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Sec. of State Pompeo to give Landon Lecture at Kansas State

MANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) — U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo will give a Landon Lecture at Kansas State University next month.

Sec. of State Mike Pompeo with North Korean Leader Kim Jung Un in May of 2018 -photo courtesy White House

Pompeo will speak Sept. 6 at McCain Auditorium. He has been secretary of state since March 2018. Before that, he served a brief time as President Donald Trump’s director of the CIA.

His speech comes as speculation swirls that Pompeo might run for a political office. He said last month that a campaign for U.S. Sen. Pat Roberts’ seat in the Senate was “off the table” but that has not stopped the conjecture.

Fortune magazine CEO Alan Murry will also give a Landon Lecture. He is scheduled to speak Sept. 27.

Murray was previously president of the Pew Research Center and chief content officer for Time, Inc.

Driver hospitalized, arrested after chase and crash on I-70

JACKSON COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating a suspect after a Tuesday chase and crash.

Scene of the Kansas Turnpike crash photo courtesy WIBW TV

Just before 2 p.m., a Jackson County Deputy Sheriff attempted to stop the driver of a Pontiac Grand Prix later identified as Jesus Emanuel Chatmon, 39, Kansas City, Mo., for allegedly committing traffic violations and suspicious activity near 126th and US 75 Highway, according to Sheriff Tim Morse.

The vehicle failed to yield to the deputy and a vehicle pursuit ensued.

The Pontiac continued into Shawnee County to I-70 and then onto the Kansas Turnpike and headed east from Topeka.

Law enforcement deployed stop sticks disabling the vehicle, which subsequently crashed just east of the toll plaza at Topeka.

Chatmon sustained minor injuries and was transported to a Topeka Hospital then booked into the Jackson County Jail. The Sheriff’s office has not released possible charges in the case.

Police capture wanted Kansas felon

RILEY COUNTY —Law enforcement authorities are investigating a wanted Kansas felon arrested after a search in Riley County.

Sexton photo KDOC

Just after 12:30p.m. Tuesday, the Riley County Police received a call concerning an individual with active warrants nearby, according to a media release.

Officer responded to the area near Deep Creek Road and Pillsbury in Riley County in attempt to locate 33-year-old Jessie Sexton of Manhattan.

Approximately two hours after the initial call, officers located and arrested Sexton about a mile away. He is being held on a felony probation violation, according to the release. Additional charges are expected. In July, the RCPD had issued an alert to the public in an effort to find him.

Sexton has five previous conviction that include flee and attempt to elude law enforcement, battery of a law enforcement officer, obstruction and for drugs, according to the Kansas Department of Corrections.

The U.S. Marshal’s Service and Kansas Highway Patrol assisted with the arrest.

Union: Comments confirm agency moves meant to cut federal workforce

By JOHN HANNA and ELLEN KNICKMEYER

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A federal employees union charged Tuesday that recent comments by acting White House chief of staff Mick Mulvaney confirm the Trump administration’s “grand strategy” to cut the federal workforce by relocating agency offices out of Washington.

Mulvaney said last week that the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s plan to relocate several hundred of jobs from Washington to the Kansas City area is “a wonderful way to streamline government.” Speaking to a group of fellow Republicans in his home state of South Carolina, he said it’s “nearly impossible” to fire federal workers but added that many will not move to “the real part of the country.”

Within days of taking office, President Donald Trump declared a hiring freeze, and within months, Mulvaney, as director of the Office of Management and Budget, outlined a plan for reducing the civilian workforce. But he said in his South Carolina remarks that he’s tried to fire workers and “you can’t do it.”

The USDA said in June it would move most of the employees of the Economic Research Service and National Institute of Food and Agriculture partly to bring the two agencies closer to farmers and agribusinesses. The Interior Department has offered a similar rationale for breaking up the Bureau of Land Management’s headquarters and putting employees in 11 western states.

