HAYS, Kan. – The Fort Hays State wrestling team hosted the annual Bob Smith Open at Gross Memorial Coliseum on Sunday (Dec. 3). There were a total of 211 wrestlers from 18 teams including the likes of Oklahoma State, Nebraska, Central Oklahoma and Newman. Brandon Ball and Rakim Dean captured runner-up finishes.
The Tigers had 20 wrestlers compete in the home event with three seniors, five juniors, three sophomores, three redshirt-freshman and six true freshman.
Ranked second in the nation in Division II, Brandon Ball opened the Bob Smith Open receiving a bye. Ball defeated Dylan Udero of Adams State with an 8-0 major decision to advance to the quarterfinals of the 141-pound weight class. He moved on to the semifinals with a 10-5 decision over Christian Miller (unattached). For the third time this season, Ball entered the title bout of his weight class. He did so with a 6-5 decision over Michael Magaldo of perennial power Oklahoma State. Ball faced Dean Heil of Oklahoma State in the 141-weight class title match. Heil, arguably one of the best athletes in the country, is the top ranked wrestler in Division I.
In a match of two of the best wrestlers in the nation across all classes, Ball was taken down early in the first set allowing Heil to earn 1:39 of riding time. Heil started the second period in the bottom position and escaped Ball’s grasp. Heil then used a takedown to pick up another two points, giving him a 5-0 lead. Ball escaped his hold and was on the board, trailing 5-1 after two periods. Ball was in the bottom position to start the third period and used a nifty reversal to grab two points to cut into Heil’s lead, making the score 5-3. Ball was gaining ride time by decreasing Heil’s earned ride time from the first two periods. Heil was then called for a stall warning, but nothing else happened as time expired. Ball dropped his first match of the year to Dean Heil, a two-time national champion for OSU.
Rakim Dean was the other Tiger to take home a runner-up finish as started the Bob Smith Open with a bye in the first round of the 197-pound weight class. Dean defeated Jacob Stoneberger of Newman with a 10-3 decision to advance to the quarterfinals. He moved on to the semifinal match with a 3-2 decision over Colton Wolfe (unattached). Dean earned a spot in the title bout after an injury cut Max Wright’s (Air Force Prep) day short. Dean competed against Andrew Marsden of Oklahoma State for first place but was pinned in 4:41 and settled for second place.
Oklahoma State captured eight of the ten weight class titles as Newman (Noel Torres, 184 pounds) and Nebraska (Mikey Labriola, unattached in the 174-pound weight class) grabbed the other two for the tournament.
The Tigers will have a week to prepare for the Reece-Wright-Conklin Jet Invite on Sunday (Dec. 10) in Wichita, Kan. The tournament is slated to begin at 9 a.m.
Today Partly sunny, then gradually becoming sunny, with a temperature rising to near 54 by noon, then falling to around 42 during the remainder of the day. Very windy, with a west wind 17 to 22 mph becoming west northwest 31 to 36 mph in the afternoon. Winds could gust as high as 49 mph.
Tonight Mostly clear, with a low around 22. Blustery, with a north northwest wind 19 to 24 mph decreasing to 9 to 14 mph after midnight.
Tuesday Sunny, with a high near 49. Breezy, with a west wind 13 to 23 mph.
Tuesday Night Mostly clear, with a low around 27. West wind 9 to 13 mph.
Wednesday Mostly sunny, with a high near 45. Breezy, with a northwest wind 13 to 22 mph.
Wednesday Night Partly cloudy, with a low around 22.
Thursday Mostly sunny, with a high near 39. Breezy.
Thursday Night Mostly cloudy, with a low around 24.
TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A special Kansas legislative committee on public school funding is having its first meeting Monday to start work on a response to a state Supreme Court order to boost funding.
The committee’s daylong session at the Statehouse includes a briefing from the attorney general’s office.
The Supreme Court ruled in October that state aid to public schools remains constitutionally inadequate, even with a new law phasing in a $293 million increase over two years to make it $4.3 billion annually. The court directed lawmakers to enact a new law before July.
The committee’s chairman is Republican Rep. Blaine Finch of Ottawa. He also is the House Judiciary Committee’s chairman.
The panel’s 11 members include the Senate majority and minority leaders and the chairs of the House and Senate budget committees.
