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KDWPT, Country Stampede to part ways; festival will stay in Topeka

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The popular Country Stampede music festival will be moving from Manhattan to Topeka — and changing its name.

photo courtesy Country Stampede

Topeka Mayor Michelle De La Isla made the announcement Thursday hours before the event kicked off in Topeka.

Country Stampede has been held at Tuttle Creek State Park in Manhattan for 23 years. It was moved to Heartland Motorsports Park for this year’s event because of flooding at Tuttle Creek.

Experts estimated the three-day event brought $8 million to the Manhattan economy. It annually draws more than 100,000 fans to hear some of the biggest country stars.

This year’s event features 50 country acts, including Clint Black, Jake Owen and Jason Aldean. It is scheduled to run Thursday through Saturday.
The festival will be called the Heartland Stampede in the future.

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TOPEKA – The Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism (KDWPT) and Country Stampede, LLC have mutually and amicably agreed to terminate the Special Event Permit Addendum dated March 26, 2018 under which the Country Stampede was to have been held at Tuttle Creek State Park this year, according to a media release from the KDWPT.

The 24th annual Kicker Country Stampede will be held from June 20-22 at Heartland Motorsports Park.

The confluence of two situations led to the decision, according to the release.

The unprecedented rainfall leading to flooding damage at Tuttle Creek State Park made it impossible to hold the concert at the scheduled time and the current economic outlook for music industry events combined with the high water event at Tuttle Creek impaired the financial viability of the Country Stampede operator

Under the termination agreement, KDWPT will refund the operator’s payment of $81,500.00 and the operator is no longer obligated to make any future payments.

KDWPT and Country Stampede, LLC have had a great relationship over the 23 years that Tuttle Creek State Park has hosted the event. Country Stampede has helped focus national and international attention on Kansas, the City of Manhattan and Tuttle Creek State Park which will have benefits for many years to come. We wish the operator well for the future.

 

Former state senator Lee named co-chair of governor’s tax reform council

Former state senator Janis Lee
Office of Gov. Laura Kelly

Honoring her promise to pursue commonsense, bipartisan reform of the Kansas tax code, Governor Laura Kelly today announced the appointment of two former state senators to serve as co-chairs of the new Governor’s Council on Tax Reform.

Kelly selected Steve Morris of Hugoton and Janis Lee of Kensington to lead the Governor’s Council on Tax Reform, charged with thorough review of the state’s tax code and recommendations for a more fiscally responsible and fair tax structure.

Morris, a moderate Republican, served 20 years in the Kansas Senate, including eight years as Senate president. During Lee’s 22 years in the state Senate, she was a longtime ranking Democrat on the Senate Tax Committee. She also is a former chief hearing officer for the Kansas Court of Tax Appeals.

Kelly served with Morris and Lee in the state Senate, and said their experience and bipartisan approach would be instrumental as the new Council on Tax Reform moves forward in pursuit of sound tax policy.

“The people of Kansas elected me to bring fiscally conservative and responsible principles back to our government,” Kelly said. “To that end, I expect the Council on Tax Reform to thoughtfully evaluate tax policy and recommend prudent, sustainable changes for the future.

“I know Steve and Janis share my desire to keep the state tax burden as low as possible. They also understand how important it is to ensure that our tax code supports public investment in areas such as education, public safety and infrastructure needed to help Kansas prosper.

“While it’s necessary to proceed with caution due to economic uncertainty, it’s also time to begin the conversation on tax reform that’s beneficial for families and businesses alike,” the governor said. “We can and should build a sensible tax system that benefits Kansans who need it most, and ultimately all Kansans.”

Kelly plans to issue an executive order establishing and announcing the full membership of the Governor’s Council on Tax Reform, and detailing the full scope of work involved in the coming weeks.

Lisa Jane Cook

Lisa Jane Cook, 48, of Oakley, died Wednesday, June 19, 2019. She was born April 13, 1971, in Euless, TX, to Wheeler Dale and Thelma (Wheeler) Wright. She married David Cook on July 7, 1995, in Oakley. Lisa enjoyed playing Farkle and spending time with her grandchildren.

She was preceded in death by her parents; husband David and grandson Jesse Bloom.

Lisa is survived by her children, Thelma (Ty) Kaiser, Tammy (Paul) Beaver and Jessica (Charlie) Bloom; sisters, Donna Cary, Debra Almond, Tammy Honea, Tony Wright and Teresa Potter; brothers Michael Wright, Bryan Wright and Roger Wright and seven grandchildren.

