humboldt 45, OT
Uniontown 43, Crest 33
Larned Tournament
Semifinal
Spearville 50, Hoisington 23
Spearville 50, Hoisington 23
St. John 65, Macksville 49
Liberal Tournament
Hereford, Texas 36, Dodge City 31
Linn County Tournament
Prairie View 54, Drexel, Mo. 29
Marion Tournament
Berean Academy 42, Wichita Home School 31
Remington 62, Peabody-Burns 35
Marmaton Valley Tournament
Olpe 50, Northeast-Arma 22
West Elk 52, Marmaton Valley 28
Moundridge Tournament
Hillsboro 47, Moundridge 44
Inman 59, Lyons 25
Natoma Tournament
Natoma 36, Palco 23
Osborne Tournament
Osborne 55, Lakeside 43
St. John’s Beloit-Tipton 48, Thunder Ridge 45
Paola Tournament
Seventh Place
Wellsville 78, KC East Christian 57
Third Place
Eudora 59, Paola 51
Roundball Classic Tournament
Holcomb 68, Purcell, Okla. 61
Palmer Ridge, Colo. 50, Garden City 42
Wichita Trinity 48, Scott City 41
Russell Tournament
Consolation Semifinal
Phillipsburg 56, Lincoln 16
Plainville 57, Russell 29
Semifinal
Central Plains 64, Ellsworth 47
Nickerson 65, Ell-Saline 36
St. Mary’s Tournament
Mission Valley 62, Onaga 58
St. Paul Tournament
Southeast 76, Chetopa 57
St. Paul 64, Columbus 49
Syracuse/Stanton County Tournament
Holly, Colo. 70, Elkhart 28
Syracuse 43, McClave, Colo. 29
Walsh, Colo. 61, Greeley County 47
Tescott Tournament
Sylvan-Lucas 56, Glasco/Miltonvale-Southern Cloud 19
Wilson 59, Tescott 42
Thunderbird Invitational
Smith Center 57, Pike Valley 55
Washington County 32, Wakefield 23
Trego Tournament
Consolation Semifinal
Northern Valley 52, Trego 48
Semifinal
Ness City 82, LaCrosse 41
Udall Tournament
Cedar Vale/Dexter 55, Oxford 48
Yates Center Tournament
Seventh Place
Marais des Cygnes Valley 65, Altoona-Midway 22
Fifth Place
Southern Coffey 57, Bluestem 56
Third Place
Hartford 56, Cherryvale 41

