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Phillips Co. authorities arrest Romanian national for alleged scam

PHILLIPS COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating a scam and made an arrest.

Muntean -photo Phillips County Sheriff

On February 9, deputies were dispatched to the El As De Oros Mexican Restaurant, 609 3rd Street in Phillipsburg in regards to a quick-change scam which had occurred, according to a social media report from the sheriff’s department.

Security cameras captured the crime as it occurred and the suspect identified as 38-year-old Ghiolbana Muntean of Corona New York (a Romanian National)  can be seen exchanging large bills for smaller ones with an employee.

The quick-change scam works by quickly and repeatedly exchanging bills between parties until the victim is confused and loses track of what has been exchanged. It is a favorite scam of gypsies, according to the sheriff’s department.

Deputies were able to locate Muntean at a local hotel and took her into custody, charging her with theft by deception.

A companion with Muntean posted a $1500 cash bond and they left the area.

Watch: Kansas officer rescues doe trapped in storm drain

OLATHE, Kan. (AP) — Authorities have rescued a doe that was found trapped in a storm drain in suburban Kansas City.

Police in Olathe said in a Facebook post that someone stumbled across the animal Saturday while walking a dog. The post described the doe as “very agitated and in distress.” The department estimated that it had been in the hole for about a week.

A video shows an animal control officer reaching a long pole with a loop on the end into the open manhole and pulling out the doe. After emerging, the doe bounds into a wooded area. The officer then told the county that the manhole needs fixing.

KZ Country Cheesy Joke of the Day 2/12/19

khaz cheesy joke logo 20110802While talking with his semi-deaf uncle one evening, Ben noticed that his uncle’s “hearing aid” was actually an earphone from a transistor radio.  The wire had been cut and was sticking out of his shirt.

“How does that help your hearing?” Ben asked.

“It doesn’t,” his uncle replied.  “Just makes people talk louder.”

 

Join fans of 99 KZ Country on Facebook:  https://www.facebook.com/99KZCountry

 

 

 

Plea negotiations stall; fraud trial set for Kansas county commissioner

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A federal judge is refusing to again delay the trial of Sedgwick County Commissioner Michael O’Donnell after plea negotiations broke down.

Michael O’Donnell-photo Sedgwick Co.

U.S. District Judge Eric Melgren on Monday noted O’Donnell’s trial had already been postponed four times.

The judge chided co-defense attorney Joshua Ney for not attending the status conference where the date was set and then waiting until two weeks before trial to ask for another continuance.

Ney cited in a motion last week his heavy workload, telling the court that plea negotiations stalled on Feb. 4.

The government has accused O’Donnell of fraudulently obtaining $10,500 from his campaign accounts for his personal use. An indictment charges him with 23 counts of wire fraud and three counts of money laundering.

A five-day trial is set to begin Feb. 25.

Hays, Russell vets talk pet health on Doctors on Call

SHPTV

BUNKER HILL – Smoky Hills Public Television’s local program, Doctors on Call, will focus on pet health with Dr. Steve Mosier from Hays Veterinary Hospital and Dr. Matt Nichols from Town & Country Animal Hospital in Russell. This episode will air Tuesday, Feb. 12th at 7 p.m.

Doctors on Call is a program that provides medical information on a variety of different topics. Medical professionals from throughout the state travel to Bunker Hill to provide information and answer questions from the viewing audience. The program airs LIVE on Tuesdays at 7 p.m.

During the program, viewers can call 800.337.4788 with their questions for the doctors.

To submit questions electronically on a specific topic, viewers can send an email to [email protected]. Questions submitted through email must be received by noon on the day of the show.

Volga German Society Oktoberfest Scholarship winner announced

Candance Miller, Alyssa’s mother, and Alyssa Miller, 2018 Volga German Society Oktoberfest Scholarship recipient.

The Volga German Centennial Association, is proud to announce the 2018 recipient of the Volga German Society Oktoberfest Scholarship: Alyssa Miller from Holdrege, Neb.

Alyssa is attending Fort Hays State University, majoring in elementary education.  Her Volga German ancestry goes back to Pfeifer and her great-great grandfather was Frank Pfeifer.  

