NEWTON – Law enforcement authorities and officials with USD 373 in Newton are investigating a student who brought a BB gun to school.
On Monday, school administration received a tip after school that a specific Slate Creek Elementary student had a gun in a backpack, according to a note sent to parents.
The Newton Police Department was called. The student and backpack were located by police and upon an investigation, a BB gun was discovered in the student’s backpack.
It was not loaded and officials had no indication of any threats made to the school or any individuals in the school.
The school reported appropriate disciplinary procedures would be followed.
WICHITA – A Kansas man was charged Tuesday in federal court with the sex trafficking of a 17-year-old girl, according to acting U.S. Attorney Tom Beall.
John H. Dickerson, 34, Wichita, was charged with one count of the sex trafficking of a minor and one count of unlawful possession of a firearm following a felony conviction.
A criminal complaint filed in U.S. District Court in Wichita alleges the case grew out of a human-trafficking enforcement operation conducted by the FBI and the Wichita Police Department. On Saturday, Oct. 15, a detective answered an advertisement on an adult services Web site. He arranged to meet a sex worker at a hotel in Wichita and to pay $200 for an hour of sex.
Dickerson dropped off a 17-year-old girl at the detective’s room. The girl and Dickerson were taken into custody. Investigators learned that that Dickerson had been paid several times to take the girl to meet customers.
If convicted, he faces a penalty of not less than10 years in federal prison and a fine up to $250,000 on the trafficking charge, and up to 10 years and a fine up to $250,000 on the firearm charge.
The Wichita Police Department, the FBI and the Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force investigated. Assistant U.S. Attorney Jason Hart is prosecuting.
SHAWNEE COUNTY- Law enforcement authorities in Shawnee County are investigating a suspect for firing a gun during a fight.
Just before 11a.m. on Tuesday, police were dispatched to the 700 Block of southwest Fairlawn in Topeka after report of a gunshots, according to a media release.
Officers found two subjects who knew each other and had become involved in an argument over property that led to a fight and a gun fired.
One shot struck an occupied apartment in the area. There were no injuries.
Police recovered the gun and arrested Danato Ferninado Rella, 32, Topeka, for criminal discharge of a firearm and misdemeanor criminal damage to property.
DETROIT (AP) — Fiat Chrysler is recalling more than 86,000 trucks and police cars mainly in North America to fix a short circuit in the alternators that can cause engine stalling or fires.
The recall covers certain 2007 through 2013 Ram 2500 and 3500 pickup trucks, as well as Ram 4500 and 5500 chassis cabs. Also covered are some 2011 through 2014 Charger police cars.
The company says diodes inside the alternators can wear out under frequent hot-temperature use in commercial fleets. That can cause the short circuits. Fiat Chrysler says it’s aware of one possibly related injury but no crashes. There also have been fires, but an FCA spokesman says he can’t say how many.
FCA will notify customers when they can bring vehicles in for service.
TOPEKA–Since 2012, more than 50 Kansas small businesses have achieved $17.2 million in export sales through STEP grant programs.
The Kansas Department of Commerce is currently accepting STEP grant applications from small businesses to assist them in starting or growing their exports. The Commerce programs, which are being funded in part through a Cooperative Agreement with the U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA), will help non-exporters begin exporting for the first time or existing exporters expand their export levels.
“Exporting can be a key to success for many small businesses,” said Kansas Commerce Secretary Antonio Soave. “These STEP grants, through the SBA, allow the Department of Commerce to assist small businesses across the state with starting, maintaining and growing their exports, in an effort to achieve their maximum potential, both as a national or global exporter and as a small business in Kansas.”
“Kansas has a proud and rich tradition in agriculture and understands that the international market is the key to growth of the industry,” said Kansas Secretary of Agriculture Jackie McClaskey. “The Kansas agriculture industry is always ready to become highly engaged in export markets. This grant will allow us to explore new markets for Kansas agricultural products.”
Programs offered through the STEP Grant include:
· Export seminars and training courses
· Opportunities for participation in foreign trade shows and missions
· Support for entering new markets
For the current grant year, SBA has awarded Kansas $383,000 in STEP funding. Commerce is administering the grant in tandem with the Kansas Department of Agriculture.
