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Real pic in fake Facebook profile leads to Kan. suspect’s arrest

HUTCHINSON, Kan. (AP) — Authorities say a Hutchinson man was arrested on suspicion of using counterfeit bills to purchase electronics because the fake Facebook profile he’s accused of using to arrange the transactions included a real picture.

Joshua Downey -photo Reno County

The man identified as Joshua Downey was arrested last week and booked into jail on suspicion of counterfeiting, theft and drug charges. Police say that last month, he used a counterfeit $100 bill to purchase a computer and five fake $20 bills to buy an iPhone 6.

Minutes after posting the photo from the suspect’s fake Facebook profile online, a parole officer called to say the man was a client. Police say he had a powdery substance in his pocket that is believed to be methamphetamine when he was arrested. His bond is set at $9,500.

Ray Pinney

Ray Pinney

Ray Pinney, 76, of North Platte, Nebraska, died at his home on Sunday, January 27, 2019.

Ray was born April 22, 1942, to Jack and Alta Pinney at Hays, Kansas. He graduated in 1960 from Ellis High School then worked for area farmers before hiring on with Peter Kiewit while they were building the I-70 section in Kansas.

In 1961 Ray joined the U.S. Army and served until 1963. After his discharge he returned to Kansas and went to work for Van Pac. His job brought him to Nebraska to help build the railroad from Wallace to the Gerald Gentleman Plant. When that job was completed he was employed by National Industrial Corporation (N.I.C) out of Texas and worked as a Pipe Foreman. Ray later went back to Peter Kiewit where he was a Mechanical Superintendent, working at 19 different locations. He eventually moved to Sutherland where he worked for Colorado Petroleum then the American Red Cross and later Lincoln County Roads Department before retiring in 2012.

Ray was married to Elizabeth Wever and they had three children, Jeff, Jennifer and Janelle. He was later united in marriage to Rosalie Houser on December 23, 1983, in Texas and the family lived wherever his job took them.

Ray was a member of P.R. Halligan Post #163 American Legion and attended Holy Spirit Catholic Church even though he was baptized in the Methodist Church when he was young.

Ray loved his family and enjoyed his work and class reunions.

He is survived by his wife, Rosalie, of North Platte; children, Jeff (Jana) Pinney, of Wichita, Kansas, Jennifer Pinney, of Hays, Kansas, Janelle Chevas, of Greeley, Colorado and Chris (Steve) Frame and Carylon (Rod) Dillenburg, of North Platte; many grandchildren and great-grandchildren; sister, Janice Broome, of North Platte; and other family.

Ray was preceded in death by his parents, Jack and Alta; brother, John Pinney; sister, Nancy Pinney; and a great-grandson.

Cremation was chosen. Graveside Service with Military Honors will be at 11 a.m. on Friday, February 8, 2019, in Fort McPherson National Cemetery. The memorial book may be signed at odeanchapel.com or at the graveside. In lieu of flowers, memorials are to the North Platte Alzheimers Support Group. Odean Colonial Chapel at C & Sycamore is in charge of arrangements.

Police: Kan. felon found sleeping in car with gun in his lap

SHAWNEE COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating a Kansas felon on new charges.

Houston -photo Shawnee Co.

Just after 1:30 a.m. Monday, police were dispatched to the 200 block of SE Lawrence in Topeka in reference to a suspicious vehicle with two people in it who did not belong in the area, according to Lt. Manuel Munoz.

Officers located 29-year-old Frank E. Houston sleeping in the vehicle with a handgun on his lap.

Houston lied about his name and attempted to flee on foot.

Police chased and took him into custody. Houston was transported to Shawnee County Department of Corrections on requested charges of Felon in Possession of a Firearm, Possession of Marijuana, possession of Paraphernalia, Interference with a Law Enforcement Officer and Traffic Contraband into a Penal Institution, according to Munoz.

Houston has nine previous convictions that include theft, burglary, stalking, aggravated battery, criminal damage to property and drugs, according to the Kansas Department of Corrections.

This is the 13th case in 2019 with a charge involving a felon in possession of a firearm reported by the Topeka Police Department.

FHSU wrestling No. 10 in latest D2WCA team rankings; Ball and Osaghae ranked

FAYETTE, Iowa – The Fort Hays State wrestling team jumped up two spots in the fourth set of regular season DII Wrestling Coaches Association Team Rankings, released Monday (Feb. 4) by the organization. The Tigers are one of three teams at No. 10, tied with Minnesota State and UNC-Pembroke. The Tigers are also one of five MIAA teams in the national team rankings as Nebraska-Kearney stayed put at No. 2. Lindenwood dipped to No. 9, while Central Oklahoma and Newman currently sit at No. 18.

In the individual rankings, junior Brandon Ball took over the top spot at 141 pounds. He sits at 17-0 on the year with individual titles at the Bethany Swede Open and the Bob Smith Open. Ball has compiled 11 wins against Division II competition on the season as well as three falls and three major decisions.

