SEDGWICK COUNTY —A Wichita Police Department Captain has been placed on unpaid administrative leave in connection with a weekend incident during a youth-league sport event in Augusta, according to officer Charley Davidson in a media release.
The Augusta Police Department is investigating the incident that showed the officer pushing a referee during the game.
The Wichita Police Department, according to policy, will review the incident to determine if department polices were violated, after the completion of the investigation or criminal proceedings. At this point, no charges have been filed. The Wichita police department did not release the officer’s name.
HAYS, Kan. – Fort Hays State opened the second half on a 20-2 run after trialing by four at halftime and beat Missouri Western 61-42 at Gross Coliseum. The Tigers (12-5, 5-3 MIAA) trailed by six with 3:42 to play in the first half but outscored the Griffons (3-13, 1-8 MIAA) 25-5 over the next 14 minutes.
Mark Johnson Postgame Interview
Hadley Gillum Postgame Interview
Game Highlights
After shooting 50-percent in the first half, MWSU was held to 14 points and 14-percent shooting in the second half. The Tigers, who were without the services of Brady Werth who’s out with mono, outrebounded the Griffons by 13 after halftime.
Hadley Gillum scored 15 of his game-high 19 points in the second half. Aaron Nicholson scored nine, Trey O’Neil eight and Marcus Cooper seven along with a team-high 11 rebounds.
Jared Vitztum made his first career start and scored five points along with eight rebounds.
The Griffons were led by Alex Martin’s 10 points.
The Tigers host defending national champion Northwest Missouri State Saturday.
SEDGWICK COUNTY— Law enforcement authorities are investigating a suspect in connection with a robbery and kidnapping.
Just after 8pm. Monday officers responded to a disturbance with weapons call at a business in the 1000 Block of East Douglas in Wichita, according to officer Charley Davidson. A 24-year-old woman told police she had arranged through Facebook to sell a ring to an unknown man at a sandwich shop in the 500 Block of North Hillside.
The suspect entered the woman’s vehicle, produced a handgun and forced her to drive to several different locations, according to Davidson.
The woman was eventually able to use a phone at a convenience store after the suspect took the ring and her phone.
After an investigation police on Wednesday were able identify a 32-year-old suspect. They took Miguel David Ibanez into custody, according to the Sedgwick County booking report. He is being held on a $100,000 Bond on requested charges of aggravated robbery, kidnapping and outstanding warrants.
Police did recover the woman’s cell phone but not her ring, according to Davidson.
Ibanez has previous convictions for criminal threat, aggravated assault and felon in possession of a firearm, according to the Kansas Department of Corrections.
The Hays High Indian wrestling team defeated Spring Hill in a dual on Thursday night. The Indians will host the Bob Kuhn Prairie Classic on Friday and Saturday. Action starts at 2:30 on Friday and 9:30 a.m. on Saturday. Finals of the tournament can be heard on 101.9 Saturday evening.
Hays (HAYS) 43.00 Spring Hill (SPHI) 23.00
106: Jordan Zimmerman (HAYS) over Cade Pettit (SPHI) (Fall 0:36)
113: Grant Karlin (HAYS) over Landon Rockers (SPHI) (Fall 2:45)
120: Corey Hale (HAYS) over Garret Smith (SPHI) (MD 14-5)
126: Trajan McCormick (SPHI) over Creighton Newell (HAYS) (Dec 9-6)
TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — An 18-year-old Topeka man is charged with first-degree murder in a shooting death at a hotel.
Shawnee County District Attorney Mike Kagay on Thursday charged Logan Lee Able Bartley with first-degree murder, aggravated robbery and conspiracy to commit aggravated robbery.
Prosecutors allege Bartley shot 31-year-old Jesse Lee McFall last week at a Best Western Hotel.
Topeka police say McFall was shot several times during an argument at the hotel.
HAYS, Kan. – The Fort Hays State women held Missouri Western without a field goal for over ten minutes in the first half, going on a 14-1 run to build a 14-point lead and beat the shorthanded Griffons 58-36 at Gross Coliseum.
The Griffons (10-8, 3-6 MIAA), who suited up seven and finished with six available players, were held to their lowest offensive output since they joined NCAA Division II in 1988 (previous low – 37 vs Michigan Tech, 11/20/09). The Griffons, who were held to 23-percent shooting, have lost five straight and seven of their last eight.
