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Police: Men with guns in Kansas City Walmart broke no laws

KANSAS CITY (AP) — Two men with handguns in their waistbands alarmed shoppers when they entered a Kansas City-area Walmart on Sunday, but police say they were just buying ammunition for target practice.

Entrance of the KC-area Walmart where police briefly detained two men with handguns photo courtesy Fox4Kansas City

Kansas City, Missouri, Police Sgt. Jake Becchina says the men were cooperative and were released because they hadn’t violated Missouri law.

Shopper Clennon Jones said he saw officers speed into the parking lot and one jumped out with shotgun in hand. Jones says shoppers streamed out of the store and warned others not to enter.

Missouri does not require a permit to openly carry a firearm for those 19 years or older. The Walmart store the men entered does not prohibit guns in the store.

Walmart officials didn’t immediately respond to a message.

Earlier this month, 22 people were killed during a mass shooting at another Walmart in El Paso, Texas.

Since then, there have been a number of incidents at Walmart stores around the country. Last week, prosecutors charged a 20-year-old man with making a terrorist threat after he walked into a Springfield, Missouri, Walmart wearing body armor, carrying a loaded rifle and handgun, and filming himself with a phone.

Hays Symphony invites kids to help conduct concert of movie music

FHSU University Relations

Before the formal opening of its 2019-20 season, the Hays Symphony at Fort Hays State University is inviting youths to help conduct the orchestra during its Movie Music Pops Concert on Friday, Aug. 23, at the Downtown Pavilion during the annual Fall Gallery Walk.

Dr. Jeff Jordan, director of FHSU bands, will give a short conducting lesson for kids at 6:30 p.m., before the concert begins at 7 p.m. Participants will then be invited to conduct the concert’s final piece.

“We wanted to take advantage of being outdoors, out of the auditorium,” said Hays Symphony publicity chair Cathy Drabkin.

“And we wanted to capitalize on the family focus of the Gallery Walk, so we decided to invite area children to help conduct,” she said.

The concert will feature music from “Pirates of the Caribbean,” “Star Wars,” “Jurassic Park,” “E.T.,” “The Wizard of Oz” and other popular movies.

“I think kids will recognize the music they’ll get to conduct,” said Drabkin. “It will be a blast for the kids, and definitely a video-worthy moment for mom and dad.”

In keeping with the movie theme, the Downtown Hays Development Corporation, which is hosting the Symphony’s performance, will provide popcorn and drinks for concertgoers. Guests are welcome to stay for a single piece or the entire show.

Dr. Brian Buckstead

The concert will also be an introduction to the orchestra’s new conductor, Dr. Brian Buckstead, who comes to FHSU from Duluth, Minn. Buckstead is also the new violin and viola professor on the FHSU Department of Music faculty. He will be joined by Jordan and Dr. Peter Lillpop, assistant director of FHSU bands, as conductors for the pops concert.

The concert will last about an hour.

The Hays Symphony has been entertaining and educating audiences for over 100 years. Its musicians are FHSU students, faculty and staff, local music teachers, community members from the area, and guest musicians from around the state.

Rehearsals are on Tuesday evenings when the university is in session. The orchestra performs four to six concerts a year.

All Hays Symphony’s concerts are free of charge, thanks to its donors and supporters. Information about the upcoming season’s concerts and ticket reservations can be found at hayssymphony.org.

Three new physicians to join Norton County Hospital

NCH

NORTON – Three physicians have signed contracts with Norton County Hospital and will begin employment in summer 2020. The contracts were formally approved at a special meeting of the hospital’s Board of Trustees on Friday, Aug. 16.

All three physicians are family practice and obstetrics providers. This means the hospital will bring back its labor and delivery program with the onboarding of these new physicians. The three physicians are also native rural Kansans.

Joshua Gaede, MD, is originally from Hoxie, Kansas. He is currently a resident in the Cox Family Medicine Residency program in Springfield, Missouri.

Miranda McKellar, MD, was raised in Sycamore, Kansas. She is currently a resident in the Smoky Hill Family Residency Program in Salina, Kansas.