Mulvaney said “the quiet parts out loud,” said Aaron Weiss, deputy director of the Center for Western Priorities, a Denver-based nonprofit critical of the Trump administration’s Interior Department. Weiss sees an “intentional brain drain” to “get rid of expertise across the government.”

“This is part of their grand strategy,” said Dave Verardo, president of the American Federation of Government Employees local that represents the USDA workers. “Reduce government so that people can come into power and do whatever they want without any checks and balances.”

Spokesman John Czwartacki defended Mulvaney’s comments Tuesday as “commentary through a political lens at a political event.” He noted that U.S. Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue has said relocating the two agencies’ employees will save money on rent and employee costs, freeing up more money for research.

“If some career bureaucrats would rather quit or retire than move closer to the people they serve, despite knowing that the relocation will allow USDA to spend less money on rent and more on research, then that is indeed a wonderful way to streamline government,” Czwartacki said.

U.S. Interior Secretary David Bernhardt described the Bureau of Land Management move as a “realignment” to “better respond to the needs of the American people.”

“Under our proposal, every Western state will gain additional staff resources,” Bernhardt said in a statement Tuesday. “This approach will play an invaluable role in serving the American people more efficiently.”

Officials in Kansas and Missouri and their congressional delegations were delighted with the USDA’s plans, believing the research agencies to be a good fit for the region. Kansas Gov. Laura Kelly, a Democrat, said she understands that USDA employees are hesitant to uproot their families but they will find advantages in the Kansas City area such as “a reasonable cost of living and strong public schools.”

The Economic Research Service examines issues including the rural economy, international trade, food safety and programs that provide food assistance to poor Americans. The National Institute of Food and Agriculture provides grants for agricultural research. The USDA said nearly 550 of the agencies’ roughly 640 jobs would move by the end of September.

The USDA says it is not cutting research. Deputy Undersecretary Scott Hutchins said the department has an aggressive hiring plan to fill vacancies.

“Universities have contacted us and asked us, ‘We can help support you and so forth,'” he said. “A lot of groups at this point are starting to rally together to see how we can make sure we do this.”

The agency’s own inspector general’s office concluded this week that the USDA may have violated federal law by moving forward on the relocation without advancing funding approval from Congress. The agency disputed that, contending that the department’s internal watchdog was misinterpreting federal law.

U.S. House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, a Maryland Democrat who has criticized the relocation plans, said Tuesday in a statement that Perdue “must halt” them. He also said Mulvaney’s comments signal the Trump administration’s “true intentions.”

“This administration’s continued assault on federal employees is part of a broader pattern to undermine the government agencies that serve the American people every day,” Hoyer said in a statement.

Verardo said at least 55% of the affected USDA workers — some 330 of them — won’t move. And Laura Dodson, an Economic Research Service employee and union steward, said the USDA’s plans force people who spent years studying agricultural economics to decide between pursuing their careers or uprooting their lives to move to a location that may not be final.

“Morale has never been lower,” she said.

Chad Hart, an economics professor and crop-markets specialist at Iowa State University, said he worries about the loss of institutional knowledge. He said the agencies being moved don’t tend to interact with individual farmers so, “it doesn’t matter if they are 10 miles or 1,000 miles from farmers.”

“You’re losing that expertise you can’t just buy back,” he said.

Jim Myers, a professor at Oregon State University who studies vegetable breeding and genetics, said research grants from the National Institute of Food and Agriculture have done “amazing things” to support his research into new varieties of organic vegetables.

“This is a move to cripple an institution that’s vital to the researchers in the U.S. and ultimately U.S. agriculture,” he said. “It just hollows it out and weakens it.”

___

Police make arrest, seize pre-packaged bags of heroin at Kan. home

HUTCHINSON – Three people were arrested just after 3 a.m. Tuesday morning after Hutchinson Police Officers attempted a traffic stop in the area of 4th and Severance.

photo Hutchinson Police

The was vehicle driven by 28-year-old Chanin Smith and officers knew she had an active arrest warrant.

