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HALOS tries to break stigma, help loved ones overcome guilt after suicide

By CRISTINA JANNEY
Hays Post

Suicide is like a bomb going off in your life, one member of the Healing After Loss of Suicide grief support group said.

On a recent visit to a meeting of the Center for Life Experiences’s HALOS grief support group, some of the members talked about the emotional fallout from losing a loved one in this devastating way.

The members of the group respect the pain that the stigma often brings when the story of a loved one’s life is shared. They also respect each member’s need to tell their story, so they asked specific names not be shared.

In addition to stigma, guilt was a reoccurring theme.

One member lost her sister-in-law as a result of suicide four decades ago. The pain persists.

“At that time, and to a certain extent today, there is a stigma to suicide. You didn’t talk about it at all,” she said.

After her brother died four years ago, she started to attend the HALOS group and talk about her sister-in-law’s death.

“I am finally able to talk about it,” she said. “I couldn’t do it, because there was also guilt that ‘What did I do that lead her to do it?’

“It is hard to explain the things that you think of that might have led to it.”

Ann Leiker, CFLE executive director and group facilitator, said in that era there were no support groups and you were basically told you just had to get on with your life, not look back and not talk about it.

Another member’s daughter had taken her life. She was diagnosed with depression before she entered grade school and had struggled her whole life emotionally. Yet this HALOS member also talked about her shock at the death and the extreme guilt she felt when her daughter died.

She said she is still pained by how the people around her responded to her daughter’s death. She said they pretended like she never existed.

“It was like being ignored, and the pain was so acute and you are in shock at first when it happens,” she said. “You feel like you’re … I don’t know … a ghost walking through this world.”

As bad as that pain was, she still had to function, go to the grocery store and take care of her other children.

“It was as though I was a non-entity. The world didn’t seem real to me. It is such a profound loss, you can’t experience anything like that,” she said. “People don’t know what to say to you or how to act.”

A neighbor led her to the group.

“If I didn’t have this group to go to, I don’t know… When something like that happens, the guilt is so horrible. To this day, you could tell me over and over again, ‘It’s not your fault. It’s not your fault. You did everything you could,'” she said but her voice began to quiver and she began to cry. “But I know there was something there that I could have done.”

“There is no one when you come right down to it, even with the group. … You’re all alone. You’re just alone. There is that guilt to suicide. It is a profound loss for all of us. It is a different kind of death, and you don’t really want to experience it because you can’t get rid of it.”

Yet another member came to the group after many years of not being about to talk about her brother’s suicide. He died in the 1970s.

“It was discussed within family only, not outside. There was such a stigma with suicide,” she said. “And so my children and my nieces and nephews — they didn’t even know my brother or anything about him. Like she said. They act like they don’t even exist. Well, my brother existed. He was alive.

“I loved him, so I made an album for him my children and my nieces and nephews if they ever want to find out about their uncle. ”

She continued, “With suicide, there is no closure because you don’t know. You may think you know the reason and probably it might have been the straw that broke the camel’s back. But I think it is many little things that happen throughout their lives.”

For years, she had wanted to connect in some positive way with other people who had been affected by suicide. When she moved back to Hays in 2009, she saw an ad for HALOS on Channel 8. She has been with the group ever since.

She focuses on trying to celebrate her brother’s life and not his death.

“You don’t want your loved ones to be forgotten,” she said. “They existed and they deserved to have a life. One thing we do is share what they did throughout their lives. It’s a story, and we focus on the life.”

Nursing students were observing the group the night the Hays Post visited as they do regularly for CFLE groups.

The member addressed the nurses, “I want to tell you, as nursing students, if you come across anybody who has had suicide in their lives, don’t be afraid of them. They are just normal people. They just need a boost. Be there for them. They need an ear.”

A man and his wife began attending the group together after their son died. He said they continue to come back to the group because they can share their experiences.

“To talk to somebody who knows what you went through,” he said. “You can’t just go out here on the street and run into someone and talk to them. We have all been there. We have all had it happen. We can talk, and you don’t get funny looks or ugly faces.

