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Kansas man busted for drugs after caught in stolen vehicle

Milbrandt
Milbrandt

HUTCHINSON– A Kansas man was seen walking by a Reno County Sheriff Deputy around 1:45 a.m. Thursday morning in the 3700 block of North Wilson Road in Hutchinson.

When the deputy stopped to talk with the man, he stated that he had run out of gas in the vehicle he was driving.

He also gave the deputy his name as Tyler Sutton.

Deputies didn’t show anything for that person but did find some information on a 22-year-old Kyler Milbrandt of Hutchinson.

After seeing his photo the deputy was able to identify him as Milbrandt.

He apparently had warrants through both Hutchinson Police and the sheriff’s office. One of those was for being an absconder from Community Corrections for a drug conviction from 2015.
Deputies also ran the tag number of the vehicle and discovered it had been reported stolen in Kingman County.

When Deputies arrested Milbrandt they also apparently found him to be in possession of methamphetamine, marijuana and drug paraphernalia.

He was booked into the Reno County Correctional Facility for suspicion of being in possession of stolen property, various drug charges, drug paraphernalia as well as the warrants.

Bond in the case is set at $15,500 and he is expected back in court next week.

UPDATE: KHP Trooper, 2 others hospitalized after rear-end crash

Thursday accident in Topeka photo by Nick Viviani courtesy WIBW TV
Thursday accident in Topeka photo by Nick Viviani courtesy WIBW TV

SHAWNEE COUNTY – Law enforcement authorities are investigating a Thursday afternoon accident in Shawnee County that injured a Kansas Highway Patrol officer and two others.

Just after 3:30p.m. on Thursday, a vehicle driven by Bill Dowden, 83, Lenexa, was eastbound on Interstate 470 in the number two lane. The vehicle drifted out of the lane, traveled across the number 1 lane, drove onto the inside shoulder and struck a Kansas Highway Patrol vehicle legally parked on the inside shoulder of the Interstate.

The trooper, Dowden and a passenger Marion Dowden, 79, Lenexa, were transported to a hospital in Topeka.

The name of the trooper was not available early Friday.

The accident remains under investigation.

SHAWNEE COUNTY – Law enforcement authorities are investigating a Thursday afternoon accident in Shawnee County that injured a Kansas Highway Patrol officer and two others.

The KHP reported just after 3:30p.m., a motor carrier inspector was involved in a two-vehicle crash on Interstate 470 between Gage and Fairlawn. The officer was sitting stationary in the median facing east when his vehicle was rear-ended.

The officer and two others were transported to a local hospital.

The Patrol’s Critical Highway Accident Response Team responded to the scene.

No additional details were released early Thursday evening. Continue reading “UPDATE: KHP Trooper, 2 others hospitalized after rear-end crash”

Separate trials ordered for 4 defendants in Kan. gun shop killing

Surveillance image from pool video of the crime
Surveillance image from pool video of the crime

OLATHE, Kan. (AP) — The four men charged with killing the co-owner of a suburban Kansas City gun store during a robbery will have separate trials.

A Johnson County judge on Thursday granted a motion from two of the defendants, Londro Patterson and De’Anthony Wiley, seeking separate trials.

The Kansas City Star reports prosecutors wanted Patterson and Wiley tried to together but did not object to separate trials for the other defendants, Hakeem Malik and Nicquan Midgyettt.

The four men are charged with first-degree murder in the January 2015 shooting death of Jon Bieker. He died while defending his wife at the She’s A Pistol gun store in Shawnee.

Three of the four alleged robbers were wounded.

Trial dates haven’t been set.

Tougher standards: 5.7 percent of KU freshmen admitted by alternative route

University of Kansas campusLAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Nearly 6 percent of University of Kansas freshmen were admitted through an alternative process after failing to meet the school’s new and tougher standards.

The Lawrence Journal-World reports that the more exacting standards took effect this semester. A committee reviews applications from students who don’t meet the criteria for automatic admission.

The change led to concerns that minority enrollment would drop. But university data shows 47 percent of the 750 students admitted through the committee process were minorities. Among those committee-admitted students, 243 enrolled this fall, and they made up 5.7 percent of the overall 4,233-student freshman class.

