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Young white nationalist seeks foothold in Kansas politics

BY ANDY MARSO

A man involved in a racist incident at a rural Kansas college has been trying to gain a foothold in state politics.

Among the messages chalked on the Bethany College campus was one that read “Make Lindsborg White Again.”
Among the messages chalked on the Bethany College campus was one that read “Make Lindsborg White Again.”

Chalk outlines of bodies and messages, including “Make Lindsborg White Again,” scrawled on Bethany College sidewalks earlier this month rattled the campus and surrounding community.

A police report of the chalkings from Sept. 3 names Gabriel James Wilson as a suspect.

Wilson, a 19-year-old from nearby Salina, has been part of multiple campaigns for statewide and legislative office during past elections, planting yard signs and offering other support. He’s since affiliated himself with Identity Evropa, a white nationalist group based in California.

See the Lindsborg Police report on the Bethany College Chalkings here

In a brief phone interview last week, he admitted to taking part in the chalkings.

 

“I was involved in the chalk incident,” Wilson said. “I apologize for being involved in the incident, and I have nothing further to say.”

Wilson answered a series of follow-up questions with “no comment” before hanging up.

He did not respond when asked via email if he made the threatening phone calls to Bethany College President Will Jones that followed the chalkings.

On Facebook, Jones wrote that the racially charged threats were aimed at his family — he has two adopted biracial children — and the students of color who’ve been recruited to his campus.

Jones has said the caller gave his name, but has declined to make it public in order to deny the caller notoriety. A spokesperson for the college, Tina Goodwin, said information had been shared with law enforcement.

The Kansas National Guard has opened its own investigation. Spokesperson Steve Larson confirmed Wilson is a Guard member.

Political involvement

Joey Frazier is director of the 1st Congressional District for the Libertarian Party of Kansas and is running for Kansas House.
Joey Frazier is director of the 1st Congressional District for the Libertarian Party of Kansas and is running for Kansas House.

Joey Frazier of Salina, director of the 1st Congressional District for the Libertarian Party of Kansas and a candidate for a Kansas House seat, met Wilson in June.

Frazier says Wilson and a group of five or six others showed up at a scheduled Libertarian Party event in Salina, started talking presidential politics with the regulars and introduced themselves as the Lindsborg chapter of Identity Evropa.

“I’d never heard of it, so I didn’t know if it was a good thing or a bad thing,” Frazier said.

Identity Evropa is part of a network of “white identitarian” groups, according to Mark Potok, a senior fellow at the Southern Poverty Law Center. These are groups that believe the United States and western Europe are “white countries” that are “under assault by the forces of multiculturalism and political correctness,” Potok said.

By the end of the Salina meeting, Frazier said Wilson had offered to help his campaign with money, volunteer hours or even an endorsement from his group.

To Frazier, a 28-year-old third-party candidate with little political experience, it seemed like an unexpected boost given that Wilson had worked on political campaigns before and seemed to know some prominent Kansas office holders.

But Wilson’s insistence that the Libertarians drop their support for their presidential nominee, Gary Johnson, and vote for Republican Donald Trump made Frazier uneasy.

Later that day Frazier received a message from Wilson via Facebook that increased his unease.

Wilson had noticed that a rainbow flag — a symbol of support for gay rights — was superimposed on Frazier’s profile picture.

“Upon further consideration, Identity Evropa will not be supporting your candidacy,” Wilson wrote. “Your public support for sexually deviant behavior on social media is antithetical to our ideals and mores.”

After looking closer at Identity Evropa online, Frazier said he dodged a bullet.

“I would have rejected his endorsement anyway because I don’t want to be involved in an organization like that,” he said.

At the bottom of his Facebook message to Frazier, Wilson described himself as Identity Evropa’s Kansas state coordinator.

Past associations

Gabriel Wilson’s message to Joey Frazier.
Gabriel Wilson’s message to Joey Frazier.

People who met Wilson while working on previous campaigns are shocked that he has taken up with a white nationalist group.

Six politically connected Republicans were friends with Wilson on Facebook as of last week but have since disassociated themselves with his page, which changed dramatically after KHI News Service began contacting elected officials to inquire about their connection to Wilson. Posts were deleted and Wilson removed his last name from the profile.

Several say they met him in 2014 when Wilson worked for Clark Shultz’s campaign for Kansas insurance commissioner. Shultz, then a state senator from McPherson, was one of several Republicans who lost in the primary to Ken Selzer. He now serves under Selzer as the Kansas Insurance Department’s deputy commissioner.

