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The Latest: 2-year-old found dead in parked car in Lawrence

DOUGLAS COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating the death of a child in Douglas County.

Lawrence Police Chief Gregory Burns, Jr. during Monday’s news conference on the death of a 2-year-old -photo courtesy Lawrence Police

Just after 5:30p.m. Sunday, police responded to the 3300 block of Iowa Street in Lawrence after receiving a call that a 2-year old child identified as DéVonté Lashawn Turner  had been left unattended in a parked car, according to Police Chief Gregory Burns.

By the time officers and paramedics arrived, the boy had died.  It appears as though heat may have been a contributing factor in the toddler’s death, according to Burns. Temperature reached 88 degrees Sunday afternoon in Lawrence, according to the National Weather Service.

The child was not with parents but in the care of other family members at the time of the incident, according to Burns.  “We do not know the specific circumstances in this death and no arrests have been made,”  Burns said during a Monday news conference.

This should serve as a reminder to take extra care when exiting your vehicle especially this time of year when temperatures are high.  

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DOUGLAS COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating the death of a child in Douglas County.

Just after 5:30p.m. Sunday, police responded to the 3300 block of Iowa Street in Lawrence after receiving a call that a 2-year old child had been left unattended in a parked car.

After arriving at the residence, officers and medical personnel determined that the child had died. Investigators have contacted the family. Authorities have released no additional details early Monday.

 

Sheriff: Magic mushrooms, guns, cash seized in Great Bend drug bust

BARTON COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating a suspect on drug charges after a weekend arrest.

Photo Barton Co. Sheriff
Matthew Tracy photo Barton Co.

Just after noon Saturday, officers executed a search warrant at 1036 Van Buren Street in Great Bend, according to Sheriff Brian Bellendir.

Officers discovered substantial quantities of controlled substances, including suspected schedule II pharmaceuticals, psilocybin mushrooms as well as large quantity of marijuana. Deputies also seized several firearms and several thousand dollars in US currency.

They also arrested at the scene  Matthew Tracy, 33 of Great Bend. 

He was booked on requested charges of possession with intent to distribute, criminal possession of a firearm, failure to pay drug tax stamp and possession of drug paraphernalia. Bond was set at $50,000. He has since posted that bond and was released.

38-year-old dead; KBI investigates officer involved shooting

LABETTE COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating an officer involved shooting in Labette County.

Just after 12:20 a.m. on Monday, the Labette County Sheriff’s Office requested KBI assistance. Preliminary information indicates that just after 12:15a.m. Monday, officers from the Chetopa Police Department served a search warrant at 1110 Cherry Street in Chetopa, according to a media release.

They had received earlier information indicating there may be possible drug activity at the residence. Further investigation led them to obtain a search warrant for the property. After knocking and announcing their presence several times, three officers entered the home. They moved through the house in an attempt to safely determine if anyone was inside. As the first officer inside the house made his way down the hallway, he encountered an armed man, and fired three shots.

All officers quickly exited the house and took cover.

The Labette County Sheriff’s Office responded to help. Once they were outside the home, officers called for the occupants of the house to come out. Soon after, a 25-year-old woman exited. The woman reported that the only other person still inside the home was the man they previously encountered, and that he required medical attention.

Police again entered the home and found the man suffering from gunshot wounds. A rifle was discovered near him. EMS responded. The man, later identified as 38-year-old Scott Souders, was declared deceased at the scene by EMS.

Souders lived at the residence. No law enforcement officers were injured during the incident.

The KBI will conduct a thorough and independent investigation into this incident. Once completed the findings will be turned over to the Labette County Attorney for review. This investigation is ongoing.  No further information will be released at this time.

Nearly 1,000 arrests in Wichita in joint effort to reduce violent crime

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Authorities say a joint operation with federal, state, Wichita and other law enforcement officers resulted in nearly 1,000 arrests and took more than 80 guns and more than $835,000 in illegal narcotics off Wichita streets.

On July 26, police in Wichita arrested 46-year-old Robert Kevin Boren on a felony warrant . He remains in custody on a $50,000 bond, according to online jail records

The effort, called “Operation Triple Beam,” came as Wichita police try to reduce a violent crime rate that has increased since 2014 to about three times the national average and triple the state average last year.

The police department said Monday the operation in June and July targeted violent offenders, many of whom were wanted on warrants.

Wichita last month was named part of the National Public Safety Partnership, a three-year program that uses federal resources and training to reduce violent crime in areas where it’s above national rates.