A Leawood couple’s home was searched for marijuana in 2012 by the Johnson County Sheriff, despite there being no marijuana in the house. CREDIT PLANTLADY233 / WIKIMEDIA COMMONS
WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A federal trial that begins Monday will focus on whether police lied about the results of tests on discarded tea leaves found in a Kansas couple’s trash to get permission for a SWAT-style raid on their home.
Robert and Adlynn Harte are seeking $5 million for economic losses plus emotional pain, distress and humiliation after a 2012 raid on their Leawood home. They are also seeking $2 million in punitive damages.
Authorities targeted the Hartes, both former CIA employees, after seeing Robert Harte leaving a store that sold hydroponic gardening equipment. Johnson County sheriff’s deputies found brewed tea leaves outside their home. An affidavit claimed field tests indicated the leaves were marijuana. A search of the home found only vegetable plants. The Hartes say law enforcement lied about the test results.
RENO COUNTY— A Kansas man found guilty of two counts of aggravated criminal sodomy by a Reno County jury was sentenced Friday to over 37 years in prison.
Richard Dean McHenry, 57, was convicted for inappropriate sexual encounters with the victim that occurred in April of 2016.
The state argued for the maximum sentence after the judge denied defense motions for judgment of acquittal or a new trial. They argued that he should receive, at the very least, a new trial because of rulings made before trial that allowed McHenry’s ex-wife to testify about him doing the same thing to her when he was living in Jefferson County.
He was convicted of that crime in 2000 and was released from prison in 2010, according to the Kansas Department of Corrections.
The defense also objected to body camera footage recorded while Sheriff’s Deputies were investigating the case. The judge stood by her earlier ruling and sentenced McHenry to the maximum allowed by law.
The sentence came after the victim read a prepared statement to the court and described the pain she still suffers today both mentally and physically. She noted that McHenry isn’t even being held accountable for some of the things he has done. She says she moved two states away to get as much distance as possible from him. She says it’s a miracle that she’s even here and that she can’t have a normal relationship because she finds it hard to trust anyone, especially men.
She also talked about losing her childhood. She told the judge that the worst part is that she lost her name with many in her community who blamed her, instead of him, for what happened.
District Attorney Keith Schroeder also noted that “the sheep allowed a wolf in their midst and then blamed the young lamb for what the wolf did.”
With the sentence, McHenry will most likely spend the rest of his life in prison. He will likely appeal the conviction and sentence.
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Xavier Sneed scored a career-high 21 points and Kansas State passed its first road test of the season with an 84-79 win at Vanderbilt on Sunday.
The Wildcats (7-1) hit 92 percent of their foul shots on 22-of-24 shooting. Kamau Stokes added 20 points and Barry Brown 18.
Vanderbilt (3-5) rallied from a 16-point deficit to tie the score with 3:33 remaining on Matthew Fisher-Davis’ 3-pointer, but was outscored 13-3 the rest of the way.
Vanderbilt’s Jeff Roberson added to his Southeastern Conference lead with his fifth double-double by scoring 22 points and grabbing 10 rebounds. Saben Lee added 19 points, including 12 at the free-throw line, and Joe Toye scored 11.
Vanderbilt’s Riley LaChance fouled out after being hit with a double technical foul with 7:38 left. He exited with nine points after erupting for a career-high 27 in Tuesday’s 74-62 win over Radford.
After trailing by as many as 16 in the first half, Vanderbilt made a 10-0 run to cut the deficit to 58-57 on LaChance’s 3-pointer with 9:15 remaining in the game.
K-State, whose only loss was a 92-90 setback to 20th-ranked Arizona State on Thanksgiving night, shot 62 percent in the first half to seize a 43-30 lead.
Vanderbilt started cold, missing 14 of its first 21 shots from the field.
REMEMBERED
Vanderbilt held a moment of silence before the game to honor former Commodore star Perry Wallace, who died Friday. Wallace, 69, became the first black varsity basketball player in the SEC 50 years ago.
BIG PICTURE
Kansas State: The Wildcats got their first signature win over a team that made it to the NCAA Tournament last season.
Vanderbilt: The Commodores made an impressive rally in the second half, but couldn’t get important foul shots to fall during the final two minutes.
UP NEXT
Kanas State hosts South Carolina Upstate (3-7) on Tuesday. USC Upstate has lost three straight by double-digit margins.
Vanderbilt hosts Middle Tennessee (5-1) on Wednesday. MTSU’s Nick King posted career highs in points (32) and rebounds (11) in Saturday’s 81-76 win at Florida Gulf Coast.
