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Kan. police chief to make court appearance on misdemeanor criminal charge

Bronson Campbell courtesy Jeff County News
Bronson Campbell courtesy Jeff County News

ABILENE, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas police chief accused of disseminating or requesting criminal history information without a legitimate need is scheduled to make his first appearance next month on misdemeanor criminal charges.

The Salina Journal reports that Bronson Campbell’s Dickinson County District Court appearance has been rescheduled for Aug. 18. His first appearance initially was scheduled for July 21. Campbell declined to discuss the case with The Associated Press.

Campbell was the Enterprise police chief from May 2013 until May 2014, when his appointment wasn’t renewed. He is currently the Valley Falls police chief and is seeking the Republican nomination for Jefferson County sheriff.

The complaint alleges that in 2014, Campbell disseminated criminal history information, or requested such information from the central repository of another criminal justice agency, without a legitimate need.

Trump uses social media to announce his running mate

Gov. Mike Pence
Gov. Mike Pence

WASHINGTON (AP) — Donald Trump says on Twitter that he’s picked Indiana Gov. Mike Pence as his running mate.

Trump says he’ll hold a news conference on Saturday morning.

Trump had originally planned to announce his running mate on Friday. But he delayed the announcement because of the attacks in Nice, France, late Thursday.

Pence had already flown to New York before Trump announced the postponement.

 

Blue-green algae warnings continue for three Kansas lakes

Kansas Department of Health and Environment

The Kansas Department of Health and Environment samples publicly accessible bodies of water for blue-green algae when the agency receives reports of potential algae blooms in Kansas lakes. Based on sampling results, KDHE reports on potentially harmful conditions.

Lakes under a Warning are not closed. Marinas, lakeside businesses and park camping facilities are open for business. If swim beaches are closed, it will be specifically noted. Drinking water and showers at parks are safe and not affected by algae blooms. Boating and fishing are safe on lakes under a Warning, but contact with the water should be avoided. It is safe to eat fish caught during a harmful blue-green algae outbreak, as long as the fish is rinsed with clean water; only the fillet portion is consumed and all other parts are discarded. Hands should also be washed with clean water after handling fish taken from an affected lake.  Zoned lakes may have portions fully open for all recreation even if other portions are under a Warning.

Kansans should be aware that blooms are unpredictable. They can develop rapidly and may float around the lake, requiring visitors to exercise their best judgment. If there is scum, a paint-like surface or the water is bright green, avoid contact and keep pets away. These are indications that a harmful bloom may be present. Pet owners should be aware that animals that swim in or drink water affected by a harmful algal bloom or eat dried algae along the shore may become seriously ill or die.

Public Health Warning: High levels of toxic blue-green algae have been detected. A Public Health Warning indicates that activities like boating and fishing may be safe; however, direct contact with water (i.e., wading, skiing and swimming) is strongly discouraged for people, pets and livestock.

Kansas public waters currently under a Warning status:

ATCHISON COUNTY PARK LAKE, Atchison County
LAKE AFTON, Sedgwick County
MILFORD RESERVOIR, (Zone C) Clay, Dickinson and Geary Counties

When a Warning is issued, KDHE recommends the following precautions be taken:

  • Lake water is not good to drink for pets or livestock
  • Lake water, regardless of blue-green algae status, should never be consumed by humans
  • Water contact should be avoided
  • Fish can be eaten as long as they are rinsed with clean water, consume only the fillet portion, and discard all other parts
  • Do not allow pets to eat dried algae
  • If lake water contacts skin, wash with clean water as soon as possible
  • Avoid areas of visible algae accumulation

KDHE will update these statements as conditions warrant.

Adoptive father suspected in disappearance of Kan. boy dies

EL DORADO, Kan. (AP) — The adoptive father of a southeast Kansas boy whose 1999 disappearance went unreported for nearly a decade has died.