Enrollment official Matt Melvin says most of the students admitted through the new committee process would have had high enough test scores and grades to be admitted under the old standards.

Judge rules in lawsuit over multi-state lottery-fixing case

Eddie Tipton- photo Polk County
Eddie Tipton- photo Polk County

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — A judge says the winner of a Hot Lotto jackpot can continue a lawsuit that contends he would have won millions of dollars more if the prior drawing had not been rigged by a lottery vendor.

Iowa District Court Judge Karen Romano refused to dismiss the case Wednesday. The suit is the first against the Multi-State Lottery Association, that including Kansas, over a jackpot-rigging scandal inside the organization.

Romano says the association and the Iowa Lottery aren’t immune from the lawsuit filed by Larry Dawson of Webster City, Iowa.

Dawson won a Hot Lotto jackpot worth $9 million in May 2011. He argues that the jackpot should have been worth $25.5 million had the prior jackpot in December 2010 not been fixed by then-association security director Eddie Tipton.

DeVry University agrees to stop using false advertising claim

COLLIN BINKLEY, Associated Press

DeVry University has agreed to stop advertising a claim about the success of its students that had been challenged by the federal government. The school has a campus in Kansas City, Oklahoma City, two in Colorado and locations in fifteen other states.

The Education Department announced a settlement with DeVry on Thursday after saying the for-profit college chain couldn’t support one of its marquee claims.

DeVry had advertised that 90 percent of its graduates since 1975 found employment in their field of study within six months of graduation. Last year, the department asked DeVry to provide evidence of the claim and found that it couldn’t.

Under the settlement, DeVry must stop advertising the claim and must pay the department $68 million.

DeVry said in a statement that it is pleased to resolve the case. The Illinois-based chain still faces another federal lawsuit over alleged deception in its advertisements.

More than $1M to be returned to Kansans by bankrupt retailer

MoneyTOPEKA – Kansas consumers will receive more than $1 million in loan write-offs and account credits under a settlement reached last week with a company that targeted sales of jewelry and other items to military families, Kansas Attorney General Derek Schmidt announced today.

USA Discounters, which also did business as USA Living and Fletcher’s Jewelers, sold consumer products, including furniture, appliances, televisions, computers, smart phones, jewelry and other consumer goods principally on credit. USA Discounters typically marketed to members of the military and veterans, advertising that military, veterans and government employees would never be denied credit for goods purchased from the retailer.

Schmidt and the attorneys general of 49 other states recently reached a settlement with the company to resolve allegations that it engaged in unfair, abusive, false and deceptive acts and practices. These allegations include that, in collecting on consumer debts, USA Discounters engaged in abusive tactics, constantly contacted service members’ chains-of-command and caused some service members to lose security clearances and face demotions. The states also alleged that USA Discounters filed its collection lawsuits in Virginia jurisdictions, no matter the service member’s location, deployment status or residence. This made it difficult or impossible for service members or their families to travel to another state to represent themselves in court in these collection proceedings.

In addition, the states alleged USA Discounters sold overpriced household goods at high interest rates, often using the military allotment system to guarantee payment. These unlawful business practices, the states claim, were secured through misrepresentations and omissions in advertising, during the loan’s origination, and during the collection process.

Virginia-based USA Discounters closed its stores in the summer of 2015, including a store in Junction City near Fort Riley. It later declared bankruptcy, and the states’ settlement agreement has been filed as part of the bankruptcy proceedings.

“The high stress and burden placed on military families are not an invitation for businesses to engage in deceptive practices,” Schmidt said. “Our Kansas consumer protection laws include special protections for military families and veterans, and this settlement will return money to those families who did business with this company.”

USA Discounters agreed to provide relief to certain former and current customers. The total estimated value to consumers for these restitution measures to Kansas consumers is more than $1 million, primarily benefiting active and veteran service members. Namely, USA Discounters agreed to:

Write off all accounts with balances for customers whose last contract was dated June 1, 2012, or earlier, and correct the negative comment from the company on those consumers’ credit reports;
Apply a $100 credit to all accounts whose contracts were dated after June 1, 2012, which were not discharged in bankruptcy, and correct the negative comment from the company on those consumers’ credit reports;
Write off all judgments not obtained in the correct state, and correct the negative comment from the company on those consumers’ credit reports; and
Credit all judgments that were obtained in the correct state against members of the military with a credit equal to 50 percent of the original judgment amount.
Affected consumers will be contacted regarding their eligibility for restitution. Consumers who believe they are eligible may also contact the attorney general’s Consumer Protection Division at (800) 432-2310 or online at www.InYourCornerKansas.org.