Kansas State Fair, U.S. Postal Service launch new stamp

HUTCHINSON— The U.S. Postal Service and the Kansas State Fair have launched a stamp celebrating the nation’s state and county fairs.

The event included old-time carnival games and a petting zoo at the U.S. Postal Service Office in Wichita. Leading the event was Postmaster Ryan Knopik, according to a media release.

The four new Forever stamps feature whimsical artwork meant to evoke a sentimental feeling for America’s fairs, both past and present. The colorful stamps feature one scene across four stamps. They were designed to work together as a panorama of familiar, traditional fair activities, while each stamp also works as an individual picture.

The State and County Fairs stamps are being issued as Forever stamps, and will always be equal in value to the current First-Class Mail one-ounce price.

“The Kansas State Fair is a place where we celebrate all things Kansas and the stamp really reflects that,” Amy Bickel, Kansas State Fair marketing director said. “If you look at it, it’s a nostalgic piece, and it shows people socializing and having fun and just coming together at the end of the summer.”

The Fair’s Educational Manager Jacki Eckert said the stamp aims to promote the social and educational value fairs offer.

“There are so many people who don’t have a touch with agriculture today,” Eckert said. “The Kansas State Fair and the Fair’s Kansas’ Largest Classroom is a way for fairgoers of all ages to learn more about agriculture, where their food comes from, as well as the products they use every day that are the result of production agriculture.”

The stamp comes in a set of four, costing $2.20.

Drive-by shooting kills 8-year-old Kansas City boy

KANSAS CITY (AP) — Kansas City police say an 8-year-old boy died and his mother was seriously injured when someone shot dozens of bullets at their home.

Bullet holes in the house image courtesy KCTV

Police say Brian Bartlett and his mother were asleep when they were shot late Saturday.

Brian and his mother were rushed to hospitals, where he was pronounced dead. His mother was hospitalized with a gunshot wound to the leg.

No information about a motive or suspect has been released.

Brian is the youngest homicide victim in Kansas City this year. He is one of at least five people under the age of 16 killed this year in the city.

New rules can deny green cards for immigrants on food stamps

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Trump administration announced Monday that it is moving ahead with one of its most aggressive steps to restrict legal immigration, denying green cards to many immigrants who use Medicaid, food stamps, housing vouchers or other forms of public assistance.

Federal law already requires those seeking green cards and legal status to prove they will not be a burden to the U.S. — a “public charge” —but the new rules detail a broader range of programs that could disqualify them.

Much of President Donald Trump’s effort to crack down on illegal immigration has been in the spotlight, but this rule change targets people who entered the United States legally and are seeking permanent status. It’s part of a push to move the U.S. to a system that focuses on immigrants’ skills instead of emphasizing the reunification of families.

U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services officers will now weigh public assistance along with other factors such as education, household income and health to determine whether to grant legal status.

The rules will take effect in mid-October. They don’t apply to U.S. citizens, even if the U.S. citizen is related to an immigrant who is subject to them.

The acting director of Citizenship and Immigration Services, Ken Cuccinelli, said the rule change fits with the Republican president’s message.

“We want to see people coming to this country who are self-sufficient,” Cuccinelli said. “That’s a core principle of the American dream. It’s deeply embedded in our history, and particularly our history related to legal immigration.”

Immigrants make up a small percentage of those who get public benefits. In fact, many are ineligible for public benefits because of their immigration status.

But advocates worry the rules will scare immigrants into not asking for help. And they are concerned the rules give too broad an authority to decide whether someone is likely to need public assistance at any time, giving immigration officials the ability to deny legal status to more people.

On average, 544,000 people apply annually for green cards, with about 382,000 falling into categories that would be subject to this review, according to the government.

Guidelines in use since 1999 referred to a public charge as someone primarily dependent on cash assistance, income maintenance or government support for long-term institutionalization.

Under the new rules, the Department of Homeland Security has redefined a public charge as someone who is “more likely than not” to receive public benefits for more than 12 months within a 36-month period. If someone has two benefits, that is counted as two months. And the definition has been broadened to include Medicaid, housing assistance and food assistance under the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP.

Following publication of the proposed rules last fall, Homeland Security received 266,000 public comments, more than triple the average number for a rule change at the agency, and it made a series of amendments to the final rules as a result.

For example, women who are pregnant and on Medicaid or who need public assistance will not be subject to the new rules during the pregnancy and for 60 days after the birth of the baby.