GIRLS’ BASKETBALL
Abilene 55, Augusta 42
Barstow, Mo. 42, KC Turner 24
Beloit 49, Republic County 44, OT
Bishop Miege 62, McPherson 45
Blue Valley 67, SM North 42
Caldwell 76, Central Burden 25
Carl Junction, Mo. 60, Pittsburg 30
Chase County 58, Lyndon 25
Circle 60, Mulvane 18
Clay Center 61, Marysville 46
Clifton-Clyde 45, Doniphan West 37
Concordia 47, Smoky Valley 41
Council Grove 62, Rock Creek 27
Frankfort 57, Valley Heights 41
Galena 56, Commerce, Okla. 29
Gardner-Edgerton 67, Excelsior Springs, Mo. 18
Girard 42, Baxter Springs 31
Goddard 38, Andover Central 34
Goddard-Eisenhower 38, Andover 34
Great Bend 57, Junction City 42
Hanover 64, Troy 20
Hays-TMP-Marian 47, Hill City 36
Hesston 58, Chanute 20
Hiawatha 58, Riverside 25
Jefferson North 55, Horton 24
Jefferson West 49, Wamego 33
Labette County 76, Spring Hill 72, OT
Lansing 61, Topeka Seaman 59
Lawrence 51, Notre Dame de Sion 39
Linn 51, Wetmore 50
Maize 52, Derby 37
Maize South 42, Arkansas City 41
Maur Hill – Mount Academy 49, Jackson Heights 32
Mill Valley 54, Lawrence Free State 42
Newton 56, Wichita Campus 24
Norwich 44, Argonia 21
Perry-Lecompton 50, Royal Valley 41
Pleasant Ridge 51, Heritage Christian 33
Riley County 56, Silver Lake 54
Rose Hill 47, Garden Plain 38
Sabetha 32, Atchison County 18
Salina Central 43, Hutchinson 33
Salina South 45, Buhler 42, 2OT
Savannah, Mo. 62, Atchison 54
SM Northwest 54, Washburn Rural 42
SM West 52, SM South 42
Tonganoxie 62, Ottawa 38
Topeka Hayden 48, Basehor-Linwood 42
Topeka West 55, Shawnee Heights 53
Valley Falls 47, Oskaloosa 24
Veritas Christian 52, Cornerstone Family 41
Wichita Bishop Carroll 62, Wichita Northwest 45
Wichita East 55, Wichita Southeast 40
Wichita Heights 54, Wichita West 40
Wichita South 65, Wichita North 6
Winfield 46, Clearwater 37
Bennington Tournament
Halstead 48, Minneapolis 41
Solomon 42, Bennington 34
Brewster (Sagebrush) Tournament
Consolation Semifinal
Cheylin 71, Heartland Christian 39
Weskan 44, Wichita County 27
Semifinal
Golden Plains 53, St. Francis 44
Triplains-Brewster 31, Logan 21
Burlington Tournament
Baldwin 71, Burlington 46
Louisburg 46, Anderson County 34
Castle Rock Tournament
Dighton 59, Quinter 26
Hoxie 49, Wheatland-Grinnell 43
Cattle Trail Tournament
Semifinal
Dundy County-Stratton, Neb. 63, Oberlin-Decatur 20
Central Heights Tournament
Semifinal
Cimarron 51, Sublette 33
Meade 54, South Gray 38
Seventh Place
KC Christian 47, Osawatomie 18
Fifth Place
Iola 44, West Franklin 29
Chapman Tournament
Chapman 47, Salina Sacred Heart 35
Rossville 47, El Dorado 17
Emporia Tournament
Emporia 33, Independence 30
Parsons 43, Coffeyville 11
Fairfield Tournament
Otis-Bison 51, Flinthills 47
Goessel Tournament
Goessel 55, Canton-Galva 34
Little River 39, Elyria Christian 36
Goodland Tournament
Consolation Semifinal
Colby 50, Burlington, Colo. 47
Wallace County 52, McCook, Neb. 44
Semifinal
Wray, Colo. 60, Norton 51
Yuma, Colo. 47, Goodland 42
Herington Tournament
Centre 34, Wichita Classical 31
Herington 45, Rural Vista 39
Hugoton Tournament
Hooker, Okla. 45, Ulysses 38
Hugoton 80, Southwestern Hts. 19
Humboldt Tournament
Uniontown 33, Crest 17
Kingman Tournament
Haven 52, Wellington 44
Kingman 57, Sterling 42
Larned Tournament
Semifinal
Kiowa County 33, St. John 32
Spearville 54, Larned 40
Liberal Tournament
Hereford, Texas 36, Dodge City 31
Linn County Tournament
Drexel, Mo. 45, Prairie View 29
Marion Tournament
Berean Academy 54, Wichita Home School 43
Remington 57, Peabody-Burns 8
Marmaton Valley Tournament
West Elk 37, Marmaton Valley 28
Moundridge Tournament
Inman 59, Lyons 25
Moundridge 42, Hillsboro 24
Natoma tournament
Palco 38, Natoma 34
Western Plains-Healy 37, Pawnee Heights 32
Osborne Tournament
Lakeside 42, Osborne 36
St. John’s Beloit-Tipton 46, Thunder Ridge 39
Roundball Classic Tournament
Garden City 42, Palmer Ridge, Colo. 34
Purcell, Okla. 50, Holcomb 37
Wichita Trinity 38, Scott City 36
Russell Tournament
Consolation Semifinal
Phillipsburg 53, Lincoln 43
Plainville 56, Ell-Saline 49
Semifinal
Central Plains 76, Ellsworth 30
Russell 40, Nickerson 27
Skyline Tournament
Cunningham 41, Medicine Lodge 33
Pratt Skyline 39, Pretty Prairie 38
St Paul Tournament
Columbus 42, St. Paul 26
Southeast 51, Chetopa 38
St. Mary’s Tournament
Mission Valley 47, Onaga 31
St. Mary’s 46, Northern Heights 39
Syracuse/Stanton County Tournament
Greeley County 56, Walsh, Colo. 25
Holly, Colo. 54, Elkhart 38
Syracuse 49, McClave, Colo. 37
Tescott Tournament
Glasco/Miltonvale-Southern Cloud 45, Sylvan-Lucas 32
Wilson 54, Tescott 41
Thunderbird Invitational
Pike Valley 32, Smith Center 31
Washington County 65, Wakefield 20
Trego Tournament
Consolation Semifinal
Ness City 60, Trego 54
Semifinal
LaCrosse 48, Northern Valley 41
Yates Center Tournament
Seventh Place
Marais des Cygnes Valley 37, Altoona-Midway 17
Third Place
Cherryvale 57, Yates Center 38
Championship
Hartford 40, Sedan 35