Campaign finance records show that Shultz’s campaign employed Wilson, then 17, as a consultant, paying him $2,000.
Shultz said that Wilson was hired to put out yard signs largely because he had access to a truck and a hammer.

He said Wilson had worked as a volunteer on the 2012 campaign of Galva resident Jesse Bryant when Bryant unsuccessfully challenged then-incumbent Sen. Jay Emler as a Republican in the primary and as a Libertarian in the general election.

Shultz said he has not talked with Wilson in a long time and never heard him express any white separatist views.

“I don’t know anybody who has views like he’s purported to have, and I certainly did not see (them) in that time period,” Shultz said. “(I) certainly never saw anything like that.”

Former Rep. Travis Couture-Lovelady, a Republican from Palco who is now a regional lobbyist for the National Rifle Association, said he met Wilson during the Shultz campaign.

“He seemed like a normal high school kid,” Couture-Lovelady said. “I don’t know. I just saw him at some parades and stuff. Didn’t hang out with him, so I can’t tell you what his personal views were.”

Couture-Lovelady’s wife, Carly Couture, was the treasurer for the Shultz campaign. She is now the state coordinator of Trump’s campaign in Kansas and, until recently, also was connected to Wilson on Facebook.

She said she has not talked with Wilson in years and he has not asked her if he could help with the Trump campaign.

“I am more than glad to tell you, zero contact,” Couture said.

Sen. Michael O’Donnell, a Republican from Wichita, was one of several people who “liked” a Sept. 15 Facebook post by Wilson that referenced Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton’s comment that half of Trump supporters belong in a “basket of deplorables.”

“The more I think on it, I think I fit into the ‘deplorables’ category,” Wilson wrote. “I’ll wear that one like a badge of honor.”

O’Donnell, who is leaving the Legislature to run for the Sedgwick County Commission, said that liking the post was meant only to register his distaste for Clinton, and that he liked several similar posts by other people.

Before it was altered last week, Wilson’s Facebook page was peppered with statements supporting Trump and the alternative-right, or “alt-right,” and expressing suspicion or derision of immigrants, Muslims, gay people and the Black Lives Matter movement.

O’Donnell said he and the other public officials connected to Wilson through the social media network have thousands of Facebook friends and can’t be expected to monitor the posts all of them make.

He said he had no idea that Wilson was connected to a white separatist movement.

“I clearly find that to be reprehensible and completely wrong,” said O’Donnell, who has since removed Wilson from his Facebook friends.

Another of Wilson’s recent Facebook friends, former Rep. Basil Dannebohm, who served briefly as a Republican, thinks Trump’s rise within the party is fueling Wilson’s ideology.

“Their presidential candidate has degraded women, minorities and the disabled,” said Dannebohm, who lives in Salina. “Acceptance of such behavior is not only ignorant, it’s dangerous.”

Dannebohm said he has left the Republican Party and is now an independent.

Dalton Glasscock, campaign and policy director for the Kansas Federation of College Republicans, also had been on Wilson’s Facebook friends list.

However, Glasscock said he has not interacted with Wilson in years, except for some pro-Trump comments Wilson made on Glasscock’s Facebook page. Glasscock is a vocal opponent of Trump.

He said he doesn’t believe Wilson’s views are widespread among Kansas Republicans, but he said party leaders should keep them from seeping in.

“You should always be concerned about that,” Glasscock said. “Those don’t reflect the views of me or the Republican Party at large and if for some reason (the party) ever moved into that, I would be out in a second.”

Ascribing to white nationalism
Wilson pronounced his white nationalist affiliation on Facebook on Aug. 29 with a post that read, “I love getting Identity Evropa packages in the mail!” and included a hyperlink to the group’s Facebook page.

A Wilson post on Islam.
A Wilson post on Islam.

As of Tuesday, Wilson was still friends on Facebook with the group’s founder, Nathan Damigo, the former chairman of the National Youth Front.

Clues to unraveling Wilson’s turn toward white nationalism can be found in the online postings of a Tulsa man named Paul Ray Ramsey. Ramsey, who goes by the handle Ramzpaul, has no known connection to Identity Evropa, but shares the same ideology in videos he posts online.

Potok, of the Southern Poverty Law Center, said Ramsey has cultivated a youthful following by couching white nationalism in humor and branding himself “as a Jon Stewart of the far right.”