Kansas State (7-5, Big 12) vs. UCLA (6-6, Pac-12), Dec. 26, 9 p.m. EST (ESPN)
LOCATION: Phoenix.
TOP PLAYERS
Kansas State: CB D.J. Reed has four interceptions and ranks second nationally in kick returns with a 35.3-yard average.
UCLA: QB Josh Rosen’s passing average of 337.9 yards per game ranks third in the nation, and he’s thrown 26 touchdowns.
NOTABLE
Kansas State: The Wildcats are one of the hottest teams in the Big 12 after knocking off then-No. 10 Oklahoma State and Iowa State in its last two games.
UCLA: Interim coach Jedd Fisch will lead the Bruins in the bowl, after which Chip Kelly takes over.
LAST TIME
UCLA 40, Kansas State 30 (2015 Alamo Bowl)
BOWL HISTORY
Kansas State: Following 11 straight bowls from 1993-2003 under Bill Snyder, the Wildcats have gone to a bowl eight straight years. The Wildcats are 8-12 in bowls.
UCLA: The Bruins are 16-18-1 in bowls, last playing in one in the 2015 Foster Farms.
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. (AP) — Josh McCown scored on a 1-yard quarterback sneak with 2:15 left, and the New York Jets bounced back from a brutal start to hold on for a wild and wacky 38-31 win over the Kansas City Chiefs on Sunday.
Chandler Catanzaro kicked a 21-yard field goal to put the Jets (5-7) ahead with 3:55 left. But Kansas City’s Bennie Logan was called for a personal foul for hitting long snapper Thomas Hennessy on the play. That gave the Jets the ball at the 1 with a new set of downs.
After two running plays, McCown threw incomplete — but Steven Nelson was penalized for defensive holding, making it first-and-goal from the 2. Three plays later, McCown kept the ball and shoved his way into the end zone.
McCown’s pass on the 2-point conversion was incomplete, but Nelson was called for holding. An enraged Marcus Peters picked up the penalty flag and tossed it away, drawing an unsportsmanlike conduct penalty. Elijah McGuire ran it in moments later to convert the 2-point play and make it 38-31.
McCown finished with 331 yards passing and a touchdown to Matt Forte, and ran for two scores — including the winner. Jermaine Kearse had nine catches for 157 yards and Robby Anderson caught eight passes for 107 yards as the Jets dominated in time of possession, but still had to hold their breath in the end.
After Tyreek Hill’s 40-yard catch put the ball at the Jets 23, Smith completed a 4-yard pass to Travis Kelce, who had two early touchdowns. But Smith was then incomplete on three straight passes.
The loss by the Chiefs (6-6) ruined the return of cornerback Darrelle Revis, who made his debut with Kansas City after signing a two-year deal last week. Revis, who played eight years over two stints with the Jets, started for the Chiefs, but spent the second half on the sideline.
Kansas City has dropped six of its last seven after opening the season 5-0. Meanwhile, New York kept its faint playoff hopes alive by snapping a two-game skid and holding on to a fourth-quarter lead. The Jets had blown leads in the fourth quarter of three of their last four losses.
MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. (AP) — Xavien Howard’s 30-yard interception return for a touchdown highlighted a dominating defensive effort by the Miami Dolphins, and they snapped a five-game losing streak Sunday with a 35-9 victory over the Denver Broncos, who lost their eighth in a row.
Miami scored two safeties in a game for the first time in franchise history and held Denver to 1 for 13 on third-down conversions. Trevor Siemian, the Broncos’ third starting quarterback in as many weeks, went 20 for 42 for 219 yards with three interceptions.
Kenyan Drake rushed for 120 yards for Miami on 23 carries, both career highs. He scored on a 42-yard touchdown run — only the Dolphins’ second rush for a TD this year.
Miami (5-7) won for the first time since Week 7, while the Broncos (3-9) went from bad to worse, extending their longest skid in 50 years.
Howard scored on the first interception by a Miami boundary cornerback all season, and added another pick in the fourth quarter to set up the Dolphins’ final touchdown.
They struck for two touchdowns in seven seconds to build an uncustomary lead. Miami was ahead at halftime for only the second time all season, and led after three quarters for the first time.
Adam Gase didn’t hold back coaching against close friend and counterpart Vance Joseph. Miami pulled off a successful onside kick in the fourth quarter while leading 33-9.