TMP girls win, boys lose in Hill City

By JEREMY McGUIRE
Hays Post

Girls: TMP 47, Hill City 36
Boys: Hill City 59, TMP 53

HILL CITY, Kan.-The TMP Lady Monarchs trailed only once at 2-0 early against Hill City in a battle between state ranked teams on Friday.  TMP scored the next eight points and never trailed again.  The Lady Monarch defense was outstanding all night long making it difficult for the dangerous Hill City shooters to get an open look.

TMP took a 26-15 lead into the locker room.  Hill City started the second half on a quick 4-0 run but TMP answered with a 6-0 run to push the lead back to double figures.  The Lady Monarchs turned the ball over five times in the third quarter but continued to hassle Hill City on the defensive end and led 36-26 after three quarters.

Hill City didn’t pose much of a problem in the fourth quarter and TMP picked up the 47-36 win.  Ellie Keener and Shaylin Russell led Hill City with 9 points as the Lady Ringnecks dropped to 1-1 on the season.  Kayla Vitztum led TMP with 19 points and Katelyn Zimmeran had 10 for the 3-1 Lady Monarchs who will play in Victoria on Tuesday.

ROSE MCFARLAND INTERVIEW

GAME HIGHLIGHTS

 

In the boys game TMP struggled to get anything going offensively in the first half against Hill City.  The Monarchs trailed 31-18 at the half thanks in part to 15 first half points from Zech Wilson.  Michael Lager led TMP at the break with 5.

Hill City kept TMP at arms length through the third quarter and took a 38-30 lead to the fourth quarter and that’s when things got interesting.  The Monarchs scored the first four points of the fourth quarter to close the Hill City lead to four.  The Ringnecks would answer with a 10-0 run to regain control and were never really challenged the rest of the way, winning 59-53.

Zech Wilson dazzled for Hill City scoring 32 points.  Everett Brandyberry added 15 for the Ringnecks.  Junior Creighton Renz was the only Monarch in double figures.  He scored 11.  Hill now improves to 2-0 on the season and will travel to Oberlin-Decatur Community.   TMP drops to 1-3 and will be in Victoria on Tuesday.

JOE HERTEL INTERVIEW

GAME HIGHLIGHTS

 

Kan. man faces charges after stopped with kids, drugs in car

Grissom-photo Reno Co.
Grissom-photo Reno Co.

RENO COUNTY– A Kansas man was denied a bond reduction when he appeared for the formal reading of charges Friday in Reno County District Court.

Jeremy Grissom, 33, is charged with felony flee and elude, two counts of endangering a child, possession of marijuana and driving while suspended.

On December 1, A Hutchinson Police officer spotted a car in the 100 block of East 4th with passengers not wearing seatbelts.

The officer attempted to stop the vehicle driven by Grissom and the car failed to stop.

The officer chased the vehicle into the 200 block of East 10th, where Grissom allegedly ran from the officers.

He was eventually captured. Inside the vehicle police say they found a marijuana pipe and a lock box with around six grams of marijuana. There were also two children in the vehicle at the time, according to police.

Grissom is no stranger to law enforcement with past convictions for aggravated assault, robbery, indecent solicitation with a child, flee and elude and operation of vehicle that was not registered.

The case now moves to a waiver-status docket.

Kan. boy shot by supremacist to be honored at Rose Bowl Parade

photo courtesy -Josh Collins/KCTV5
photo courtesy -Josh Collins/KCTV5

OVERLAND PARK, Kan. (AP) — A 14-year-old boy who was killed by a white supremacist at a Jewish site in suburban Kansas City will be honored in this year’s Tournament of Roses Parade.

Reat Underwood was shot to death along with his grandfather, William Lewis Corporan, in April 2014 outside the Jewish Community Center in Overland Park by a man who wanted to kill Jews. Another woman was killed at nearby retirement home.