Cremation was chosen and a private family memorial service will be held. For information or condolences visit www.baalmannmortuary.com

Great Bend teen wins national basketball skills competition

Parker Dicks, pictured 2nd from the right, won the 13U Jr. NBA Skills Challenge in New York City on Wednesday.

By COLE REIF
Great Bend Post

GREAT BEND — A Great Bend teenager became a national champion Wednesday in New York City. Parker Dicks won his age division in the 2019 Jr. NBA Skills Challenge. The challenge is designed to have participants dribble a basketball through cones and shoot from certain spots on the court that are worth different points. Dicks won the 13U division at Basketball City on the Lower East Side of Manhattan, New York.

“I was hoping to go and have fun,” said Parker Dicks. “I thought I would do pretty well. I didn’t expect to win but I was glad to.”

Dicks won the skills challenge hosted by the Optimist Club of Great Bend at The Fieldhouse last January. The soon-to-be 8th grader at Great Bend Middle School then won the Regional competition in Denver in March and received an all-expenses paid trip to New York for the national contest and a chance to attend the NBA Draft on June 20.

“I’ve had the privilege to coach with some of the best people around,” said Parker’s father, Shane Dicks. “We have a really good support structure around here. Parker is one that we have never had to tell to go out and and put the work in. He does it by himself.”

Parker was one of nine finalists at the national competition and won the event with a score of 66.

“I was probably the most excited I’ve ever been about anything,” said Parker. “I love to play basketball and for it to bring me here was amazing.”

Parker and his parents, Hayley and Shane Dicks.

Hays Eagles rally for win over Great Bend

HAYS – Trey Riggs and Palmer Hutchison each drove in a run late with a sacrifice fly to help the Hays Eagles Senior American Legion baseball team rally for a 4-2 win over Great Bend Wednesday at Larks Park.

Great Bend got the scoring started in the top of the third to take a 1-0 lead but the Eagles answered right back in the fourth, scoring a run on an error and a William Sennett RBI single to go up 2-0.

Hutchison’s sacrifice fly in the fifth inning put Hays up 3-1 and then after the Chiefs scored a run in the top of the seventh Riggs drove in the Eagles fourth run on a sacrifice fly putting Hays up 4-2.

Five Hays pitchers combined to allow just two runs on six hits. Brock Lumus pitched three innings of scoreless relief and earned the win. Brady Kreutzer pitched a perfect ninth for the save.

Kreutzer’s appearance wasn’t without issue though. After throwing 102 pitches on Saturday against Rossville he was required to wait four days before pitching again so he should not have been allowed to pitch again until Thursday.

The American Legion rules state that when the player violates the pitch count rule the player and the coach are ineligible until reinstated by the Kansas American Legion Baseball Committee.

The Eagles improve to 13-4 with the win and are at the Hooper Showcase in McPherson this weekend. They are scheduled to play Pratt and Liberal on Friday.

Kirk Kalvin ‘KB’ Brown

Kirk Kalvin Brown, known to many as KB, Brownie or Captain Kirk was born in Oberlin, Kansas on June 29, 1957. He was the youngest of three children, born to Raye and Violet (VanPelt) Brown. Kirk passed away at his home in Oberlin, KS on June 18, 2019 at the age of 61.

Kirk was raised in Oberlin and graduated from DCHS in 1975. After high school, he did some construction work with Ronnie Black before returning to the family business. He bought Raye’s Grocery from his sister and husband, Lee and Jackie Frickey. It was during these years that his two daughters were born. Jenny in 1975 and Ashley in 1989.

Kirk enjoyed life. He took pride in watching his children and grandchildren grow and loved to spoil them whenever possible. When he was younger, he took every chance he could to take his Harley out for a ride. Kirk also enjoyed a good day of fishing and had an extensive album collection that he enjoyed listening too and took pride in.

Another love of his was Raye’s Grocery. It had become his home away from home, and he considered all the employees that worked there as part of his family. Kirk was well known for the many ways in which he supported the local community. One event he especially enjoyed was sponsoring the Lunch Box Derby every year.

Survivors include daughter, Jenny Kasson and husband Matt of Norcatur, KS; daughter, Ashley Brown and fiancé Allen Porter of Oberlin, KS; four grandchildren: Mike, Dennis Raye and Dru Kasson, and Avery Porter; sisters: Janie Neal and husband Rich and Jackie Frickey and husband Lee, plus many nieces, nephews and other relatives.

He was preceded in death by his father Raye Brown, his mother Violet Brown, his cousin Kerry Brown and many close friends that had become family.