KHP asks for help to locate truck that fled hit and run crash

Pedestrian accident smallSHAWNEE COUNTY – Law enforcement authorities are investigating a pedestrian accident in Shawnee County and looking for a vehicle that fled the scene.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported just after 8p.m. on Tuesday, a late ‘90s or 2000 dark blue or black Chevy pickup was northbound on Kansas 4 just north of Northeast Seward Avenue when it struck a pedestrian and continued on without stopping. The truck will be missing a right side mirror and the passenger side headlight might be inoperable, according to the KHP.

The victim Daniel Christopher VIning, 38, Lawrence, was transported to Stormont Vail for treatment of severe injuries, according to the KHP.

Anyone with information in the case is asked to contact Master Trooper Adam Simone at 785-296-3102

Heavy rains: Extensive damage to Kan. Supreme Court building

Flooding inside Kansas Judicial Center -photo courtesy KSNT
Flooding inside Kansas Judicial Center -photo courtesy KSNT

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Rainwater has seeped into the building that houses the Kansas Supreme Court, causing extensive damage and forcing some employees to temporarily relocate.

The Topeka Capital-Journal reports that the Kansas Judicial Center’s leaking roof, which was in the process of being fixed, was inundated by heavy rains on Sept. 13.

Appellate court spokeswoman Lisa Taylor says the most significant water damage occurred on the third and second floors. The Office of the Judicial Administration, which is housed on the third floor, was also damaged.

Fifty people — including all seven justices, five of 14 court of appeals judges, their staffs and other court employees — were moved from their offices to other spaces in the building.

Taylor says the total cost of the damage is unknown.

Medicaid payment change affects Kansas disability services network

By ANDY MARSO

Photo by Andy Marso/KHI News Service Cornerstone Supports clients Tom Newman, left, and Kim Vermillion, seated at table, talk with Kim’s mom, Vickie, who owns Cornerstone. Vickie Vermillion said she's closing the company that provides support services to Kansans with intellectual and developmental disabilities because of a Medicaid reimbursement change the state made to help close a budget gap.
Photo by Andy Marso/KHI News Service
Cornerstone Supports clients Tom Newman, left, and Kim Vermillion, seated at table, talk with Kim’s mom, Vickie, who owns Cornerstone. Vickie Vermillion said she’s closing the company that provides support services to Kansans with intellectual and developmental disabilities because of a Medicaid reimbursement change the state made to help close a budget gap.

The employees of Cornerstone Supports gathered last week at a house in Olathe with their clients — adults with intellectual and developmental disabilities — to plan their last day together.

Cornerstone will close later this month, and its 19 clients will have to find other companies to help them with daily tasks so they can stay in their own homes.

The regular gatherings at the Olathe house where three Cornerstone clients live will end Oct. 28.

“We should do something,” said Brandon Thompson, one of the clients.

“What do you want to do?” asked Vickie Vermillion, Cornerstone’s owner.

“A cookout or something,” Thompson said.

As they planned the barbecue, another client sitting nearby started crying softly. Vermillion stopped to comfort him.

Vermillion is closing Cornerstone at end of October because of a Medicaid reimbursement changethe state made in May to help close a budget gap.

She said the state’s restructuring of the residential pay policy will result in a cut that’s too deep for her company to absorb.

People who help Kansans with disabilities find support services say providers across the state are struggling to adjust to the policy change. Some smaller companies, like Cornerstone, are simply unable to do so.

Derek Laney, director and CEO of a company that provides disability support services in southern Iowa and eastern Kansas, said he foresees more closures and consolidations.

Laney said he knows of at least one other Kansas company that is closing and has approached his company, Kansas Focus, about taking on its clients.

“We’re committed to doing that for as long as we can stay financially viable,” he said.