The Medicare Part D low-income subsidy won’t be considered a public benefit. And public benefits received by children up until age 21 won’t be considered. Nor will emergency medical assistance, school lunch programs, foster care or adoption, student loans and mortgages, food pantries, homeless shelters or disaster relief.

Cuccinelli said the comments resulted in changes that “we think it made a better, stronger rule.”

Green card hopefuls will be required to submit three years of federal tax returns in addition to a history of employment. And if immigrants have private health insurance that will weigh heavily in their favor.

Active U.S. military members are exempt. So are refugees or asylum seekers, and the rules would not be applied retroactively, officials said. But the Trump administration also has moved to drastically reduce asylum in the U.S.

The administration recently tried to effectively end the protections at the U.S.-Mexico border before the effort was blocked by a court. It has sent more than 30,000 asylum seekers mostly from Central America back to Mexico wait out their immigration cases.

According to an Associated Press analysis of census data, low-income immigrants who are not citizens use Medicaid, food aid, cash assistance and Supplemental Security Income, or SSI, at a lower rate than comparable low-income native-born adults.

In general, immigrants are a small portion of those receiving public benefits. For example, non-citizen immigrants make up only 6.5 percent of all those participating in Medicaid. More than 87 percent of participants are native-born. The same goes for food assistance: Immigrants make up only 8.8 percent of recipients, and more than 85 percent of participants are native-born.

The new public assistance threshold, taken together with higher requirements for education, work skills and health, will make it more difficult for immigrants to qualify for green cards, advocates say.

“Without a single change in the law by Congress, the Trump public charge rules mean many more U.S. citizens are being and will be denied the opportunity to live together in the U.S. with their spouses, children and parents,” said Ur Jaddou, a former Citizenship and Immigration Services chief counsel who’s now director of the DHS Watch run by an immigrant advocacy group. “These are not just small changes. They are big changes with enormous consequences for U.S. citizens.”

The new rules come at a time of increased criticism over Trump’s hardline policies and his rhetoric.

On Aug. 3, 22 people were killed and dozens were injured in a mass shooting in El Paso, Texas, a border city that has become the face of the migration crisis. The shooting suspect told authorities he targeted Mexicans in the attack.

Critics contend Trump’s words have contributed to a combustible climate that has spawned death and violence, but Trump disagrees.

Tyson will pay employees while southwest Kansas plant closed

HOLCOMB, Kan. (AP) — Fire officials are trying to determine the cause of a fire that has temporarily shut down the Tyson Fresh Meats plant in Holcomb.

Fire at the Tyson plant west of Garden City -photo courtesy Holcomb Community Fire Department

Investigators say the fire Friday night started in the box shop near the area where animals are killed, causing part of the roof to collapse. It took firefighters more than 12 hours to get the fire under control.

Garden City Fire Chief Rick Collins said no one was injured.

The Topeka Capital-Journal reports Secretary of Commerce David Toland and Secretary of Agriculture Mike Beam met Saturday with representatives from Tyson, local government and economic development officials to coordinate state aid if it is needed.

The plant will be closed indefinitely. The company said in a statement Saturday that it will pay employees until production resumes.

Kansas troopers catch stolen car suspect on I-70

SHAWNEE COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating a stolen car suspect after a chase and arrest.

Troopers catch stolen car suspect photo courtesy Kansas Highway Patrol

On Saturday, Kansas Highway Patrol Troopers from Troop B and Troop G were involved in a pursuit with a stolen vehicle on the Kansas Turnpike westbound from Douglas County. The pursuit continued into Shawnee County.

Shawnee County Sheriff’s deputies  were ready with tire deflation devices. They were successful with their deployment, hitting 3 of the 4 tires as the pursuit passed westbound on I-70 near the Croco Road overpass. The suspect exited the interstate at Deer Creek and surrendered without further incident.  Troopers have not named the suspect and possible charges.

Kan. man’s trial delayed over crash deaths of 4 on motorcycles

NORTH PLATTE, Neb. (AP) — The Nebraska trial of a Kansas man charged with the 2017 traffic deaths of four Iowa motorcyclists has been delayed again until October.

CISNEROS HERNANDEZ- photo Keith County

A judge recently agreed to delay the trial for 24-year-old Jeser Cisneros-Hernandez, of Liberal, Kansas. He’s pleaded not guilty to four counts of vehicular homicide, one of reckless driving and one of failing to drive in his lane.