Funeral services will be 2:30 pm Friday, June 21, 2019 at The Gateway Event Center in Oberlin, Kansas. Burial will follow at Oberlin Cemetery. Visitation will be 3-7:00 pm Thursday, June 20, 2019 at Pauls Funeral Home, Oberlin. The family will receive friends from 6-7:00 pm.

Memorial contributions may be made to the American Legion Post 70 or the Oberlin ~ Decatur Economic Development. Condolences may be left at www.paulsfh.com

The Latest: Iran shoots down $100M US drone, President Trump responds

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump declared Thursday that “Iran made a very big mistake” in shooting down a U.S. drone.

White House press secretary Sarah Sanders says Trump was briefed Wednesday night and again Thursday morning about the incident. She says the administration also will keep in touch with lawmakers on Capitol Hill.

Trump made his comment on Twitter in midmorning.

American and Iranian officials are disputing the circumstances of the incident.

Iran’s Revolutionary Guard said it shot down the drone over Iranian airspace. The U.S. military is calling the downing an “unprovoked attack” and said it occurred over international airspace in the Strait of Hormuz.
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TEHRAN, Iran (AP) — Iran’s Revolutionary Guard shot down a U.S. drone on Thursday amid heightened tensions between Tehran and Washington over its collapsing nuclear deal with world powers, American and Iranian officials said, though they disputed the circumstances of the incident.

The Guard said it shot down the drone over Iranian airspace, while two U.S. officials told The Associated Press that the downing happened over international airspace in the Strait of Hormuz. The different accounts could not be immediately reconciled.

Previously, the U.S. military alleged that Iran had fired a missile at another drone last week that was responding to the attack on two oil tankers near the Gulf of Oman. The U.S. blames Iran for the attack on the ships; Tehran denies it was involved.

The attacks come against the backdrop of heightened tensions between the U.S. and Iran following President Donald Trump’s decision to withdraw from Tehran’s nuclear deal a year ago.

Separately, Saudi Arabia said on Thursday that Yemen’s Iranian-allied Houthi rebels launched a rocket targeting a desalination plant in the kingdom the previous night. The White House said Trump was briefed about that attack.

Iran has quadrupled its production of low-enriched uranium and threatened to boost its enrichment closer to weapons-grade levels, trying to pressure Europe for new terms to the 2015 nuclear deal.

In recent weeks, the U.S. has sped an aircraft carrier to the Mideast and deployed additional troops alongside the tens of thousands already in the region. From Yemen, the Houthis have launched bomb-laden drones into neighboring Saudi Arabia.

All this has raised fears that a miscalculation or further rise in tensions could push the U.S. and Iran into an open conflict, some 40 years after Tehran’s Islamic Revolution. Thursday’s drone incident marks the first direct Iranian-claimed attack on the U.S. amid the crisis.

“We do not have any intention for war with any country, but we are fully ready for war,” Revolutionary Guard commander Gen. Hossein Salami said in a televised address.

Iran’s paramilitary Revolutionary Guard, which answers only to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, said it shot down the drone on Thursday morning when it entered Iranian airspace near the Kouhmobarak district in southern Iran’s Hormozgan province. Kouhmobarak is some 1,200 kilometers (750 miles) southeast of Tehran and close to the Strait of Hormuz.

The Guard said it shot down the drone at 4:05 a.m. after it collected data from Iranian territory, including the southern port of Chahbahar near Iran’s border with Pakistan. Iran used its air defense system known as Third of Khordad to shoot down the drone — a truck-based missile system that can fire up to 18 miles (30 kilometers) into the sky, the semi-official Fars news agency reported.

Iran’s state-run IRNA news agency, citing the Guard, identified the drone as an RQ-4 Global Hawk. However, the U.S. Navy also flies a variant that looks similar, called the MQ-4C Triton.

The drones cost over $100 million apiece and can fly higher than 10 miles in altitude and stay in the air for over 24 hours at a time. They have a distinguishable hump-shaped front and an engine atop. Their wingspan is bigger than a Boeing 737 passenger jet.

The U.S. officials told the AP the Iranians fired a surface-to-air missile striking the American drone over the Strait of Hormuz, in international airspace. The strait is the narrow mouth of the Persian Gulf through which 20% of all global oil moves.

The officials spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity as the information had yet to be cleared for release to the public. They did not elaborate on the type of drone shot down, nor the mission it was conducting. However, the U.S. has been worried about international shipping through the Strait of Hormuz since the limpet mine attacks in May and June.

Salami, speaking to a crowd in the western city of Sanandaj, described the American drone as “violating our national security border.”

