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Sunny, mild Tuesday

Today Partly sunny, with a high near 54. South southwest wind 6 to 10 mph.

Tonight Partly cloudy, with a low around 30. South wind 6 to 8 mph becoming west in the evening.

Wednesday A 20 percent chance of rain after noon. Partly sunny, with a high near 54. Windy, with a north northwest wind 9 to 14 mph increasing to 20 to 25 mph in the afternoon. Winds could gust as high as 45 mph.

Wednesday NightMostly clear, with a low around 33. Breezy, with a north northwest wind 18 to 22 mph, with gusts as high as 38 mph.

ThursdaySunny, with a high near 51. Breezy, with a north northwest wind 16 to 22 mph.

Thursday NightClear, with a low around 26.

FridaySunny, with a high near 53.

Woman who drove kids into Kan. River pleads guilty to murder

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — A Missouri woman who told police she intentionally drove into the Kansas River while trying to kill herself and her two young children pleaded guilty Monday to first-degree murder and attempted first-degree murder.

Scharron Dingledine-photo Douglas County
Dingledine’s vehicle pulled from the river on August 3 -image courtesy KCTV

Scharron Dingledine, 26, of Columbia, Missouri, entered the plea Monday in Douglas County Court in Lawrence, Kansas. As part of the plea, she won’t be eligible for parole for 25 years, The Lawrence Journal-World reported .

Prosecutors say Dingledine drove a car into the Kansas Rivernear downtown Lawrence in August. Rescuers pulled Dingledine and her 1-year-old son, Elijah Lake, from the water but were not able to save her 5-year-old daughter, Amiyah Bradley. Her body was recovered from the river the next day. Elijah was critically injured.

A probable cause affidavit released in the case says Dingledine told police that she had a fight with her boyfriend, she was voluntarily admitted to a psychiatric hospital for several hours on Aug. 2, one day before she drove her car into the river in downtown Lawrence, about 160 miles west of her hometown of Columbia, Missouri.

After she was released from the hospital, her boyfriend agreed to take her to a shelter. But when he stopped at a store, Dingledine drove off in his car, with the children inside, she told detectives. She later stole another vehicle near Columbia and drove to the Kansas City area, where she spent the night in the vehicle. She drove to Lawrence Aug. 3 and was “feeling depressed and worried about the consequences of her actions” on the previous day, according to the affidavit.

The document said she drove to the Kansas River, parked and let the children walk around and put their feet in the water. She said she decided the river was a good way to kill herself and she decided to kill the children “because she didn’t want anyone else to have them.”

She told detectives she accelerated into the river while the children were unrestrained in the front seat. She said she knew neither child could swim and “would likely die,” according to the affidavit.

Driver hospitalized after ejected when car rolls on I-70

ELLIS COUNTY— One person was injured in an accident just before 4:30p.m. Tuesday in Ellis County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2005 Chrysler PT Cruiser driven by  Matthew David Zaleski, 43, Southfield, MI., was westbound on Interstate 70 just west of Toulon Avenue.

The driver lost control of the vehicle. It entered into the median and rolled, came back onto the roadway in the east bound lanes and rolled three times crossing the east bound lanes.

The vehicle came to rest on its wheels in the south ditch. The driver was not wearing a seat belt and was ejected from the vehicle.

Zaleski was transported to Hays Medical Center.

Tigers need two overtimes to get past Bethel College

Courtesy FHSU Athletics / Allie Schweizer

HAYS, Kan. – Brady Werth scored 23 points and hit four 3-pointers all in the closing seconds of regulation and in overtime to lead Fort Hays State to a 101-96 double-overtime victory over Bethel College Monday at Gross Coliseum.

Werth’s fourth three of the game came with 3:13 to play in the second overtime and tied the game 91-91. Kyler Kinnamon then drove in for a layup following a Freddy Bitondo blocked shot to give the Tigers) the lead for good at 93-91. Kinnamon then hit four free throws in the final 50 seconds to seal the win.

Mark Johnson Postgame Interview

Aaron Nicholson Postgame Interview

Game Highlights

The Tigers (7-3) trailed by four with 22 seconds to play in regulation but Werth hit a three with 16 seconds left closed the gap to one. After the Threshers hit one of two free throws, Marcus Cooper scored on a layup to tie the game 70-70 with six seconds left.