Theresia Neill, MD, grew up in Severy, Kansas. She is currently a resident in the Smoky Hill Family Residency Program in Salina, Kansas.

Read more on our website: https://bit.ly/2KCEeAW.

Doris LaFern (Keil) Maier

Doris LaFern (Keil) Maier, 92, of Natoma, Kansas and formerly of Gove County and Russell County Kansas, passed away on Saturday Aug 17th, 2019 at the Ness City Hospital.

Doris was born on April 12, 1927 in rural Russell County as the first child to John and Anna (Krug) Keil. She grew up in the Bender Hill area in a Volga German community, and attended a one room school house at Holly through 8th grade. She grew up during the depression and Dustbowl days. Being the oldest child, much of her younger years were spent helping her mother with the household and raising her younger brothers.

Doris was united in marriage to Ruben Jacob Maier on November 10th, 1946 at the Bender Hill Lutheran Church. They first made their home in Russell County in a stone house that was the childhood home of Ruben’s mother, Katie Dumler. It was here that their first son Tom was.

They moved to Gove County where they raised a family of 6 children and operated a farm and ranch from 1951-1972. She was an active member of the Oakley Lutheran Church frequently teaching in Sunday school and vacation bible school. She was an active member of the Extension Home Makers Unit.

In 1972, the family moved to Natoma, Kansas where the family continued with farming and ranching of Angus cattle. She was active in the Natoma Lutheran Church where she was in the women’s guild and sang in the choir. She was the director for the Natoma Housing Authority and the Natoma Thrifty Market. She was active in the Natoma Heritage Seekers and the Volga Germans Historical Society.

Her great joy in life was always family life. Her face always lit up to see a family member. She was a passionate gardener with a very green thumb and operated a home greenhouse. She enjoyed playing the organ, singing, and traveling. A highlight of the year was often a family summer vacation to the western mountains of the United states, picnicking, fishing and exploring. It was a great joy in her life when she and Ruben traveled to Europe and visited Germany where she was able to converse with the locals in her childhood language.

Doris’s surviving family include: her brother Dean (Ruth) Keil of Russell, her sister-in-law Elsa (Marvin) Keil of Colby Kansas, Carolyn (Larry) Keil, Lincoln Nebraska, sons Martin (Iva) Maier of Natoma, Steve (Cindy) Maier, Brownell, daughter Janna (Peter) Belau, Pagosa Springs, CO and Savannah, GA, daughter-in-law Donna (Tom) Maier Russell and many grand, great grand and great great grandchildren.

Doris was proceeded in death by her parents, her husband Ruben, 3 sons Tom, John and Mikey, brothers Marvin, Larry and infant brother Melvin.

A celebration of Doris’ life will be held at 11 A.M. on Wednesday, August 21, 2019, at the Peace Lutheran Church in Natoma, Kansas. Burial will follow at the Natoma Lutheran Cemetery. Visitation will be at the church from 9:30 A.M. to 11 A.M. on Wednesday the day of the service. Memorials may be given to Peace Lutheran Church or Cedar Village Long Term Care and sent in care of the mortuary. Pohlman-Varner-Peeler Mortuary of Natoma, Kansas, is in charge of the funeral service arrangements.

Man guilty of felony for unlawful use of a Kan. driver’s license

OLATHE – A  man has been found guilty of an unlawful act relating to the use of a Kansas driver’s license, according Kansas Attorney General Derek Schmidt.

Emmanuel Salas-Pena photo Johnson Co.

Emmanuel Salas-Pena, 35, pleaded no contest in Johnson County District Court to one felony count of an unlawful act relating to the use of a driver’s license. The case stemmed from an investigation by the Office of Special Investigations of the Kansas Department of Revenue, which revealed that in October 2016 Salas-Pena concealed material information in his driver’s license application at the Johnson County Driver’s License Office in Mission.

This is the 14th conviction resulting from an agreement announced in March 2018 between the attorney general’s office and the Department of Revenue.