A Feb. 27 posting on Ramsey’s blog referenced a trip to Kansas to connect with “Gabriel and his girlfriend.” In a short video, Ramsey described the pair as perfect ambassadors for the alt-right movement because they are young and attractive.

Paul Ray Ramsey of Tulsa described coming to Kansas to meet “Gabriel and his girlfriend” in February
View larger photo

“Gabriel and his girlfriend met with me last year,” Ramsey posted. “They found other people in their area who also watched my videos and they formed some real life friendships. Based on these friendships Gabriel took the initiative to arranged (sic) an Alt Right meet up. I was invited and I was happy to attend.”

Potok said it’s plausible that Ramsey’s videos shaped Wilson’s views and Trump’s campaign energized him.

“I think that Ramzpaul has shown that he is capable of bringing people into the white nationalist movement,” Potok said. “In addition to that, what we’ve seen in the last year or so is that Donald Trump’s presidential campaign has really opened up a political space for these kinds of individuals and ideologies to essentially be pushed into the mainstream.”

Ramsey posted on his verified Twitter account July 30 that he had a “great dinner and conversation tonight with the Kansas #altright” — seeming to identify Wilson as a charter member. Ramsey said about 20 people attended and thanked Wilson by tagging Wilson’s Twitter account.

Paul Ray Ramsey’s Twitter profile described a second meeting in July and tagged Gabriel Wilson’s profile.
Paul Ray Ramsey’s Twitter profile described a second meeting in July and tagged Gabriel Wilson’s profile.

He told another Twitter user who asked about the meeting to “get in touch” with Wilson about a schedule of such events and tagged him again. Another Twitter user also advised those interested to contact Wilson and posted “we are from all over KS.”

Dannebohm said Wilson told him that in the future he would like to run against Rep. Steven Johnson, a Republican from Assaria who represents Lindsborg.

Potok said that would fit a national trend.

“The fact is that many of these white nationalists are doing their best to enter politics in a fairly mainstream way,” Potok said. “They are working to spread their ideas, and very typically they do so hiding behind names that sound innocuous. They don’t call themselves the Klan; they call themselves something like Identity Evropa.”

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

 

Army names new Fort Riley commander to replace fired officer

Maj. Gen. Joseph Martin-courtesy photo
Maj. Gen. Joseph Martin-courtesy photo

LOLITA C. BALDOR, Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Army has named a new commander at Fort Riley, Kansas, to replace an officer who was fired Monday, just weeks before soldiers from the 1st Infantry Division deploy to Iraq.

Maj. Gen. Joseph Martin is assuming command of the division. Martin replaces Maj. Gen. Wayne Grigsby, who is the subject of an Army investigation and was removed from command. The Army hasn’t released details of the investigation.

Martin is a 1986 graduate of the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, and recently was commander at the National Training Center in Fort Irwin, California. He deployed to Iraq twice as a commander during the Iraq war.

Brig. Gen. Jeffery D. Broadwater will take command of the National Training Center. He’s currently deployed to Afghanistan.

Police search for suspect after alleged assault on Kansas teen

Dunn, Thomas William -  C
Dunn, Thomas William –

SALINE COUNTY – Law enforcement in Saline County are investigating an alleged assault and searching for a suspect.

Just after 9:30 p.m. on Wednesday, a 16-year-old girl was walking in the 100 block of E. Walnut near the Stiefel Theatre and when became paranoid that someone was following her, according to Salina police captain Paul Forrester.

When the girl turned around, a man she described as wearing a pink dress with a Mohawk haircut struck her in the right cheek.

After striking the girl, the man then tried to pull her into an alley.

Forrester said the girl was able to kick the man in the groin to free herself. She then ran to her home and notified police.

The suspect has been identified as 46-year-old Thomas Dunn, who has been seen numerous times throughout the community.

.

Nationwide cosmetology school with location in Kansas closing

Regency on SW Wanamaker in Topeka-google image
Regency on SW Wanamaker in Topeka-google image

TOPEKA -A nationwide Cosmetology school with a location in Kansas announced Wednesday it is closing all 79 campuses.

On the school web site they wrote, “It is with great sadness that we announce that after more than 50 years of educating cosmetology students, Regency Beauty Institute is permanently closing.

See additional details here

The school also tried to explain the reason they are closing.

“ The organization does not have the cash to continue to run the business. There are multiple intertwined reasons: declining numbers of cosmetology students nationwide, a negative characterization of for-profit education by regulators and politicians that continues to worsen and, in light of these factors, an inability to obtain continued financing.

