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Wanda Gale Smith

Wanda Gale Smith, age 60, of Great Bend, Kansas passed away Sunday, February 17, 2019 at Hays Medical Center. She was born on March 14, 1958 in Smithville, Missouri, to Jessie and Grenelle Wegener. She married Gary Smith on April 17th 1993 in Kansas City Missouri.

She moved to Great Bend from Kansas City Missouri in 1995, she was a stay at home mother until she started working at Countryside Veterinary Associates in Great Bend. She enjoyed spending time with her family and being amongst her friends. She did not know a stranger. She was known as a huge animal lover by all of those who knew her. She was a great wife, mother and also a friend.

Survivors include her husband Gary Smith of Great Bend Kansas, daughter Jessie Gates married to Scott Gates of Great Bend, daughter Jennie Smith, engaged to Ryan Huntington of Bethany Oklahoma, and son Brett Routon of St. Joseph Missouri.

Funeral arrangements in care of Brock’s-Keithley Funeral Chapel and Crematory 2509 Vine Hays, KS 67601. A celebration of life will be announced and held at a later date.

Condolences may be left by guest book at www.keithleyfuneralchapels.com or by email [email protected]

Judge dismisses charges over Kansas boy’s death on water slide

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A judge has dismissed criminal charges against a Kansas water park owner and the designer of a 17-story slide on which a 10-year-old boy was decapitated in 2016.

Schooley -photo Wyandotte Co.
Henry -photo Johnson County

Wyandotte County Judge Robert Burns found Friday that state prosecutors showed grand jurors inadmissible evidence in dismissing second-degree murder charges against Schlitterbahn owner Jeff Henry and designer John Schooley. The judge also dismissed an involuntary manslaughter charge against operations manager Tyler Miles.

State prosecutors didn’t immediately return phone and email messages.

Caleb Thomas Schwab-courtesy photo

They alleged that shoddy planning and maintenance led to Caleb Schwab’s death on a special day for elected officials. Caleb’s father is Scott Schwab, a state lawmaker who’s now Kansas secretary of state.

A Schlitterbahn spokeswoman says the company welcomes the decision.

Mona M. Peterman

Mona M. Peterman, 92, passed away Wednesday, February 20, 2019 in Ellsworth. She was born November 8, 1926 in Ellsworth County to William, Sr. and Minnie (Haase) Wachs.

Mona was a lifetime resident of Ellsworth County where she married Clarence Peterman on May 25, 1947. She was a member of the St. Paul Lutheran Church of rural Ellsworth where she was the church organist for 50 years and a member of the Lutheran Women’s Missionary League. Mona was a homemaker and site manager for the Ellsworth Senior Center. She was also a 4-H leader and loved playing cards.

Mona is survived by her son, Karl (Paulette) of Altura, MN; son, William (Lynette) of Hutchinson; daughter, Susan Klotz (Mark) of Leavenworth; son, Arthur (Shirley) of Coffeyville; son, Gary (Leesa) of Salina; son, David (Cheryl) of Yukon, OK; daughter, Pamela Dunaway (Mark) of Olathe; 19 grandchildren and 29 great grandchildren; brother, William Wachs, Jr. of Ellsworth; and sisters, Della Ranker of Ellsworth, Alice Bednasek of Holyrood, and Nancy Wachs of Ellsworth. She was preceded in death by her parents and husband, Clarence.

Visitation: 1-8 p.m., Friday, February 22, 2019 at Parsons Funeral Home, Ellsworth. Family will receive friends 6-8 p.m.

Funeral service: 2:00 p.m., Saturday, February 23, 2019 at St. Paul Lutheran Church, rural Ellsworth.

Memorial contributions may be made to St. Paul Lutheran Church or the Ellsworth Senior Center, c/o, Parsons Funeral Home, Box 45, Ellsworth, KS 67439.

Norbert Joseph Schmeidler Jr.

Heaven gained another angel as Norbert passed away peacefully at Via Chrisit Village in Wichita.

Norbert was born and raised in Hays, KS with his sister Mary Jean (Schmeidler) Marvin. He was a retired teacher (Campus High school in Haysville) and retired from Lear Jet after 30 years.

Norbert was preceded in death by his parents (Norbert and Regina).

Norbert will be remembered by his wife Sharon (Moyer), sister Mary Jean Marvin, children: Norbert III (Jennifer), Catherine (Mark) Pratt, Carolyn (Dennis) Thomas, Christine (Robert) DeWitt and Cheryl (Betty Jo Lawson) Schmeidler, 11 Grandchildren and 2 Great Grandchildren.

Norbert loved reading and teaching, the love for his family was so apparent, there was nothing more important to him.

Friends and family are invited to attend the rosary on Monday, Feb 25th at 7:00pm and Mass will be on Tuesday, Feb 26th, 10am at St. Anne Catholic Church in Wichita. In lieu of flowers, memorials can be sent to Thomas Moore Prep-Marion, Hays, KS.