Under the agreement, the attorney general’s office, in cooperation with local prosecutors, assumed responsibility for the prosecution of cases of tax fraud and related crimes investigated by the Department of Revenue in efforts to strengthen the state’s enforcement efforts for these types of crimes.

District Judge Thomas Sutherland took the plea. Sentencing is yet to be scheduled in the case.

Lightning believed responsible for Kansas house fire

JOHNSON COUNTY — Lightning is believed responsible for a house fire in Johnson County.

Photo courtesy Overland Park Fire Dept.

Just after 2a.m. Saturday, fire crews responded to a fire in a home in the 8000 Block of West 146th Terrace in Overland Park, according to amedia release.
Crews immediately went to work on the fire in the attic and it took 30 minutes to bring the fire under control.

Neighbors reported hearing loud thunder and seeing lightning just before the fire was discovered.
Two adults, two children and three dogs were displaced by the fire damage.
There were no injuries. The exact cause of the fire remains under investigation.

Kan. officer hospitalized after crash with wrong-way driver

SEDGWICK COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating a suspect in connection with a wrong-way crash that injured a police officer.

Johnson photo Sedgwick Co.

Just after 2 a.m. Saturday, police responded to a wrong-way driver identified as 58-year-old James D. Johnson in a Ford F150 traveling eastbound in the westbound lanes at Kellogg and Maize, according to officer Kevin Wheeler.

A responding officer located the vehicle and was struck by vehicle as the officer attempted to avoid a head-on collision. Johnson continued driving and struck the center median before coming to a stop near Kellogg and Meridian.

The involved officer was transported to a hospital with minor injuries, and was later treated and released. Johnson was not injured. Both vehicles were towed from the scene.

Police arrested Johnson on charges of aggravated battery, driving while under the influence, DUI after a second conviction, hit and run, driving the wrong way on a one-way road, and driving on an expired driver’s license, according to Wheeler.

Alonso breaks NL rookie HR record, Mets down Royals

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Pete Alonso hit his 40th home run to break the National League rookie record, capping a late outburst by the New York Mets in their 11-5 victory over the Kansas City Royals on Sunday.

Michael Conforto hit a long homer in the first inning and drove in four runs. Amed Rosario put the Mets ahead 6-4 with a two-run single in the seventh, and Alonso went deep in the ninth on an 0-2 pitch. He snapped a tie with Cody Bellinger, who launched 39 long balls for the Dodgers in 2017 on the way to winning Rookie of the Year honors.

Back in the thick of a crowded NL wild-card race thanks to a second-half surge, New York completed a 3-3 road trip and improved to 24-10 since the All-Star break.

Alonso also had an RBI double and scored three times during his second consecutive three-hit game. Rosario had three hits and three RBIs in the leadoff spot, and Joe Panik added three hits as the top four batters in the Mets’ lineup combined to go 11 for 18 with nine RBIs and seven runs.

New York scored six times in the seventh to turn a 4-3 deficit into a 9-4 lead. J.D. Davis tied it with a pinch-hit RBI single and Rosario had the go-ahead single two batters later. Alonso, Conforto and Wilson Ramos added RBI base hits later in the inning.

New York battered Royals reliever Kevin McCarthy (2-2), who was charged with four runs in just one-third of an inning.

Jeurys Familia (4-1) got the win, throwing two innings and allowing one run.

Conforto put the Mets up 3-0 in the first, sending the first pitch he saw from starter Glenn Sparkman 452 feet to right field for his 25th home run.

Sparkman settled down after that to throw six solid innings. He set down 14 of his next 15 batters and pitched around a couple of one-out singles in the sixth.

Mets starter Zack Wheeler didn’t allow a hit through the first three innings, but things snowballed over the next two. He gave up four runs — three earned — on five hits in five innings and committed a costly throwing error in the fifth.

The Royals got one run back in the fourth on an RBI groundout by Ryan O’Hearn, then took the lead an inning later. Kansas City loaded the bases with nobody out and all three runners came around to score. Whit Merrifield had an RBI single in the inning. Nicky Lopez and Hunter Dozier also had RBIs.