Bethel’s Danen Kistner missed a three at the horn to send the game to overtime.

The Threshers (7-6) led by five on three different occasions in the first overtime but threes from Werth and Trey O’Neil pulled the Tigers within two. Werth’s second three of the extra period with 40 seconds left gave FHSU an 86-84 lead.

Jaylon Scott, who scored 28 points and pulled down 15 rebounds for Bethel, hit a jumper with 16 seconds left. Kyler Kinnamon missed a contested layup then Scott missed a mid-court shot to send the game to a second overtime.

The Tigers struggled from the free throw line, missing their first eight and 11 of their first 13 attempts midway through the second half. They hit 17 of their next 21 including 11-of-14 in the overtime periods.

Werth also had a team best 7 rebounds before fouling out in the second overtime. Aaron Nicholson also hit four 3-pointers and added 19 points despite going 1-for-8 from the free throw line.

Kyler Kinnamon scored 16 and dished out nine assists with only one turnover. Marcus Cooper added 14 points and Trey O’Neil 13.

The Tigers are off until December 30th when they host McPherson College in their final non-conference game.

— Edited to correct final score

No. 6 Tiger women match best start in program history with big win over Rockhurst

Courtesy FHSU Athletics / Nicole Heitmann

HAYS, Kan. – Lanie Page scored a career-high 23 points and the 6th-ranked Fort Hays State women used a 17-2 first quarter run to build an early double-figure lead and rolled past Rockhurst 89-55 to move to 10-0. It matches the best start in program history previously accomplished in 2015-16 and in 2012-13.

Tony Hobson Postgame Interview

Game Highlights

Madison Mittie hit a deep three at the end of the first quarter to give the Tigers a 14-point lead. They increased that lead to 18 at halftime then outscored the Hawks 27-13 in the third to blow the game open.

Page finished 7-for-8 from the floor including 3-for-3 from beyond the arc and hit all six of her free throws.

Belle Barbiere scored 11 and pulled down a game-high seven rebounds. Whitney Randall added 10 points off the bench.

The Tigers are now off until December 30th when they host Tabor College for their final non-conference game.

U.S. Attorney: Worker at Kan. children’s facility distributed child porn

KANSAS CITY, Kan. – A staff member at a facility for children with developmental disabilities pleaded guilty Monday to federal child pornography charges, according to U.S. Attorney Stephen McAllister.

William Bresee, 31, Fontana, pleaded guilty to three counts of distributing child pornography and one count of possessing child pornography. At sentencing, the prosecutor told the court Bresee admitted that federal agents downloaded child pornography from his computer using an online file sharing program. Bresee was a staff member at Lakemary Center in Paola, working an overnight shift when investigators tracked child pornography to an IP address at the center.

Sentencing is set for March 4. He faces a penalty of not less than five years and not more than 20 years in federal prison and a fine up to $250,000 on the distribution charges, and not more than 10 years and a fine up to $250,000 on the possession count.

Lakemary offered a statement on the case in a press release Tuesday morning:

“Lakemary Center was informed that William Bresee pled guilty to certain criminal charges in Federal Court today. Mr. Bresee has not been employed at Lakemary since July of 2015 and Mr. Bresee never worked with the children served at Lakemary Center. When Lakemary was originally informed of his potential criminal activity in 2015, Lakemary fully cooperated with police and Federal authorities. Mr. Bresee was immediately terminated. At no time was any individual in the care of Lakemary Center affected by any actions by Mr. Bresee.”

UPDATE: Suspect dead after taking Kan. officer’s gun, shooting officer

KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — Authorities say a suspect has been killed after wounding an officer in Kansas City, Kansas.

Police on the scene of the shooting investigation-photo courtesy KCTV

Police Chief Terry Zeigler says the shooting happened Sunday night when officers responded to an indecent exposure call.

Police said in a news release Monday that a man at the house, 46-year-old Richard Johnson, died after being shot by an officer.

Two officers responded to the call and Johnson was able to get a gun from one of the officers. Police say during the ensuing struggle, Johnson fired a shot and a second officer returned fire.

The officer who was shot suffered non-life threatening injuries.

——–

KANSAS CITY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating after a fatal officer-involved shooting.

Late Sunday, police responded to an indecent exposure call in the 400 block of North 18th Street, according Kansas City, Kansas, Police Chief Terry Ziegler.