“Borders are our red line,” Salami said. “Any enemy that violates the borders will be annihilated.”

Iran’s Foreign Ministry separately protested the drone, saying it entered Iranian territory.

Iran has claimed to have shot down American drones in the past. In the most-famous incident, in December 2011, Iran seized an RQ-170 Sentinel flown by the CIA to monitor Iranian nuclear sites after it entered Iranian airspace from neighboring Afghanistan. The Iranians later reverse-engineered the drone to create their own variants.

Meanwhile, Saudi Arabia said Yemen’s Houthi rebels fired a rocket a desalination plant in al-Shuqaiq, a city in the kingdom’s Jizan province. The state-run Saudi Press Agency quoted military spokesman Col. Turki al-Maliki as saying the attack caused no damage and wounded no one. The Yemeni rebel Al-Masirah satellite news channel earlier said the Houthis targeted a power plant in Jizan, near the kingdom’s border with Yemen, with a cruise missile.

White House spokeswoman Sarah Sanders said Trump had been “briefed on the reports of a missile strike in the kingdom of Saudi Arabia.”

“We are closely monitoring the situation and continuing to consult with our partners and allies,” Sanders said. It wasn’t immediately clear why Trump would be briefed about an attack that caused no damage or casualties.

A Saudi-led coalition has been battling the Houthis since March 2015 in Yemen, the Arab world’s poorest nation now pushed to the brink of famine by the conflict. In recent weeks, the Houthis have launched a new campaign sending missiles and bomb-laden drones into Saudi Arabia.

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Hutch couple found guilty of March robbery involving hatchet

David Hunter / photo Ellis Co.

By JONATHAN ZWEYGARDT
Hays Post

A Hutchinson couple pleaded no contest to robbery and drug charges Tuesday in Ellis County District Court after robbing a man in March while armed with a hatchet.

David Scott Hunter initially was charged with kidnapping, aggravated robbery, aggravated assault with a deadly weapon, drug possession, and interference with law enforcement after the March 29 incident in Hays.

Hunter’s wife, Hollie Hunter, was charged with aiding in the commission of the crimes of kidnapping, aggravated robbery and aggravated assault with a deadly weapon, and drug possession.

Under the plea agreement, David Hunter pleaded no contest and was found guilty of aggravated robbery and possession of methamphetamine — both felonies. The agreement calls for David Hunter to serve 130 months, or 10 years and 10 months, in prison on the aggravated robbery charge. He was also sentenced to 11 months for drug possession, which will run concurrent to the robbery sentence.

Three other charges were dropped as a result of the plea agreement.

He is also on probation with an underlying sentence of 21 months in prison for a case in Reno County and faces a theft charge in Reno County.

Hollie Hunter pleaded no contest and was found guilty of aiding and abetting in the commission of aggravated robbery and possession of methamphetamine.

Hollie Hunter / photo Ellis Co.

Hunter agreed to 41 months for the aiding and abetting charge and 11 months on the drug charge for a total of 52 months. Under the agreement, Hunter will serve three years of probation instead of the prison sentence, but if she violates her probation, the judge can sentence her to the full 52 months in prison.

As part of the plea deal, Hollie Hunter agreed to testify against her husband. Two other charges were dropped.

According to court documents, David and Hollie Hunter were accused of robbing an acquaintance in the early morning hours of March 29 instead of giving him a ride to his girlfriend’s house.

The victim told police that Hollie Hunter drove the three of them to the Kwik Shop, 1301 Vine, to get gas and cigarettes but after the victim gave David Hunter cash, Hunter got back in the van and threatened the man with a hatchet.

Documents said David Hunter then told his wife to drive away and, after they reached an area outside of Hays, they let the man out of the vehicle.

The Hunters took a wallet, backpack, jewelry, a cellphone and approximately $150 from the victim.

The victim reported the incident to the Hays Police Department a short time later and traced his cellphone to a Hays hotel.

Police located a van matching the suspect’s van at the hotel. There an officer from the HPD identified both Hollie Hunter and David Hunter.

David Hunter, who initially gave the officer a fake name, was identified as having a Reno County warrant for his arrest and he was taken into custody. The officer also reportedly found Hunter to be in possession of items taken from the victim earlier in the day, as well as drug paraphernalia.

Hollie Hunter was identified as a person of interest in a shoplifting report at Walmart and also was arrested.

While searching the couple’s hotel, more of the victim’s belongings, drugs and drug paraphernalia were found.

Sentencing for both is tentatively scheduled for August.

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