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UPDATE: 22-year-old dead in McPherson shooting

MCPHERSON —The Kansas Bureau of Investigation and police are continuing their investigation into an early morning shooting that left a 22-year-old man dead, according to McPherson County Attorney Greg Benefiel. The investigation of leads and at the crime scene continues.

Around 12:25 a.m., McPherson Police received a report of a shots fired at the Mustang Mobile Home Park in the 400 block of Dales Draw. Officers located the victim in a vacant lot of the park with gunshot wounds. The victim was determined to be dead at the scene. The victim’s identity is being withheld pending notification of his family.

Location of the Monday shooting in McPherson County- Google image

 

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MCPHERSON, Kan. — Around 12:25 a.m. Monday, McPherson Police were dispatched to the Mustang Mobile Home Park on the report of gunshots being fired. When they arrived on the scene, officers located the body of a deceased white male who suffered apparent gunshot wounds. His body was found in an empty lot.

The KBI is now assisting McPherson Police with the investigation.

An autopsy on the man is expected to happen at the Sedgwick County Forensic Science Center in Wichita.

No additional information has been released and no arrest has been made.

Anyone with information is asked to call McPherson Police.

News From the Oil Patch, June 11

By JOHN P. TRETBAR

The Oklahoma Corporation Commission met Monday to discuss what, if any, additional regulatory action they might take after a magnitude 4.4 earthquake northwest of Oklahoma City that was felt as far north as Manhattan Saturday morning. No injuries or damage were reported. Previous quakes in the area in April, and earlier, have already prompted some dramatic limits on oilfield wastewater disposal in the area.

Scientists may have found previously unmapped faults in Oklahoma that could be contributing to a sharp increase in induced earthquakes in our region. Oklahoma Geological Survey Director Jeremy Boak says the magnetic imaging study suggests the “new” faults extend from the end of mapped faults directly to areas of northern Oklahoma and southern Kansas where many quakes occurred.

Baker Hughes on Friday reported 1,062 active rotary drilling rigs across the US, up one oil rig and one gas rig. Texas added three active rigs for the week. Canada notched 112 active rigs, up 13. Independent Oil & Gas Service reported no change in the Kansas rig counts, with 11 active rigs in eastern Kansas and 23 west of Wichita.

Drilling is underway on one Ellis County lease and operators report drilling ahead at one site in Stafford County. They’re moving in completion tools at four sites in Barton County and six in Ellis County.

Operators filed 42 permits for drilling at new locations across the state last week, 26 east of Wichita and 16 in western Kansas. There’s one new permit for Barton County and one for Ellis County. So far this year, operators have filed 697 new drilling permits, which is nearly 100 permits ahead of last year at this time.

Independent Oil & Gas Service reports 21 newly-completed wells for the week, 644 so far this year. There were three new completions in eastern Kansas and 21 west of Wichita, including one each in Barton and Ellis counties.
The Kansas Independent Oil & Gas Association (KIOGA) announces details of its 81st annual convention, August 12th through 14th at the Wichita Hyatt Regency. You can find details along with early-bird registration, sponsorship forms and trade show contracts at their Web site, at www.kioga.org.

Canada’s biggest crude-export pipeline operator told shippers it won’t proceed with recently announced rules setting an allowance for the amount of crude companies could nominate for transport. Enbridge was hoping to stop shippers from claiming more space than they can use on a key pipeline linking Alberta’s oil sands with U.S. refineries. Bloomberg reports that after discussions with shippers, Enbridge called off the changes, and Canadian crude prices surged by the most ever, jumping upwards of $12 a barrel.

Two Chevron employees are reported “in good health” and have been reunited with their families, after their release by Venezuelan officials Wednesday. The pair were arrested in April amid a national anti-corruption investigation. Neither the oil company nor the government have said whether they were charged with any crimes.
Venezuela’s state-run oil company PDVSA has notified eight international customers, including China, it will not be able to meet its full crude supply commitments in June. S&P Global Platts reports the drop in supply from Venezuela is forcing China’s independent refiners to shop elsewhere, including Columbia, Mexico and Canada.