Also in the rankings is Efe Osaghae, who held steady as the fourth-ranked wrestler in the 157-pound weight class. The sophomore continues to put together a solid year thus far with a 21-2 overall record and is currently 14-2 against Division II opponents. Osaghae paces the team in technical falls with six.

The Tigers are back in action Sunday (Feb. 10) as they travel to Kearney, Neb. to take on No. 2 ranked Nebraska-Kearney inside the Health and Wellness Center. The dual is slated to begin at 3 p.m.

Megalodon exhibit open at Sternberg Museum

The Fort Hays State University’s Sternberg Museum of Natural History proudly presents “Megalodon: The Largest Shark that Ever Lived!”

Fifteen million years ago, this gigantic predator could be found around the world, swimming along the ocean’s coastal shores. Now you can meet this ferocious beast and learn how Megalodon became the top predator of its time.

Make the trip today out to Sternberg Museum, 3000 Sternberg Drive, Hays.

The Sternberg Museum is open Tuesday – Saturday 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. and Sunday 1 p.m. to 6 p.m.

For more information, call  785-628-4286.

Hays woman pleads not guilty on indecent liberties charge, plea agreement reached

By JONATHAN ZWEYGARDT
Hays Post

A Hays woman pled not guilty to multiple sex and drug crimes Monday at arraignment in Ellis County District Court.

Skylar Madison Henson is charged with three counts of aggravated indecent liberties with a child. According to the criminal complaint, Henson is alleged to have had sexual relations with a 14-year-old on three separate occasions in late 2018.

Henson is also charged with two counts of distribution of marijuana. Court documents alleged Henson provided the 14-year-old with marijuana on two occasions.

She pled not guilty to all five charges Monday.

After pleading not guilty Monday, Henson will be back in court in March. Henson’s attorney Olavee Raub and Ellis County Attorney Tom Drees said during Monday’s proceedings that they have reached a plea agreement in the matter. Sentencing will be at a later date.

News From the Oil Patch, Feb 4

By JOHN P. TRETBAR

Baker Hughes reports a big drop in the active drilling rig count for this week. Nationwide, the total is 1,045 active rigs, that’s up one rig drilling for natural gas, but down 15 oil rigs. Oklahoma and Alaska were each down four rigs. Texas was down three. Independent Oil & Gas Service reported just two active drilling rigs in eastern Kansas last week, down one from the week before. The count west of Wichita was 29 active rigs, down two.

Regulators approved ten permits last week for drilling at new locations across Kansas, one east of Wichita, and nine in Western Kansas, including one new permit in Russell County.

Independent Oil & Gas Service last week reported 26 newly completed wells in the Sunflower State, including one development well in Ellis County. There were nine wells completed in the western half of the state, of which four were dry holes.

Operators filed just 72 new intent-to-drill notices across Kansas in January. There are four new intents on file in Barton County, one in Ellis county, two in Russell County and three in Stafford County.

Kansas operators produced more 2.8 million barrels of crude oil in October of last year, according to the latest totals from the Kansas Geological Survey. That brings the total for the first ten months of 2017 to 29.1 million barrels. The state is on track for smallest annual production total since 2006. Barton County pumped 140-thousand barrels in October, Ellis County added 209-thousand. In Russell County, operators produced 129-thousand barrels, and Stafford County kicked in nearly 86-thousand.

Crude futures prices were three percent lower in morning trading Monday. The Nymex benchmark contract was down $1.53 at $53.73/bbl. London Brent was down $1.09 to $61.66.

Triple-A reported a slight uptick in the average price across America for a gallon of regular gasoline to $2.26. That’s still about a cent and a half lower than last week, a penny less than last month, and nearly 30 cents less than last year at this time. The average across Kansas is$1.963. Prices are below $1.90 a gallon at several locations in Hays and Great Bend. Your 15-gallon fill up will cost you about two dollars less than last month, and 11 dollars cheaper than six months ago.

The U.S. Energy Information Administration reported another increase in domestic crude-oil stockpiles last week, 445.9 million barrels, down 900-thousand barrels. That’s still about seven percent above the five-year average.

U.S. crude production has declined slightly from the all-time high reported in mid-January, but at 11.89 million barrels per day we’re still producing more oil than anyone on the planet. That’s down two thousand barrels from last week, but 1.97 million barrels per day more than last year.

U.S. crude oil imports averaged 7.1 million barrels per day last week, down by 1.1 million barrels per day from the previous week. Current import totals are about 4.5% less than the same four-week period last year.

The Supreme Court of Colorado reaffirmed its ruling that oil and gas regulators there are not required to make health and environmental protection their top priority. The original lawsuit argued that state law requires the oil and gas commission to ensure energy development does not harm people’s health or the environment. The commission refused, saying the law required it to balance health and environmental concerns with other factors including economic ones. The Supreme Court agreed with the commission.