Hays Oktoberfest promotes the rich heritage of the Volga German and Bukovina Germans who settled in Ellis County, Kansas. The Volga German Society of Ellis County and Rush County, along with the Sunflower Chapter of the American Historical Society of Germans from Russia, and the Ellis County Historical Society put on the event each year. It also celebrates the history of early settlers in Ellis County, which was created in 1867. The annual Hays Oktoberfest helps raise scholarship money for students of Volga German descent and promote the German Heritage. The booths at the Hays Oktoberfest also help support nonprofit organizations.

The Volga German Society Oktoberfest Scholarship has expanded this year to students attending North Central Kansas Technical College in addition to Fort Hays State University.  The scholarship is intended for students who attend or are planning on attending FHSU or NCK Tech full time and are a descendant of settlers from Ellis or Rush counties. A non-renewable $500 scholarship will be awarded to one student attending FHSU and one student from NCK Tech. All applications must be submitted to the Oktoberfest Scholarship Committee by Feb. 15.

For more information on applying for the Volga German Society Oktoberfest Scholarship visit https://haysoktoberfest.com or call 785.259.1425.

About the Volga German Centennial Society

The Volga German Centennial Association exists to promote and support surrounding Volga German Communities in the Ellis County Kansas Regional Area.

— Submitted

2 Kan. men, woman arrested on drug charges due to burglary investigation

COWLEY COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating three suspects on drug and firearm charges.

Ranger -photo KDOC

On February 6, police responded to a home in the 500 Block of South Sixth Street in Arkansas City for a report of a burglary, according to a media release. As they canvassed the surrounding area, they found items behind a residence at 523 S. Fifth Street that belonged to the burglary victim.

They attempted to contact the homeowner, but were unable to speak with anyone at that time.

Just before 3:30 a.m. January 7, an officer observed a vehicle in the driveway and lights on at the residence at 523 S. Fifth and could smell a strong odor of marijuana while standing on the front patio.

The officer also was able to observe illegal drug activities taking place, providing probable cause for a search warrant, which was applied for, obtained and executed later that morning.

During a search of the residence, officers located a loaded firearm and items related to drug sales.

Police made three arrests including Danny Duarte, 28, on suspicion of felony counts of possession of a controlled substance and possession of a depressant, as well as a misdemeanor count of possession of drug paraphernalia. He was transported to and booked into the Cowley County Jail in Winfield in lieu of $4,500 bond through Cowley County District Court in Arkansas City.

Amber Meleise McHargue, 31, was arrested on suspicion of felony possession of a controlled substance, as well as misdemeanor counts of possession of drug paraphernalia and possession of marijuana. She was booked into the county jail in lieu of $4,500 bond through Ark City district court.

Cody Christopher Ranger, 26, was arrested on suspicion of felony counts of criminal possession of a firearm by a convicted felon, distribution of a controlled substance, possession of drug-sale paraphernalia, possession with intent to distribute marijuana and possession with intent to distribute methamphetamine, as well as misdemeanor counts of no drug tax stamp for a controlled substance and possession of drug paraphernalia. Ranger was transported to and booked into the county jail in lieu of $32,500 bond through Arkansas City district court.

All three individuals remained in custody. Both Duarte and McHargue reside at 523 S. Fifth Street. Ranger is listed as homeless.

 

HAWVER: Property tax, pot proposals focus on Kan. veterans

Martin Hawver
Everyone wants to be helpful to injured veterans. That’s just part of being an American. Those troops, whether volunteers or drafted, deserve our respect for their service…and especially if they have been injured in their jobs.

Now, does that respect make a bill more likely to pass the Kansas Legislature? We may find out this session.

Two bills specifically refer to wounded veterans for their provisions; one would put a cap on property tax increases, another would create the “Veterans First Medical Cannabis Act,” which would legalize medical marijuana and give those wounded veterans first access (for 60 days) to that medical pot.

Will respect or deference to veterans boost the vote, maybe get the bills passed, or is special treatment of veterans a gimmick to broaden support for the bills?

The property tax bill? It would freeze property taxes for some Kansans 65 and older whose household income is $50,000 or less, own outright (no mortgages) homes worth $350,000 or less…and veterans with a 50% permanent disability.

Sounds like a target group that many would like to see escape ever-rising property tax bills, like everyone else in Kansas, but a group which is identifiable and for which many Kansans have empathy.