Businesses that wish to apply for support or are interested in learning more should visit KansasCommerce.com/STEP.
WICHITA –A federal grand jury returned an indictment Tuesday charging a Salina man with producing and distributing child pornography, Acting U.S. Attorney Tom Beall said.
Michael N. Rodenbeek, 53, is charged with three counts of producing child pornography, one count of distributing child pornography, one count of possessing child pornography, and one count of unlawful possession of a firearm following a felony conviction. The crimes are alleged to have occurred in June, July, August and September, 2016, in Saline and Sedgwick counties.
A complaint filed in the case alleges a Wichita police detective accessed a file sharing network to download child pornography from Rodenbeek’s computer. Investigators learned that on June 18, 2016, Rodenbeek used an iPhone to record a 9-year-old girl and on July 19, 2016, he used an iPhone to record a 10-year-old girl.
If convicted, he faces a penalty of not less than 15 years and not more than 30 years on each count of production, not less than five years and not more than 20 years on the distribution count, up to 20 years on the possession count, and up to 10 years on the firearm charge. The Wichita Police Department, Homeland Security Investigations and the Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force investigated. Assistant U.S. Attorney Jason Hart is prosecuting.
OLATHE, Kan. (AP) — Election officials in Kansas’ most populous county didn’t offer the easiest option for registering to vote until the day before voter registration ended.
The American Civil Liberties Union told The Associated Press it’s trying to determine whether other counties were doing the same thing.
The Kansas City Star reports Johnson County election officials until Monday only offered a form that requires documentary proof of U.S. citizenship to register to vote.
After the newspaper questioned whether doing so violated the National Voter Registration Act, the office began providing a federal form that simply requires people to attest they are citizens.
Recent court decisions have blocked Kansas from requiring proof-of-citizenship documents from people who register when getting their driver’s license or when using the federal form. Voter registration ends Tuesday in Kansas.
CUNNINGHAM, Kan. (AP) — An 8-foot-long tusk of a mammoth uncovered earlier this year by a southern Kansas construction company has been moved to a lab at Wichita State University.
The Wichita Eagle reports that the tusk will be cleaned and prepped for display in the Kingman County city of Cunningham, where it was found as Skyland Grain LLC ran a sewer line across a grain elevator’s property.
Radiocarbon dating will be conducted to determine the tusk’s age.
The tusk was longer when first discovered, but part of it broke off during the project.
Wichita State associate anthropology professor David Hughes, who worked at tusk’s excavation site with his students, says the tusk belonged to a mammoth that was probably about 15 to 20 years about and was about 12 feet tall.
HUTCHINSON— A Kansas man with a lengthy criminal history finds himself in more trouble for allegedly being involved with the theft of a moped and a couple of motorcycles.
Derrick Pederson, 22, Hutchinson, faces possible charges for three counts of being in possession of stolen property and theft.
Police discovered the vehicles Pederson’s residence in the 1100 block of East 9th Street in Hutchinson, according to statements made in court.
Pederson appeared via video from the Reno County Correctional Facility.
He allegedly told police that he didn’t steal the items and only allowed them to be stored at the home.
He’s expected back in court on the new charges next week.
Pederson also faces a probation violation for numerous convictions for burglary, theft, drugs, obstruction, trafficking in contraband into a detention facility and forgery.
WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A former Wichita State University administrative assistant has filed a lawsuit in federal court accusing the university of discrimination under the Americans with Disabilities Act.
Vicki Huntoon says in the lawsuit that she was fired from the university because of her generalized anxiety disorder after two doctors diagnosed the disorder and she requested to work in a quieter department multiple times.
According to the lawsuit, a transfer request recommended by a university selected doctor was denied.
University spokesman Lou Heldman tells the Wichita Eagle that school officials were not yet aware of the lawsuit.
Photo by KHI News Service Nine months after Osawatomie State Hospital lost its federal payments, all rooms are back online after renovations and the state is looking at partnerships to address some of its long-term struggles. Inspectors have to make two separate visits to check renovations at the hospital before the 60 beds are cleared for Medicare payments.