Royal Dutch Shell surpassed Exxon Mobil as the biggest oil and gas company on earth, according to the annual Forbes Global 2000. The magazine rates companies based on revenue, profits, assets and market value. Exxon Mobil is the second largest oil and gas company, followed by Chevron, France’s Total, and China’s Sinopec.

A Florida man will serve just over three years in prison for filing fraudulent oil-spill claims in the aftermath of the Deepwater Horizon disaster. Joseph Bassler also faces a money judgment of $77,224 for his guilty plea last June. Bassler assisted companies filing business loss claims after the 2010 oil spill. He inflated claims by more than $600,000 on behalf of 62 clients and then accepted a portion of the proceeds.

A self-described “music visionary” in Texas is being sued by federal regulators for a ponzi scheme involving the oil industry. Paul Gilman allegedly funded some lavish spending habits with more than three million dollars raised from about 40 investors. He claimed his “revolutionary” sound-wave technology could, among other things, improve oil pipeline flows.

Report: Winter wheat harvest begins in Kansas


WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A new government report shows the winter wheat harvest has begun in Kansas amid poor prospects for much of this season’s crop.

The National Agricultural Statistics Service reported Monday that 2 percent of the wheat in the state has been cut. About 29 percent of the wheat in Kansas is now mature.

The agency pegged 47 percent of the crop as poor to very poor condition, while 37 percent rated as fair. About 15 percent is in good and 1 percent in excellent shape.

Much of the wheat ready for harvest is in south central Kansas where 64 percent has matured. Southeastern Kansas is close behind at 61 percent maturity. But wheat is also rapidly ripening in central Kansas as well with 42 percent of the crop at maturity.

Vernon A. Pfannenstiel

Vernon A. Pfannenstiel, 81, Munjor, died Saturday, June 9, 2018 at Shawnee Mission Medical Center.

He was born August 22, 1936 in Hays the son of Edward and Oliva (Lang) Pfannenstiel. A graduate of Hays High School in 1954, he was united in marriage to Anna Mae Zimmerman on October 8, 1960 at St. Francis of Assisi Catholic Church in Munjor. They celebrated over 51 years of marriage before she preceded him in death on June 8, 2012.

Vernon was a lifelong farmer and member of St. Francis of Assisi Catholic Church, and he was also the owner of the Country Market in Munjor. He was an avid baseball and sports fan and enjoyed KU and FHSU athletics and the Kansas City Royals.

Survivors include five sons; Kevin Pfannenstiel and Dawn of Munjor, Keith Pfannenstiel and wife Jody of Hays, Vernon Pfannenstiel, Jr. and wife Autumn of Lenexa, Greg Pfannenstiel and wife Rene of Shawnee, and Troy Pfannenstiel and wife Laura of Orion, IL, a brother; Verlin Pfannenstiel and wife Elaine of Hays, six sisters; Darlene Dinges and husband Bob of Dalton, Georgia, Jeanette Tauscher and husband Charlie and Juanita Stecklein and husband Alan, all of Hays, Judy Pfannenstiel and husband Dave Waxse of Overland Park, Mary Ann Pfannenstiel-Miller and husband Tim of Leawood, and Joyce Allen and husband Gene of Atchison, twelve grandchildren; Josh Pfannenstiel, Ali Pfannenstiel, Sydni Pfannenstiel, Kyle Pfannenstiel, Randi Ziegler, Korey Pfannenstiel, Erin Engel, Cameron Pfannenstiel, Danielle Pfannenstiel, Alexis Pfannenstiel, Kian Pfannenstiel, and Owen Pfannenstiel, eight great-grandchildren; Brody Pfannenstiel, Kaydan Bednasek, Jordan Robinson, Makia Hykes, Kolter Pfannenstiel, Kyson Ziegler, Kimber Pfannenstiel, and Kambrie Ziegler, and numerous nieces and nephews.