Brett Phillips had his first two big league hits of the season, including a double in the seventh. He was 0 for 6 in his first two games of the year this weekend.

STATS AND STREAKS

Mets catcher Tomás Nido snapped an 0-for-24 skid with a double in the seventh. … Ramos singled in the seventh to extend his hitting streak to 13 games, tied for the longest active run in the majors with Cincinnati’s Jose Iglesias. … Rosario moved from shortstop to left field in the bottom of the seventh, his first major league appearance in the outfield. … Cheslor Cuthbert went 0 for 4 for the Royals, matching Chad Kreuter’s team record with his seventh straight 0-for-4 game. Cuthbert is hitless in 30 at-bats dating to Aug. 8. … Kansas City is 1-10 in series rubber games this season and 1-24 dating to May 30, 2018.

TRAINER’S ROOM

With an off day on Monday, the Mets decided to keep Davis out of the starting lineup for a second consecutive day as he nurses a sore calf. After his pinch-hit single, he went first to third on Nido’s double but was then removed from the game.

UP NEXT

Mets: Return home Tuesday night to begin a nine-game homestand against playoff contenders. Steven Matz (7-7) starts the series opener against All-Star Game MVP Shane Bieber (12-5) and the Cleveland Indians. Mets manager Mickey Callaway was Cleveland’s pitching coach under skipper Terry Francona before getting the job in New York.

Royals: Head out of town for a seven-game trip beginning Monday night in Baltimore. Jorge Lopez (1-7) makes his 12th start of the season.

Benjamin ‘Ben’ Jacob Arnhold

Benjamin “Ben” Jacob Arnhold, 76, of Russell, Kansas, passed away Friday, August 16, 2019 at Russell Regional Hospital.

Ben was born January 7, 1943 in Hays, Kansas to Alexander and Marie (Schlageck) Arnhold. After birth they moved to Herington until Ben was 10 years old at which time the family moved to Russell, Kansas. He graduated from Russell High School and then attended Ft. Hays State University.

Ben was united in marriage to Shirley Krug on August 14, 1965 at St. Mary’s Catholic Church in Russell. This union was blessed with four children; Anthony, Angela, Lorraine and Alexander.

Ben served his country in the U.S. National Guard for 6 years and was activated from 1968 to 1969 at Ft. Hood Texas.  After serving in the Army they returned to the Russell area.

Ben was an auto body technician and mechanic for the Arnhold Chevrolet Dealership in Russell for many years.  Later in life he worked in the oil field for a few years and become a home painter. Afterword’s he become head of maintenance at St. Mary’s Catholic Church.  Ben retired from working early to care for his aging parents.  He was a member of the St. Mary’s Catholic Church, Knights of Columbus and Russell American Legion.  He enjoyed riding motorcycles, drag racing, hunting, fishing, gardening, reading, taking care of animals and researching the stock market.

Ben’s surviving family includes his wife of 54 years, Shirley of the home; daughter, Lorraine Kasten (Shawn) of White City, Kansas; sons, Anthony Arnhold (Lorri) of Trinidad, Colorado and Alexander Arnhold (Kendra) of Wichita, Kansas; sister, Roselyn Heckman (Jay) of Phoenix, Arizona; six grandchildren, Tonya Mincic (Matt), Todd Arnhold (Cheyenne), Jacob Kasten, Gavin Arnhold, Madison Arnhold and Ethan Arnhold; and four great grandchildren.

Ben was preceded in death by his infant daughter Angela Lynn Arnhold, his parents and his sister Charlotte Caywood.

Celebration of the Funeral Mass will be held at 10:30 AM, Tuesday, August 20, 2019 at St. Mary, Queen of Angels Catholic Church.  Burial will follow at the St. Mary’s Catholic Cemetery in Russell.  Visitation will be held from 10:00 AM to 8:00 PM, Monday, August 19, 2019 at Pohlman-Varner-Peeler Mortuary, with the family present to greet friends from 6:00 PM to 7:00 PM.  Memorials have been established with Knights of Columbus or St. Mary’s Catholic Church.  Contributions and condolences may be sent to Pohlman-Varner-Peeler Mortuary, who is in charge of these arrangements.