The Kansas City Star reports that Reat’s family unveiled a floragraph of the teen Thursday that will be on the parade’s Donate Life float Jan. 2 in Pasadena, California.

The portrait, made of organic materials, will be one of 60 portraits of organ donors on the float.

Heather Denise Reed-Flynn of Kansas City also also will be honored on the float.

Report: Some of the nation’s worst drivers live in Kansas

Image QuoteWizard-click to enlarge
Image QuoteWizard-click to enlarge

You will find bad drivers are everywhere.

Kansas has some of the worst, according to a new report from QuoteWizard.

They paired two million data points with state fatality info to determine the best and worst driving states in the nation, according to their web site.

They also ranked all 50 states based on these findings.  See their report here

Ellis Co. drug distribution conviction among cases on Kan. Supreme Court docket

TOPEKA — The Kansas Supreme Court will hear arguments in a case originating in Ellis County this month in Topeka.

According to the Office of Judicial Administration, the case of the State of Kansas v. David Darrel Williams will be heard by the Supreme Court on Dec. 13.

Williams was arrested in September 2012 on suspicion of distribution of methamphetamine.

According to the Office of Judicial Administration, Williams was involved in a controlled buy with an undercover agent, who was wearing a recording device. Over Williams’ objection, the Ellis County District Court admitted the audio recording into evidence at the trial. Williams was convicted of distributing meth.

“Issues on review are whether the district court properly admitted the audio recording of the drug transaction and whether Williams’ criminal history was proved to the jury beyond a reasonable doubt,” the OJA said.

Below is the entire amended docket for the Kansas Supreme Court.

———-

AMENDED
9 a.m. Monday, December 12, 2016

Appeal No. 114,850: Adam Pener, et al. v. Michael S. King, Secretary of Transportation

Wyandotte County: (Civil Appeal) The Kansas Department of Transportation acquired, through eminent domain proceedings, real property owned by Pener and the Alexander Gold Revocable Trust. The property was used in a highway improvement project. The landowners challenge the district court’s rulings regarding compensation and reimbursement of costs and expenses. Issues on appeal are whether: 1) landowners are entitled to recover their attorney’s fees and expenses as part of their litigation expense reimbursement; 2) landowners are entitled to recover the cost to replace a security fence that KDOT removed; and 3) landowners were awarded just compensation for their property.

9 a.m. Tuesday, December 13, 2016

Appeal No. 113,409: State of Kansas v. Jason A. Jones

Sedgwick County: (Criminal Appeal) A jury convicted Jones of aggravated kidnapping and first-degree premeditated murder or alternatively felony murder. Jones received a hard-25 life sentence for murder and 165 months for aggravated kidnapping. Issues on appeal are whether the trial court: 1) violated Jones’ rights under the Confrontation Clause when it admitted the results of the blood tests without requiring the testimony of the chemist who conducted the tests; and 2) erred by admitting hearsay statements under the co-conspirator’s statement exception. The court will also consider whether cumulative err denied Jones a fair trial.

Appeal No. 114,417: State of Kansas v. Dang Sean

Sedgwick County: (Criminal Appeal) A jury convicted Sean of first-degree premeditated murder and kidnapping. Sean received a hard-25 life sentence for murder and 77 months for kidnapping. Issues on appeal are whether the district court erred in: 1) failing to grant Sean’s motion to suppress; 2) admitting hearsay evidence and in denying a mistrial; 3) admitting irrelevant and highly inflammatory sympathy evidence; and 4) denying Sean the ability to confront a witness for the state. Also, whether it was prosecutorial misconduct for the prosecutor to introduce bad act evidence and whether the breadth of prosecutorial misconduct denied Sean a fair trial, and whether cumulative err denied Sean a fair trial.

Appeal No. 111,046: State of Kansas v. David Darrel Williams

Ellis County: (Petition for Review) Williams was involved in a controlled buy of methamphetamine. The undercover agent was wearing a recording device and recorded the entire interaction. Williams was convicted of distributing methamphetamine. The district court admitted the audio recording into evidence at trial. Issues on review are whether the district court properly admitted the audio recording of the drug transaction and whether Williams’ criminal history was proved to the jury beyond a reasonable doubt.