This is not another case of a school being forced to shut down because it was accused of wrongdoing. We held ourselves to high educational and ethical standards.

The environment is simply not one that allows us to remain open. We diligently explored a range of strategic options that would benefit our students, teachers, and staff — and allow us to remain open. Unfortunately, those efforts were not successful.”

The school also said the Kansas location was working to secure teach-out partners, check the school web site frequently, starting the week of October 3 or call the state cosmetology board.

The Latest: 1 dead, more than 100 injured in commuter train crash

HOBOKEN, N.J. (AP) — The Latest on the commuter train that crashed into a station in New Jersey (all times local):

1:50 p.m.

A New Jersey Transit machinist at the Hoboken train station when a train crashed says he saw it coming in at a high rate of speed and strike a bumper block, which caused the front car to go into the air.

Michael Larson says the train traveled about 40 feet after going airborne and hit the wall of a waiting room at the station in New Jersey at morning rush hour Thursday.

Larson says the bumper blocks are made of concrete and steel.

 

Gov. Chris Christie says one person was killed. Area hospitals report that 74 patients were being treated, including three who suffered traumatic injuries.

___

1:20 p.m.

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo has canceled a trip to Israel for Shimon Peres’ funeral because of the deadly commuter train crash in New Jersey.

The Democratic governor had planned to pay his respects to the former Israeli leader on Friday. Instead he will tour the crash site with New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie.

Cuomo says a large number of New Yorkers were on the train when it crashed into the station in Hoboken. One person was killed and 74 others were hospitalized.

He says New York State Police are assisting in the response to the crash, along with officials from other local, state and federal agencies.

Cuomo says the crash will likely cause “major delays” into New York City.

___

1:15 p.m.

Hospitals in New Jersey say they have received 74 patients from the Hoboken train crash.

A spokesman for Jersey City Medical Center says it got 51 injured. Three are trauma patients in serious condition, while eight others are in less serious condition. Forty others were brought in by bus, were triaged and were being treated in its cafeteria.

Officials at Hoboken University Medical Center say they received 22 patients. Three of them had broken bones, while the rest had bumps, cuts and other minor injuries.

The two hospitals are the primary places taking those injured in the crash, which killed one person. Another patient was taken to Christ Hospital in Jersey City.

The New Jersey Transit train overran the end of the tracks in Hoboken and smashed into the station.

___

11:55 a.m.

New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie says no one is believed to be trapped on the commuter train that crashed in Hoboken.

Christie spoke Thursday to Fox News, more than two hours after the New Jersey Transit train overran the end of the line and crashed into the Hoboken station. He confirms that there has been one fatality. More than 100 others were injured.

The governor says he, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey and New Jersey Transit are coordinating on the response.

Christie says all victims are being taken to one of two hospitals in the area: Jersey City Medical Center and Point Care Hospital Center in Hoboken. He says loved ones should contact the hospitals directly to get information on family members who may be hospitalized.

___

11:40 a.m.

The New Jersey Transit train that crashed in Hoboken, killing one person and injuring more than 100 others, was not equipped with a technology that is designed to slow speeding trains.

U.S. railroads are under government orders to install the system called positive train control, but the work has gone more slowly than expected. The deadline has been repeatedly extended and is now Dec. 31, 2018.

Bob Chipkevich, who formerly headed the National Transportation Safety Board’s train crash investigations section, says the agency will be looking at whether the train was exceeding speed limits, both when it was approaching the station and when it entered the station area.

Last month, the Federal Railroad Administration said New Jersey Transit had a lot of work yet to do on installing the necessary equipment. New Jersey Transit responded that the report didn’t reflect the work it had accomplished.

___

11 a.m.

A state lawmaker says one person was killed and two critically injured when a commuter train plowed into the Hoboken station.

Democratic Assemblyman Raj Mukherji, who represents Hoboken, said a transit official confirmed the death to him. A New Jersey Transit spokeswoman, Jennifer Nelson, earlier said that more than 100 people were injured in the crash.

The train from New York crashed during the Thursday morning rush hour. It caused serious damage to both the train and station. Witnesses reported injuries, including one woman who was trapped under concrete and many people bleeding.

The National Transportation Safety Board is opening an investigation into the crash, and is sending a team of investigators to the scene.

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10:20 a.m.

A New Jersey Transit spokeswoman says that more than 100 people were injured, some critically, when a commuter train plowed into the Hoboken station.