Two hospitalized after car rear-ends Kansas school bus

ATCHISON COUNTY — Two people were injured in an accident just after 7 a.m. Friday in Atchison County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2005 Chevy Impala driven by Skylar D. Coady, 21, Atchison, was traveling on U.S. 73 five miles west of Atchison.

The Chevy rear-ended a school bus from Atchison County Community Schools driven by Kimberly J. Myers, 56, Lancaster, that had slowed to turn south on Lincoln Road.

Coady and one of 12 students on the bus Dylan Mullins, 12, Atchison, were transported to the hospital in Atchison.

Both drivers were properly restrained at the time of the accident, according to the KHP.

Alleged ringleader in foiled Kan. bomb plot sentenced for child porn

WICHITA, KAN. – Already sentenced to prison for his role as the alleged ringleader in a bomb plot, Patrick Stein, 50, of Wright, Kan., pleaded guilty Friday and was sentenced to an additional 44 months in federal prison for possession of child pornography, according to U.S. Attorney Stephen McAllister.

Patrick Stein-photo Butler Co.

Stein pleaded guilty to one count of possessing child pornography. In his plea, he admitted investigators found up to 149 images of children engaged in sexual activities on his laptop computer and USB drives.

Investigators found the child pornography after obtaining a warrant to search Stein’s computer for evidence of his part in a plot to detonate multiple bombs at an apartment complex in Garden City where Somali refugees were living.

In January, Stein was sentenced to 30 years in federal prison for his role in the bomb plot. He will serve the sentence for the child pornography conviction consecutively with the sentence in the bomb case.

🎥 Mayor: DWR ‘promises’ R9 Final Master Order by next Friday

By BECKY KISER
Hays Post

With the city-imposed deadline just one week away, the R9 Ranch water project will move forward by Friday, March 1.

Hays Mayor Henry Schwaller made that announcement during Thursday night’s city commission work session saying the Division of Water Resources Chief Engineer “has promised he’s going to get the Final Master Order off his desk by next Friday.”

“We’re going to move forward. It’ll then go to review by internal counsel there at the Division of Water Resources and then handed over to the city for its review,” said Schwaller.

“I want to thank Commissioner Meier because during his term as mayor he made this a priority. That’s what really got this kickstarted. Because of him, we’ve entered this final stretch which has really gotten dragged out.”

Vice-Mayor Shaun Musil said he had reached out to Chief Engineer David Barfield earlier on Thursday.

“I personally thought it was a very good conversation and I feel like he’s definitely hearing us,” Musil said.

He thanked Schwaller and former mayor James Meier for their leadership in working with state officials to speed up the change order process which has been underway since June 2015.

“I think they are hearing us. I know it’s not as soon as we want to get it done,” added Musil, “but I think it’s happening just by your comments to get it going.”

During a Tuesday news conference detailing a personal visit with the governor on Monday, Schwaller said the Kansas Livestock Association (KLA) has endorsed the long-term water project.

That was incorrect.

“I mistakenly said they had endorsed the project when really they were just involved in it to a light degree. I just want to correct the record,” he clarified.

Schwaller said KLA had asked about doing some water modeling. “We said no, we’re going to handle that. We did keep them in the loop.”

The water modeling to determine how much water would be moved from Edwards County to Ellis County and used by the cities of Hays and Russell was conducted by Black and Veatch engineers.

In May 2018, the Kansas Department of Agriculture Division of Water Resources released a Draft Master Order approving an application to convert water use on the city-owned property from agricultural to municipal.

Following a public hearing in Greensburg in June, DWR Chief Engineer Barfield began preparing the Final Master Order.

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Vatican sex abuse summit seeks new culture of accountability

By NICOLE WINFIELD
Associated Press

VATICAN CITY — Cardinals attending Pope Francis’ summit on preventing clergy sex abuse called Friday for a new culture of accountability in the Catholic Church to punish bishops and religious superiors when they fail to protect their flocks from predator priests.

On the second day of Francis’ extraordinary gathering of Catholic leaders, the debate shifted to how church leaders must acknowledge that decades of their own cover-ups, secrecy and fear of scandal had only worsened the sex abuse crisis.

“We must repent, and do so together, collegially, because along the way we have failed,” said Mumbai Cardinal Oswald Gracias. “We need to seek pardon.”

Chicago Cardinal Blase Cupich told the 190 bishops and religious superiors that new legal procedures were needed to both report and investigate Catholic superiors when they are accused of misconduct themselves or of negligence in handling other abuse cases.

He said lay experts must be involved at every step of the process, since rank-and-file Catholics often know far better than priests what trauma the clergy sex abuse and its cover-up has caused.

“It is the witness of the laity, especially mothers and fathers with great love for the church, who have pointed out movingly and forcefully how gravely incompatible the commission, cover-up and toleration of clergy sexual abuse is with the very meaning and essence of the church,” Cupich said.

“Mothers and fathers have called us to account, for they simply cannot comprehend how we as bishops and religious superiors have often been blinded to the scope and damage of sexual abuse of minors,” he said.