Butler County Sheriff Kelly Herzet said Thursday that Doug Herrman died Wednesday night after an illness. The Wichita Eagle reports that Herrman was 61 and lived near Grove, Oklahoma.

His adopted 11-year-old son, Adam Herrman, disappeared from his Towanda home in 1999, but authorities in Kansas didn’t learn about it until late 2008. See more here.

Doug Herrman and the boy’s adoptive mother weren’t charged in Adam’s disappearance. But they were convicted in 2011 of continuing to receive state adoption subsidies after he went missing.

The Herrmans had said that the boy ran away and that they didn’t report it out of fear that their other children would be taken from them.

2 Americans among those killed in the Bastille Day attack in France

NICE, France (AP) — The Latest on attack that killed 84 people in Nice (all times local):

— Relatives say a father and son from the Austin area are among the victims of the deadly truck attack in Nice.

Family friend Jess Davis says 51-year-old Sean Copeland and his 11-year-old son Brodie were killed Thursday evening in what French authorities have described as a terror attack.

Davis released a statement Friday on behalf of the Copeland family, saying they are “heartbroken and in shock.”

State Department spokesman John Kirby said earlier that two Americans were killed, but didn’t identify them citing privacy.

Davis says the Copelands, from Lakeway, were on a European vacation that began in Spain. They were celebrating Bastille Day in Nice.

The statement says Sean Copeland is “a wonderful husband and father” and Brodie is “an amazing son and brother who lit up our lives.”

 

 

 

 

11:55 a.m.

Czech police say they are increasing security as a precaution following the truck attack in Nice.

Tomas Tuhy, the country’s top police officer says security has been boosted at Prague’s and other international airports, train stations and other places where sports and cultural events take place.

The Foreign Ministry says no Czechs are among the dead, but one Czech woman suffered a light injury in the attack.

___

11:40 a.m.

Estonia’s Foreign Ministry says two Estonian nationals were injured in the Nice attack and it is trying to reach other Estonians believed to be in the area. It did not identify the injured or give further details.

Meanwhile, Estonian state-owned airline Nordica says it’s offering passengers with tickets to Nice for July to change their flight plans.

Nordica CEO Jaan Tamm says customers who have flown to Nice will be allowed to return on earlier return flights if seats are available. Passengers booked to fly to Nice this month will be allowed to change the time of their departure or change the destination to the Croatian cities of Split or Rijeka, or Odessa in Ukraine until the end of the summer season free of charge.

Two Estonian mobile operators said they would allow clients to make free mobile calls from France and receive calls there free of charge for the next two days.

___

11:35 a.m.

London Mayor Sadiq Khan says London will review its security procedures because of the attack in Nice.

The mayor said he wants to reassure all London residents that the Metropolitan Police will do “everything possible” to keep the British capital safe. He said the extremists’ “poisonous and twisted ideology” will be defeated in France, London and other parts of the world.

The terror threat in Britain is judged to be “severe,” meaning that an attack is highly likely.

___

11:15 a.m.

Belgium’s prime minister says next week’s national holiday celebrations will go ahead, but with additional security measures.

Charles Michel spoke to journalists following a morning meeting of the Belgian’s government’s Security Council following the lethal truck attack in Nice, France.

Michel says Belgian authorities had already considered the possibility of a terrorist using a vehicle to attack a crowd. He says additional “appropriate measures,” which he did not specify, will now be taken to safeguard events scheduled to mark National Day on July 21.

OCAM, an independent body that assesses the risk of an extremist attack in Belgium, is maintaining the threat level at 3 on a 4-point scale, Michel said. For the level to be raised to the maximum, he says, there must be “concrete and precise” information about an imminent attack, which he said there was none at present.

___

11:05 a.m.

German police say they’re stepping up border checks on the French frontier following the attack in Nice.

Federal police said Thursday that they had increased checks at land borders and railway crossings with France, and at airports.

They would not give further details, but said the move was made in consultation with France.