Kansans with developmental and intellectual disabilities who want to receive the services have faced a waiting list for years. The loss of providers like Cornerstone could make it more difficult for them to find the services, even if the state has enough funding to pay for them in the future.

Chad VonAhnen, executive director of Johnson County Developmental Supports, said that if the provider network shrinks, more Kansans with developmental disabilities will be unable to make the decision to live independently, which is less costly than institutional care.

“The concern for us is this system is based on choice for people,” VonAhnen said. “When we start limiting provider options because they’re no longer able to provide services in this climate, that’s concerning.”

The change

Under the residential pay policy:

  • A community developmental disability organization, or CDDO, assesses Kansans with disabilities to determine what services they need. VonAhnen’s organization is one of 27 CDDOs throughout the state.
  • Kansans with disabilities are assigned to one of five tiers based on the level of services they need.
  • Reimbursements for each tier are calculated on a monthly basis and split into equal payments for each day of the month.

Those payments used to be made even if the client did not need services every day. The policy change the state enacted means that starting this month, providers are to bill only for the days when clients need services.

“Before the policy in question was adopted, each person receiving residential supports was automatically authorized to receive services for each day of the month, ” Angela de Rocha, a spokeswoman for state agencies, said via email. “This authorization was not dependent upon true need or the provider delivering an actual service.”

Jerry Michaud, executive director of Developmental Services of Northwest Kansas, said the change sounds reasonable on its face. But it makes it harder financially for providers to keep enough staff to have employees on call every day of the month in case one of their clients unexpectedly needs help.

“That’s exactly what it was,” Michaud said. “We had staff in place, and if ‘Bob’ needed something that maybe wasn’t on that regular schedule, we were available.”

The policy change was part of a package of $56 million in Medicaid cuts Gov. Sam Brownback enacted in May to balance the budget.

Providers of the home and community-based services, or HCBS, were spared the 4 percent cut that providers of medical services had to absorb for Medicaid patients.

But Laney said most providers like him would have welcomed a 4 percent cut rather than the residential pay policy change. He thinks that change will reduce payments to his company by 15 percent to 25 percent and the overall cut to all providers will be higher than the $1.3 million estimated by the state.

“I honestly don’t know what the number will be, but we’re not talking just a couple million dollars,” he said.

Laney said the change will create unintended consequences, including provider closures that mean clients will move to more expensive long-term care facilities or have more medical costs because they’re not getting support in their homes.

Some states already reimburse providers for days served. Laney said that could work in Kansas, but state officials would have to increase the daily base rates.

A change to those rates may be coming, but advocates fear it could go in the other direction.

Rate study

HCBS providers received a letter at the end of September from Mike Randol, director of the Division of Health Care Finance at the Kansas Department of Health and Environment.

The letter told providers they would be required to submit information on their revenue, expenses and service delivery to Optumas, a contractor that KDHE hired to study their reimbursement rates.

 

The study pertains to all services in KanCare, not just HCBS, de Rocha said, and comes on the heels of a study by a company working for Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Servicesnamed Myers and Stauffer that was inconclusive about HCBS rates.

Tim Wood, executive director of an advocacy group for HCBS providers called Interhab, said what concerns providers is that the new study requests information about their ability to raise money through sources other than state Medicaid dollars — such as county property taxes or grants.

He said he thought that was unprecedented.

“We’re in the process of trying to figure out how to respond to this,” said Wood, who doubts the new study will result in higher reimbursement rates.

De Rocha said the request is aimed at keeping provider networks intact.

“As viability of Medicaid providers in important to the state, we are trying to get a more comprehensive look at the entire fiscal situation of these providers,” de Rocha said.

The last time reimbursements were increased was almost 10 years ago, and providers said their costs have risen since then.

Michaud’s network, which stretches across 18 counties in northwest Kansas, consolidated some providers two years ago.

Tim Cunningham, who runs a CDDO called Tri-Valley Developmental Services in Chanute that serves four southeast Kansas counties, said the providers in his network have shrunk their workforce from 172 employees to 131 in the last nine years even though demand for services has dropped only slightly.

With the state budget still tight, Cunningham said he fears the new Optumas study will be used to justify rate reductions.

