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2018-19 USD 489 Master Teacher nominees named

USD 489

USD 489 is proud of all of this year’s Master Teacher nominees.

The overall winner for the USD 489 Master Teacher of the Year is Laura Gaughan.

Gaughan is a reading teacher at O’Loughlin Elementary School.

This year’s Master Teacher nominees include:

• Lincoln Elementary School— Deaira LaSage

• O’Loughlin Elementary School— Laura Gaughan

• Roosevelt Elementary School— Misty Lohmeyer

• Wilson Elementary School— Candace Sage

• Hays Middle School— Karen Nowak and Julie Zollinger

• Hays High School— Suellyn Stenger

• Head Start— Christine Weber

 — Corrected to associate teachers with their correct schools.

University of Kansas announces area’s fall graduates

LAWRENCE — The names of nearly 1,350 candidates for degree from the University of Kansas this fall — representing 51 Kansas counties, 44 other states and 23 other countries — have been announced by the University Registrar. Degrees are officially conferred in January.

Some candidates are participating in school and departmental recognition events this month. Others will take part in the annual KU Commencement on May 19, 2019.

Candidates from the Hays area include:

Ellis County
Brandon Christopher Bollig, Ellis, Bachelor of Arts in Human Biology
Kelsi Nicole Broadway, Hays, Master of Business Administration
Mason Avery Choitz, Hays, Bachelor of Science in Chemical Engineering
Ethan T. Fort, Hays, Master of Science in Education
Nathan E. Romme, Hays, Bachelor of Science in Biology
Ethan Joshua Waddell, Hays, Bachelor of Science in Business in Marketing

Phillips County
Mariah Irene Coomes, Phillipsburg, Bachelor of General Studies in Speech-Language-Hearing

Russell County
Christopher M. Hilger, Russell, Bachelor of Science in Geology.

O’Loughlin Elementary PTA earns playground grant

USD 489

The O’Loughlin Elementary School PTA for earned a grant from the Heartland Community Foundation.

The grant was for $10,000 and will be used toward purchasing playground equipment for the school.

The PTA has been raising funds over the past several years to purchase new equipment.

“USD 489 wishes to extend its sincere thanks to the Heartland Community Foundation for its continued support of education and wellness for Hays Public Schools,” the district said in a news release.

Now That’s Rural: Joe & Cathy Broeckelman, The Satisfiers

Ron Wilson is director of the Huck Boyd National Institute for Rural Development at Kansas State University.

By RON WILSON
Huck Boyd National Institute for Rural Development

“We had lots of happy taste testers.” That type of help in the kitchen, plus an old family recipe and an entrepreneurial spirit, has helped one family develop a remarkable business in rural Kansas. Their products are used year-round, including as customer appreciation gifts during the holidays. This is a special holiday edition of Kansas Profile.

Joe and Cathy Broeckelman are pork producers and founders and owners of a cookie dough business called The Satisfiers. Joe grew up on a farm, attended Colby Community College and K-State, met and married Cathy, and began a family farm near Selden. They had a big family: Eight children who are now raising 25 grandkids and three great-grandchildren.

“All eight were valedictorians or co-valedictorians of their classes,” Joe said proudly.

The Broeckelmans maximize the value of their hog production with niche marketing. “We market all of our pork privately,” Joe said. Rather than shipping generic hogs to a sale barn, Joe sells some as feeder pigs and grows out the rest, to have the meat processed and sold as individual cuts of meat. “We raise hogs to taste good and grow good.”

In addition to pork sausage, ham, pork chops, and bacon, they sell quarter-pound porkburger patties, brats, summer sausage, snack sticks and more. They also help non-profit groups market their production.

“We work with schools so they can do fundraisers selling our products,” Cathy said.

Over time, when the kids were still young, the Broeckelmans diversified their business. “I made cookies one day, and Joe said those were so good that we should sell them,” Cathy said. One night they both woke up, and said, “Let’s sell frozen dough.”

“We feel that this idea was given to us by God through the Holy Spirit,” Joe said.

The Broeckelmans mixed up a batch of dough from the family recipe and tried different flavors. With eight children, they had plenty of willing volunteers to taste the samples. “We had lots of happy taste testers,” Cathy said. Then they tried it out on friends and neighbors. The response was so enthusiastic that it became a business.

But what should the business be named? “We were talking to the kids about this, and we said, ‘Let’s go to the Bible,’ ” Joe said. They came upon a verse in Proverbs which spoke of heavenly satisfaction, which was the reaction they wanted from their customers. They named their products The Satisfiers.