He was preceded in death by his parents and his wife Anna Mae Pfannenstiel.

Mass of Christian Burial will be at 10:00 am on Thursday, June 14, 2018 at St. Francis of Assisi Catholic Church in Munjor with Fr. Earl Meyer and Fr. Reggie Urban officiating. Burial will follow in the St. Francis Cemetery. A parish vigil service will be at 6:30 pm followed by a recitation of the rosary, both on Wednesday at the Hays Memorial Chapel Funeral Home, 1906 Pine Street. Visitation will be from 4:00 pm until 8:00 on Wednesday and from 9:00 am until 9:40 on Thursday, all at the funeral home.

Memorials are suggested to St. Francis of Assisi Catholic Church, in care of the funeral home. Condolences and memories of Vernon may be left for the family at www.haysmemorial.com.

UPDATE: Kansas man apologizes for attempted abduction hoax

MANHATTAN, KAN. Law enforcement authorities have investigated reports of an attempted abduction.

Just before 9:30 p.m. Saturday, a story was posted on a Manhattan man’s personal Facebook page claiming there was an attempted child abduction at the Wal-Mart in Manhattan, Kansas. The post, which contained a picture of a woman and her license plate, was shared over 11,000 times.

In a media release, the Riley County Police Department would like to assure the citizens that we take all incidents like this seriously. We heard from several concerned citizens questioning the situation and our response. After a thorough investigation, it was determined the claims made were unsubstantiated and the attempted abduction did not occur. The woman pictured in the post did not commit any crimes and was wrongly labeled as a suspect by the poster.

After showing video evidence to the alleged victims, they wanted to do the right thing and apologize for the unnecessary hysteria caused by the post.

“”Several days ago my wife and her sister were shopping with our two sons at Walmart,” Joshua Hatley said. “In the course of their shopping, my sister in law claimed there was an incident involving another woman attempting to abduct our youngest child. As a result of the circumstances at the time, we believed this to be true, as my wife did not see the events unfold with her own eyes. This was shared as a warning post on Facebook, and quickly went viral.

 We have remained on top of this issue, and after conferring with detectives at RCPD and viewing security footage from the event, we have determined there was never any real danger to our sons, or the general public, and that our relative misrepresented what truly happened to us, and to management.

The woman involved, and her family, are completely innocent and we would like to apologize to them. We believed there was real danger present, and did what we thought was necessary to help mitigate the issue. We are truly sorry for any damage that may have been caused by this event, and we hope you understand that there was no malicious or ill intent behind our actions; we only wished to make sure children were safe from a perceived threat. We have spoken with an attorney and learned that we are unable to pursue anything legally, and that the victim must do this. If you choose to do so, we will fully support you in accumulating any evidence we have access to, and we are incredibly sorry for anything negative that has happened as a result of this.”

If you ever experience a situation where you feel you or your child is in danger, please call 911 immediately. Child abductions and attempts should be reported directly to police. Sharing stories on social media that are not verified can cause undue hardship for the people labeled as suspects who may have done nothing wrong. RCPD prides itself on our relationship with the citizens we serve in-person and on our social pages. We will continue to build relationships with our community through open, transparent release of information and exchange.

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RILEY COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities have investigated reports of an attempted abduction.

Riley County Police reported they were aware of a post on Facebook being shared about an attempted abduction at the Walmart in Manhattan.

RCPD was never notified of the incident but was sent the Facebook post by several concerned citizens. The Pottawatomie County Sheriff’s Office was alerted to the post by Walmart.

They investigated the claims and found the reports to be unsubstantiated.

Police reported, “we understand the fear that can be caused by reports of unknown people trying to snatch children.