The medical marijuana bill? It basically legalizes under an extensive, nearly exhaustive list of rules, regulations, boards and commissions the growing, prescription and use of medical marijuana.

Oh, and prescription of pot grown in Kansas for those who have medical conditions which can be alleviated by use of marijuana is for the first 60 days of the enactment of the law limited to veterans. Just veterans. After that, well, it’s a matter of what you can work out with your physician, nurse-practitioner or midwife. Yes, midwife.

No telling how this is going to work out for the legislative bills, and their beneficiaries.

The property tax lid? It is predicted to freeze property taxes for as many as 42,000 Kansas homeowners, saving them about $10 million in property taxes as their neighbors’ homes see their tax bills rising. No numbers on how many of those are veterans with a 50 percent disability.

The medical marijuana? There are polls out there that show more than 70 percent of Kansans favor legalizing medical marijuana. And, veterans have for years advocated for medical marijuana in order to help with treatment of post traumatic stress disorder and other combat-related issues, supporters of the bill say.

There’s probably a fine line somewhere on just when inclusion of specific beneficiaries of a bill helps it pass or when it doesn’t. Nobody has suggested a property tax lid for, say, law enforcement officers or schoolteachers or injured construction workers or notaries.

This isn’t a group of beneficiaries likely to be used as ornaments for otherwise tough-to-pass legislation, and it isn’t likely that they have been tricked or persuaded to become the centerpiece of bills that otherwise make pretty good sense.

It just feels a little…strange. And is a veteran’s 50 percent disability the right number for some medical reason or is it a provision that most people wouldn’t question or care to argue about?

Well, that’s how the Legislature works. There are towns where a large portion of the population has either served in the military or has family or friendship ties to veterans. There are also towns where rising property taxes threaten to force some retirees to consider trading-down or moving in with their children or to a retirement facility.

We’ll see where this goes.

Syndicated by Hawver News Company LLC of Topeka; Martin Hawver is publisher of Hawver’s Capitol Report—to learn more about this nonpartisan statewide political news service, visit the website at www.hawvernews.com

NCK Tech selected as a top automotive school

According to Trade School Future, NCK Tech achieved the ranking of No. 2 in the nation for its Automotive Program. Daniel Kolbo of Trade School Future announced the ranking after a “deep dive into hundreds of the top trade schools in the nation to select our top ten based off of the projected value gained by going through the particular program.”

The ranking, based off five different criteria, includes average cost of tuition, typical debt-load of graduates, average early career salary, average mid-career salary and graduation rate.

NCK Tech has two campus locations – Beloit and Hays. Both campuses offer an 18-month Associate of Applied Science degree in Automotive Technology. Bob Gibbens, Department Chair of the Beloit program reiterates the criteria by which the school was evaluated.

“We work with students to go out after graduation so they can perform above expectations of most employers.” Gibbens adds that even though students receive a lot of hands-on experience in the shop/lab and through contests, “…at the end of the day going to work after graduation is what it is all about.”

“Employers from all over the state are calling asking for graduates to move to their towns or cities to come work for them,” stated Richard Cox, Department Chair of the program in Hays. “Our program takes pride in our students and we stand behind their education 100 percent.”

President of NCK TECH Eric Burks commented, “I’m a big believer that you build great things around great people. We’re blessed to have dedicated faculty and staff members who make our programs successful. I very pleased for the national recognition the Automotive Technology program has received, and appreciate the efforts of instructors Ryan Cairns, Richard Cox, Bob Gibbens, Brett Pfannenstiel and Mark Rathbun for all they do to make this program successful.”
Burks emphasized the importance of this type of recognition. “Ultimately, we’re elated for our graduates, as this ranking is based primarily on the fantastic return on investment they receive when they complete this program.”

The entire article from Trade School Future came be found at www.tradeschoolgrants.com. For information and to learn more about NCK TECH, visit www.ncktc.edu.

Kansas Farm Bureau Insight: Mentor and friend

By GLENN BRUNKOW
Pottawatomie County farmer and rancher

My friend and writing mentor John Schlageck decided to retire. I doubt if retire is quite the right word. If I know John, he will be the farthest thing from retired — he just won’t be coming into Kansas Farm Bureau each morning.