Today, the Satisfiers includes a line of homemade food products based on the cookie dough. There are nine flavors: Chocolate chip, M&M, Reese’s, peanut & chocolate chip, peanut butter, butterscotch chip with pecans, sugar, oatmeal with butterscotch chips, and oatmeal with chopped raisins. The dough is marketed in two- or four-pound tubs.

Another popular product is hand-dipped nut clusters. Some businesses order these during the holidays to give to their customers as appreciation gifts.

Imagine a gift package containing hand-dipped chocolate nut clusters. That would tell me I’m on Santa’s good list. A biscuit and pancake mix has also been added to the product line.

With the kids grown, two women now assist Joe and Cathy with production. The products are marketed through area grocery stores and local meat lockers in western Kansas and Nebraska. The Dillons store in Colby carries their products, for example, as do many locally-owned stores.

“This has been a good family project. We think there are other couples who could benefit from this idea,” Joe said. It’s a creative way to generate value on a family farm in rural Kansas. The Broeckelman farm is located near the rural community of Selden, population 219 people. Now, that’s rural.

For more information, visit The Satisfiers on Facebook.

“Lots of happy taste testers” made for an excellent family project by the Broeckelman family. “This has helped our kids learn to work and to think,” Cathy said.

We commend Joe and Cathy Broeckelman and all their family for making a difference with entrepreneurship and creativity. That is helping this rural family get a taste of success.

“The Broeckelman family would like to wish everyone a very merry Christmas,” Joe said.

In Case You Missed It: Eagle Morning Show 12/10-12/14

It was another busy week on the KAYS Eagle Morning Show. Here’s what you missed last week!

Monday

Catholic Schools Report – TMP HS/JR Athletic Director Troy Shulte

Troy joined C.D. and Mike to talk about past and upcoming athletic events at TMP:

Basketball

Wrestling

Scholar’s Bowl/Fall Sports/Middle School Sports

You can visit the TMP website here.

 

Tuesday

County Commission Meeting Recap: County Administrator Phillip Smith-Hanes & County Commissioner Barb Wasinger

Change of Classification for Bridge Crew

Excess Sales Tax Proceeds

 

Wednesday

Protect & Serve: Hays Chief of Police Don Scheibler:

Chief Scheibler joined the show to talk about safety during the holidays:

Locking car doors and being safe while holiday shopping

 

Humane Society of the High Plains: Betty Hansen

Full inventory of animals

The upcoming Sour-R-Bowl and where to get tickets

The Humane Society of the High Plains is located at 2050 E Us Highway 40 in Hays and is open every day (except Mondays) from 1-5pm. Volunteers are free to come and go during open hours. You can visit their website here.

 

Thursday

USD 489 Report: Hays Middle School Assistant Principal Shauna Zweifel

Shauna joined us on the show to talk about what’s going on at Hays Middle School

Current activities at HMS

Selling Taco Shop cards

 

Join us next week on the Eagle Morning Show on KAYS (94.3FM & 1400AM), on hayspost.com (KAYS tab at top of page) or on the KAYS app (available for Apple and Android)!

 

 

 

 

 

Kansas gov.-elect: State’s condition ‘even worse than I thought’

Kansas Gov.-elect Laura Kelly insists the state budget she’s preparing can fully fund the state’s schools, expand Medicaid coverage to another 150,000 people and begin to repair a troubled child welfare system — without a tax hike.

The Democrat said Wednesday night she’ll lean on experience and relationships built over 14 years in the Kansas Senate to carve out compromises with lawmakers on those priorities.

Yet she described her job as daunting and state government as broken in several key areas.

In little over a month since she beat Republican Kris Kobach in the race for governor, Kelly said she’s worked on a budget proposal to put to legislators in January and found serious problems in state government.

“No surprises … but I am disappointed that the devastation was even worse than I thought,” she told a crowd of 200-plus at Washburn University in Topeka. “The problems are broad and they’re deep.”

Her comments came at Kansas News Service event.

Kelly said rosy revenue projections — the state’s draw from taxes and fees has beat expectations for 18 months in a row — suggest the ability to deal with “school finances without breaking the bank.”

She’s braced for a push from conservatives in the Capitol to pass an amendment to the state constitution scrubbing out the demand for “suitable” financing to local districts from the state. Much of the Republican leadership in the state contends that would free lawmakers to decide funding levels without ongoing lawsuits dictating what the state should spend.