We wanted to let the public know that the claims were unfounded. If you ever do experience a situation like what was described, please call law enforcement immediately. Child abduction is not a joking matter and should be reported directly to police and deputies.

Also, remember that in our social media driven world, that sharing stories on social media that are not verified can cause undue hardship for the people labeled as suspects who may have done nothing wrong.”

Hays man gets 4+ years for November convenience store robbery

By JONATHAN ZWEYGARDT
Hays Post

A Hays man was sentenced to more than four and a half years in prison for robbery at a Hays convenience store in November.

Jordan Stevens was sentenced to 55 months in prison for aggravated robbery Monday in Ellis County District Court.

Stevens pleaded no contest to the charge on May 14 after initially pleading not guilty in February.

According to court documents, on Nov. 3, 2017, Stevens entered the Tiger Mart Convenience Store in the 300 block of West Eighth in Hays just before midnight, brandished a firearm and demanded money. Stevens was identified as the suspect, by the store clerk and on surveillance footage from inside the store.

A vehicle matching the description of the suspect’s vehicle was located by police a short time later in the alley behind an apartment complex in the 2700 block of Colonial Drive.

Officials said Stevens and a female, identified as Kelsie Replogle, were arrested after clothes matching the robber’s description, a gun and $1,000 cash was located in an apartment.

Replogle was identified as the driver and pled no contest to a robbery charge in March. She was sentenced to 36 months probation.

Stevens will also be required to serve 36 months post-release supervision.

He has been in the Ellis County jail since November and was given jail credit of 220 days.

Federal court blocks feds from implementing WOTUS rule in Kansas

TOPEKA – A federal district court has prohibited the federal government from implementing the Waters of the United States (WOTUS) rule in Kansas, according to Attorney General Derek Schmidt.

The WOTUS rule, which sought to vastly expand the definition of “waters of the United States” to include ditches, ponds, and wetlands in order to more aggressively regulate private land use under the authority of the federal Clean Water Act, has faced numerous legal challenges since it was finalized by the Obama Administration in 2015. Kansas filed a lawsuit seeking to block the implementation of the rule the day after it was announced, but the litigation was delayed by a legal dispute over jurisdiction that ultimately reached the U.S. Supreme Court. Earlier this year, Kansas won the jurisdiction argument in the Supreme Court, but in the interim the Trump Administration assumed office and announced it was delaying WOTUS until 2020 with the intention to revise it.

Still, in light of multiple challenges by supporters of the 2015 rule to block the Trump Administration plans to change the rule, Kansas pressed ahead with its lawsuit.

“This injunction ensures that the Obama-era WOTUS rule will not be implemented in Kansas,” Schmidt said. “Even if the federal government changes its mind or if other courts reject the government’s decision to delay WOTUS until 2020, Kansas will be protected. This injunction brings certainty to farmers, ranchers, small businesses, and other private property owners.”

In entering the injunction, Federal District Judge Lisa Godbey Wood rejected the federal government’s assertion that its delay of WOTUS until 2020 made the injunction unnecessary.

“[I]f the WOTUS Rule becomes effective before a final decision on the merits is rendered, farmers, homeowners, and small businesses will need to devote time and expense to obtaining federal permits—all to comply with a rule that is likely to be invalidated,” she wrote.

Democratic candidates for Kansas governor debate

The three top Democratic candidates for governor debated in Wichita on Friday evening.

Carl Brewer, Josh Svaty and Laura Kelly met for a debate in Wichita on Friday evening.

Laura Kelly, Carl Brewer and Josh Svaty participated at the event held in The Lux apartment building and venue space in downtown Wichita.

About halfway through the debate, Brewer said Kansas should look into requiring businesses that receive incentives from the state to provide equal pay for women and minorities.

“If you’re investing my dollars, are you doing it in a fair and equitable way where everyone has a fair opportunity to grow?” Brewer said. “We must go out and create an environment that’s welcoming to everyone.”