Tony Hobson Postgame Interview
Game Highlights
The Tigers (13-4, 4-4 MIAA) led by 12 at halftime then went on a 10-1 run early in the third quarter to take control.
Emma Stroyan lead the Tigers with 14 points. Tatyana Legette added 13 along with eight rebounds.
Melia Richardson was the only Griffon in double-figures with 13 points.
Farmers Cooperative Elevator in Garden Plain- Google image
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Key senators and farm groups are trying to fix a provision in the federal tax overhaul that gave an unexpected tax break to farmers who sell their crops to cooperatives rather than regular companies.
Lawmakers say they didn’t intend to give a competitive advantage to co-ops. But it’s not clear they can rework the legislation given the partisan divide on Capitol Hill. That means many companies — from local grain companies to agribusiness giants such as Cargill and ADM — could wind up paying more for crops than co-ops.
The provision from GOP Sens. John Thune of South Dakota and John Hoeven of North Dakota surfaced in the final days of the debate over the tax bill, which President Donald Trump signed last month. Thune and Hoeven wanted to replace a deduction that benefited co-ops in the old law, which was being dropped, and they wanted to make sure farmers didn’t wind up with a tax increase.
But the final language went further than maintaining the status quo.
“I think at the end of the day what it boiled down to is the staff didn’t know what they were doing. … They rushed this thing through,” said U.S. Rep. Collin Peterson of Minnesota, the ranking Democrat on the House Agriculture Committee.
Agricultural co-ops are typically owned by farmers, and they provide their members with help with marketing crops, purchasing supplies and various other services. They range from small and local co-ops to big, nationwide ones such as Land O’ Lakes and Sunkist Growers.
The new provision lets farmers deduct 20 percent of their gross sales to co-ops, but only 20 percent of their net income if they sell to other companies. The difference is big enough that farmers who sell to co-ops could entirely eliminate their tax bills.
“If it stands the way it is, you’re going to see a dramatic change in who farmers sell their product to,” said Paul Neiffer, a partner with CliftonLarsonAllen, a national accounting firm with clients on both sides.
Farmers who do sell to regular companies may be able to command higher prices to help make up for the lower tax break.
Kristine Tidgren, assistant director of the Center for Agricultural Law and Taxation at Iowa State University, calculated that a farmer with $300,000 in income from grain sales to a regular company and $180,000 in expenses would have $86,400 in taxable income for the year. If that same producer sells to a co-op, she said, the farmer would have just $48,000 in taxable income.
“It’s a huge difference. … We’ve tried to tell everyone to hold on and see what happens before you make any major changes to your business,” she said.
Hoeven’s chief of staff, Ryan Bernstein, said the senators didn’t intend to give a competitive advantage to co-ops and their farmer-patrons. They’ve been working with the National Grain and Feed Association, the National Council of Farmer Cooperatives and other parties to find a quick solution, he said.
Greg Ibach, undersecretary at the U.S. Department of Agriculture, said the tax code shouldn’t “pick winners and losers” and the agency expects a correction.
The new tax break has at least one defender, the North Dakota Farmers Union. The group’s president, Mark Watne, said efforts to change it “may not be in the best interest of farmers or the viability of cooperatives.”
Spokespeople for Thune and Sen. Pat Roberts of Kansas, chairman of the Senate Agriculture Committee, said they’re supporting efforts to fix the provision.
Randy Gordon, president of the National Grain and Feed Association, which represents co-ops as well as regular companies, said there’s been progress in the past week. He said in a newsletter Wednesday that all sides have held several meetings and conference calls to explore alternatives.
Minnesota-based Land O’Lakes, the country’s third-largest agricultural co-op, and Illinois-based ADM both said they look forward to a fix.
But it won’t be simple. Bernstein said Hoeven and Thune are looking at attaching it to must-pass legislation, likely a big spending bill expected to come up late next month. That assumes that everyone agrees on a solution by then.
Even a must-pass bill likely would require 60 votes to pass the Senate, which would require some support from Democrats.
“All it’s going to take is a couple Democrats in the Senate to derail the whole thing. … I’m willing to help, but it looks like a long shot to me,” Peterson said.