___

10:55 a.m.

The children’s hospital in Nice says it has treated some 50 children and adolescents injured in the truck attack, including two who died during or after surgery.

Stephanie Simpson, the communications director for the Lenval foundation hospital, tells The Associated Press that injuries included fractures and head injuries and that the victims were aged 18 or under.

In a phone interview, she said: “Some are still life and death.”

She said she could not say exact number of children hospitalized or the ages of those who died.

The hospital is also offering psychological counselling to parents and siblings.

The hospital, equipped with one of France’s largest pediadiatric emergency units, also called the families of children it was already treating before the attack to ask them to pick up their children to free up rooms for the attack victims.

___

10:40 a.m.

French Prime Minister Manuel Valls said the government is declaring three days of national mourning after the attack in Nice that left at least 84 people dead. Speaking after an emergency meeting, Valls said the national mourning would begin Saturday.

He confirmed that a measure extending the country’s state of emergency would go before lawmakers next week.

Valls and French President Francois Hollande were going to Nice later Friday.

___

10:10 a.m.

French Foreign Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault has cut short a visit to Mongolia to return to Paris because of the Nice attack.

A foreign ministry spokesman says Ayrault was in Mongolia for the Asia-Europe summit and is expected back late Friday.

___

9:55 a.m.

Germany’s top security official says the attack in Nice is “incomprehensible and simply awful,” and that “this barbaric murder must be finally brought to an end.”

Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere said Friday he was shocked by the news of the attack and that his thoughts were with the victims and their family.

De Maiziere says “our friendship with the French people will become even deeper in mourning, anger and determination.”

___

9:50 a.m.

Belgium’s prime minister said he’s convening a meeting of the National Security Council Friday in the wake of the Nice attack, to make sure adequate security measures are in place for Belgium’s national holiday next week.

“We have already taken a certain number of steps in connection with preparations for July 21, as you can imagine, and our security services are permanently evaluating the measures that are necessary,” Charles Michel, the Belgian prime minister, said in a radio interview. “It’s certain that our security services are going to include information resulting from this act committed last night in Nice in their analyses.”

On March 22, suicide bombers killed 32 victims in the Brussels Airport and subway. The Belgian capital was also home to many of the attackers who killed 130 people in Paris on Nov. 13.

Both of those attacks were claimed by the Islamic State group.

___

9:40 a.m.

A lawmaker for the region that includes Nice said some people tried to escape the attack by going into the sea, giving new details of the horrifying last minutes of the attack in Nice.

“A person jumped onto the truck to try to stop it,” Eric Ciotti told Europe 1 radio. “It’s at that moment that the police were able to neutralize this terrorist. I won’t forget the look of this policewoman who intercepted the killer.”

___

9:30 a.m.

Christian Estrosi, the regional president in Nice, said some of the city’s 1,200 security cameras had pinpointed the moment the attacker boarded the truck, far from the seaside “in the hills of Nice” and could follow his path to the promenade. Estrosi called for the investigation to focus on any accomplices.

“Attacks aren’t prepared alone. Attacks are prepared with accomplices,” Estrosi said. “There is a chain of complicity. I expect it to be unveiled, discovered and kept up to date.”

Estrosi said more than 10 children were among the dead and he said France needed to think carefully about its next response to attacks, as previous responses were not enough to protect the people.

___

9:20 a.m.

Russian news agencies on Friday quoted Irina Tyurina, spokeswoman for the Russian Union of Travel Industry, saying that a Russian woman was killed and her friend hurt in the Nice attack. Tyurina said she got the information from insurance agencies.

“Two friends from Russia were taking a walk on the Promenade des Anglais. One was killed by the truck, the other lightly injured, she’s got broken toes and some other minor injuries,” Tyurina said.

Thousands of Russian tourists are estimated to be holidaymaking in Nice.

___

8:50 a.m.