“We just talk as friends. This basically become our second family. We talk to these people just like family.”

“There is no stigma in this room,” another member said. “We don’t judge.”

The woman who lost her daughter said, “There is a compassion here that we can’t get anywhere else, not even from our best friends, not even our family members. It is only the people who have had to live through it. It is not understandable to other people.”

The people in the group said the cliches many people use to try to comfort you after a death just don’t work. They don’t want to hear things, such as “They are in a better place” or “God won’t give you more than you can handle.”

People who are suffering in that way really need friends and family to anticipate needs, such as food, mowing the lawn, an hour of housework, listening or a simple hug.

“We need someone to listen,” she said. “We need to talk about that person. You have to let us miss that person and talk about that person.”

She said she really appreciated a fellow-support group member who came over and cleaned her bathroom. Another member of the community baked her family bread.

The woman who lost her brother said, “Suicide is something that needs to be talked about. It’s happening. It is in our society. It’s amongst our young ones, and we just need to talk about it honestly. Don’t be ashamed.”

The group also talked generally about the stigma associated with mental illness. Members agreed more resources need to be dedicated to assist people who suffer from mental illness. Western Kansas has the highest suicide rate in the state and that rate is climbing, yet because of its rural nature, accessing treatment for mental illness can be difficult, Leiker said.

HALOS is the only suicide grief support group west of Salina and only one of a half a dozen in the state.

Leiker said mental illness also needs to be decriminalized.

“Our societal approach to suicide needs to be rethought and reframed,” she said, “so people who are in so much pain the only solution they see is ending their lives are not re-traumatized by becoming a part of the legal and law-enforcement systems unless a crime is committed.

“Law enforcement are often the first responders to a suicide attempt and want to help the situation but are often short on available resources due to cutbacks in funding mental health at all levels. Everyone is trying, but we need more people available to help.”

When a suicidal person is reported to 911, they send the police and that person is sometimes taken to treatment in handcuffs.

The HALOS group is open to anyone. It is free, and all you have to do is show up to the group. Leiker and the Center for Life Experience also facilitates Healing Hearts, for those grieving the loss of a child; Healing After Loss, for those grieving the loss of adults; and the National Alliance on Mental Illness, which offers support groups for both people who suffer from mental illness and their families.

If you or someone you love is in immediate danger of suicide, call 911. For non-emergencies, you can contact High Plains Mental Health at 1-800-432-0333.

To learn more about HALOS, NAMI or any of the Center of Life Experience groups or programs, visit its website.

See related story: Center for Life Experience moves; same purpose remains

See related story: After tragic loss of their teen son, couple finds solace through Healing Hearts

See related story: Healing After Loss helps the grieving to repair, reconnect

Cover graphic courtesy CanStockPhoto.com

Update: Mueller’s Russia probe report rules out Trump criminal collusion

WASHINGTON (AP) — Special counsel Robert Mueller did not find evidence that President Donald Trump’s campaign “conspired or coordinated” with Russia to influence the 2016 presidential election but reached no conclusion on whether Trump obstructed justice, Attorney General William Barr declared. That brought a hearty claim of vindication from Trump but set the stage for new rounds of political and legal fighting.

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U.S. Attorney General’s letter on the Mueller investigation -courtesy U.S. Dpt. of Justice (click to expand)

Trump cheered the Sunday outcome but also laid bare his resentment after two years of investigations that have shadowed his administration. “It’s a shame that our country has had to go through this. To be honest, it’s a shame that your president has had to go through this,” he said.

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Democrats pointed out that Mueller found evidence for and against obstruction and demanded to see his full report. They insisted that even the summary by the president’s attorney general hardly put him in the clear.

 

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Mueller’s conclusions, summarized by Barr in a four-page letter to Congress, represented a victory for Trump on a key question that has hung over his presidency from the start: Did his campaign work with Russia to defeat Democrat Hillary Clinton? That was further good news for the president on top of the Justice Department’s earlier announcement that Mueller had wrapped his investigation without new indictments. The resolution also could deflate the hopes of Democrats in Congress and on the 2020 campaign trail that incriminating findings from Mueller would hobble the president’s agenda and re-election bid.