In any case, the idea to fill the hole with guest columnists was hatched and I was asked to help.
I admit it, I struggled to come up with an idea. After all, I write a weekly column and to ask my little-pea-picking brain to come up with two ideas in one week is a lot. Then it dawned on me, the first column should be about John.

It’s an idea he would hate. You see, John would never go for the idea because he reveled in the focus of this column staying on the farmers and ranchers he worked for and not himself.

I also contemplated writing this in the same style John would have and then realized I could not. There truly is only one John Schlageck and try as hard as I might, I could never replicate his style and voice.

His writing has a warmth and depth that I have never found anywhere else. He paints a picture with words like very few can. A picture with depth, color and detail. One that takes you to the very place and time he is describing.

Over the past decades of service to Kansas Farm Bureau, John has explored every corner of our state. He has gone to places like Sin City…I mean Sun City (it’s an inside joke that probably everyone who has ever went to Busters can understand). More importantly he has covered nearly every inch of this state meeting the very men and women he worked for. Getting to know them so he could share their stories in vivid color.

For those of you who have not met my friend, although I know there are not many, the man is even better than his writing. John has one of those personalities that fills the room without taking all the air out of it. Much like his writing, he is always focused on other people rather than himself. That is an exceedingly rare quality and one that should be held in highest regard.

Shortly after I started my column, John gave me one of the best compliments I have ever received. He told me he liked my writing because I wrote from the heart and about things I knew. Those words meant so much to me because I knew that was how he writes. John never really worked a day at Kansas Farm Bureau. He loved what he did too much to have considered it work and all of us in the Farm Bureau family benefited from that dedication.

I also don’t want this to sound like a memorial because it is far from that. It is simply the last sentence in a very good chapter. I know I echo the thoughts of many when I say we wait with anticipation to find out what exactly the next chapter will bring. I don’t know what it will be, but I know it will be good.

“Insight” is a weekly column published by Kansas Farm Bureau, the state’s largest farm organization whose mission is to strengthen agriculture and the lives of Kansans through advocacy, education and service.

Fort Hays State professor judges KWU music competition

Kansas Wesleyan University has announced the winners of its first International Festival Concerto/Aria Competition.

According to information from the university, the competition was conducted last weekend when 13 competitors assembled in Christ Cathedral to perform in front of a panel of judges including the following.

  • Julie Bees, Wichita State University piano professor
  • Genaro Mendez, University of Kansas voice professor
  • Matt Means, Fort Hays State University strings professor

Participants were competing for the opportunity to perform with the KWU Festival Orchestra during the International Music Festival. The winners’ concert is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. March 27 on the Kansas Wesleyan campus.

Pre-college winners include the following.

Cello
Brandon Rectenwald, Salina
Joseph Gogadi, Salina

Piano
Landon Wilson, Minneapolis

Collegiate winners include the following.

Marimba
Morgan Parker, Salina

Piano
Joseph Wu, Taichung, Taiwan

Violin
Alicia Mora, Hutchinson

Vocal
Stephine Gomez (soprano), Lyons
Brianna Anderson (soprano), Colorado Springs, Colo.

Budget deal allows far less money than Trump wants for wall

WASHINGTON (AP) — Congressional negotiators reached agreement to prevent a government shutdown and finance construction of new barriers along the U.S.-Mexico border, overcoming a late-stage hang-up over immigration enforcement issues that had threatened to scuttle the talks.

Republicans were desperate to avoid another bruising shutdown. They tentatively agreed Monday night to far less money for President Donald Trump’s border wall than the White House’s $5.7 billion wish list, settling for a figure of nearly $1.4 billion, according to congressional aides. The funding measure is through the fiscal year, which ends Sept. 30.

The agreement means 55 miles of new fencing — constructed through existing designs such as metal slats instead of a concrete wall — but far less than the 215 miles the White House demanded in December. The fencing would be built in the Rio Grande Valley in Texas.

“With the government being shut down, the specter of another shutdown this close, what brought us back together I thought tonight was we didn’t want that to happen” again, said Senate Appropriations Committee Chairman Richard Shelby, R-Ala.

Details won’t be officially released until Tuesday, but the pact came in time to alleviate any threat of a second partial government shutdown this weekend. Aides revealed the details under condition of anonymity because the agreement is tentative.