She promised to oppose such a move, although the Legislature could put a proposed constitutional amendment to voters without her approval. But that’s happened before, and failed.

“I have no doubt,” Kelly said, “the people of Kansas will reject that.”

The state may yet need to add money for aid to local school districts in the wake of a Kansas Supreme Court decision. A plan to add  hundreds of millions to that formula in coming years was approved by the Legislature and Republican Gov. Jeff Colyer earlier this year.

But more money may still be needed to account for inflation. Kelly said she’s been studying the state budget and recent improvements in tax revenues.

“We will find when the budget comes out we can afford” to cover her top priorities, she said, without raising taxes.

Republicans have already begun to challenge her definition of a tax hike. Federal tax cuts pushed through by the Trump administration last year had the unintended effect of increasing what a small minority of taxpayers owe the state. Some people simply can’t itemize things like they did before.

That’s produced a windfall in state revenues. Broadly speaking, Republican lawmakers say failing to rewrite state tax law to return that money amounts to a tax hike.

Kelly sees it differently.

She argued again Wednesday that Kansas policymakers don’t yet fully understand the impact of the partial reversal in 2017 of sweeping tax cuts enacted under former Gov. Sam Brownback five years earlier. She also said state officials still need to better fathom how the Trump tax cuts will change state finances.

Only well into 2019, she said, will those things become clear.

“It’s at that point we can look” at whether to return the windfall, she said.

Yet she talked confidently about corralling votes in the Legislature for an expansion of Medicaid in line with the federal Affordable Care Act, or Obamacare.

She was vague about how much her plan for that expansion would cost Kansas taxpayers — and suggested it might not cost them anything. But Kelly promised to study other states in search of a model that can work in Kansas.

A fight will come in the Legislature, where conservatives are already girding for battle. In the end, she said Democrats and moderate Republicans — what she calls “the moderate majority” — can push through a plan.

This year’s elections replaced some moderates with either conservatives or Democrats. But Kelly said the math is roughly the same as when lawmakers approved expansion in 2016 and came just three votes shy of overcoming a Brownback veto.

The difference this year: “We don’t have to override vetoes.”

She used her most urgent language of the evening to describe the state’s shortcomings in how it cares for children.

A fast-growing foster caseload has added to chronic problems in recent years. Kids have been forced to spend nights in the offices of placement contractors. Some children were shuttled among more than 100 foster homes. Young people have been assaulted while in state custody.

That’s generated frustration with the Department for Children and Families.

“We are literally in a life-or-death situation on DCF,” Kelly said.

In a brief interview after her appearance on stage, the incoming governor said the state needs to hire more people to better manage the cases of children in crisis.

“There is no doubt that we have a lack of qualified social workers,” Kelly said.

DCF, helpd, needs to put more work into family preservation efforts to help parents keep their children. For those children who end up in foster care, Kelly said the agency needs to devote more people to helping them adjust when they’re reunited with their biological families.

“That’s a clear, critical need,” she said.

Yet she didn’t say how much improving those child welfare functions might cost. And Kelly said she’s not yet sure if she’ll approve DCF’s pending plans to expand the number of contractors it hires for that work to five firms from the current two.

Still, the lawmaker from Topeka said Kansas will have enough money for that problem, for robust school spending, for expanding Medicaid, for roads.

Among other things she said in a rare public appearance since her election:

  • She’s exploring whether the state must enforce a law passed this year allowing some state-hired faith-based adoption agencies to deny placements with same-sex parents.
  • Kelly will collect proposals on what she called “common sense” gun control, but seemed to suggest any proposal won’t come soon. “I’m not sure how quickly we can get that policy together and round up the votes.”
  • Her efforts on climate change will focus on working with the state’s congressional delegation and western governors. She also promised to push for more renewable energy use in the state.
  • Kelly said tighter welfare rules are part of the reason more kids are landing in foster care. Changing those rules, she said, is “a priority” for fixing DCF.
  • She gave Brownback credit for his efforts to deal with the state’s dwindling water supply. “The problem is,” she said, “there was absolutely no funding, very little funding, put into it.”
  • Kelly said the state’s criminal sentencing practices need dramatic reform and locks up non-violent offenders too often and for too long. “Those people belong in prison no more than you or I.”

Scott Canon is digital editor of the Kansas News Service. You can reach him on Twitter @ScottCanon.