The train from New York crashed during the Thursday morning rush hour. It caused serious damage to both the train and station. Witnesses reported injuries, including one woman who was trapped under concrete and many people bleeding.

The spokeswoman, Jennifer Nelson, says she doesn’t know yet how fast the train was going when it ran into the rail bumper at the end of the line.

___

——-
10 a.m.

A New Jersey Transit spokeswoman says that a commuter train that crashed into a train station in Hoboken was coming from Spring Valley, New York, on the Pascack Valley Line.

Nancy Snyder says there were multiple injuries, but it’s not clear how many, after Train No. 1614 crashed into the Hoboken train station around 8:45 a.m. She says the train left Spring Valley at 7:23 a.m. Thursday.

TV footage and photos from the scene Thursday morning show damage to the rail car and extensive structural damage to the Hoboken station.

A spokesman for the Federal Railroad Administration says that investigators have been dispatched to the scene.

Passengers heading to New York City transfer from New Jersey Transit trains at Hoboken to board other trains and ferries to get into Manhattan.

___

9:55 a.m.

A passenger says the commuter train that crashed in New Jersey was crowded and plowed through the platform at the end of the line.

Bhagyesh Shah told NBC New York he saw a lot of people bleeding and a woman pinned under concrete Thursday morning at New Jersey Transit’s Hoboken station.

Shah says he was in the back of the train but that many people use the front cars, since it makes for an easier exit. He says the train plowed into the platform. He says it lasted only a couple seconds, “but it felt like an eternity.”

He tells the TV station that passengers in the second car broke the emergency windows to get out.

Images from the scene show damage to the rail car and extensive structural damage, but there’s no official word on the number of injuries.

___

9:30 a.m.

A commuter train has crashed into a rail station in New Jersey during the morning rush hour, causing serious damage.

TV footage and photos from the scene Thursday morning show damage to the rail car and extensive structural damage to the Hoboken station.

Radio station WFAN anchor John Minko told New York radio station WINS that the train “went right through the barriers and into the reception area.”

Rail service was suspended in and out of Hoboken, which is 7 miles outside New York City.

There is no word so far on the number of injuries.

Emergency crews are arriving on the scene.

___

9:10 a.m.

A commuter train has crashed into a rail station in New Jersey.

Emergency crews are arriving on the scene in Hoboken on Thursday morning.

Photos from the scene show a damaged New Jersey Transit rail car inside the station, surrounded by debris.

There is no word on the damage or any possible injuries.

Hoboken is across the river from New York City.

Police: Missing 12-year-old Kansas boy found safe

SEDGWICK COUNTY –  Police report missing Devin James was located just after 8 a.m. and  is safe. No additional details were released on Thursday morning.

—————-

SEDGWICK COUNTY – Law enforcement authorities in Sedgwick County are asking the public for help to find a missing 12-year-old boy.

Devin James was last seen in the 2300 Block of North Dogwood in Wichita.

He was wearing a blue camo hooded sweatshirt, black shorts, grey tennis shoes and carrying a camo back pack.

He is 5’ tall, weighs approximately 90 pounds and wears black frame glasses.

Police ask that you call 911 if you see him or know where he is.

Kansas man arrested after chase leading to his own home

Whetstone-photo Kan. Dept. of Corrections
Whetstone-photo Kan. Dept. of Corrections

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Authorities say a fleeing Kansas motorist has been arrested after driving to his own home and trying to sneak inside.

The man drove off Wednesday night when a Shawnee County deputy attempted to pull him over. The five-minute, slow-speed pursuit ended at the man’s home.

Sheriff’s officials said the suspect Eric Whetstone, 40, was booked into the Shawnee County Jail in connection with multiple offenses, including felony fleeing or attempting to elude an officer, possession of stolen property and interference with a law enforcement officer.

He has previous convictions in Shawnee County for drugs, robbery and forgery, according to the Kansas Department of Corrections.

Kansas man charged after motorcycle crash into tree

Logsdon
Logsdon

RENO COUNTY -A Kansas man who was badly injured in a motorcycle accident on August 8, has now been charged by the state for that accident.

Jody Logsdon, 28, Hutchinson, has been charged with flee and elude, possession of stolen property, driving while suspended, illegal display and criminal damage.

Logsdon was allegedly driving a stolen motorcycle when he struck some mailboxes and then a tree at 27th and Rambler Road in Hutchinson. EMS transported him to Wesley Medical Center for treatment.