Farmer who led largest US organic food fraud going to prison

CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa (AP) — A judge on Friday sentenced the mastermind of the largest known organic food fraud scheme in U.S. history to 10 years in prison, saying he cheated thousands of customers into buying products they didn’t want.

U.S. District Judge C.J. Williams said Randy Constant orchestrated a massive fraud that did “extreme and incalculable damage” to consumers and shook public confidence in the nation’s organic food industry.

Williams said that, between 2010 and 2017, consumers nationwide were fooled into paying extra to buy products ranging from eggs to steak that they believed were better for the environment and their own health. Instead, they unwittingly purchased food that relied on farming practices, including the use of chemical pesticides to grow crops, that they opposed.

“Thousands upon thousands of consumers paid for products they did not get and paid for products they did not want,” Williams said. “This has caused incalculable damage to the confidence the American public has in organic products.”

Williams said the scam harmed other organic farmers who were playing by the rules but could not compete with the low prices offered by Constant’s Iowa-based grain brokerage, and middlemen who unknowingly purchased and marketed tainted organic grain.

Williams ordered Constant, a 60-year-old farmer and former school board president from Chillicothe, Missouri, to serve 122 months in federal prison, as his wife and other relatives sobbed.

Earlier in the day, Williams gave shorter prison terms to three Overton, Nebraska, farmers whom Constant recruited to join the scheme. Williams described the three as largely law-abiding citizens, including one “legitimate war hero,” who succumbed to greed when Constant gave them the opportunity.

Michael Potter, 41, was ordered to serve 24 months behind bars; James Brennan, 41, was sentenced to 20 months; and his father, 71-year-old Tom Brennan, was given a three-month sentence. Williams said the shorter sentence for the elder Brennan reflected his heroism as a decorated platoon leader in the Vietnam War.

All four farmers sentenced Friday had pleaded guilty to wire fraud charges and cooperated with a two-year investigation that isn’t over. A fifth farmer has also pleaded guilty in the case and is awaiting sentencing.

The farmers grew traditional corn and soybeans, mixed them with a small amount of certified organic grains, and falsely marketed them all as certified organic by the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Most of the grains were sold as animal feed to companies that marketed organic meat and meat products.

The farmers reaped more than $120 million in proceeds from sales of the tainted grain. The scheme may have involved up to 7 percent of organic corn grown in the U.S. in 2016 and 8 percent of the organic soybeans, prosecutors said.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s National Organic Program requires crops to be grown without the use of fertilizers, sewage sludge and other substances.

The Cornucopia Institute, an organic industry watchdog group, has been critical of the USDA for being too lenient with producers who flout its standards. Violations are typically handled through USDA enforcement action that can bring fines, revocations and bans. But federal criminal charges are rare, said the group’s director, Mark Kastel.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Jacob Schunk said that under the scheme, consumers paid at least $250 million for fraudulent organic products — and perhaps $1 billion or more. He said that Constant for years exploited an organic certification system that relies on the honesty of farmers and private certifiers.

“He saw the weakness in the system and he exploited it over and over again,” Schunk said.

He noted that Constant had admitted in a court filing to spending some of the money on vacations and repeated trips to Las Vegas. Constant, whose wife of 39 years was in the courtroom Friday, acknowledged in the filing that he spent $2 million supporting three women there with whom he developed relationships.

Constant said that he took full responsibility for his crime and he apologized to his family and the grain merchants, farmers, ranchers and consumers whom he ripped off.

“The organic industry in this country is built in trust and I violated that trust,” he said.

Constant’s lawyer, Mark Weinhardt, described his client as a pillar of the community in Chillicothe, where Constant was known as generous with his money and time.

But Williams said that Constant was similar to the grain that he marketed.

“He is not what is advertised,” the judge said. “Below the surface, he was lying and cheating.”

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