Sunny, mild Sunday

Today
Sunny, with a high near 56. Northwest wind 6 to 8 mph becoming north northeast in the afternoon.

Tonight
Clear, with a low around 24. Northeast wind around 5 mph becoming calm in the evening.

Monday
Sunny, with a high near 55. Light south southwest wind becoming south 12 to 17 mph in the morning.

Monday Night
Increasing clouds, with a low around 32. South wind 7 to 10 mph.

Tuesday
Mostly cloudy, with a high near 52. South southwest wind 5 to 7 mph becoming northwest in the afternoon.

Tuesday Night
Mostly cloudy, with a low around 30.

Wednesday
Mostly sunny, with a high near 56. Windy.

Wednesday Night
Partly cloudy, with a low around 34. Breezy.

Thursday
Sunny, with a high near 50. Windy.

Sharing American holiday customs with international students at FHSU

By DIANE GASPER-O’BRIEN
University Relations and Marketing

In an effort to familiarize international graduate students with some of the American holiday customs, the Fort Hays State University Graduate School sponsored a holiday reception for those students in the Memorial Union Monday.

Dr. Jennifer Bonds-Raacke, dean of the Graduate School, said she and her staff were brainstorming one day and came up with the idea of building ginger bread houses. So she ordered several kits that included everything to build a house, including a large tube of frosting and a variety of tiny candies for decoration.

“We were thinking what would be fun for our international students to experience some of the traditional holiday culture,” she said. “I think it’s going pretty well.”

Indeed.

Dr. Jennifer Bonds-Raacke

Fatimah Alhazmy, a graduate student from Saudia Arabia, was taking a little ribbing about how professional her ginger bread house looked.

Alhazmy, a fine arts major with an emphasis in ceramics, was part of a team that included Linda Ganstrom, professor in the Department of Art and Design.

“We’re just a construction crew here,” Ganstrom said as all four people at her table took turns adding their personal touches to their house.

A table nearby with hot chocolate and other holiday goodies helped provide a festive atmosphere for the students.

“We need to make shutters for our windows,” Aminata Diarra said as she worked on a house with Leslie Paige, director of the Office of Scholarship and Sponsored Projects in the Graduate School.

Diarra – a native of Mali, a country in West Africa – is a freshman who now lives in Denver. She said she chose Fort Hays State because her older sister, Yamoudji, is a current FHSU student and has had a good experience here.

While Diarra is not a graduate student, all international students were welcome to participate. Diarra said that when she heard about the event, she thought it would be a good way to take a break from studying for finals.

Diarra already had taken two finals and said, “This is relaxing before I go study for more.”

She said she had never made a ginger bread house before but that this wouldn’t be her last.

“This is pretty cool,” Diarra said. “Maybe I’ll go buy one. This could be something for our family to do together.”

There are 67 international students enrolled in on-campus graduate programs at FHSU this fall. That is 20 percent of all on-campus graduate students. Nearly two dozen of those participated in Monday’s event.

“We really want our international students to know they are wanted at FHSU. Our international students make the Graduate School complete,” Bonds-Raacke said. “Our one goal of this event was to show them how much they are valued.”

Native countries of other students participating in the event included Germany, England and Brazil and represented majors ranging from biology to music to clinical psychology.

During the house building, personnel from the Graduate School helped created a “hope chain,” where students, faculty and staff responded to questions such as “What is your favorite part about FHSU?” The responses on black and gold paper were linked together and hung in the Graduate School.

“We hope this activity helped remind everyone of what really matters, especially at a stressful time during the semester,” Bonds-Raacke said.

The faculty and staff seemed to enjoy the event as much as the students.

“It was a great opportunity to connect informally with our students,” Bonds-Raacke said, “and learn more about them on a personal level.”

KDA to exercise foreign animal disease response

KDA

Manhattan — The Kansas Department of Agriculture will lead an emergency preparedness exercise, named Rampart, Dec. 17–20, 2018, in Manhattan, Kansas, to practice the state’s response plan to a foreign animal disease event.

The four-day functional exercise, which will be based out of KDA headquarters in Manhattan, will enable KDA and its partners in other state agencies, federal and local government, industry, university and 16 other states to practice the state’s foreign animal disease response plan. More than 200 individuals will participate in the Rampart exercise, which will be based on a fictional scenario involving the confirmation of foot-and-mouth disease in the United States.