Smith refused to stop and officers pursued the vehicle and she led officers to a residence at 2214 E 4th Lot 417.

Smith ran into the residence and 29-year-old Kylie Berry who was a passenger in the vehicle during the pursuit was arrested.

Smith, along with another occupant, 26-year-old Justin Pisoni surrendered to officers and were taken into custody. A search of the vehicle yielded drug paraphernalia and methamphetamine.

After obtaining a search warrant on the home, officers with the Patrol Division, Repeat Offender Unit, and K-9 Unit found numerous pre-packaged bags containing heroin inside. The gross weight of the heroin seized was approximately five grams which is equivalent to over 50 single uses of heroin.

Methamphetamine and other drug paraphernalia used for the packaging were also located inside the residence.

Smith and Pisoni were jailed for suspicion of being in possession of Heroin and drug paraphernalia with intent to distribute, possession of methamphetamine and possession of personal use drug paraphernalia. Smith was also jailed for felony flee and elude and felony interference. Berry was arrested for possession of methamphetamine and drug paraphernalia.

KHP identifies woman who died after crash with a semi

GREENWOOD COUNTY — One person died in an accident just before 3 p.m. Tuesday in Greenwood County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2005 Chevy passenger car driven by Anita Lucy, 50, Salem, Arkansas, was eastbound, on U.S. 54 Highway, in the outside (south) lane leaving Eureka.

The driver attempted to pass a 2001 International semi as the outside lane was coming to an end.

The Chevy left the roadway to the right, onto the gravel shoulder, and the driver overcorrected to the left in front of the semi and began traveling eastbound and sideways.

The Chevy then crossed the eastbound lane, the center line, and the westbound lane. The semi struck the Chevy’s passenger side.

EMS transported Lucy to the Greenwood County Hospital where she died. The semi driver John Q. Thompson, 30, Wichita, was not injured. Lucy was not wearing a seat belt, according to the KHP.

Police no longer searching for teen in Kan. shooting investigation

TOPEKA — Law enforcement authorities are investigating a shooting, have one suspect in custody and are no longer looking for one person of interest.

Keys photo Shawnee Co.

Just after 11 p.m. July 13, officers were dispatched to 1516 SW 16th Street in Topeka on a report of a shooting, according to Lt. Aaron Jones. Upon arrival, officers located a victim suffering from life-threating injuries. The victim was transported to a local hospital for treatment of his injures.

Witnesses reported seeing a dark colored vehicle leaving the area northbound at a high rate of speed

On July 14, police arrested Jihad Anwar Keys, 20 years old in connection to this investigation on requested charges of Aggravated Battery, Felon in Possession of Firearm, and  Aggravated Assault.

On July 15, 21-year-old Anthony Soto came to the Law Enforcement Center on his own accord. After speaking with investigators, he was later released. On Tuesday, police reported they no longer looking for 19-year-old Larry D. Huggins in connections with the case.

More reward money offered to find who killed Kan. restaurant owner

SEDGWICK COUNTY —An anonymous donor is offering $1,000 for information that leads to the arrest of the individual(s) responsible for the murder of Charles Giles, 55, of Wichita. The supplemental reward is being provided to Crime Stoppers of Wichita – Sedgwick County to help generate information on the case as no arrests have been made.

Charles ‘Chuck’ Giles was gun downed, robbed and murdered in his drive way photo GoFundMe

On July 19, Giles was robbed and fatally shot outside of his home in the 2100 block of West Columbine in Wichita when he returned home from working at his Wichita restaurant Neighbors Bar and Grill.

Anyone with information on this crime is encouraged to submit an anonymous tip to Crime Stoppers by one of three ways. Tipsters may call the Crime Stoppers hotline at 316-267-2111. Tips may also be submitted by downloading the free P3 app, or by visiting www.wichitasedgwickcountycrimestoppers.com.

