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Gallagher hits slam for 1st MLB homer, Royals beat A’s

OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) – Cam Gallagher hit a grand slam for his first career home run and second big league hit, and the Kansas City Royals beat the Oakland Athletics 6-2 on Monday night.

Gallagher’s shot into the left-field seats in the sixth inning marked the first grand slam by a Royals rookie since Paulo Orlando connected in the first game of a doubleheader against Tampa Bay on July 7, 2015.

Jake Junis (5-2), recalled for his seventh stint with Kansas City this season, allowed two runs and four hits in six innings with two strikeouts and no walks.

The Royals moved into a second-place tie with the idle Twins, five games back of AL Central-leading Cleveland.

Hot, windy Tuesday with a chance for thunderstorms

Today A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms after 4pm. Mostly sunny, with a high near 91. Breezy, with a south wind 7 to 12 mph increasing to 15 to 20 mph in the afternoon.

Tonight A 50 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms, mainly after 7pm. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 69. Breezy, with a south southeast wind 11 to 20 mph.

Wednesday A 40 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 84. Southwest wind 6 to 9 mph becoming north northwest in the afternoon.

Wednesday NightPartly cloudy, with a low around 62. Northwest wind 5 to 10 mph.

ThursdaySunny, with a high near 88. North northwest wind around 6 mph.

Thursday NightA 30 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms, mainly after 1am. Partly cloudy, with a low around 64.

FridayA 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms after 1pm. Mostly sunny, with a high near 88.

UPDATE: 3 dead including 3-year-old after Kansas shooting

Law enforcement authorities on the scene of Sunday’s shooting-photo courtesy WIBW TV

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Authorities say they believe a man fatally shot a woman outside a Kansas home before killing their 3-year-old daughter and himself near wetlands roughly 10 miles away.

The Douglas County Sheriff’s Office said in a statement Monday the body of the woman, from Missouri, was discovered first about 1:30 p.m. Sunday on the driveway of a residence she had no connection to southwest of Lawrence.

Law enforcers later found the girl and her 41-year-old father dead near the woman’s vehicle at the Baker Wetlands.

Authorities said without elaborating that the man and woman had previously been in a relationship.

Investigators haven’t determined how the man and the girl died, saying autopsies were pending.

Identities of the girl or her parents were not immediately released.

——–

DOUGLAS COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating the death of three people including a 3-year-old girl.

Just after 1:30p.m. Sunday, deputies responded to report of a shooting in the driveway of a home in the 1000 Block of E900 Road southwest of Lawrence, according to a media release.

Upon arrival, deputies found a 36-year-old woman with several gunshot wounds. She died at the scene. She was not affiliated with the residence, according to the sheriff’s department.

Authorities later found the woman’s vehicle in the parking area at Baker Wetlands south of 31st and Haskell Avenue. A 41-year-old man and 3-year-old girl were found dead in the wetlands not far from the vehicle. Authorities have not determined how they died.

Authorities believe the man shot the woman and the child is their daughter and no other individuals were involved. Names of the victims were not released.

Serial killer loses appeal after sexual note to Kan. female corrections officer

Grissom Jr., -photo KDOC

EL DORADO, Kan. (AP) — A man imprisoned for killing three suburban Kansas City women nearly three decades ago has lost his disciplinary appeal.

The Kansas City Star reports that Kansas Department of Corrections officials disciplined Richard Grissom Jr. for passing a sexually explicit note to a female corrections officer. Grissom is imprisoned at the El Dorado Correctional Facility for killing three young women who disappeared in June 1989.The bodies of Joan Butler, Christine Rusch and Theresa Brown have never been found.

The now 56-year-old admitted to writing the note. But he said the officer had asked him to write it — something she denied.

Grissom was sentenced to serve 30 days in segregation and fined $20. On Friday, a three-judge panel of the Kansas Court of Appeals denied Grissom’s appeal of the disciplinary action.

Kan. man sentenced for lying before motel shootout with federal agents

Fire at the motel during Saturday’s gun battle -photo courtesy WIBW -TV

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A  Kansas, man has been sentenced to prison for lying to investigators after a 2016 standoff involving a fugitive who shot three federal agents before his body was found in a motel room.

A federal judge in Topeka sentenced 37-year-old Quentin Kirk Lawton on Monday to three and a half years in prison. Lawton pleaded guilty in May to one count of making a false statement.

Authorities say Lawton visited Orlando Collins in a motel room in April 2016 and left shortly before a standoff there between Collins and federal agents. Collins shot and wounded two U.S. marshals and an FBI agent before a fire swept through Collins’ room and the motel. Collins’ body was later found in the room.

Lawton told investigators he hadn’t seen Collins that day.