“Our staffs are just working out the details,” said House Appropriations Committee Chairwoman Nita Lowey, D-N.Y.

The pact also includes increases for new technologies such as advanced screening at border entry points, humanitarian aid sought by Democrats, and additional customs officers.

This weekend, Shelby pulled the plug on the talks over Democratic demands to limit immigrant detentions by federal authorities, frustrating some of his fellow negotiators, but Democrats yielded ground on that issue in a fresh round of talks on Monday.

Asked if Trump would back the deal, Shelby said: “We believe from our dealings with them and the latitude they’ve given us, they will support it. We certainly hope so.”

Trump traveled to El Paso, Texas, for a campaign-style rally Monday night focused on immigration and border issues. He has been adamant that Congress approve money for a wall along the Mexican border, though he no longer repeats his 2016 mantra that Mexico will pay for it, and he took to the stage as lawmakers back in Washington were announcing their breakthrough.

“They said that progress is being made with this committee,” Trump told his audience, referring to the congressional bargainers. “Just so you know, we’re building the wall anyway.”

Democrats carried more leverage into the talks after besting Trump on the 35-day shutdown but showed flexibility in hopes on winning Trump’s signature. After yielding on border barriers, Democrats focused on reducing funding for detention beds to curb what they see as unnecessarily harsh enforcement by Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or ICE.

The agreement yielded curbed funding, overall, for ICE detention beds, which Democrats promised would mean the agency would hold fewer detainees than the roughly 49,000 detainees held on Feb. 10, the most recent date for which figures were available. Democrats claimed the number of beds would be ratcheted down to 40,520.

But a proposal to cap at 16,500 the number of detainees caught in areas away from the border — a limit Democrats say was aimed at preventing overreach by the agency — ran into its own Republican wall.

Democrats dropped the demand in the Monday round of talks, and the mood in the Capitol improved markedly.

Trump met Monday afternoon with top advisers in the Oval Office to discuss the negotiations. He softened his rhetoric on the wall but ratcheted it up when alluding to the detention beds issue.

“We can call it anything. We’ll call it barriers, we’ll call it whatever they want,” Trump said. “But now it turns out not only don’t they want to give us money for a wall, they don’t want to give us the space to detain murderers, criminals, drug dealers, human smugglers.”

The recent shutdown left more than 800,000 government workers without paychecks, forced postponement of the State of the Union address and sent Trump’s poll numbers tumbling. As support in his own party began to splinter, Trump surrendered after the shutdown hit 35 days, agreeing to the current temporary reopening without getting money for the wall.

The president’s supporters have suggested that Trump could use executive powers to divert money from the federal budget for wall construction, though he could face challenges in Congress or the courts.

The negotiations hit a rough patch Sunday amid a dispute over curbing ICE, the federal agency that Republicans see as an emblem of tough immigration policies and Democrats accuse of often going too far.

According to ICE figures, 66 percent of the nearly 159,000 immigrants it reported detaining last year were previously convicted of crimes. Reflecting the two administration’s differing priorities, in 2016 under President Barack Obama, around 110,000 immigrants were detained and 86 percent had criminal records.

Few convictions that immigrants detained last year had on their records were for violent crimes. The most common were for driving while intoxicated, drugs, previous immigration convictions and traffic offenses.

The border debate got most of the attention, but it’s just part of a major spending measure to fund a bevy of Cabinet departments. A collapse of the negotiations would have imperiled another upcoming round of budget talks that are required to prevent steep spending cuts to the Pentagon and domestic agencies.

___

Police: Kansas man jailed after woman overdoses on heroin

SALINE COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating a suspect on drug distribution charges.

Richardson -photo Saline Co.

Just after 10:30p.m. Sunday, emergency crews were dispatched to the 2500 Block of South Ohio in Salina for a person in medical distress, according to Police Detective Sergeant David Villanueva. Preliminary indications were that the woman was overdosing on an opiate.

Investigators determined  that Johnathan Scott Richardson, 30, Abilene, had injected the woman with heroin. The injection was consensual, Villanueva said. When she began to crash, Richardson called 911.

Paramedics were able to revive the woman, who was then taken to the hospital for further treatment.

Police arrested Richardson on requested charges of distributing drugs within 1,000 feet of a school, possession of opiates, and endangerment

 

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