Francis summoned the bishops for the four-day tutorial on preventing sex abuse and protecting children after the scandal erupted again last year in Chile and the U.S. While the Vatican for two decades has tried to crack down on the abusers themselves, it has largely given a pass to the bishops and superiors who moved the predators around from parish to parish.

Cupich called for transparent new structures to report allegations against superiors, investigate them and establish clear procedures to remove them from office if they are guilty of grave negligence in handling abuse cases.

He proposed that metropolitan bishops — who are responsible for other bishops in their area — should conduct the investigations into suspected abuse with the help of lay experts, then forward the results to the Vatican.

Cupich acknowledged his proposal differed from that prepared by the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops at large last year. Those procedures, which called for a code of conduct for bishops and a third-party confidential reporting system, ran into legal snags at the Vatican, which blocked U.S. bishops from voting on them in November.

At the time of the blocked vote, Cupich proposed his “metropolitan model,” which he articulated further Friday from the privileged position as an organizer of Francis’ summit.

Cupich told reporters that his proposal differed from the U.S. conference in that it was “anchored” in existing U.S. church structures for accountability and would therefore be obligatory for all bishops. The U.S. conference proposal would have been voluntary.

In addition, he said involving the regional metropolitan in the procedure would allow for pastoral follow-up to care for the victims.

More than 30 years after the scandal first erupted in Ireland and Australia, and 20 years after it hit the U.S., bishops and Catholic officials in many parts of Europe, Latin America, Africa and Asia still either deny that clergy sex abuse exists in their regions or play down the problem.

Francis, the first Latin American pope, called the summit after he himself botched a well-known sex abuse cover-up case in Chile last year.

Gracias, the Indian cardinal, opened the session by saying bishops must work together to address the problem because it was erroneous to say “it’s a just a problem for the USA or Europe or Australia.”

“This, brothers and sisters, is just not true. I dare say there are cases all over the world, also in Asia, also in Africa,” Gracias said.

But Gracias’ prime-time speaking slot drew some criticism, since the Indian church isn’t known for being proactive in combating clergy sex abuse. Gracias himself has been publicly criticized for his record.

“Why was Gracias allowed to speak at the papal summit? He is a poster boy for the lack of accountability of church leaders, especially in developing countries,” said Anne Barrett Doyle of the online group BishopAccountability, which tracks the abuse scandal.

But it appeared the Vatican may have chosen as speakers precisely those cardinals whose own national churches have not confronted the scandal openly. On the summit’s opening day, for example, the keynote speaker was Filipino Cardinal Luis Tagle.

Based on public reporting and criminal prosecutions, BishopAccountability says it appears that no priests sexually abuse children in the Philippines, a scenario Barrett Doyle calls patently unrealistic. Tagle has said that cultural taboos in the Philippines often prevent victims from coming forward.

Victims have turned out in droves on the sidelines of the summit to demand greater accountability from the church, saying it has for decades put its own interests over those of who were harmed.

“They have this systematic process of covering up, moving along, transferring and not reporting,” said Tim Lennon, president of the U.S.-based survivor group SNAP.

German survivor Matthias Katsch said victims are beyond angry.

“We are really fighting for truth and justice for the survivors,” he said.

Irish Archbishop Eamon Martin said the summit had given many pause for thought.

“We are beginning to realize that perhaps there is something about the way we did things as Church, about the way we are as Church, that this issue really throws up for us. It really makes us ask questions about ‘who are we?’ ” Martin said.

Police: Patriots owner Robert Kraft solicited prostitute

JUPITER, Fla. (AP) — Police in Florida have charged New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft with misdemeanor solicitation of prostitution, saying they have videotape of him paying for a sex act inside an illicit massage parlor.

Jupiter police told reporters Friday that the 77-year-old Kraft hasn’t been arrested. A warrant will be issued and his attorneys will be notified.

The charge comes amid a widespread crackdown on sex trafficking in the area surrounding Palm Beach County. About 200 arrest warrants have been issued in recent days and more are expected.

The Patriots won the Super Bowl earlier this month in Atlanta. The team did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

In a statement, a spokesperson for Kraft said they “categorically deny that Mr. Kraft engaged in any illegal activity. Because it is a judicial matter, we will not be commenting further.”

Increased security at school after Kan. teen arrested for alleged bomb threat

HARVEY COUNTY —Law enforcement authorities are investigating the circumstances surrounding a bomb threat note left in a classroom at Newton High School on Thursday and have made an arrest.

Police provided enhanced security Friday morning at the school, according to Newton police Lt. Mike Yoder. “We are taking the necessary precautions in conjunction with USD 373,” he said.

The note was found in a classroom between classes, according to media release from school district.  School staff turned the note over to the school resource officer and following an investigation, police arrested a 16-year-old boy Thursday afternoon, according to Yoder.

Details of the case will be reviewed by the Harvey County Attorney for possible charges.

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