Shrinking choices

Vermillion founded Cornerstone four years ago because she wanted her daughter, Kim, to be able to live independently with just one or two roommates rather than in group homes that house up to eight adults with disabilities.

Her agency now serves people in three houses and four apartments across Olathe — none with more than three residents.

“My goal was to have small homes,” she said.

But it takes more staff to make that model work, and Vermillion said it’s no longer financially viable.

When Cornerstone closes, Kim will come back home and live with her.

Vermillion has lined up services for some of her other clients that will allow them to stay in their current houses. Others, like Betty Hauber, might have to move.

“I don’t think we know what’s going to happen with Betty,” Vermillion said.

“I haven’t heard yet,” Hauber said.

Vermillion’s clients have different levels of need. Helen Hillman, one of Kim’s roommates, needs daily support and will have to move.

Colin Olenick, who is studying at Johnson County Community College to be a paralegal, needs fewer services. He will be able to stay in his house and has another service provider lined up. But he said he’s disappointed by Cornerstone’s closure because he prefers smaller providers.

“The state says we have a choice,” Olenick said. “But in a way, by eliminating agencies, particularly the small ones, it sort of limits our choice.”

It’s also a challenge for Cornerstone’s 22 employees, who are looking for new jobs.

Anton Bauer, who has worked with adults with disabilities for eight years, called Cornerstone’s closing “disheartening, to say the least.”

“I have a passion for this,” he said. “I would never want to leave this field. But now I’m looking at (needing) two jobs just to support my family.”

Bauer said he’s considering going back to school and changing careers because “there’s no security left” in his current field.

He said he would miss the time spent with Cornerstone’s clients.

“They become part of your life,” Bauer said.

A few minutes later Thompson asked if Bauer could cook dinner that night.

“Very well,” Bauer said. “You’re helping.”

The two exchanged a high five.

Andy Marso is a reporter for KHI News Service in Topeka, a partner in the Heartland Health Monitor team. You can reach him on Twitter @andymarso

Sheriff: Pastor’s office ransacked in Kansas church burglary

Church in Assaria- google image
Church in Assaria- google image

SALINE COUNTY – Law enforcement authorities in Saline County are investigating a church burglary.

Vandals broke out a window to gain entry to Assaria Lutheran Church, 124 W. 1st Street sometime between 9 p.m.
Tuesday and 6 a.m. Wednesday, according to Saline County Sheriff’s Lt. Mike Smith

The burglar ransacked the pastor’s office, the church secretary’s office, the community room and the main sanctuary.

Smith said an acoustic guitar valued at $300 was missing from the sanctuary, a 60″ Vizio flat screen TV valued at $600 was missing from the community room, and a Hewlett Packard computer tower valued at $400 was taken from the secretary’s office.

Numerous drawers had been rummaged through and papers were scattered throughout a hallway.

Total damage to the window and the church has been estimated at $1,360, according to Smith.

Verizon closing call centers in 5 states, cutting jobs

job  jobsALBANY, N.Y. (AP) — Verizon is closing call centers in five states, including its home state of New York, drawing the ire of the governor’s office.

The company says a consolidation of its call centers will impact about 3,200 workers near Rochester and New York City; Bangor, Maine; Lincoln, Nebraska; Wallingford and Meriden, Connecticut, and Rancho Cordova, California.

Some 850 jobs will be lost at the two New York locations, including 600 in Henrietta, outside Rochester. In California, 700 jobs are being cut and another 300 are being relocated.

A spokeswoman for Verizon Communications Inc. said Thursday that all the workers are being offered jobs at other company sites.

A spokesman for the administration of New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo called the job losses “an egregious example of corporate abuse.”

Police: KBI assisting with SW Kansas investigation

KBISEWARD COUNTY – Law enforcement authorities continue an investigation in Seward County.

A portion of Tucker Road from Millwood Circle to Country Estates Road Northeast of Liberal closed due to the investigation was reopened late Wednesday, according to Police Captain Patrick McClurg.

“Due to the nature of the investigation, we are not releasing details at this time,” he said Thursday morning.

The Kansas Bureau of Investigation is among the agencies involved with the investigation, according to McClurg.

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