The shortage of pipeline capacity in some areas of the U.S. and Canada continues to send business to the railroad industry. According to the Association of American Railroads, U.S. oil-by-rail shipments increased 18.4% to more than 13-thousand rail tanker cars for the week ending January 26. Canada oil-by-rail was up 21%.

The government said gasoline demand has jumped to levels more typically seen in the summer driving season. Demand reached 9.6 million barrels per day last week, up 700-thousand barrels from the week before, and half a million barrels per day more than the estimates from a year ago. Inventories were down 2.2 million barrels on the week, but EIA said that’s still about five percent above the five-year seasonal average.

Nadine Leann Stapleton

Nadine Leann Stapleton, age 77, died Saturday, February 2, 2019, at her home in Victoria, Kansas.

She was born November 16, 1941 in Newton, Kansas to Paul and Gertrude (Troyer) Roupp. She married Arden Stapleton on January 27, 1964 in Caldwell, Kansas.

She was a district clerk for the Chase-Raymond School District from 1993 to 2008. She lived in Lyons until moving to Victoria.

Survivors include her husband, Arden Stapleton; one son, Tim Christenson; two daughters, Teresa Cass and husband, Chuck; Leann Olson and husband, Wade; twelve grandchildren and 5 great grandchildren.

She was preceded in death by her parents; one daughter, Julia Stapleton; one brother, Stanley Ruopp; and one sister, Carol Jean Weber.

A private inurnment will be at the Lyons Municipal Cemetery, Lyons, Kansas.

Services are entrusted to Cline’s-Keithley Mortuary of Hays, 1919, East 22nd Street, Hays, Kansas 67601.
Condolences can be left by guestbook at www.keithleyfuneralchapels.com or can be send via e-mail to [email protected]

Mary G. (Juenemann) Braden

Mary G. (Juenemann) Braden

Mary G. (Juenemann) Braden, age 67, of Hays, passed away Sunday, February 3, 2019 at the Good Samaritan Society, Hays.

Funeral services will be 10:30 AM Saturday, February 9, 2019 at St. Nicholas of Myra Catholic Church in Hays. Private family inurnment will be at a later date.

Memorial visitation will be Friday 5 PM – 8 PM with a combined parish vigil service and rosary at 7 PM. All at Brock’s-Keithley Funeral Chapel and Crematory 2509 Vine Hays, KS 67601.

A complete obituary is pending.

55 Kansas lawmakers sponsor LGBTQ anti-discrimination bill

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Fifty-five Kansas lawmakers are co-sponsoring a bill that would ban discrimination in the private sector based on sexual orientation or gender identity.

The bill introduced Monday would protect LGBTQ residents in employment, housing and services.

38 representatives and 17 senators are co-sponsoring the bill.

Rep. Susan Ruiz, a Democrat from Shawnee who is one of the state’s two openly gay legislators, said the legislation would help attract outside businesses to Kansas.

The bill would amend the Kansas Act Against Discrimination to add sexual orientation and gender identity to a list that includes race, religion, color, sex, disability, national origin and ancestry.

Tom Witt, executive director of Equality Kansas, said the law already exempts religious institutions, and concerns by people who support those institutions are unfounded.

Got talent? Hays Rec looking for instructors

HAVE SOMETHING TO SHARE? – BE AN INSTRUCTOR AT HRC

Have a talent you would like to share with others and get paid for? The Hays Recreation Commission is looking for people to teach classes for Adults or youth in anything!!

If you are interested or would like more information please contact Program Director Haley Nixon at 785-623-2650 or e-mail her at [email protected]. Please contact her as soon as possible but no later than February 20th!

KBI: Silver Alert for Nebraska man who may be in Kansas

CLAY COUNTY – The Clay County Sheriff’s Department requested the Kansas Bureau of Investigation (KBI) issue a statewide Silver Alert for a missing 66-year-old Nebraska man. Mr. Kubes  was last seen Sunday morning in Clay Center, according to the Sheriff’s Department. 

Mr. Kubes -Photo courtesy Clay Co. Sheriff

He was last seen wearing dark long sleeve shirt with a dark green windbreaker, blue jeans. a red/white ball cap, red in the front with mesh in the back and wearing glasses and large mustache.  He is 5-foot-10, and weighs 175 pounds. He has white hair and a white mustache.

He was heading to his home in Auburn, Nebraska from Clay Center.

 Mr. Kubes travels from Clay Center north on K-15 to Highway 36 then East bound on 77 then North to Beatrice Nebraska and then east on 136 to Auburn.  His family states that he doesn’t travel outside this normal route.

He is driving a 2010 Ford Super Ranger pickup, silver in color. The back window has an “N” Nebraska sticker and a pass thru window.  The front has a black bug guard. There is also a cooler and red two wheel appliance cart in the back.

The tag that is on the vehicle is Nebraska KUMFISH.

Kubes was in pain when he left Clay Center and was headed to the hospital in Auburn. He does have a phone but is not answering it.

Anyone with information is encouraged to call the Law Enforcement Center of Clay Center Kansas at 785-632-5601 opt #5.

 

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