When officers arrived and began their investigation, the individual took one officer’s gun and fired a shot striking one of the officers.

Officers returned fire and killed the suspect, according to Ziegler.

Both officers were transported to the University of Kansas Hospital and are expected to make a full recovery.

Police have released no additional details.

UPDATE: Poacher ordered to repeatedly watch movie ‘Bambi’

SPRINGFIELD, Mo. (AP) — A poacher has been ordered to repeatedly watch the movie “Bambi” as part of his sentence for illegally killing hundreds of deer.

David Berry -photo Lawrence Co. Sheriff

David Berry Jr. is to watch the Walt Disney movie the first time before Sunday and at least once each month during his one-year jail sentence in southwest Missouri’s Lawrence County. He was convicted there of taking wildlife illegally.

David Berry Sr. of Springfield and two of his adult sons, David Berry Jr. of Brookline and Kyle Berry of Everton, were arrested in August after an 8½- month investigation by state, federal and international agencies that also involved cases in Kansas, Nebraska and Canada.

Berry also was sentenced last week to 120 days in jail in nearby Barton County for a firearms probation violation.

Lawrence County Prosecuting Attorney Don Trotter says the deer were killed for their heads, with their bodies left to rot. Three relatives and another man also were caught in what conservation agents are calling one of the state’s largest deer poaching cases.

 

Kansas felon hospitalized after police chase, crash

SALINE COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating two suspects after a chase through a residential area that sent two women to the hospital.

Deniston -photo Saline County

On November 14, police were called to the 600 block of North 12th  Street in Salina after report of suspicious activity, according to Captain Paul Forrester.

While there, officers observed a 2008  Nissan Altima that had a tag belonging to a vehicle out of Finney County and a registration sticker from Sedgwick County. At that time, police were unable to locate a person associated with the vehicle, according to Forrester.

Just before 11a.m. Sunday, an officer spotted the same vehicle driving on North College Street in Salina. When the officer stopped the vehicle at College and Park, the driver gave a name the officer believed to be false. While the officer was waiting for backup before proceeding, the driver started the car and sped away.

Forrester said that with the police officer in pursuit, the Nissan, traveling at speeds up to 60 mph through 13 streets.

Near the intersection of Broadway and Crawford, the driver attempted to cut through the parking lot of Kansasland Tire and Service to avoid the stoplight. While cutting through the parking lot, the car hit a landscaping boulder, went airborne, and struck a cement pole.

The driver identified as Joanna Deniston, 28, of Salina and a passenger in the vehicle, Sophia Lamas, 33, of Salina, were injured and transported to Salina Regional Health Center, Forrester said. Deniston was then transported to Wesley Medical Center in Wichita.

Police believed the Nissan belongs to Lamas. Narcotics were found in the vehicle.

Requested charges against Deniston could include felony flee and elude and interference with a law enforcement officer, according to Forrester . Deniston has previous convictions for theft, forgery and criminal use of a financial card.

UPDATE: Theft suspect sought by Hays Police located, arrested

HPD / click to expand

UPDATE, 5:25 p.m.: The Hays Police Department has reported that a theft suspect sought Monday has been located, identified and arrested. Details will be released later, the HPD said.

“The Hays Police Department would like to thank the community for their assistance in this matter,” the department said in a news release.

—————–

Police are urging shoppers to guard their valuables and be on the lookout for a theft suspect on Monday afternoon.

Late Monday afternoon, Hays Police Chief Don Scheibler said there had been four theft reports since approximately 3:30 p.m. The reports came from the areas of Big Creek Crossing and Westlake Ace Hardware.

The Hays Police Department is looking for a white female that was reported as stealing billfolds out of purses on the north end of Hays within the last three hours,” the HPD said. “The Hays Police Department would also like to remind citizens to secure their billfolds, purses, gifts, vehicles and homes. Thefts increase this time of year.”

Security cameras captured images of the female suspect. Anyone with information about the suspect should call the Hays Police Department at (785) 625-1011.

Check Hays Post for more as details become available.

HPD

News From the Oil Patch, Dec. 17

BY JOHN P. TRETBAR

Gasoline prices across the U.S. are about 28 cents cheaper than they were a month ago. EIA says gasoline inventories remain about three percent above the five-year average for this time of year, and grew last week by 2.1 million barrels, which should put more downward pressure on pump prices. AAA says the national average price for a gallon of regular is two thirty-nine nine ($2.399). Across Kansas, we’re paying an average of $2.08 a gallon. Locally most retailers are asking $2.11 per gallon, but we spotted $2.02 at one outlet in Great Bend, and $2.06 was the cheapest we saw in Hays.