In addition to KDA, which will operate as the Incident Command Post for the exercise, the Kansas Division of Emergency Management and multiple Kansas counties will activate emergency operations centers as part of the Rampart exercise.

Foot-and-mouth disease was last identified in the United States in 1929. FMD is a highly contagious disease of cattle, sheep, swine, goats, deer and other cloven-hooved animals. It is not a human food safety concern nor a public health threat. It is a primary concern for animal health officials because it could have potentially devastating economic consequences due to disrupted trade and lost investor confidence.

The exercise has been partially funded with a grant provided by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.

Cleveland Browns beat injury-plagued Broncos

DENVER (AP) — Whether it was “The Fumble” or “The Drive” in the playoffs in the 1980s or the 11 consecutive times Denver had dumped Cleveland, the Broncos always served as the Browns’ biggest bugaboo.

With John Elway watching from his suite at Mile High Stadium, Baker Mayfield capitalized on Denver’s depleted cornerback corps and dubious coaching decisions in leading the Browns past the Broncos 17-16 on Saturday night.

Mayfield’s 2-yard TD toss to Antonio Callaway with just under 12 minutes left provided the winning margin for the Browns (6-7-1), who kept alive their slim hopes of ending the NFL’s longest playoff drought.

The Browns still have a shot at their first winning season since 2007 and even their first playoff berth since 2002 thanks to their first win over Denver (6-8) since 1990.

“I think the tough environment, winning on the road’s the most important thing,” Mayfield said. “If we don’t take care of business tonight — and obviously we have to move on and take care of business next week — none of that matters.

“So, being able to win on the road is something we’ve got to take pride in.”

Combined with their win at Cincinnati last month, the Browns have multiple road victories for the first time since 2014.

Callaway’s touchdown made it 17-13 and came with safety Justin Simmons in coverage because the Broncos were down five cornerbacks.

The Broncos responded with a 13-play drive that ate up more than seven minutes, but after Phillip Lindsay was stuffed for no gain on third-and-1 from the Cleveland 6, Broncos coach Vance Joseph sent in kicker Brandon McManus for a field goal instead of going for it on fourth down.

Jabrill Peppers, for one, was surprised the Broncos didn’t try for the first down or the end zone.

“Absolutely. Absolutely. But, hey, it worked out in our favor,” Peppers said. “We’d been stopping them all day and they didn’t want to come away with nothing.”

Exactly.

“I wanted points there,” Joseph explained. “We had about 4:35 left. We had one timeout and the 2-minute warning. I trust our defense to get a stop there.”

It didn’t happen, at least not right away.

Nick Chubb reeled off a 40-yard run on the first play.

“We can’t let that happen,” Von Miller said.

But the Broncos came up with a big stop on fourth-and-1 from the Denver 10 when Cleveland interim coach Gregg Williams went for it — and Chubb was dropped for a 2-yard loss by Adam Gotsis.

“We came up here to win a ballgame,” Williams said. “I don’t think anybody’s worried about me not being aggressive and we came up here to win it. Offensively we were going to win it right there. If not, defensively we’re going to come back and do it. Pretty similar going all-out blitz the last several plays. That’s the aggressive nature of the team.”

The Broncos got the ball back at their 13 with 1:49 remaining and reached the 50-yard line with 52 seconds left. But a spike, two incompletions and a sack by defensive back Peppers of Case Keenum all but ended Denver’s playoff hopes.

Keenum said he wanted the Broncos to go for it on fourth down at the Cleveland 6 but added that ultimately, Joseph’s decision worked out, despite the loss.

“I can’t complain,” Keenum said, “because I’ve got the ball back in my hands with a chance to win the game. So, that’s all I can ask for.”

The Broncos began the night with cornerbacks Chris Harris Jr. and Isaac Yiadom sidelined and they lost Brendan Langley to a concussion in the first half and newly signed Jamar Taylor to an ejection in the second half on the same play Bradley Roby went out with a laceration in his mouth. Roby later returned.

With safety Dymonte Thomas, who had his first career interception in the first half, subbing at cornerback, Miller broke Simon Fletcher’s franchise record of 103½ sacks, including playoffs.

Denver’s depleted defense, however, was forced right back out onto the field when Keenum’s first-down heave was easily picked off by T.J. Carrie at the Broncos 48, after just eight seconds had ticked off the game clock.

“I didn’t see the corner,” Keenum acknowledged. “And it’s not an excuse. But it’s ultimately what lost us the football game because they went out and scored right after that.”