But while Mueller was categorical in ruling out criminal collusion, he was more circumspect on presidential obstruction of justice. Despite Trump’s claim of total exoneration, Mueller did not draw a conclusion one way or the other on whether he sought to stifle the Russia investigation through his actions including the firing of former FBI director James Comey.

According to Barr’s summary, Mueller set out “evidence on both sides of the question” and stated that “while this report does not conclude the president committed a crime, it also does not exonerate him.”

Barr, who was nominated by Trump in December, and Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, who appointed Mueller in May 2017 and oversaw much of his work, went further in Trump’s favor.

The attorney general said he and Rosenstein had determined that Mueller’s evidence was insufficient to prove in court that Trump had committed obstruction of justice to hamper the probe. Barr has previously voiced a broad view of presidential powers, and in an unsolicited memo last June he cast doubt on whether the president could have obstructed justice through acts — like firing his FBI director — that he was legally empowered to take.

Barr said their decision was based on the evidence uncovered by Mueller and not affected by Justice Department legal opinions that say a sitting president cannot be indicted.

Mueller’s team examined a series of actions by the president in the last two years to determine if he intended obstruction. Those include his firing of Comey one week before Mueller’s appointment, his public and private haranguing of then-Attorney General Jeff Sessions for recusing himself from the Russia investigation because of his work on the campaign, his request of Comey to end an investigation into Michael Flynn, the White House’s first national security adviser, and his drafting of an incomplete explanation about his oldest son’s meeting with a Russian lawyer during the campaign.

Mueller’s findings absolve Trump on the question of colluding with Russia but don’t entirely remove the legal threats the president and associates are facing. Federal prosecutors in New York, for instance, are investigating hush-money payments made to two women during the campaign who say they had sex with the president. Trump’s former personal lawyer, Michael Cohen, implicated Trump in campaign finance violations when he pleaded guilty last year.

The special counsel’s investigation did not come up empty-handed. It ensnared nearly three dozen people, senior Trump campaign operatives among them. The probe illuminated Russia’s assault on the American political system, painted the Trump campaign as eager to exploit the release of hacked Democratic emails to hurt Hillary Clinton and exposed lies by Trump aides aimed at covering up their Russia-related contacts.

Thirty-four people, including six Trump aides and advisers, were charged in the investigation. Twenty-five are Russians accused of election interference either through hacking into Democratic accounts or orchestrating a social media campaign to spread disinformation on the internet.

Sunday’s summary — and its suggestion that Mueller may have found evidence in support of obstruction — sets up a fight between Barr and Democrats, who called for the special counsel’s full report to be released and vowed to press on with their own investigations.

“Attorney General Barr’s letter raises as many questions as it answers,” House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer said in a statement.

“Given Mr. Barr’s public record of bias against the special counsel’s inquiry, he is not a neutral observer and is not in a position to make objective determinations about the report,” they said. Trump’s own claim of complete exoneration “directly contradicts the words of Mr. Mueller and is not to be taken with any degree of credibility,” they added.

Trump was at his Florida estate when lawmakers received the report. Barr’s chief of staff called Emmet Flood, the lead White House lawyer on the investigation, to brief him on the findings shortly before he sent it to Congress. Mueller submitted his report to Barr instead of directly to Congress and the public because, unlike independent counsels such as Ken Starr in the case of President Bill Clinton, his investigation operated under the close supervision of the Justice Department.

Barr did not speak with the president, Mueller was not consulted on the letter, and the White House does not have Mueller’s report, according to a Justice Department official.

Though Mueller did not find evidence that anyone associated with the Trump campaign coordinated with the Russian government, Barr’s summary notes “multiple offers from Russian-affiliated individuals to assist the Trump campaign.”

That’s a likely reference not only to a June 2016 Trump Tower meeting at which Donald Trump. Jr. expected to receive damaging information on Clinton from a Kremlin-connected lawyer, as well as a conversation in London months earlier at which Trump campaign aide George Papadopoulos was told Russia had “dirt” on Clinton in the form of thousands of stolen emails.