Fire crews work to help the elephant in early December-Photo courtesy city of Topeka
TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Federal inspectors say they found no evidence the Topeka Zoo violated any standards before the death of a 35-year-old elephant.
Inspectors were called after the Dec. 11 death of Shannon, an African elephant.
Deputy Topeka city manager Doug Gerber says a veterinary medical officer from the U.S. Department of Agriculture presented a report to the zoo Tuesday.
The cause of the animal’s death has not been determined. The veterinary pathology department at Kansas State University is evaluating tissue samples taken from the elephant.
Shannon died that day after she spent about 20 hours on the ground over a two-day span. When she was found on the ground Dec. 10, a team lifted her back up but she was found back on the ground the next day.
BROOKFIELD, Ill. – Fort Hays State had nine players named to the 2017 Don Hansen NCAA Division II All-Super Region 3 Team. Head coach Chris Brown earned Super Region 3 Coach of the Year honors for guiding Fort Hays State to an undefeated 11-0 regular season and its first NCAA Playoff appearance since 1995. Conferences combining to create Super Region 3 are the MIAA, GLVC, GLIAC, and GAC.
Chris Brown adds the Don Hansen Super Region 3 Coach of the Year honor alongside the MIAA Coach of the Year distinction. Also, Brown won the HERO Sports Fan Choice D2 Coach of the Year vote, an honor voted on by fans nationwide.
Four Tigers received first-team honors, two on offense and two on defense. The list includes senior running back Kenneth Iheme, senior offensive lineman Travis Talley, senior defensive lineman Nathan Shepherd, and junior defensive back Doyin Jibowu.
Iheme finished the year with 1,380 on 230 carries. He averaged 6.0 yards per carry for the season and 115 rushing yards per game. He produced seven 100-yard rushing games, with 189 as his season high against Pittsburg State. Iheme was one of 34 candidates considered for the Harlon Hill Trophy (Division II Player of the Year), finishing the season with 1,690 all-purpose yards. With 2,569 rushing yards in his career, Iheme finished seventh on the all-time rushing list at FHSU. He is eighth all-time in all-purpose yards with 3,458. Iheme was a unanimous All-MIAA First Team selection this season. Iheme was also a D2CCA All-Super Region 3 First Team selection.
Talley grabs his second Super Region 3 First Team honor on the offensive line after receiving the same distinction from D2CCA. Talley also received All-America honors from D2Football.com and was an All-MIAA First Team selection. Talley anchored the Fort Hays State line this year at right tackle, helping the team average 441.5 total yards of offense per game. He helped the Tiger offense average 257.3 passing yards per game and 184.2 rushing yards per game.
Shepherd adds another postseason honor to his collection after already receiving All-America status from three organizations. Shepherd was the MIAA Defensive Player of the Year. He finished the year with 38 tackles, 12.5 tackles for loss, and four sacks. In his three years at Fort Hays State, Shepherd amassed 168 tackles, 27 tackles for loss, and 10 sacks. He tied as the top vote receiver in NCAA Division II for the Cliff Harris Award, presented to the nation’s top small college defensive player representing almost 500 colleges and universities from NCAA Division II, Division III and NAIA colleges. He will compete in both the NFLPA Collegiate Bowl and the Reese’s Senior Bowl.
Jibowu nabs his second Super Region 3 First Team selection this year after receiving the same honor from D2CCA. Playing the bandit back position (safety-linebacker hybrid), Jibowu finished the year with 62 tackles, 7.5 tackles for loss, five interceptions, nine pass break-ups, and two forced fumbles. Over three seasons, Jibowu now has 219 tackles and seven interceptions in his career at FHSU.
Second team selections went to wide receiver Monterio Burchfield, kicker Brandon Brown, linebacker Jose Delgado, and punter Dante Brown.
Burchfield became the sixth receiver in Fort Hays State history to eclipse the 1,000-yard receiving mark, finishing 2017 with a team-high 1,003 yards on 54 catches. He averaged 18.6 yards per catch and produced nine touchdowns. Burchfield adds this honor to his All-MIAA First Team selection this year.