Kansas man admits using iPhone to record child porn victims

Rodenbeek-photo KDOC

WICHITA -A Kansas man was sentenced Friday to 20 years in federal prison for producing child pornography, according to U.S. Attorney Tom Beall.

In his plea, Michael Rodenbeek, 54, Salina, admitted using an iPhone camera to record videos of a 10-year-old victim and a 9-year-old victim. The recordings were made without the victims’ knowledge.

The investigation began in August of last year.

He has three previous drug convictions in Saline County.

Beall commended the Wichita Police Department, Homeland Security Investigations, the Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force and Assistant U.S. Attorney Jason Hart for their work on the case.

Amid backlash, Roberts defends keeping Senate filibuster

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — U.S. Sen. Pat Roberts is defending the Senate filibuster rule amid some unusual backlash from his Republican House colleagues and constituents at a conference of independent oil and gas producers.

But Roberts concedes Republicans may have to do away with it in order to pass their agenda.

The sometimes testy exchanges Monday came at the convention of the Kansas Independent Oil and Gas Association.

Rep. Lynn Jenkins won scattered applause when she called for getting rid of the filibuster, saying Congress is “crippled” right now.

 

Roberts says Republican control of the Senate can easily flip, noting he has been in the minority more often than he has been in the majority.

Rep. Kevin Yoder reminded people that health care repeal failed even though it only needed 51 votes to pass.

Gov.’s communications director steps down; temporary replacement named

OFFICE OF GOV.

TOPEKA – Governor Sam Brownback today announced that Melika Willoughby will step down from her post as communications director. Willoughby has served on the Governor’s senior staff since November of 2016.

“I am deeply grateful for Melika’s service to the state of Kansas,” said Governor Brownback. “She has been a tireless warrior for conservative principles and an advocate for making Kansas the best state in America to raise a family and grow a business. I trust that she will accomplish great things in the years to come.”

Willoughby joined the Governor’s Office in 2014 as the deputy communications director. She holds a bachelor of arts in Politics from Hillsdale College. Willoughby is a graduate of the Eisenhower Women’s Leadership Series and was named a 2016 Publius Fellow through the Claremont Institute: Recovering the American Idea.

“Governor Brownback’s commitment to expanding the freedoms of our citizens, empowering struggling Kansans through the dignity of work, and defending vulnerable unborn lives is peerless,” said Willoughby. “It’s been a distinct honor to serve on his staff in defense of these principles that make Kansas great.”

Willoughby will join Forge Leadership Network as Vice President of Communications and Strategic Development.

Willoughby will leave the Governor’s Office on August 18. Rachel Whitten will fill the role of spokesperson through the remainder of Governor Brownback’s time in office. Whitten will retain her role as Director of Public Relations at the Kansas Department of Revenue during this time, and will remain at KDOR after her service in the Governor’s Office. Media inquiries should continue being sent to [email protected].

Irrigation projects aimed at saving water supply in Kansas

photo Kansas Water office

HUTCHINSON, Kan. (AP) — Irrigation projects that aim to improve Kansas’s diminishing underground water supply will be showcased across the state this month.

The state’s more than 15 Water Technology Farms will show farmers in western Kansas how to use less irrigation water on their crops.

One technology is a precision mobile drip irrigation system that aims to increase efficiency.

The first technology farms were implemented in 2016. They test the latest irrigation equipment on a large level.

Gov. Sam Brownback began working on a plan to preserve the state’s water resources shortly after taking office. Irrigation wells are drawing water from the Ogallala Aquifer at a rate that could leave the aquifer 70 percent depleted by 2064.

More than 95 percent of that water is used for irrigation.

Crews rescue 6 adults, 5 kids on the Kansas river

Photo Riley Co. Police

RILEY COUNTY — First responders with four agencies worked together Sunday night to rescue a group stranded on a sandbar due to low water levels on the Kansas River.

According to a social media report from the Riley County Police Department, the Manhattan Fire Department, Riley County EMS and the officials with the Kansas Department of Kansas Wildlife, Parks and Tourism combined their resources to rescue six adults and five children.

No injuries were reported.

News From the Oil Patch, Aug. 14

By JOHN P. TRETBAR

Kansas independent oil producers got an earful from members of the state’s congressional delegation Monday, mostly about regulation and tax reform. Senator Pat Roberts, and Representatives Lynn Jenkins, Kevin Yoder and Ron Estes took part in the annual meeting of the Kansas Independent Oil & Gas Association in Wichita. Yoder told the gathering that tax reform would be the “centerpiece” of the House’s work this fall. Jenkins complained about the Senate’s 60-vote threshold for ending filibusters, calling it “the only thing” keeping them from doing the right thing in Washington. Senator Roberts said he hopes they won’t have to do away with the rule, saying he thinks it would be bad for the country, making the Senate little more than the House.