Nine months after Osawatomie State Hospital lost its federal payments, all rooms are back online following renovations and the state is looking at partnerships to address some of its long-term struggles.
The state hospital — one of two in Kansas for patients with severe mental health issues — has shown progress on several problems that led to the loss of Medicare payments, though it isn’t clear when it could receive federal payments again.
Inspectors have to make two separate visits to check renovations before the 60 beds are cleared for payments. In the meantime, the hospital can treat patients in those beds, but the state has to come up with the funds.
Inspectors responding to a report that an OSH employee had been sexually assaulted in October 2015 found staffing and security problems they said put patients in danger, which led federal officials to cut payments to the hospital. The decision followed reports of patient overcrowding, overworked staff and problems with the building’s fixtures that inspectors said could allow patients to harm themselves.
Tim Keck, interim secretary of the Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services, said the hospital is prepared for inspection, but the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services hasn’t indicated when the inspectors may come.
In the meantime, the hospital, KDADS and other partners are working on improving processes, retaining employees and trying to improve the rest of the mental health system, he said.
“We’re trying to get a little closer to excellence every day,” he said.
Long wait times
OSH hasn’t run over capacity since KDADS declared admissions limits in mid-2015. The trade-off, however, is that hospital emergency rooms in eastern Kansas have sometimes had to hold patientsdeemed a danger to themselves or others for days while waiting for a bed to open at OSH.
As of Sept. 26, the average wait time for a space at OSH was 39.8 hours for people admitted in an emergency, said Angela de Rocha, spokeswoman for KDADS.
A pilot program could help open a few beds occupied by people who aren’t believed to be dangerous to themselves or others but who aren’t ready to live independently.
Bill Persinger, CEO of Valeo Behavioral Health Care in Topeka, said the community mental health center has an agreement with the state to provide transitional living care for patients who are ready to leave OSH. Valeo has four small residential facilities and will take a few former OSH patients at a time as space allows, he said.
KDADS identified about 25 people who need transitional housing and Valeo has taken four so far, Persinger said. How many it will take in the future depends on available space, patient conditions and whether the patients want to move there temporarily, he said.
KDADS allocated $350,000 toward the pilot program with the goal of reducing the odds that patients will return to the state hospital shortly after being released, de Rocha said.
“If it works the way we believe it will work, we will work to establish similar projects,” she said.
The idea is that clients can practice living alone in an environment where they feel safe, Persinger said. Most clients probably will stay two to six months, he said.
“People know how to take care of themselves, but mental illness symptoms can interfere with that,” he said. “Anxiety can shut a person down.”
The transitional housing is voluntary and isn’t locked, but clients have access to a staff person who can offer help and monitor for safety, Persinger said. Clients also receive assistance from a therapist and a case manager and can participate in life skills classes like budgeting and managing relationships, he said.
“It’s a step down from the hospital,” he said.
Demand for psychiatric beds is still strong, Persinger said, so both the client released to transitional housing and the patient replacing him or her at the hospital will benefit.
“That’s four more people that need to get (to OSH) and now they can get there,” he said.
Keck didn’t comment on other specific partnerships with community organizations, but he said the department is working with the Adult Continuum of Care Committee to examine the mental health system as a whole. That includes efforts to reduce the number of people who need to use the state hospital, he said.
“The transition, in my mind, isn’t just going out of the state hospital but also going into the state hospital,” he said.
Renovations for safety
The planned renovations on the two 30-bed units are complete, Keck said, but additional repairs were needed when the roof sprung a leak and condensation built up during the warmer months. Patients are living in the rooms while repairs are finished, he said.
The renovations included replacing furniture and other fixtures with round-edged models that couldn’t be used to anchor clothing or other items patients might use for hanging. The rooms and common areas also have tamper-resistant ceilings, so patients can’t access wiring, and heavy furniture that would be difficult to lift.