Rep. Jerrold Nadler of New York, the House Judiciary Committee chairman, said Congress needs to hear from Barr about his decision and see “all the underlying evidence.” He said on Twitter, “DOJ owes the public more than just a brief synopsis and decision not to go any further in their work.”

Barr said that Mueller “thoroughly” investigated the question of whether the Trump campaign coordinated with Russia’s election interference, issuing more than 2,800 subpoenas, obtaining nearly 500 search warrants and interviewing 500 witnesses. Trump answered some questions in writing, but refused to be interviewed in person by the Mueller team.

Barr said Mueller also catalogued the president’s actions including “many” that took place in “public view,” a possible nod to Trump’s public attacks on investigators and witnesses.

In the letter, Barr said he concluded that none of Trump’s actions constituted a federal crime that prosecutors could prove in court.

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WASHINGTON (AP) — The Justice Department said Sunday that special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation did not find evidence that President Donald Trump’s campaign “conspired or coordinated” with Russia to influence the 2016 presidential election.

Mueller also investigated whether Trump obstructed justice but did not come to a definitive answer, Attorney General William Barr said in a letter to Congress summarizing Mueller’s report.

The special counsel “does not exonerate” Trump of obstructing justice, Barr said, and his report “sets out evidence on both sides of the question.”

After consulting with other Justice Department officials, Barr said he and Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein determined the evidence “is not sufficient to establish that the president committed an obstruction of justice offense.”

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U.S. Attorney General’s letter on the Mueller investigation -courtesy U.S. Dpt. of Justice (click to expand)

Barr released a four-page summary of Mueller’s report Sunday afternoon. Mueller wrapped up his investigation on Friday with no new indictments, bringing to a close a probe that has shadowed Trump for nearly two years.

Barr’s chief of staff called White House counsel Emmet Flood at 3 p.m. Sunday to brief him on the report to Congress. Trump was at his Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida, about to return to Washington after spending the weekend there.

Mueller’s investigation ensnared nearly three dozen people, senior Trump campaign operatives among them. The probe illuminated Russia’s assault on the American political system, painted the Trump campaign as eager to exploit the release of hacked Democratic emails to hurt Democrat Hillary Clinton and exposed lies by Trump aides aimed at covering up their Russia-related contacts.

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Mueller submitted his report to Barr instead of directly to Congress and the public because, unlike independent counsels such as Ken Starr in the case of President Bill Clinton, his investigation operated under the close supervision of the Justice Department, which appointed him.

Mueller was assigned to the job in May 2017 by Rosenstein, who oversaw much of his work. Barr and Rosenstein analyzed Mueller’s report on Saturday, laboring to condense it into a summary letter of main conclusions.

Fort Hays State Historic Site ‎Vintage Base Ball Game March 30

Join us for Vintage Base Ball at Fort Hays State Historic Site in Hays!

This game is played with original rules from 1867. The Post Nine from Fort Hays, the Westerns Club from Topeka, and the Colorado vintage base ball teams will face each other in three games. The teams will be wearing uniforms styled from the 1860s to 1880s. An umpire will preside and an interpreter will help explain the rules of the game. There are several differences in vintage base ball from today’s games. Most teammates play without gloves and the ball is softer. No one strikes out, so everyone gets a hit.

All ages are welcome. Games begin at 10 a.m., 1 p.m., and 3 p.m.
10 a.m. – 3 p.m. Saturday, March 30, 2019.

Donald Lynn Ohlemeier

Donald Lynn Ohlemeier, 82, passed away Friday, March 22, 2019, at Great Bend Health and Rehabilitation Center, Great Bend. He was born Nov. 21, 1936, at La Crosse, to Henry and Irma (Lynn) Ohlemeier. Donald married Pat Schwindt June 18, 1961, in LaCrosse, and were later divorced. Donald then married Mary (Spitznagel) Spillar December 19, 1987, at Lawrence.