Appeal No. 110,982: State of Kansas v. Marlon T. Hardy

Sedgwick County: (Petition for Review) Hardy was charged with aggravated battery after he shot a man that was part of a group that had surrounded Hardy’s car. Hardy filed a motion asserting self-defense immunity. The judge granted Hardy’s motion for immunity and dismissed the complaint. The Court of Appeals reversed because the district court did not hold an evidentiary hearing and Hardy had not resolved evidentiary conflicts that were in the state’s favor. Issue on review is whether the Court of Appeals applied the appropriate standard of review in conducting a hearing under the immunity from prosecution statute (K.S.A. 21-5231) by viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the state and resolving all conflicts against a finding of immunity.

9 a.m. Wednesday, December 14, 2016

Appeal No. 114,351: State of Kansas v. Louis Cotton

Wyandotte County: (Criminal Appeal) This case is an appeal from the district court’s denial of Cotton’s pro se motion to set aside a void judgment some 16 years after the convictions. The district court found Cotton’s motion was time-barred and was also past any deadline for post-conviction relief. Issue on appeal is whether the district court erred in denying Cotton’s motion to set aside a void judgment.

Appeal No. 112,513: State of Kansas v. Matthew R. McDaniel

Sedgwick County: (Criminal Appeal) McDaniel was convicted of felony murder and aggravated robbery. Issues on appeal are whether the district court violated McDaniel’s right to be present at a critical stage of the trial and whether the jury instructions were clearly erroneous.

Appeal No. 112,212: State of Kansas v. John W. Bannon

Sedgwick County: (Petition for Review) Bannon was convicted of criminal carry of a weapon after it was reported that Bannon would tell people he worked for homeland security, carried a gun, and interrogated people. Officers found Bannon and searched him. They found a handgun during that search. The district court denied Bannon’s motion to suppress finding the residence hall was a public area and the officers had reasonable suspicion of a firearms-related crime. The Court of Appeals reversed, holding officer safety was not at issue and the motion to suppress should have been granted. Issue on review is whether the Court of Appeals erred in requiring direct testimony from officers that they were concerned for their safety in order to conduct a Terry frisk.

Appeal No. 112,782: State of Kansas v. Shawn Malik Brown

Sedgwick County: (Criminal Appeal) Brown was convicted of two counts of felony murder. Issues on appeal are whether: 1) there is sufficient evidence to support Brown’s conviction for felony murder based on aggravated robbery of the first victim; 2) there is sufficient evidence to support Brown’s conviction for felony murder and aggravated robbery of the second victim; 3) the district court abused its discretion in admitting the evidence of Brown’s interview with police; and 4) the state presented evidence of intent to aid and abet aggravated robbery or criminal discharge of a firearm under the new definition of “intentional.”

9 a.m. Thursday, December 15, 2016

Appeal No. 112,509/112,510: State of Kansas v. Tracey Jerome Toliver

Riley County: (Petition for Review) Toliver spit several times on a police department detective. The issue is whether the detective can be categorized as a county correctional officer or employee to constitute felony battery. The district court found Toliver guilty. The Court of Appeals found the detective was neither a correctional officer nor correctional employee. Issues on review are whether a uniformed county law enforcement officer who is transporting a detained person into a correctional facility is a “county correctional officer or employee” and whether Toliver was a “confined person in a county jail facility.”

Appeal No. 111,590: Emma McElhaney v. Charles Thomas, et al.

Riley County: (Petition for Review) Thomas was driving his vehicle in the school parking lot when he ran over a fellow student’s foot. McElhaney filed a civil lawsuit against Charles alleging negligence and the intentional tort of battery. In addition, McElhaney sued Charles’ parents for negligent entrustment of a vehicle to Charles. The jury awarded McElhaney $42,333 on the negligence claim. She appeals. Issues on review are whether the district court: 1) erred in finding that McElhaney did not sufficiently plead the intentional tort of battery or produce evidence of an intentional tort to send the claims to the jury; 2) abused its discretion by denying McElhaney’s motion to amend her petition to add a claim of punitive damages; and 3) erred in dismissing State Farm because the allegations were unsupported and conclusory. Also, whether McElhaney is precluded by res judicata from relitigating the negligent entrustment claims against Thomas’ parents.

Appeal No. 113,962: State of Kansas v. Jeffrey Wade Chapman

Barton County: (Criminal Appeal) Galyardt accused Chapman of having an affair with Galyardt’s girlfriend and came at Chapman with a knife. Chapman shot Galyardt in the chest and then took the body to the country. Despite Chapman’s claim of self-defense, the jury convicted Chapman of first-degree murder. Issues on appeal are whether the district court erred in denying a change of venue, and abused its discretion in allowing the state to introduce evidence of a text message.