Six plays later, Mayfield put the Browns ahead for good.

INJURIES

Langley went out in the first half and Roby in the second. Combined with Taylor’s ejection — he was signed after Harris fractured his right fibula two weeks ago — and the Broncos were left scrambling in their secondary.

UP NEXT

Browns: Host Cincinnati Bengals on Dec. 23.

Broncos: Visit Oakland Raiders on Christmas Eve.

Brown leads No. 25 Kansas State over Georgia State

MANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) — Barry Brown has been ready to step up when No. 25 Kansas State needs him.

With injuries to Dean Wade and Kamau Stokes, Brown delivered again for the Wildcats on Saturday night.

Brown scored 13 of his 21 points in the second half, propelling Kansas State over Georgia State 71-59.

“I don’t think it had anything to do with pressure,” Brown said. “I just tried to stay confident when Dean and Kam went down and keep our guys going.”

The biggest concern for the Wildcats is the ankle injuries to Wade and Stokes, which came minutes apart in the second half. Both players suffered injuries last year, too, and Wade missed almost the entire NCAA Tournament, making this familiar territory for K-State.

“With Dean, I don’t have a definite answer, but I do know he didn’t break anything and we’ll do an MRI tomorrow and see how severe it is,” coach Bruce Weber said. “Kam stepped on a player’s foot on their bench and he said he could’ve gone back in. It was the same foot he broke last year and he tweaked it and there is some swelling.”

Brown scored the first eight points for the Wildcats and was key during a later 7-0 run. K-State let the Panthers hang around with 19 turnovers leading to 25 points as Georgia State again competed well with a Power Five school after wins over Georgia and Alabama this season.

Jeff Thomas led the Panthers with 13 points, Nelson Phillips had 11 and D’Marcus Simonds had 10.

“(Jeff) kind of got going,” coach Ron Hunter said. “He had been struggling and has been in a slump. He got tired at the end and missed some wide open shots.”

Stokes had 15 points, Xavier Sneed had 14 and Wade ended with 12.

The Wildcats held a nine-point lead numerous times but couldn’t put away Georgia State until late. K-State was up 48-39 before the Panthers went on a 14-2 run with 10 minutes to go.

“I think we played a solid game up to about the last 7-8 minutes,” Panther senior guard Devin Mitchell said. “Those guys just did a really good job of just doing what they do — playing defense and really getting into us.”

After Georgia State took a 53-50 lead, the Wildcats ended the game on a 21-6 run highlighted by 11 points from Brown, including a trio of 3s, and five points by Xavier Sneed.

Georgia State was very active on the defensive end, forcing 19 turnovers that led to 25 points. The Wildcats won the rebounding battle 33-24.

“That looked like an NCAA Tournament game,” Hunter said. “That is what I told our kids. Maybe it is a different outcome if you are playing on a neutral court.”

BIG PICTURE

Kansas State will hope the injuries will not keep Wade and Stokes out for long as they play two games in the next seven days.

Georgia State is looking like it could be an upset threat if it makes the NCAA Tournament.

UP NEXT

K-State will play its first weekday game in nearly a month when it hosts Southern Mississippi on Wednesday night.

Georgia State hosts the UNC-Wilmington on Wednesday night.

KBI: 15-year-old shot after strangling woman, escaping on horse

SMITH COUNTY – The Kansas Bureau of Investigation (KBI) is investigating the attempted murder of a woman in Smith County, as well as an officer involved shooting which occurred as police attempted to apprehend the 15-year-old suspect.

Google map

According to a KBI media release,  just after 10:20 a.m. Saturday, the Smith County Sheriff’s received a 911 call, and responded to 10021 O Road in Smith Center. Upon arriving, they located a 66-year-old white female victim who reported being restrained, beaten, and strangled. She was taken to a local hospital, and is expected to recover.

The suspect, a 15-year-old black male, fled the area on horseback. When he was located by Kansas Highway Patrol troopers at 100 Road and L Road, in Smith County, he was armed with a firearm. KHP and Smith County Sheriff’s deputies spent a few hours attempting to apprehend the suspect. Then just before 2:20 p.m. the suspect fired at troopers. Two troopers returned fire, striking the subject.

They rendered medical aid and EMS responded. EMS transported him to a local hospital. He was then flown to a Kearney, Nebraska hospital where he underwent surgery. His condition is currently unknown. The identity of the subject will be withheld because he is a juvenile.

No law enforcement officers were injured during the incident.

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