Don, a longtime resident of Great Bend coming from LaCrosse, was a veteran of the U.S. Army. He was a self-employed carpenter and belonged to the First Church of the Nazarene. Don loved fishing and playing golf, enjoying the challenge that golf presented, especially being proud of his hole-in-one.

Survivors include his wife, Mary of the home; two sons, Doug Ohlemeier and wife Brenda of Tampa, Fla., and Todd Ohlemeier of Leander, Texas; step sons, Bill Spillar and wife Mandy of Leawood, and Steve Spillar of Columbine, Col.; one step daughter, Sharon Spillar of St. Louis, Mo.; one brother, Bill Ohlemeier of Topeka; and six grandchildren, Brandon Spillar, McKenna Spillar, Lindsey Spillar, Riley Spillar, Parker Henzel and Anais Henzel. Also surviving is his Shih Tsu, Tiny. He was preceded in death by three brothers, Merlin Ohlemeier, Marlin Ohlemeier and Gene Ohlemeier; one sister, Janice Lawrence; and long-time canine companion, Danny Boy.

Funeral services for Don will be held at 10:00 a.m. Monday March 25, 2019, at First Church of The Nazarene, 4811 Broadway, Great Bend, with Pastor Josh Foster and Pastor Amy Foster. Interment will follow at Hillcrest Memorial Park, Great Bend, with military honors conducted by the Kansas National Guard Honor Guard. Visitation will be from 1:00 to 9:00 p.m. Sunday, March 26, with the family receiving friends from 6:00 to 8:00 p.m., all at Bryant Funeral Home. Memorials may be given to the Alzheimer’s Association or First Church of the Nazarene, in care of Bryant Funeral Home.

Cloudy, mild Monday

Monday Patchy fog before 8am. Otherwise, mostly cloudy, with a high near 54. North wind 5 to 8 mph becoming east in the afternoon.

Monday Night Partly cloudy, with a low around 38. East southeast wind around 6 mph.

TuesdayMostly sunny, with a high near 65. South wind 6 to 16 mph.

Tuesday NightMostly clear, with a low around 49. Breezy, with a south southeast wind 15 to 20 mph, with gusts as high as 30 mph.

WednesdayMostly sunny, with a high near 76. Breezy.

Wednesday NightPartly cloudy, with a low around 55. Breezy.

ThursdayMostly sunny, with a high near 75.

Kansas woman dead, man hospitalized after head-on crash

GEARY COUNTY — One person died in an accident just after 3p.m. Sunday in Geary County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 1995 Dodge Ram 2500 driven by Dwight Dean Sharp, 66, Council Grove was northbound on Kansas 177 two miles south of Interstate 70.

The pickup traveled left of center and struck a 2011 Subaru Outback driven by Jacobson, Kayla Marie Jacobson, 31, Alta Vista, head-on.

Jacobson was pronounced dead at the scene and transported to Johnson Funeral Home in Junction City. Life Flight transported Sharp to a hospital in Topeka. Both drivers were properly restrained at the time of the accident, according to the KHP.

Kansas State Fair announces grandstand acts

HUTCHINSON, Kan. — The Kansas State Fair on Monday announced acts for the Nex-Tech Wireless Grandstand concert series.

According to a media release, a Kansas native will kick off the 10-day event. Successful Nashville songwriter Nicolle Galyon, who hails from Sterling, will grace the grandstand stage Sept. 6. In February, she was honored with a Country Music Association Triple Play Award, which honors songwriters who have achieved three No. 1 hits in a one-year period.

Galyon will open for American radio personality and 2018 “Dancing with the Stars” mirrorball winner Bobby Bones, who will perform with his comedy show Bobby Bones and the Raging Idiots.

Meanwhile, longtime country crooner Billy Currington with 11 chart-toppers will perform on Sept. 7.

Contemporary Christian singers Francesca Battistelli and Zach Williams, both with Grammy and Dove awards on their resume, will perform Sept. 11.

The lineup also includes rock band Skillet on Sept. 8 and rising country star Lauren Alaina with Mitchell Tenpenny on Sept. 13.