Drilling rig counts were down slightly over the last week. Independent Oil & Gas Service reported 13 active rigs in eastern Kansas, up one, and 30 active rigs west of Wichita, down three. They’re about to spud a new well on one lease in Russell County and drilling is underway at a well site in Stafford County. Baker Hughes reported 1,071 active rigs nationwide, down four oil rigs. Canada checked in with 174 active rigs, down 12 for the week.

Operators filed 42 permits for drilling at new locations last week, 28 in eastern Kansas and 14 west of Wichita. There are two new drilling permits in Barton County and one in Russell County.

Independent Oil & Gas Service reports 31 newly completed wells for the last week, bringing the total for the year up to 1,517 completions. There were 15 east of Wichita and 16 in western Kansas, including one each in Barton, Ellis and Stafford counties.

The government reported a decline in U.S. crude production and inventories. According to the Energy Information Administration, U.S. crude production dropped about 100-thousand barrels per day last week to just shy of 11.6 million barrels per day. EIA said crude oil inventories decreased by 1.2 million barrels to 442.0 million barrels. That’s about 7% above the five-year average for this time of year.

A separate government report says U.S. crude production increased in November to 11.5 million barrels per day. EIA expects that for the year, U.S. crude production will average 10.9 million barrels per day in 2018, an increase of 1.5 million barrels per day over last year. The report predicts domestic production will increase to an average 12.1 million barrels per day in 2019.

For one week in November, the U.S. became a net exporter of crude and petroleum products. The government reported that during the week ending November 30, we exported more than we imported for the first time in weekly data going back to 1991. EIA said that single-week estimate is part of a longer-term trend of declining imports of crude oil and increasing petroleum exports.

Wichita State University will award an honorary doctorate to the Wichita oilman who made the largest-ever cash donation to WSU in May. It is against state policy to award honorary degrees for “philanthropic activity,” but school officials insist Wayne Woolsey’s generosity is not a motivating factor in bestowing the honorary degree. President John Bardo’s nomination letter lauds Woolsey’s introduction of large-scale hydraulic fracturing techniques to Kansas.

A federal lease sale in Alaska went on as planned this week despite courtroom attempts to derail the auction. The lease of 174,000 acres generated 16 bids and about $1.5 million in revenue, about one million more than last year’s offering. Fossil fuel giants ConocoPhillips Emerald House and Nordaq Energy were the three companies to make bids on the 16 tracts. A federal judge in Alaska dismissed two lawsuits asserting there hasn’t been adequate environmental review or consideration of the impacts of climate change.

The Trump administration is moving forward with plans to ease restrictions on oil and natural gas drilling, mining and other activities that were put in place to protect an imperiled bird species across millions of acres in the American West. Land management documents released by the U.S. Interior Department show the administration intends to open more public lands to leasing and allow waivers for drilling to encroach into the habitat of greater sage grouse.

Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder has signed legislation establishing an oversight panel for a hotly disputed tunnel and oil pipeline project beneath the waterway linking Lake Huron and Lake Michigan. The bill creates the Mackinac Straits Corridor Authority to monitor construction and operation of the tunnel in bedrock beneath the waterway. The tunnel and new pipeline segment will replace twin pipelines now resting on the bottom of the straits. They are part of the Enbridge Line 5, which runs from Superior, Wisconsin, to Sarnia, Ontario.

Colorado regulators are considering expanding the buffer zones between new oil and gas wells and school property. Coming on the heels of the election defeat of much tougher setbacks, the proposal would include outdoor areas such as playgrounds within the current rules that require new wells to be at least 1,000 feet from buildings.

China’s crude imports set a new record in November, and are on track for a record year. Reuters cites customs data reporting the Chinese imported 10.43 million barrels per day last month, the first time they’ve imported more than 10 million.

DHDC announces 2018 Frostfest winners

DHDC

The Downtown Hays Development Corp. has announced winners from the annual Frostfest Illuminated Parade.