For now, KDADS has elected to only try to recertify 60 beds, though Keck hasn’t ruled out recertifying the other 146 beds. The main differences between the two would be that patients in the uncertified beds would be in rooms that hadn’t been renovated and the federal government wouldn’t pay for their care.
A consultant specializing in recertifying hospitals still is visiting monthly to find areas where OSH could improve and “hard wire” process changes that already have started, Keck said.
“I don’t expect us to be perfect … but I really want us to achieve excellence,” he said.
Efforts to reduce overtime
Keck said he believes the hospital has hired enough staff to satisfy inspectors’ requirements for the two 30-bed units, but more employees will be needed for the other units. The hospital has done well recruiting mental health technicians, though the competition is stiffer for staff with more education, such as registered nurses, he said.
“On the certified side, with the 60-bed unit, I’m really confident with where things are,” he said.
Efforts to hire more people and reduce the amount of overtime staff worked appeared to be making progress the first few months of the year, but overtime at OSH started to rise again in late April.
Staff worked about 1,957 overtime hours, or the equivalent of 24 full-time employees’ work if the hospital hadn’t used overtime, in the two-week period ending Jan. 2. It fell as low 707 hours (nine full-time employees) in the two-week period ending April 9 but rose again to 1,946 hours in the two weeks ending June 4.
More recent overtime information isn’t available because the state is reformatting how it counts the hours, de Rocha said.
Keck said it wasn’t entirely clear what had caused the overtime increase. But he said a large regional employer had increased pay, possibly drawing away hospital employees.
Staff vacancies are down, however, with about 18 percent of registered nurse positions and 4.2 percent of mental health technician positions unfilled as of Oct. 5.
The hospital recently began offering a six-week program for its current mental health technicians to become licensed, which Keck hopes will encourage them to keep working at OSH and developing their skills.
KDADS and the Kansas Department of Commerce also are working on a partnership to train certified nursing assistants to work at OSH, Keck said. Those who complete the training would start as mental health technicians, but their training would lay the groundwork for them to become a licensed practical nurse or registered nurse later, he said.
“We want to develop that career track for people,” he said.
Meg Wingerter is a reporter for KHI News Service in Topeka, a partner in the Heartland Health Monitor team. You can reach her on Twitter @meganhartMC
Fire crews on the scene of Monday’s fire in Manhattan-photo courtesy Manhattan Fire Department
RILEY COUNTY – Investigators are still working to determine the cause of Monday’s Founder’s Hill apartment building fire in Manhattan.
Just after 3:30 p.m. on Monday, the Manhattan Fire Department was dispatched to 1401 College Avenue Building G, for a report of a structure fire, according to a media release.
The fire was immediately upgraded to a third alarm, bringing neighboring fire departments for assistance.
The building is a total loss with an estimated value of $2 million to the structure. A total 91 residents were evacuated at the height of the fire, with 45 remaining displaced indefinitely.
Six pets were rescued from the fire, with two pets still unaccounted for at this time.
The fire was considered under control in just less than three hours.
Residents watch Monday apartment building fire in Manhattan
There were no injuries.
The property management company is First Management, Inc. of Lawrence, Kansas, and the owner is listed as Manwest LLC, also of Lawrence. First Management Inc. has provided motel rooms for the affected residents. The American Red Cross is also on scene and is offering assistance to residents. Kansas State University students affected can receive assistance by calling the Kansas State University Office of Student Life at (785) 532-6432.
TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A man has been sentenced to one year and four months in prison for helping a would-be jihadist’s unsuccessful attempt to plant what they thought was a bomb at an Army post in northeast Kansas.
A federal judge sentenced 29-year-old Alexander Blair on Tuesday. The Topeka man was accused of loaning $100 to 21-year-old John T. Booker Jr. to store an explosive device. It actually was a fake bomb built by FBI informants.
Prosecutors allege Booker intended to plant it outside Fort Riley in support of the Islamic State group. Blair pleaded guilty in May to a conspiracy charge.
Blair’s attorney sought five years’ probation, arguing Blair has an unusual genetic personality disorder. Prosecutors pushed for the maximum five-year prison term.
Booker pleaded guilty in February to two felonies. He hasn’t been sentenced.