In court, he was still wearing braces on both legs from that accident.

The case now moves to a waiver-status docket.

Kansas woman hospitalized after crash during u-turn

screen-shot-2013-12-13-at-8-39-21-pmBARRY COUNTY, MO- A Kansas woman was injured in an accident just before 4 p.m. on Wednesday in Barry County, Missouri.

The Missouri State Highway Patrol reported a 2007 Mazda 5 driven by Patrick A. Jordon, 28, Clearwater, was traveling on U.S. 60 one mile south of Monett

The driver made a u-turn in front of a 2004 Pontiac GTO driven by Louis M. Soto, 22, Verona, Missouri.

The Pontiac hit the driver’s side of the Mazda.

A passenger in the Mazda Tammy A. Coe, 37, Eldorado, was transported by ambulance to Mercy Hospital in Joplin.

She was not wearing a seat belt, according to the MSHP.

An emergency medical helicopter flew Coe to Mercy Hospital in Springfield.

Jordan was not injured.

Kansas reports record low infant mortality

KDHE Secretary Susan Mosier
KDHE Secretary Susan Mosier

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas is reporting that its infant mortality rate decreased in 2015 to the state’s lowest annual figure ever.

The state Department of Health and Environment said Wednesday that there were 230 infant deaths last year for a mortality rate of 5.9 for every 1,000 live births.

The figure was 6.3 deaths for every 1,000 live births in 2014, when 246 infant deaths were reported. The department also said the figure last year was 28 percent lower than it was in 1996.

The state’s rate also is slightly below the national figure of 6 deaths for every 1,000 live births.

KDHE Secretary Susan Mosier attributed the decline to ongoing work by more than 20 organizations to research and raise awareness about infant mortality.

Kan. man indicted for setting supervisor on fire at Army medical facility

Currie, nn employee of the Munson Army Health Center at Fort Leavenworth was arrested for allegedly assaulting two employee-photo courtesy KCTV
Currie, nn employee of the Munson Army Health Center at Fort Leavenworth was arrested for allegedly assaulting two employee-photo courtesy KCTV

KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — A civilian employee accused of setting a co-worker on fire at a health center at Kansas’ Fort Leavenworth is facing an additional charge in a new federal indictment.

Grand jurors on Wednesday in Kansas City, Kansas, indicted 54-year-old Clifford Currie of Leavenworth with one count each of assault with intent to commit murder and of assault with a dangerous weapon.

The indictment replaces a complaint that charged Currie only with assault to commit murder.

Prosecutors allege Currie threw a flammable liquid on his female supervisor, lit her on fire and assaulted her with a straight edge razor and scissors. Authorities say another worker was injured when she tried to stop the assault before other hospital employees subdued Currie.

Messages left Wednesday with Currie’s public defenders weren’t immediately returned.

Teen faces charges after reported sex assault at Kansas school

PRAIRIE VILLAGE, Kan. (AP) — Authorities have charged a teenager in connection with a reported sexual assault at a high school in suburban Kansas City.

The Johnson County district attorney’s office said Wednesday that the 15-year-old male is charged with aggravated indecent liberties with a child, which is a felony, and lewd and lascivious behavior, a misdemeanor.

A female freshman at Shawnee Mission East High School in Prairie Village reported being groped and fondled in a boys’ bathroom at the school on Sept. 14.

The Kansas City Star reports that prosecutors did not release the name of the teen charged, and no court date has been set for him.

On Sept. 21, many students wore black in support of the victim.

 

 

 

 

School officials say internal disciplinary action was also taken as a result of the incident, but they could not comment because of privacy laws.

Former Kansas mayor admits stealing money from his old job

Jeremy Farmer- City of Lawrence photo
Jeremy Farmer- City of Lawrence photo

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — A former Lawrence mayor has admitted to stealing money from his old job as executive director of a food pantry.

The Lawrence Journal-World reports that 33-year-old Jeremy Farmer pleaded guilty Wednesday in federal court in Topeka to one count of interstate transportation of stolen funds.

He was hired at Just Food in 2011 and resigned from that position — and from his seat on the Lawrence City Commission — in August 2015. His resignation came about after it was revealed he had not paid more than $50,000 in federal and state payroll taxes on behalf of Just Food. At the time Farmer said the taxes were unpaid due to an oversight.

Farmer now lives in Kansas City, Kansas. Sentencing will be set at a later date.

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