Appeal No. 113,537: State of Kansas v. Billy F. Davis Jr.

Shawnee County: (Criminal Appeal) Davis was convicted of taking an 8-year-old girl from her apartment, raping her and then putting her in a clothes dryer. The jury convicted Davis of capital murder, aggravated kidnapping, rape of a child, and other charges relating to the entry into the girl’s apartment and two other burglaries in the complex that night. Issues on appeal are whether: 1) there was sufficient evidence to support a conviction of premeditated intentional murder; 2) the state committed prosecutorial misconduct in closing argument by misstating the law and the evidence; 3) the district court erred in failing to grant Davis’ motion to suppress; 4) the district court erred by instructing the jury that it must be unanimous on every count; and 5) Davis’ conviction for rape is multiplicitous.

Appeal No. 106,981: State of Kansas v. James K. Kahler

Osage County: (Criminal Appeal) Kahler was convicted of capital murder and aggravated burglary in connection with the shooting death of four family members. He was sentenced to death. Issues on appeal are whether: 1) prosecutorial misconduct occurred during defense counsel’s closing argument; 2) the district court’s comments during trial denied Kahler a fair trial; 3) the district court erred in denying a jury instruction on the defense expert’s testimony; 4) the district court erred in limiting the jury’s consideration of the evidence of mental disease or defect; 5) the district court erred in failing to instruct on felony murder; 6) the district court erred in prohibiting defense counsel from questioning prospective jurors about the death penalty; 7) cumulative err denied Kahler a fair trial; 8) the Kansas death penalty is categorically disproportionate punishment; 9) the two aggravating factors submitted by the state properly channeled jury discretion; and 10) there was sufficient evidence that the killings were committed in a heinous, atrocious and cruel manner.

Appeal No. 111,698: State of Kansas v. David Lee Ryce

Sedgwick County: (Criminal Appeal) Ryce was charged with refusing to submit to testing for the presence of alcohol or drugs. Ryce’s counsel moved to have the count dismissed on the grounds that K.S.A. 8-1025 was unconstitutional. The district court conducted a hearing and granted the motion. The state appeals the district court’s conclusion. In February 2016, the Kansas Supreme Court found that by criminally punishing a driver’s refusal to submit to a breath test, K.S.A. 8-1025 infringes on fundamental rights arising under the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution. In June 2016, the United States Supreme Court in Birchfield v. North Dakota held that the Fourth Amendment permits warrantless breath tests incident to arrests for drunk driving. Issue on appeal is whether the district court erred in finding K.S.A. 8-1025 violates the Constitution.

Appeal No. 111,401: State of Kansas v. Gregory Michael Nece

Saline County: (Petition for Review) Nece was arrested for driving under the influence of alcohol or drugs. Prior to trial, Nece filed motions to suppress alleging that: 1) there was no probable cause for the DUI arrest; 2) that the implied consent law is unconstitutional on its face and as applied regarding a preliminary breath test; 3) that the implied consent law is unconstitutional on its face and as applied regarding evidentiary breath testing; and 4) that law enforcement failed to obtain knowing, intelligent, and voluntary consent free of duress or coercion. The district court found that the implied consent advisory provided to Nece was inherently coercive and suppressed Nece’s breath test result. The state filed a notice of interlocutory appeal from the district court’s suppression order. The Court of Appeals reversed the district court’s judgment and remanded the case for further proceedings. In February 2016, the Kansas Supreme Court found K.S.A. 8-1025 infringes on fundamental rights arising under the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution. In June 2016, the United States Supreme Court in Birchfield v. North Dakota held that the Fourth Amendment permits warrantless breath tests incident to arrests for drunk driving. Issue on review is whether the district court correctly determined that the warrantless search conducted on Nece constituted a clear violation of Nece’s Fourth Amendment rights under the United States Constitution.

Summary Calendar No Oral Argument

When a case does not present a new question of law, and oral argument is deemed neither helpful to the court nor essential to a fair hearing of the appeal, it is placed on the summary calendar. These cases are deemed submitted without oral argument.