Jay Cutler went 18 for 31 for 235 yards and two scores but threw two interceptions. Justin Simmons scored Denver’s touchdown on a 65-yard interception return.
QUICK STRIKES
Miami’s Julius Thomas celebrated a 9-yard scoring catch on his knees with a ride-’em-cowboy dance. One play later, Howard stepped in front of a pass intended for Demaryius Thomas for his first career interception and sprinted to the end zone.
TWO-POINTERS
Denver fell to 0-6 on the road and looked lost. Miami took a 2-0 lead when the Broncos botched a third-down play at their 5. Mark Paradis’ high snap deflected off Siemian’s hands, and the ball squirted out of the back of the end zone.
Denver’s Isaiah McKenzie fumbled on a punt return and recovered in his end zone for another safety in the fourth quarter.
BREAKOUT PERFORMANCE
Drake had his first 100-yard rushing game and made three receptions for 21 yards. The Dolphins won for the first time since they traded running back Jay Ajayi on Oct. 31.
INJURIES
Dolphins: C Mike Pouncey left the game in the fourth quarter with a hamstring injury. … CB Cordrea Tankersley left the game with an injured shoulder, returned and departed again because of an ankle injury.
Broncos: S Justin Simmons was evaluated for a possible concussion and cleared to return. … LB Joseph Jones was helped off the field in the fourth quarter.
UP NEXT
The Dolphins host New England on Monday, Dec. 11. The Patriots beat Miami 35-17 a week ago.
Denver returns home to face the New York Jets next Sunday.
Eisenhower was honored on the Kansas Walk of Honor Oct. 7, 2015-Photo courtesy Kansas State Historical Society
TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas may be getting closer to adding another memorial for President Dwight Eisenhower at the Statehouse.
The state’s Capitol Preservation Committee is set to meet Thursday. Its agenda includes a presentation from the state Department of Administration about a statute honoring Eisenhower on the Statehouse grounds.
Gov. Sam Brownback has advocated honoring Ike with a statute outside, and his administration has been working on the idea for about four years.
The state added a plaque for the president and supreme Allied commander during World War II to the Statehouse’s sidewalk “Walk of Honor” in 2015. Eisenhower grew up in Abilene.
The visitor’s center also has a small statue of Ike in front of a sign with his photo and a quote from him about statesmanship.
JOPLIN, Mo. (AP) — Insurance companies have classified Missouri as one of three states deemed “high-risk” for deer collisions.
The Joplin Globe reports that the other two states considered high-risk are Arkansas and Kansas, according to State Farm.
The Missouri State Highway Patrol says that accidents involving deer are common, but fatalities and injuries are rare. The patrol reported three deaths and just more than 300 injuries from deer collisions in 2015.
Auto shop manager Kelly Peterson says he’s had 15 people in the past three weeks come in to have their cars repaired after a run-in with deer. Peterson recommends motorists slow down and pay more attention than usual this time of year, especially at night.
State Highway Patrol Sgt. John Lueckenhoff advises people to avoid making an erratic action upon seeing deer.
KANSAS CITY – Former professional basketball player and representative for the National Basketball Players Association (NBPA) has pleaded guilty in federal court to charges related to a charity fraud scheme, according to Tom Larson, Acting United States Attorney for the Western District of Missouri.
Kermit Alan Washington, 66, of Las Vegas, Nev., pleaded guilty before U.S. District Judge Greg Kays on Thursday, Nov. 30, 2017, to two counts of making a false statement in a tax return and one count of aggravated identity theft.
Co-defendant Patricia Harris, 65, of Las Vegas, also pleaded guilty yesterday. Harris pleaded guilty to making false declarations before a grand jury.
Washington and Harris are among 11 defendants who have pleaded guilty in several cases related to the investigations of an international software piracy conspiracy and charity fraud scheme.
Washington agreed to refer professional athletes to attorney Ronald Jack Mix, 78, of San Diego, Calif., so that Mix could file workers’ compensation claims in the state of California on behalf of the athletes. Mix then agreed to make donations to Washington’s charity, The Sixth Man Foundation, doing business as Project Contact Africa.
Washington accepted approximately $155,000 in donations to his charity, which were actually illegal referral payments from Mix and his law firm. Washington diverted those funds from the charity’s bank account to pay himself or for personal spending. Washington admitted that he failed to account for this income to the charity on Project Contact Africa’s IRS filings during those years.