When the question of concealed carry came up, Kelly said that while she voted for constitutional carry in 2015, that law has now gone too far. Kelly said she has since worked to roll back what she called “loose ends” from the bill by voting to ban guns on school campuses and in public hospitals.

Svaty criticized Kelly for her initial vote.

“We lost common sense with Kansas gun laws when constitutional carry passed,” Svaty said. “We should have stopped this when we had the chance in 2015, and we needed Democrats that knew that then.”

One of the biggest cheers of the night came when Kelly responded to moderator Brett Harris’ question on how to make sure underrepresented groups, such as minorities and single women, have an equal opportunity to vote.

“Beat Kris Kobach,” Kelly said.

Stephan Bisaha reports on education for the Kansas News Service. Follow him on Twitter @SteveBisaha. Kansas 

Ellis Co. Sheriff and Kan. Fire Marshal investigate suspicious fires

By JONATHAN ZWEYGARDT
Hays Post

The Ellis County Sheriff’s Department assisted with a pair of fires over the weekend.

In a press release Monday, Ellis County Sheriff Ed Harbin said the sheriff’s department assisted the Ellis County Fire Department with a house fire at 5:54 p.m. Saturday in the 1600 block of Norfolk Road.

The house, which was unoccupied, was a total loss. There were no injuries reported.

The second fire was a bale fire reported at 1:45 a.m. Sunday at the northeast corner of Emmeram Road and Toulon Avenue. According to the press release, a total of 33 round bales were destroyed.

The cause of both fires was undetermined, but the press release said both fires are considered suspicious. The sheriff’s office and the Kansas Fire Marshal’s Office are investigating both fires.

Anyone with information is urged to contact the sheriff’s office at (785) 625-1040 or the Kansas Fire Marshal’s Office at (785) 296-3401.

Woman burned in Kansas restaurant fire dies

SEDGWICK COUNTY —  One of the two victims injured in a fire at a Wichita restaurant on May 11, has died, according to Lt. Jose Ocadiz.

Rosa Martinez – photo courtesy Rostizeria Los Reyes

Rosa Martinez, 51, died over the weekend, according to Ocadiz. The second victim remains hospitalized and unable to speak and unable to tell investigators the cause of the fire.

At 9p.m. May 11, fire crews were dispatched to Rostizeria Los Reyes, 512 West 21street North to help a police officer that had arrived on the scene of a woman with severe burns, according to Ocadiz.

As the officer was able to extinguish the patient, he learned there was another woman inside.  The officer used his expandable baton to break the front glass to get access to the other woman victim in the fire, according to Ocadiz.

Emergency crews were then able to transport the code red patients to a local hospital.

The officer who saved the women on fire suffered minor burns to his hands.

Services for Martinez are scheduled for Wednesday, according to Rostizeria Los Reyes Facebook page.

Local 4-Hers working to preserve habitat for iconic insect

Kansas 4-Hers recently got a lesson on the difficult road to life for monarch butterflies during a Discovery Days class in late May. Twenty-two Kansas 4-Hers have begun an effort to preserve habitat that is critical for the survival of the monarch butterfly, in hopes of keeping it from becoming an endangered species.

KSRE NEWS

MANHATTAN – Nearly two dozen Kansas kids are stepping up to increase the odds of survival for the monarch butterfly, an iconic insect that is fluttering toward becoming an endangered species.

As of late May, they’d already taught lessons to nearly 1,000 other kids and even some adults on the best ways to build a habitat in which monarch butterflies can thrive.

“This is a conservation project to help the butterflies,” said 17-year-old Brett Droegemeier, a senior at Hays High School.

According to the U.S.-based Center for Biological Diversity, there were an estimated 682 million of the bright orange-and-black butterflies in North America in 1997. Last year, the same report noted the monarch population is down to 109 million.