Brandon Brown was the 2017 MIAA Special Teams Player of the Year. He finished the year with 94 kicking points to set a new single-season record at FHSU. It broke his own mark of 88 set the previous year. He was a perfect 49-of-49 on PAT attempts and went 15-of-21 on field goal attempts. Brown finished his two-year career at FHSU with 31 field goals and 89 PATs for a total of 182 kicking points, ranking fourth all-time in kick scoring at FHSU.
Delgado led the Tigers in tackles from his linebacker position in 2017. He finished with 107 tackles for the season, including 11 for loss, and 3.5 sacks. Delgado now has 285 tackles in his career, along with 6.5 sacks. He is already seventh on the career tackles list for the NCAA era at Fort Hays State and will enter his senior year 76 shy of the record.
Dante Brown finished the year averaging 43.5 yards per punt, the second-highest average for a season in FHSU history. He ranked sixth in NCAA Division II in yards per punt, giving the MIAA three punters inside the top 10 nationally. Brown placed 18 kicks inside the 20-yard line this year, and 20 punts that went at least 50 yards. He was an All-MIAA Third Team selection.
Kamon Clayton was the lone third-team selection for the Tigers. The senior cornerback earned All-MIAA First Team status in 2017, finishing the year with 37 tackles and a team-leading 13 pass break-ups. He ranked fourth in the MIAA in pass break-ups.
LYON COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating four suspects on burglary and drug charges.
An alert citizen followed the “SeeSomethingSaySomething rule,” according to the Lyon County Sheriff’s department. As a result, four suspects were caught in the act of breaking into buildings in the 200 block of Road 190 on Wednesday afternoon.
Deputies arrested Diana Lee, 59; Clinton Moody, 28; Andrea Redburn, 31 and Nathan Kennedy, 33, all of Emporia
Moody and Redburn also had outstanding warrants they were arrested for various charges, according to the sheriff’s department. Moody has a previous drug conviction and DianaLee has a previous theft conviction, according to the Kansas Department of Corrections.
Hays allowed just two second quarter points in building at 28-16 lead at halftime over the Manhattan Indians Thursday afternoon at the Dodge City Tournament of Champions. The two teams traded baskets over the first six minutes of the game leaving Manhattan with a 14-11 lead. Hays would score in the final seconds of the first quarter when Ethan Nunnery picked up a loose ball and flung a shot up from just in front of half court to tie the game at 14.
That shot started a 10-0 Hays run that gave the Indians in maroon a 21-14 lead. Manhattan would answer with their only two points of the second quarter to close the game to 21-16. The Indians scored seven more unanswered points to the end half including a Tradgon McCrae three pointer with time expiring for a 28-16 half time lead.
Highlights
Hays hit a three pointer to build their lead to 15 but would not score for the next four minutes allowing Manhattan to close the gap. A 10-0 run by Manhattan brought the Hays lead down to five before Peyton Kieffer and McCrae combined for five quick points to go up 36-26. Manhattan scored the next six points to get with in four at 36-32 with 2:05 left in the third quarter.
Hays though would buckle down on defense and allow just 13 points for the rest of the game. Hays pushed their lead back to nine to start the fourth quarter. Hays led by as many as 20 in the fourth quarter and never by less than nine with the final buzzer showing Hays with a 63-45 victory.
Coach Rick Keltner
Tradgon McCrae scored a game high 17. Peyton Kieffer added 15 and Ethan Nunnery scored 13. Nunnery led the team with eight rebounds and eight assists just missing out on a second consecutive triple-double. Hays improves to 8-2 on the season while Manhattan falls to 5-4.
Hays will face the winner of the Wichita Heights and Leavenworth at 2:30 on Friday.
TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas Corporation Commission is studying how recently enacted federal tax cuts could affect public utilities.
The KCC on Thursday announced the general investigation and ordered utilities to track all savings from the tax cuts and to keep those funds in a separate interest-bearing account.
The tax cuts reduce the federal corporate income tax rate from 35 to 21 percent.
The commission’s announcement came after Westar Energy, Kansas City Power and Light, and Black Hills Energy announced they will ask for regulatory approval to lower their rates because of the tax cuts.
The Lawrence Journal-World reports KCP&L expects to save up to $100 million a year, while Westar anticipates it will save about $65 million a year. Black Hills did not say how much it anticipates saving.