The new trial date is Oct. 15. Cisneros-Hernandez remains free on bail.

Prosecutors say Cisneros-Hernandez’s vehicle hit two motorcycles carrying two people each on July 1, 2017, near Ogallala.

Authorities say 54-year-old Sheila Matheny and 61-year-old James Matheny, from Bedford, Iowa, were on one motorcycle. The other motorcyclists were 58-year-old Michal Weese and 59-year-old Jerolyn Weese, who lived in Council Bluffs, Iowa.

Kansas anti-vaccine groups say membership numbers surging

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas anti-vaccination group says its membership is growing dramatically since the state added two new vaccination requirements for children returning to school this fall.

Standing room only on June 27, as Kansas citizens wait to listen and share their opinions on the school vaccine requirements.-photo Immunize Kansas Coalition

As of Aug. 2, Kansas is requiring a meningitis vaccine for students beginning seventh grade and students entering 11th grade who weren’t vaccinated before their 16th birthdays. And students entering kindergarten or first grade need two doses of the hepatitis A vaccine. The vaccines are required for children in public and private schools and are in addition to five other mandated vaccines.

Exceptions are allowed for religious or medical reasons.

Connie Newcome, president of Kansans for Health Freedom, said the nonprofit has grown larger since the Kansas Department of Health and Environment held a hearing on the two new vaccination requirements in June.

“I think most people in Kansas are independent enough that they prefer to make their own family decisions without the government telling them what to do,” said Newcome, a grandmother living outside Hutchinson who says she stopped vaccinating her children decades ago.

The new requirements follow recommendations of the Advisory Committee for Immunization Practices.

“Both of these illnesses are severe and preventable, and the safety profile of the vaccines is well-recognized, in keeping with the CDC (Centers for Disease Control) and other scientific authority,” said Kristi Pankratz, a spokeswoman with the state health department.

Members of the anti-vaccination group told The Star they worry about the pharmaceutical industry’s influence on scientific studies. Many also discussed their children’s illnesses and disorders, which they claim occurred or grew worse after vaccinations — despite research largely showing the contrary.

Christine White, a Johnson County physician, said research shows the benefits of vaccines far outweigh the risks, especially with life-threatening diseases such as meningitis.

“Parents who refuse meningitis (vaccines) often say their children aren’t at risk because they’re homeschooled or aren’t often in group environments. And we try to discuss it only takes one sneeze or one shared drink with a kid who has it to get it,” White said. “I’ve had a few converts with that one. But meningitis scares people. People know that it can kill you.”

In 2017, 72% of Kansas teenagers had been vaccinated against meningitis, lower than the national average of 85%. Kansas ranks sixth from the bottom in meningitis vaccination rates in the country.

Last year, 90% of Kansas children were vaccinated against hepatitis A, due to a previously approved requirement for children in day cares.

Members sought for KanCare Consumer Corps

TOPEKA – The Alliance for a Healthy Kansas is hosting a workshop for individuals interested in joining our KanCare Consumer Corps.

We welcome people from all across Kansas who are uninsured or who have struggled to find or pay for health insurance. Your experiences could help thousands of Kansans get access to affordable health care.

At this workshop, you’ll learn how to speak with legislators and the media as a health care consumer and the best way to share your experiences and health challenges.

Participants will receive travel reimbursement, lunch and a financial award for attending. Out-of-town participants will be lodged in a nearby hotel.

What You’ll Get:

  • Learn how to share your story with legislators and the media
  • Gain skills for giving legislative testimony
  • Guidance on fine-tuning your personal story
  • Travel expenses PAID!
    • Mileage reimbursement for travel to training
    • Paid hotel stay, breakfast and lunch
    • $100 Visa gift card scholarship for attendance

When and Where:

Thursday, Aug. 29
10 a.m. – 2 p.m.
Kansas Leadership Center
325 East Douglas Avenue
Wichita, Kansas 67202

If you have any questions, or for more information, contact Spencer Culver at [email protected]

– SUBMITTED –

Police investigate shooting that killed boy, wounded woman in KC

KANSAS CITY(AP) — Kansas City authorities are investigating a weekend shooting that killed a boy and wounded a woman.

Kansas City Police said the shooting happened late Saturday in a Kansas City, Missouri, neighborhood. Both the victims were inside when someone fired from outside the home.

Police said the juvenile boy died at a hospital. The woman remained hospitalized Sunday morning with a gunshot wound to her leg.

The victims’ identities were not immediately released

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