Baker Hughes reported 949 active drilling rigs across the US Friday, a drop of eight rigs drilling for natural gas but an increase of three rigs looking for oil. Canada reported 220 active rigs, up three. They’re drilling at one site in Russell County and reporting drilling ahead on two leases in Barton County this week. Operators are moving in completion tools at two sites in Barton County, two sites in Ellis County, and one in Stafford County. Independent Oil & Gas reports 11 active rigs in eastern Kansas last week, up three, and 23 west of Wichita up one.

The Nomenclature Committee of the Kansas Geological Society recognized and named 16 new oil fields in Kansas last month, bringing the statewide total so far this year to 38, 22 more than the same period last year. The committee recognized two new fields in Ellis County, Coachman Energy’s Penney lease, and Stroke of Luck Energy’s Custer Valley play.

Operators filed 40 permits to drill at new locations last week, 22 east of Wichita and 18 in western Kansas, including two each in Ellis and Stafford counties. Statewide so far this year we’ve seen 859 new permits, compared to 598 a year ago and 1,535 at this time two years ago.

Independent Oil & Gas Service reported 27 new well completions across the state last week, 820 so far this year, including ten in eastern Kansas and 17 west of Wichita. There was one in Ellis County and two in Russell County but all three were dry holes.

Monthly numbers from Independent Oil & Gas Service show that through July, one in four completed wells statewide, and one in three in western Kansas failed to produce pay dirt. Operators reported 27 dry holes in July out of 80 completed wells. So far this year, out of 741 total completions, 180 were dry holes. Independent reported 54 newly-completed wells in eastern Kansas last month and 26 west of Wichita, including three in Barton County, one in Russell County and one in Stafford County.

Operators filed 93 permits to drill at new locations across Kansas last month. There were 41 new permits in eastern Kansas and 52 in western Kansas, including two in Barton County, two in Ellis County, and one in Russell County.

The US was a net-exporter of Liquefied Natural Gas for the first time in 60 years. Last week the government reported our capacity to export LNG is set to increase nearly sevenfold over the next three years thanks to five new export projects, as well as rising capacity on pipelines to Mexico. In its monthly Short-Term Energy Outlook the US Energy Information Administration raised its estimate of US crude oil output for this year and next year. EIA lowered its price expectations for this year, but left next year’s price forecast unchanged.

A rail bridge and rail line viewed as critical to the oil and gas industry in Texas will get a refit, thanks to a $7 million grant from the federal government. The funds will be used to rebuild the Presidio-Ojinaga International Rail Bridge across the Rio Grande, which was damaged and closed by fire nine years ago. Officials called the project a critical project to increase jobs and investment in the Permian Basin and the Texas oil patch.

Chinese crude oil imports in July dropped to their lowest level in seven months, although they were up 12 percent on an annual basis. According to Reuters both exports and imports increased less than expected and that has analysts worried that China’s economy may have started to show signs of a slowdown.

The list of people facing sanctions in Venezuela grew to 30 this week, But an outcry from the US oil industry appears to have stalled efforts to sanction the country as a whole. Officials say a ban on petroleum imports from Venezuela, our third-largest supplier, would cost U.S. jobs and drive up gasoline costs. The Trump administration on Wednesday slapped sanctions on eight members of Venezuela’s new constitutional assembly. The Treasury Department took the unusual step of sanctioning Maduro himself last month, freezing any assets he may have in the U.S. and blocking Americans from doing business with him.

Hays man dies in Monday truck rollover in Ellis County

A 42-year-old man died in a single-vehicle rollover accident that occurred about 11:50 a.m. Monday.

The Ellis County Sheriff’s Office reported the Hays man was southbound in the 1400 block of 160th Avenue in a tank truck. The department said in a news release it appears the truck went into a west ditch and the driver over-corrected. The tank truck overturned, coming to rest on its top in the east ditch.

The driver was the only occupant, and he was wearing a seat belt. He was pronounced dead at the scene. The name of the driver is being withheld pending notification of family.

Judge dismisses gun charge against man in Kan. domestic terror plot

Gavin Wright, Curtis Allen and Patrick Stein are charged with domestic terrorism

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A federal judge has thrown out one of the charges against a Kansas man accused of plotting to attack Somali immigrants in the meatpacking town of Garden City.

U.S. District Judge Eric Melgren granted a defense motion to dismiss a firearms charge against Curtis Allen. The decision comes in the wake of a 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeal panel’s ruling in May in an unrelated case that found that a person convicted of misdemeanor domestic battery under a city ordinance can legally carry a gun.

Allen and co-defendants Patrick Stein and Gavin Wright still face charges of conspiring to detonate truck bombs at an apartment complex where Somali immigrants live.

All three men have pleaded not guilty.

Their trial is set for Feb. 20.

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