The decline in monarch butterfly numbers led several groups to petition the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to protect the butterfly as threatened under the Endangered Species Act. The agency will make a ruling on the petition in June 2019.

Twenty-two 4-H’ers in Ellis and Barton counties aren’t content to wait for that to happen.

Fueled by a $20,000 grant from the National 4-H Council, they are teaching a class called “Monarchs on the Move” to youths and others in their communities, encouraging them to plant and preserve milkweed – the major food source and breeding ground for monarch butterflies.

“They have been out in after-school sites and classrooms and libraries doing this,” said Susan Schlichting, the 4-H youth development agent in Ellis County. “They see how excited the kids get and how dedicated to preserving the monarchs the younger kids are. I think that has built the energy among our teen team, as well.”

Kansas 4-H’er Nathan Profitt is among 22 teens who are teaching the class, “Monarchs on the Move,” to help bring greater understanding to the plight of the monarch butterfly, which is currently under consideration as an endangered species.

There are more than 100 varieties of milkweed, but many farmers, homeowners and landscape professionals consider it a weed to be sprayed, pulled or mowed. Doing so may be prudent for growing food or improving a landscape, but it’s a disaster for monarch butterflies.

That’s because female monarchs will only lay their eggs on milkweed, as many as 500 eggs at a time. And the caterpillars that spawn from those eggs will only eat milkweed.

Most of the caterpillars won’t become butterflies. It’s thought that only 1 in 20 (5 percent) will make it to adulthood, due to such factors as heat, cold, wind, rainstorms, predators, or the weed being sprayed, pulled or mowed while the caterpillars are trying to feed.

As 15-year-old Lexi Straub puts it, “it’s not easy to become a monarch butterfly.

“Monarchs are just such a unique species of butterfly, and it’s something we want to keep around for future generations,” said Straub, who is from Ellinwood and is one of the 22 youths who are teaching “Monarchs on the Move.” “I think it’s important for more generations to come to have the same experience of enjoying this butterfly.”

Berny Unruh, a 4-H youth development agent in Barton County, said “Monarchs on the Move” is a national curriculum that covers the biology of the monarch butterfly, as well as its migration pattern, life cycle and benefits to the ecosystem.

At the end of the hour-long class, kids plant their own milkweed that they are encouraged to take and re-plant in their backyard.

“It’s been really neat to see the younger kids listening to the teenagers and going, ‘yes, we should take these home and we should take care of these plants and make sure there’s food for the caterpillars and we also need to make sure these flowers are growing nectar for our butterflies to continue on,’” Unruh said. “Hopefully because of efforts like this, the numbers of monarch butterflies will increase.”

Kansas was one of just five states that received the $20,000 grant from the National 4-H Council, which was able to provide the money in partnership with Monsanto, Inc. Those states are located primarily in the Midwest, which is a key pathway as monarch butterflies migrate from Mexico to Canada in the spring, and back again in the fall.

“A few years ago, there was a freeze in Mexico, and we almost lost the population; only a very few of them survived,” Droegemeier said. “Hopefully with what we are doing and what other organizations are doing, their population is starting to increase again. We are hopefully getting them out of being endangered.”

Droegemeier is involved in a project to put several hundred milkweed plants in an outdoor classroom at Hays High School. The group of teens recently spoke to their peers at the annual 4-H Discovery Days event in Manhattan, and this summer they will present “Monarchs on the Move” during the Kansas 4-H Insect Spectacular at the Sedgwick County Zoo in Wichita, among other speaking engagements.

“For the teens, this program is huge because they have the opportunity to stretch their leadership abilities,” Schlichting said. “Most of them are young leaders and this is their first chance to put together a program. They’ve worked together in teams to design a program and present it in schools and after-school sites.

“There are many skills that they are gaining through this process. It’s been fun to watch the confidence that they’ve gained.”

To learn more about Monarchs on the Move, visit www.extension.iastate.edu/4h/monarchs-move.

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