All tips are anonymous, and no one will ever ask for the tipster’s name. Crime Stoppers is a division of the non-profit Wichita Metro Crime Commission.

On July 30, Giles family and friends established a GoFundMe page in an effort to raise money to help find the killer.

Kansas: Aetna risks losing state’s $1B Medicaid contract

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas health department says insurance company Aetna is at risk of losing its $1-billion-a-year contract with the state’s Medicaid program.

The agency gave Aetna 10 days to get its act together. A Kansas City Star request for comment to Aetna was not immediately returned.

The insurance company joined Kansas’ privatized Medicaid program this year. But the newspaper reports that medical providers have complained about Aetna for months.

The Kansas Department of Health and Environment sent Aetna a non-compliance letter July 24. The letter cites concerns including claims issues, vague service plans for Medicaid recipients, and delays in credentialing medical providers for billing.

Medicaid provides health care coverage for about 400,000 people in Kansas. Most are children, the elderly, people with disabilities and pregnant women.

SW Kan. woman will challenge Marshall for 1st Congressional seat

HUTCHINSON, Kan. (AP) — A 34-year-old Garden City native is running for the 1st Congressional District seat in Kansas.

Kali Barnett, a Democrat, is a political newcomer who taught school in Kansas and New York City. She is running for the seat currently held by U.S. Rep. Roger Marshall.


Marshall has not formally announced he will seek a U.S. Senate seat, but he is expected to enter that race.

Barnett officially launched Kali for Kansas during the weekend. She is the first Democrat to announce her candidacy for the 1st District, which has never sent a woman to Congress.

Barnett said she will advocate for federal support of schools, better health care and access to health care for rural areas.

She will have campaign operations in Garden City and Manhattan.

Kan. man avoids injury after small plane makes emergency landing

MONTGOMERY COUNTY — A Kansas man avoided injury after a small plane made an emergency landing just before 10a.m. Tuesday in Montgomery County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a Zenith Zodiac piloted by John C. Cambron, Jr., 64, Coffeyville, was taking off from the Harmony Valley Airpark, east of Independence.

Shortly after takeoff the aircraft started pulling to the right, so the pilot attempted an emergency landing on the grass field just north of the runway.

At landing the left wing tip touched ground and the nose wheel dug in forcing it to collapse and the aircraft came to a stop.

Cambron was uninjured and able to climb out of the aircraft, according to the KHP. The accident remains under investigation.

Former Kan. DCF leader named Youth Suicide Prevention coordinator

TOPEKA – Kansas Attorney General Derek Schmidt Tuesday announced the appointment of Gina Meier-Hummel to serve as the first Kansas Youth Suicide Prevention Coordinator, a position created by the Legislature in May to implement recommendations of the Youth Suicide Prevention Task Force, according to a media release from Schmidt’s office.

Gina Meier-Hummel photo KANSAS NEWS SERVICE

“Gina will give the serious problem of the rising rate of youth suicide the attention it requires,” Schmidt said. “I’m confident her leadership and implementation of the task force’s recommendations can begin to change the trend line so the number of youth suicides in Kansas stops increasing and instead begins to decline. I look forward to working with her in this effort.”

Meier-Hummel has spent her career working on behalf of children and families. She currently serves as the Executive Director of O’Connell Youth Ranch in Douglas County. Previously she served as the Deputy Director of the Victims Services Division in Schmidt’s office. She also served as Secretary of the Kansas Department for Children and Families (DCF) from November 2017 through January 2019. Prior to leading DCF, she was the Executive Director of The Shelter, Inc., a nonprofit organization focused on crisis intervention for at-risk youth in Douglas County and Northeast Kansas. Before that, she served in varying capacities at the Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services (KDADS), DCF and its predecessor agency the Department for Social and Rehabilitation Services, and KVC Behavioral Health System.