Appeal No. 112,009: State of Kansas v. Derick A. Wilson

Shawnee County: (Rehearing) Wilson was charged with refusal to submit to testing and other charges. Prior to trial, Wilson filed a “Motion to Dismiss and Find K.S.A. 8-1025(b)(1)(D) Unconstitutional.” The district court granted the motion to dismiss as to the refusal to submit to testing charge and found K.S.A. 8-1025 unconstitutional. The state appealed. In February 2016, the Kansas Supreme Court found that by criminally punishing a driver’s refusal to submit to a breath test, K.S.A. 8-1025 infringes on fundamental rights arising under the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution. In June 2016, the United States Supreme Court in Birchfield v. North Dakota held that the Fourth Amendment permits warrantless breath tests incident to arrests for drunk driving. Issue on rehearing is whether the test refusal law codified as K.S.A. 8-1025 violates the Fourth Amendment’s protection from unreasonable search and seizure.

Appeal No. 110,393: State of Kansas v. Darwin Estol Wycoff

Saline County: (Rehearing) Wycoff’s counsel filed a motion to suppress and/or dismiss any and all evidence regarding refusal to submit to a test to determine the presence of alcohol or drugs and for the dismissal of the charge of refusing to submit to a test to determine the presence of alcohol or drugs. Wycoff’s motion was based, in part, on the Fourth Amendment and the Doctrine of Unconstitutional Conditions. The district court suppressed all evidence supporting the test refusal charge and dismissed that charge from the complaint. In February 2016, the Kansas Supreme Court found that by criminally punishing a driver’s refusal to submit to a breath test, K.S.A. 8-1025 infringes on fundamental rights arising under the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution. In June 2016, the United States Supreme Court in Birchfield v. North Dakota held that the Fourth Amendment permits warrantless breath tests incident to arrests for drunk driving. Issue on rehearing is whether the test refusal law codified as K.S.A. 8-1025 violates the Fourth Amendment’s protection from unreasonable search and seizure.

Student accuses Smith Center coach of harassment

Smith Center High School-google image
Smith Center High School-google image

KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas high school student has filed a federal lawsuit accusing an assistant football coach of sexually harassing her.

The Kansas City Star reports the student, who is not identified, and her mother filed the lawsuit Thursday in Kansas City, Kansas, against the Smith Center School District and assistant high school football coach Brock Hutchinson.

The lawsuit accuses Hutchinson of sexually harassing the student in front of classmates and school employees. The lawsuit claims the harassment led the student to become depressed, miss school and change schools in her senior year.

The school district referred questions about the case to the district’s attorney, who didn’t immediately respond to a call seeking comment Friday. Hutchinson said he didn’t know such a lawsuit had been filed and declined comment.

Kansas forward Carlton Bragg accused of domestic battery

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) – Kansas forward Carlton Bragg Jr. has been arrested on suspicion of domestic battery.

The 20-year-old sophomore from Cleveland was taken into custody Thursday and accused of causing “reckless bodily harm to a family member,” according to booking records. His case was forwarded to the Douglas County prosecutor but no charges had been filed as of Friday morning.

Kansas associate athletic director Jim Marchiony said the school is aware of the situation and was still gathering facts. It is unclear whether Bragg will play Saturday against Nebraska.

Bragg has appeared in all nine games with five starts for the third-ranked Jayhawks this season, and is averaging 7.8 points and 5.3 rebounds in 16 minutes.

Kan. spent $17M on technology project before outsourcing effort

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The administration of Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback spent $17 million on resolving technology needs in-house before outsourcing the effort to a company in another state.

Chief information technology officer Phil Wittmer told The Topeka Capital-Journal that the in-house project was too expensive and would have cost $50 million to complete.

The state is retiring its IBM mainframe used by four major agencies. In September, Kansas reached a five-year, $14 million deal with Illinois-based Ensono to replace the mainframe.

Department of Administration spokesman John Milburn declined to answer questions on why the project was initially approved, where the equipment for the project is being stored and whether any of the $17 million can be recouped.

Lily Meier

Lily Meier, 88, Hays, died Friday, December 09, 2016 at the Hays Good Samaritan Society.

Funeral arrangements are pending and will be announced by Hays Memorial Chapel Funeral Home.

Marjorie Schumacher

Marjorie Schumacher, 79, Hays, died Friday, December 09, 2016 at the University of Kansas Hospital in Kansas City, Kansas.

Funeral arrangements are pending and will be announced by Hays Memorial Chapel Funeral Home.

Copyright Eagle Radio | FCC Public Files | EEO Public File