Tour de France riders including race leader Chris Froome sent messages of support to the victims of the deadly attack in Nice, although organizers did not immediately say whether cycling’s showpiece event will continue as planned.

Froome posted a picture of the blue, white and red French flag on Twitter and wrote: “Thoughts are with those affected by the horrific terror attack in Nice.”

___

8:30 a.m.

The city of Marseille has canceled its fireworks show on Friday. The seaside city, not far from Nice and one of France’s largest, announced the cancellation after an attack on Nice’s waterfront promenade left at least 84 people dead.

___

8 a.m.

The French Interior Ministry has raised the death toll to 84 from the attack on people celebrating Bastille Day in the Riviera city of Nice. The additional four deaths were apparently from the 18 people who were seriously injured when a truck slammed into the crowds. Minister Bernard Cazeneuve said extra medical-legal police were being sent to Nice to speed the identification process so bodies can be returned to families.

___

7:50 a.m.

France, hit with two waves of attacks last year that killed 147 people, has long known it is a top target for the Islamic State group. In September 2014, then-spokesman Abu Mohammed al-Adnani referred to “the filthy French” in a statement telling Muslims within the country to attack them in any way they could, including “crush them with your car.”

The message was not limited to France. It addressed “disbelieving Americans or Europeans — especially the spiteful and filthy French — or an Australian or a Canadian.”

2:15 a.m.

U.S. President Barack Obama has condemned what he says “appears to be a horrific terrorist attack” in Nice.

Obama says, “Our thoughts and prayers are with the families and other loved-ones of those killed.”

Noting that the attack occurred on Bastille Day, Obama praised “the extraordinary resilience and democratic values that have made France an inspiration to the entire world.”

Obama is offering French officials “any assistance that they may need to investigate this attack and bring those responsible to justice.”

France’s ambassador to the United States, Gerard Araud, characterized the events in Nice as a “terrorist attack.”

“Our democracies — France, the United States, our other partners , we are besieged, we face a terrible threat,” Araud said at a Bastille Day reception at the French Embassy in Washington late Thursday.

___

2:05 a.m.

The ranking politician of the Alpes-Maritime department that includes Nice says the truck plowed into the crowd over a distance of two kilometers (more than a mile), killing 75 people and wounding 50.

Eric Ciotti said on BFM TV that police killed the driver “apparently after an exchange of gunfire.”

The Paris prosecutor’s office opened an investigation for “murder, attempted murder in an organized group linked to a terrorist enterprise.” The probe is being handled by France’s intelligence agency and judicial police.

 

 

___

1:45 a.m.

Writing online, Nice Matin journalist Damien Allemand who was at the waterside said the fireworks display had finished and the crowd had got up to leave when they heard a noise and cries.

“A fraction of a second later, an enormous white truck came along at a crazy speed, turning the wheel to mow down the maximum number of people,” he said.

“I saw bodies flying like bowling pins along its route. Heard noises, cries that I will never forget.”

Allemand said people took shelter in a nearby restaurant, where he continued to hear people shouting for missing family members. He ventured out and saw bodies, blood and body parts all along the road.

“This evening, it was horror,” Allemand concluded.

——
1:20 a.m.

The president of the region that includes Nice says a truck that slammed into revelers celebrating Bastille Day on the city’s waterfront was loaded with arms and grenades, and that the driver of the truck has now been killed by police.

Christian Estrosi told BFM TV that “the driver fired on the crowd, according to the police who killed him.”

Estrosi said the truck was drivien by someone who appeared to have “completely premeditated behavior.” He added that “the truck was loaded with arms, loaded with grenades.”

———

Donald Trump says on Twitter that he is delaying the announcement of his running mate following the deadly truck attack in France.

 

After a day of speculation about who might join Trump atop the Republican Party’s presidential ticket, Trump tweets on Thursday night: “In light of the horrible attack in Nice, France, I have postponed tomorrow’s news conference concerning my Vice Presidential announcement.”
————-

1 a.m.