Tickets go on sale at 8 a.m. Friday, April 5.
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Residents can snag tickets one day earlier on April 4 by signing up for the fair’s email list at www.KansasStateFair.com.

Prices include gate admission if purchased by Aug. 11.

Hays USD 489 board to discuss HMS computers, capital projects

By CRISTINA JANNEY
Hays Post

The Hays school board will again consider the purchase of new computers for Hays Middle School at its meeting Monday night.

The district’s technology committee has recommended the district buy new iPads for $238,000 as part of a four-year technology replacement plan.

Some members of the school board have advocated for Chromebooks. However, the district Technology Committee in a report determined Chromebooks with the same capabilities as the iPads would cost more than the iPads — $267,048.

Some members of the board asked if the touchscreen capability was necessary.

The Technology Committee went back to the teachers to determine how often they use the touchscreen function and how eliminating touchscreens would affect student learning.

Of the 36 teachers surveyed, 21 of the 36 said their students used the touchscreen function hourly. Thirty-one of 36 teachers said student learning would be negatively impacted by the elimination of touchscreens.

The teachers were then asked to elaborate on how the touchscreens were used in their classes. Many of them said the students took notes or completed assignments by writing or drawing using the touchscreen function.

Capital improvement
The board also will review several capital projects Monday night.

The board is set to vote on Roosevelt and HMS roof bids. The low bid for the Roosevelt roof was $241,298 from High Plains Roofing. The low bid for the HMS roof was $46,120 from Wray Roofing of North Newton.

The HMS project will fix a leak over the cafeteria.

The board will review a plan to add secure entrances at Hays High School and HMS. The district has received more than $86,000 in grants for the project. The district’s portion of these projects is $16,693. The district hopes to have the entrance projects completed this summer.

The projects will funnel visitors through the schools’ offices after the start of the school day.

The board will also review bids for a project to pull wiring for new clock, phone and security camera systems at the high school. The low bid was from Nex-Tech for $129,337.

In other business, the board will:

• Discuss a possible bond issue
• Discuss dissolving the Oak Park Condominium Association
• Discuss the Oak Park Medical Complex tax-exemption application

KC man sentenced for 3-month crime spree, 13 armed robberies

KANSAS CITY – A Kansas City man was sentenced in federal court today for his role in an armed robbery that was part of a three-month-long spree of armed robberies at metropolitan area businesses, according to the United State’s Attorney.

Donald L. Boggess -photo NDC

Donald L. Boggess, also known as “Old School,” 57, was sentenced by U.S. District Judge Brian C. Wimes to 11 years and nine months in federal prison without parole. The court also ordered Boggess to pay $19,796 in restitution, for which he is jointly and severally liable.

On Dec. 19, 2017, Boggess pleaded guilty to the Aug. 30, 2015, armed robbery of a 7-Eleven store at 1701 Independence Ave., Kansas City.

The crime spree, which lasted from July 25 to Oct. 20, 2015, involved 13 armed robberies of businesses in the metropolitan area in which $19,796 was stolen.

Boggess is the fourth and final defendant to be sentenced in this case. Isaac J. Williams, also known as “Dat Flyguy,” 26, of Kansas City, Mo., also pleaded guilty and was sentenced to 11 years in federal prison without parole. Rahnice J. Clay, 25, of Kansas City, Mo., also pleaded guilty and was sentenced to eight years in federal prison without parole. Deitra M. Turner, also known as “Detrix Mob Turner,” 26, of Kansas City, Mo., also pleaded guilty and was sentenced to eight years in federal prison without parole.

During the armed robbery of the metroPCS store at 4513 Independence Ave., Kansa City, Mo., on Aug. 18, 2015, metroPCS robbery, Boggess was armed with a silver handgun while Williams stood by the door looking out. When Boggess demanded money, the sales clerk motioned to the cash register and Boggess opened the drawer, took approximately $2,627, and stuffed it into his hooded sweatshirt pocket. While taking the cash from the drawer, Boggess continued to point the handgun at the clerk and another employee. Williams and Boggess then fled the store and got into the getaway car with the Turner and Clay. All four divided and shared in the proceeds from the robbery.