In a separate but related case, Mix pleaded guilty on May 23, 2016, to filing a false tax return. Mix admitted that he made donations ranging from $5,000 to $25,000 for referrals of athletes, some of whom lived in the Western District of Missouri. Mix then claimed those payments as charitable contributions on his individual tax returns from 2010 to 2013.
Washington also admitted that he accepted approximately $82,025 in contributions to his charity from Reza Davachi, 43, of Damascus, Md., and likewise diverted those funds from the charity’s bank account to pay himself or for personal spending.
In a separate but related case, Davachi pleaded guilty on Oct. 20, 2015, to his role in one of the largest software piracy schemes ever prosecuted by the U.S. Department of Justice. Investigators seized more than $20 million in assets from conspirators who are estimated to have sold in excess of $100 million worth of illicit, unauthorized and counterfeit software products to thousands of online customers.
Davachi admitted that he managed the on-line presence of the Project Contact Africa eBay/PayPal charity. Davachi actively used the Project Contact Africa charity’s eBay/PayPal account to sell unauthorized, illicit, and counterfeit software and software components through eBay, and used the charity’s PayPal account to facilitate payments for these software components. By using the charity’s account to sell his items through the eBay charity store, Davachi saved thousands of dollars per month that he would have otherwise had to pay eBay in the form of various fees. During this time, the Project Contact Africa eBay/PayPal account took in approximately $12 million in revenue, and eBay/PayPal sustained losses of approximately $908,231 due to the waived fees.
Customers of the Project Contact Africa eBay charity store were under the impression that “100 percent” of the proceeds of sales were intended to go to the charity when, in fact, only a portion of the proceeds actually went to the charity. The remainder went to Davachi and his company, Rez Candles, Inc. Davachi also admitted that he allowed numerous other individuals to use the Project Contact Africa eBay/PayPal charity store to sell their own items at a significantly reduced amount as compared to other for-profit sales methods on eBay, with the understanding that they would pay back to Davachi a portion of their savings.
By pleading guilty, Washington specifically admitted that he filed a materially false individual tax return on Feb. 18, 2014, and that he filed a materially false Form 990-EZ for his tax-exempt organization on Aug. 20, 2012. On this Form 990-EZ, Washington claimed that Project Contact Africa received $52,069 in income; in reality these charity accounts received approximately $114,774 in income, some of which Washington diverted to his personal accounts and used towards his personal spending.
Washington also admitted that used the name, personal address and business address of another person without lawful authority in numerous state and federal filings on behalf of the charity. The identity theft victim, identified in court documents as “T.G.”, was a resident of Oregon. Washington admitted that he used her identity information so that Project Contact Africa could maintain its active status within the state of Oregon, which enabled the charity to receive the charitable donations from Mix and permitted Davachi to maintain the charity store for his sales on eBay.
Harris admitted that, while under oath before a federal grand jury, she made materially false statements by denying that she played any role in creating and co-authoring false and fictitious board minutes for the Sixth Man Foundation d/b/a Project Contact Africa charity. Harris admitted that she created and co-authored false and fictitious board minutes for purported board of directors meetings in 2012, 2013, 2014 and 2015, which never actually occurred. The information and content contained within these falsified board minutes was relayed to Harris by Washington. She aided in the preparation and falsification of these minutes at Washington’s direction.
Under federal statutes, Washington is subject to a sentence of up to six years in federal prison without parole for the tax counts, plus a mandatory consecutive sentence of two years in federal prison without parole on the identity theft count. Harris is subject to a sentence of up to five years in federal prison without parole. By pleading guilty today, Washington acknowledged that the court may order restitution as related conduct in connection with his personal tax years 2010, 2011, 2012, and 2014, and for the tax years 2010, 2012, and 2013 for the tax returns filed for the Sixth Man Foundation, D/B/A Project Contact Africa.
The maximum statutory sentence is prescribed by Congress and is provided here for informational purposes, as the sentencing of the defendant will be determined by the court based on the advisory sentencing guidelines and other statutory factors. Sentencing hearings will be scheduled after the completion of presentence investigations by the United States Probation Office.
The Janousek Funeral Home of La Crosse, Kansas, has announced visitation for John W. Kirk Sr., 63, La Crosse will be 4 to 7 p.m. Monday, December 4, 2017, at Janousek Funeral Home, La Crosse, Kansas.