The head of the French department in which Nice is located says at least 60 people have died in what officials say was a deliberate attack when a truck drove into Bastille Day revelers in the resort city.

Eric Ciotti said on France Info radio that “It’s a scene of horror.” He said he was speaking from the scene.

The Nice prosecutor Jean-Michel Prette said bodies are strewn about along the roadway.

___

12:45 a.m.

A spokesman for France’s Interior Ministry says there are likely to be “several dozen dead” after a truck drove into a crowd of revelers celebrating Bastille Day in the French city of Nice.

Pierre-Henry Brandet told BFM TV: “it’s going to be a very high toll.”

The president of the Nice regional council also gave a similar number.

 

Huelskamp Takes Action to Impeach IRS Commissioner Koskinen

John Koskinen, IRS Commissioner
John Koskinen, IRS Commissioner

WASHINGTON -Congressman Tim Huelskamp (KS-01) joined Representative John Fleming (LA-04) to offer a privileged motion on the floor of the House of Representatives to impeach IRS Commissioner John Koskinen. The goal of this motion is simple: force members of Congress to vote on impeaching Commissioner Koskinen, according to a media release.

IRS Commissioner John Koskinen was supposed to reform the IRS after the scandal regarding the targeting of conservative groups years ago. Koskinen has failed to reform the IRS, failed to follow the legal requirements to preserve and hand over evidence in the targeting investigation, perjured himself in sworn testimony to Congress, and hid critical information from Congress. In fact, under his leadership, the IRS erased 422 backup tapes with as many as 24,000 emails.

“Time after time, Obama and those in his Administration have gotten away with behavior that would result in the rest of us getting fired or thrown in prison. Just last week, the Administration gave Hillary Clinton a free pass despite her criminal conduct.

“Congress has held countless congressional hearings on the impeachable offenses of Koskinen — but there have been zero consequences for his behavior. It is time for him to be impeached and removed,” Huelskamp said. “This action was necessary to bring national attention to this disgrace and to impeach and remove at least one Obama Administration official.

“No one should be above the law in America, especially the head of an agency that has harassed and threatened so many Americans. These folks work for us. They should not lie to us, destroy evidence in investigations, or hide it from us.”

Protest leaders, Wichita police to co-host community cookout

Screen Shot 2016-07-14 at 4.14.07 PMWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Wichita police and community activists are inviting city residents to a community cookout this Sunday.

The event “First Steps Barbecue,” will be held at McAdams Park, starting at 6 p.m.

After a peaceful Black Lives Matter protest on Tuesday, police Chief Gordon Ramsay met with local activist leaders to discuss replacing a second protest planned for Sunday with the cookout.

Ramsay says officers will be encouraged — but not required — to attend the event to interact with citizens. The police department will provide the food, with officers grilling and serving it.

 

 

The department is seeking donations for the cookout.

Fear Factor: Americans scared of their presidential options

Clinton TrumpWASHINGTON (AP) — The vast majority of Americans say they are afraid of at least one of the two major candidates for president winning the White House, a remarkable finding that reflects an unsettled nation unhappy with its choice.

A new AP-GfK poll finds that 81 percent of Americans say they would feel afraid following the election of one of the two polarizing politicians: Hillary Clinton or Donald Trump.

That includes a quarter who say it doesn’t matter who wins: they’re scared of both.

Three-quarters of voters say their pick for president is motivated by a desire to cast their Election Day ballot against Clinton or Trump, more than those who say they’re voting for the candidate who shares their positions on the issues or is the most qualified to hold the office.

Man charged in Monday’s Kansas shooting death

Wesson, Sr.- photo Wyandotte Co.
Wesson, Sr.- photo Wyandotte Co.

KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — A 53-year-old man is jailed on $500,000 after being accused of fatally shooting another man in Kansas City, Kansas.