During the armed robbery of the Phillips 66 gas station at 7531 Troost Ave., Kansas City, Mo., on Aug. 21, 2015, Williams and Turner entered the store, while Clay was at the gas pump as the lookout and Boggess remained in the car, as he was the getaway driver. The cashier was in the middle of a transaction with a customer who had just handed her a $100 bill when Williams pushed the customer out of the way and demanded the money in the register. He then pulled out a silver handgun that was wrapped in a t-shirt and pointed it at her. The cashier opened the cash register and took out all of the cash and placed it onto the counter. Williams grabbed the cash, then he and Turner (who was standing by the door as a lookout) left the store. They got into Boggess’s vehicle and Boggess drove away. The money from the robbery was split equally among the four of them.

Clay admitted that, in two robberies, she entered the store prior to the robbery then left the store when there were no other customers. A short time later, Williams and Turner entered the store. Williams, armed with a handgun, demanded money.

During the armed robbery of the metroPCS store at 723 Southwest Blvd., Kansas City, Mo., on Sept. 11, 2015, Turner grabbed a blue metroPCS bag from the store to put the money in to. The employee handed over approximately $312. Williams and Turner ordered her to the back to unlock the safe, but she was unable to unlock the safe.

During the armed robbery of the GameStop store at 906 Westport Rd., Kansas City, Mo., on Sept. 12, 2015, Turner took one of the employees to the back and collected game systems. The employee stated he handed over approximately $555 and games. Two witnesses outside the GameStop store saw Williams and Turner run to and get into Clay’s red Toyota; Clay, the getaway driver, was already in the car. Williams, Turner, and Clay split the money and video game systems.

Haynes-Jones carries Wichita State past Clemson in NIT

CLEMSON, S.C. (AP) — Samajae Haynes-Jones tallied 10 points and 10 rebounds to carry Wichita State to a 63-55 win over Clemson in the second round of the NIT on Sunday.

Jaime Echenique had 18 points and three blocks for Wichita State (21-14), which has reached 20 wins in 10 straight seasons. Markis McDuffie added 16 points. Dexter Dennis had nine points, 11 rebounds and three blocks for the road team.

Wichita State plays top-seeded Indiana on Tuesday night in the quarterfinals.

The Tigers’ 28.3 field-goal percentage represented the worst mark by a Wichita State opponent this season.

Marcquise Reed had 18 points for the Tigers (20-14). Elijah Thomas added eight rebounds. David Skara had three blocks.

FHSU tennis drops home opener to No. 4 Bronchos

HAYS, Kan. – In their first home match of the spring season, the Fort Hays State women’s tennis suffered a 6-1 loss at the hands of No. 4 Central Oklahoma in Hays. The Tigers drop to 3-5 on the season and 0-3 in MIAA play, while the Bronchos improve to 8-2 overall and a perfect 3-0 in conference battles.

In singles play, the Tigers picked up one win as Ellea Ediger claimed a 2-6, 6-4, 10-8 win over Nikki Boyer. However, Fort Hays State faltered in its other singles bouts. Laura Jimenez-Lendinez fell in a 4-6, 2-6 contest to Isabella Dunlap, while UCO’s Kirtana Bhat claimed a 1-6, 1-6 win over Lauren Lindell. Natalie Lubbers fell 3-6, 2-6 to Paola Landin. Haley Weidemann slipped in a 2-6, 0-6 loss to Alix Williams. Nicole Lubbers rounded out the singles play for FHSU as she suffered a 3-6, 2-6 loss to Jessica Le.

Doubles play went to the Bronchos as they took all three contests. The duo of Natalie Lubbers and Lindell were shutout 0-6 by Adel-Byanu Abidullina and Bhat. Nicole Lubbers and Jimenez-Lendinez were bounded 2-6 by Sarah Van Eeckhoudt and Boyar, while Ediger and Weidemann were defeated 2-6 by the Bronchos duo of Williams and Le.

The Tigers are back in action at home on Monday (March 25) at 10 am as they play host to Northeastern State.

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