Meier-Hummel also served as a member of the Child Welfare Task Force, Commissioner of the Governor’s Mental Health Task Force, Chair of the Governor’s Subcabinet on Behavior Health, a member of the Social Services Policy Council, as well as on the steering committee for KanCare.

“I am honored to be appointed to this position by the Attorney General, and grateful to have the opportunity to work on this very important issue impacting Kansas families and communities,” Meier-Hummel said.

In June 2018, Schmidt and the Tower Mental Health Foundation formed the task force to survey efforts underway in Kansas to reduce the incidence of youth suicide and provide recommendations on further steps that could be taken. In May, the Legislature adopted several of those recommendations by passing the conference committee report on House Bill 2290, which created the coordinator position and requires the coordinator to:

  • Lead the development, implementation and marketing of a website, online application and mobile phone application to facilitate communication with youth for the purpose of preventing youth suicide and promoting youth safety and well-being.
  • Develop and promote multidisciplinary and interagency strategies to help communities, schools, mental health professionals, medical professionals, law enforcement and others work together and coordinate efforts to prevent and address youth suicide.
  • Organize events that bring together youth, educators and community members from across the state to share information and receive training to prevent and address youth suicide in their communities.
  • Gather, disseminate and promote information focused on suicide reduction.

Meier-Hummel will serve in a part-time capacity beginning today. Schmidt said other employees in the Attorney General’s office will support the suicide-prevention work as needed. Although the coordinator’s position was created by statute, no additional funding was appropriated to support it.

In 2016, the most recent year for which data is available from the State Child Death Review Board, the number of suicides in Kansas by persons 18 years of age or younger was 20 at a rate of 3.0 deaths per 100,000 population. Unfortunately, this continued the steady increase since 2005, which had eight suicides at a rate of 1.1 deaths per 100,000 population.

A copy of the task force report, including a full list of its members and its recommendations, is available at https://ag.ks.gov/ysptf.

Benedictine Monastery: Abuse reports against 8 priests credible

CONCEPTION, Mo. (AP) — A Benedictine monastery north of Kansas City  has released the names of eight priests or brothers who had credible allegations of sexual abuse of minors made against them.

The Conception Abbey said on its website Monday that seven of the priests are dead and the eighth was removed from the ministry.

The abbey, which is about 95 miles north of Kansas City, hired retired FBI agents to review personnel files of priests and brothers who served there in the last 70 years.

In a statement on the website, Abbot Benedict Neenan apologized to the victims and said he hoped publishing the list would help them heal.

David Clohessy, with the Missouri Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, said the abbey should release more information.

The list includes

Fr. Vincent Barsch

Born:                          1919

Ordained:                  1945

Left religious life:    1973

State and Timeline: South Dakota, ca. 1955-62

Status:                       Deceased in 2010

Fr. Bede Parry

Born:                          1942

Ordained:                  1983

Dismissed from religious life: 2002

State and Timeline: Missouri, ca. 1982-87

Status:                       Deceased in 2013

Fr. Edgar Probstfield

Born:                          1927

Ordained:                  1952

State and Timeline: Missouri, 1976-77

Status:                       Deceased in 2007

Fr. Regis Probstfield

Born:                          1931

Ordained:                  1957

State and Timeline: Missouri, 1976

Status:                       Deceased in 2008

Fr. Gilbert Stack

Born:                          1913

Ordained:                  1939

State and Timeline: South Dakota, ca. 1949-53

Status:                       Deceased in 2007

Fr. Hugh Tasch

Born:                          1930

Ordained:                  1957

State and Timeline: Missouri, 2003

Status:                       Deceased in 2017

Fr. Paschal Thomas

Born:                          1934

Ordained:                  1959

State and Timeline: Connecticut, 1993

Status:                       Deceased in 2015

Fr. Isaac True

Born:                          1937

Ordained:                  1966

State and Timeline: Missouri, 1979

Status:                       Removed from Ministry

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