The Kansas City Star reports that Wyandotte County prosecutors charged Tyrone Wesson Sr. of Kansas City, Kansas, was charged Thursday with second-degree murder.

Authorities allege that Wesson repeatedly shot 26-year-old Mark A. Payne on Monday night.

Police haven’t released a possible motive for the shooting.

It was not immediately clear if Wesson has an attorney.

Authorities arrest man after Kan. car chase, baby abandoned UPDATE

Edge of perimeter of search at Simpson and Schippel Road Thursday afternoon.
Edge of perimeter of search at Simpson and Schippel Road Thursday afternoon.
Allen Marlow
Allen Marlow

SALINE COUNTY -Just before 10:30 a.m. on Thursday, a Saline County Sheriff’s Deputy went to an address near the intersection of N. 5th Street and E. Stimmel Road in Salina to attempt service of a Saline County District Court warrant, according to a media release.

When the deputy arrived, a white 2008 Mazda CX7 SUV was moving on the property and once the driver of the SUV saw the deputy, the driver fled the property westbound on Stimmel Road towards N. 9th Street in the SUV with the deputy in pursuit.

The Saline County Deputy was able to get the Kansas tag number on the SUV and the vehicle had been reported as stolen in Salina to the Salina Police Department on July 11.

The driver refused to stop for the deputy and the pursuit continued northbound on N. 9th Street and then eastbound on I-70 HWY at speeds above 100 MPH. The driver of the stolen vehicle, exited I-70 HWY at N. Simpson Road by driving south down an embankment, back west through a KDOT barbed wire fence and onto N. Simpson Road. The vehicle then continued southbound on N. Simpson Road.

Numerous Salina County Sheriff’s Office Deputies and Kansas Highway Patrol Troopers had responded to the call and were in the I-70 HWY and N. Simpson Road area. The SUV was quickly located in the 3200 block of N. Simpson Road where it had been abandoned.

A check of the vehicle was made by a deputy and trooper and it was discovered an eight year old male, still in the vehicle, was a passenger in the stolen vehicle during the pursuit.

It was learned the suspect driver had fled westbound into a tree line and field. KHP K-9 Troopers were also in the area and deployed their K-9s for tracking and a KHP plane also assisted with attempting to locate the suspect driver.

During the investigation, it was learned the suspect driver was Allen Marlow, 22, Salina who had several active warrants and is listed on the July 2016 CrimeStoppers 48 Most Wanted.

At or around 4:19 PM, Saline County Deputies located Marlow in a row of hay bales in the 3400 block of N. Simpson Road and he was taken into custody.

Allen Marlow was arrested at the site on a Saline County District Court felony warrant and two Salina Municipal Court warrants. Marlow also faces possible charges of Felony Possession of Stolen Property, Felony Aggravated Endangering a Child, Felony Obstruction, Felony Possession of Methamphetamine, two counts of Criminal Damage to Property, Possession of Paraphernalia, Driving While Revoked, Fail to Stop at Stop Sign, two counts of Fail to Signal Turning Movement and Speeding of Maximum Limits.
——-

SALINA, Kan. (AP) — Law enforcement officers are searching for a man involved in a police chase who fled and left a child behind in the car.

Saline County Sheriff Glen Kochanowski says the chase began Thursday morning when a deputy tried to stop a car in north Salina. The ensuing chase reached speeds up to 110 mph before the vehicle went off the interstate and eventually stopped. Two men jumped out and ran into a nearby field, leaving a young boy in the car.

One of the men was quickly arrested but the other has eluded police. The child was not hurt and has been returned to his mother.

The search near where the vehicle stopped has ended but Kochanowski says officers know the man’s identity.

Most Kansans make payments for 2016 marketplace insurance

 CREDIT BIGSTOCK

CREDIT BIGSTOCK

By MEGAN HART

Almost nine out of every 10 Kansans and Missourians who selected health insurance on the federal online marketplace paid for at least the first month of their coverage this year, offering one bit of stability in the sometimes-turbulent marketplace.