The parade, presented by Eagle Communications and the Hays Convention and Visitor’s Bureau, took place Saturday, December 15 on The Bricks in Downtown Hays. This year’s parade theme was “Christmas Flicks on the Bricks,” submitted by Sabian Chaney last year. Chaney served as the 2018 parade Grand Marshal.

Six judges, including Fort Hays State University’s mascot, Victor E. Tiger judged the parade entries on use of theme, lighting and creativity. The winners in each category receive $100 in Chamber Cheques.

Animals:
1st place – Kansas Western Horseman’s Association, 2nd place – Big Creek Riders, 3rd place – Jayhawker Rodeo Queen and Princess

Business:
1st place – Elements of Massage, 2nd place – Bullseye Millwright and Welding, 3rd place – High Plains Mental Health Center

Non-Profit/Religious:
1st place – Hays Public Library, 2nd place – Girl Scouts of the Kansas Heartland

Schools:
1st Place – NCK Technical College

Other:
1st Place – Donna Fleishacker’s “A White Christmas” Buggy, 2nd Place – Hays Area Young Professionals, 3rd Place – Our Diamond Miss and Pay it Forward Pageants
This was also the ninth year for the Nex-Tech Wireless People’s Choice award, which was voted on by parade goers via text message. The winner of this award receives $200 in Chamber Cheques.

Nex-Tech Wireless People’s Choice:
1st place – NCK Tech College, 2nd place – Bullseye Millwright and Welding, 3rd place – Elements of Massage

The theme for the 2019 parade, “A Kansas Christmas,” was revealed at the end of the parade. It was submitted by Melissa Chaney during the annual Frostfest Theme Contest.

UPDATE: Man sentenced for death of Kan. boy found encased in concrete

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas man convicted of abusing and killing his girlfriend’s 3-year-old son before encasing the boy’s body in concrete in their rental home’s garage was sentenced Monday to more than 100 years in prison.

Evan Brewer- courtesy photo

Judge Steve Ternes sentenced Stephen Bodine to 109 years and six months after telling him during the hearing in Sedgwick County district court: “Your acts were disgusting and cowardly and monstrous.”

Bodine, 41, did not address the court.

Bodine was convicted in October of first-degree murder, child abuse and other charges in the torture and killing of Evan Brewer. Prosecutors say Bodine and Evan’s mother, Miranda Miller, chained the boy in the basement and forced him to stand in a corner for hours in the months before his May 2017 death at their rental home in Wichita.

Evan’s body was found that September by the landlord, after Miller and Bodine moved out.

Miller, 37, pleaded guilty to second-degree murder and other charges last month and is due to be sentenced in January. Her plea deal required her to testify against Bodine.

Bodine-photo Sedgwick Co.
Miller-photo Sedgwick Co.

During Bodine’s trial, prosecutors presented a cache of 16,000 photos and video files collected by the couple’s home surveillance system that detailed the boy’s abuse.

Miller testified that Bodine made Evan stand against a wall for hours for not eating on May 19, 2017. When the boy collapsed, Bodine took the screaming boy into the bathroom and later came out with his wet and lifeless body. Miller said Bodine mixed bags of concrete and buried the boy’s body in it.

When Evan’s body was found, it was so badly decomposed that an autopsy couldn’t determine how he had died. He had Benadryl in his system, and Miller said she thinks Bodine sickened him in the days leading up to his death by force-feeding him large amounts of salt.

Evan’s father, Carlo Brewer, said he began seeking custody of his son after noticing signs that he had been abused, and authorities were alerted at least six times that Evan was being abused.

After the sentencing, Carlo Brewer said he was pleased with the sentence.

“We don’t have to worry about him getting out and hurting other people or children. It’s turned into a pretty good day,” he said.

—————-

 

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A 41-year-old Kansas man has been sentenced to 109 years and six months in prison for abusing and killing his girlfriend’s 3-year-old son, whose body was found encased in concrete in the garage of a Wichita rental home they had lived in.

Stephen Bodine was convicted of first-degree murder and other charges in the 2017 killing of Evan Brewer. He was sentenced Monday.

Prosecutors say the Bodine and Evan’s mother, 37-year-old Miranda Miller, tortured the boy for months before his death, including chaining him naked in a basement and forcing him to stand in a corner for hours.

Miller pleaded guilty in November to second-degree murder and other charges. Her plea deal required her to testify against Bodine. She is due to be sentenced in January.

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