Critics of the Affordable Care Act, also known as Obamacare, questioned whether people who signed up for coverage actually would pay their premiums after the exchanges’ troubled rollout in late 2013 and early 2014.

Data from 2015 and 2016 suggest most people who sign up for insurance through the marketplace do pay their premiums, at least early in the year. The online marketplaces at www.healthcare.gov  were created as part of the health reform law to provide increased access to health insurance.

Whether people pay their premiums matters because insurers only make money — and stay in business — if they collect more from customers than what they pay when those customers receive health care. Some insurers have chosen to stop selling policies on the marketplace because it tends to attract sicker customers than they had planned for, and other insurers have asked for substantial premium increases.

In Kansas, 89,566 people had paid their marketplace premiums as of March 31, according to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. That accounts for about 88 percent of the 101,555 Kansans who selected a plan for 2016.

Sign-ups ended in early February, meaning March was the first month when everyone who signed up during regular enrollment had to pay a premium.

In Missouri, 252,044 people had paid as of the end of March, or about 87 percent of the 290,201 who enrolled.

Those rates are slightly higher than what is typical in the individual insurance market, according to Dylan Roby, an assistant professor at the University of Maryland School of Public Health who studies insurance markets.

Usually, about 80 percent to 85 percent of people who seek individual coverage pay, though those rates are much higher among people with employment-based coverage, he said.

“The tax credits and cost-sharing subsidies (in the marketplace) help ensure the premiums are affordable for people on the lower end of the income spectrum,” he said, and encourage them to maintain their coverage.

A higher rate of customers dropping coverage becomes a problem only if it leaves insurers with a pool of people who are more expensive to cover and fewer people paying their premiums, Roby said.

Insurers can’t raise marketplace premiums midyear in the way a grocery store can charge more for a gallon of milk, so if too many healthy people drop out they have to absorb costs until they are able to set new premiums the next year.

Both Kansas and Missouri were near the middle in terms of the percentage of enrollees who paid for their insurance. Nationwide, about 11.1 million of the 12.7 million people who enrolled in the marketplaces still were paying their premiums as of March 31, for a payment rate of about 87 percent. State rates ranged from a low of 66 percent in Virginia to a high of nearly 97 percent in Massachusetts.

CMS didn’t track why some people didn’t pay their premiums, so it isn’t clear whether they were unable to afford coverage, decided they didn’t want to pay anymore or gained coverage through an employer or another source, such as a new spouse’s insurance.

About 17,000 of those who weren’t included as of March 31 were dropped due to the problems verifying their immigration status, according to CMS. People who aren’t citizens or legal residents can’t buy insurance through the marketplace.

Sheldon Weisgrau, director of the Health Reform Resource Project in Kansas, said some people may have received the care they needed and quickly dropped their insurance, but most people who aren’t paying likely have lower incomes and struggle to afford coverage. While that may not affect the marketplace much, it could leave people unable to pay for care they need, he said.

“It raises concerns in the sense that there are people losing their insurance for one reason or another,” he said.

Megan Hart is a reporter for KHI News Service in Topeka, a partner in the Heartland Health Monitor team. You can reach her on Twitter @meganhartMC

Kansas church pastor charged with sexually molesting a child

Preston- photo Miami Co. Sheriff
Preston- photo Miami Co. Sheriff

PAOLA, Kan. (AP) — A church pastor and longtime eastern Kansas homeless shelter director has been charged with sexually molesting a child.

The Kansas City Star reports that 57-year-old Jay Preston was charged Monday in Miami County with felony aggravated indecent liberties with a child. He’s jailed on $500,000 bond. It wasn’t immediately known if he has an attorney.

He had served as pastor of Grace Revolution Church of the Nazarene and president and CEO of My Father’s House in Paola. My Father’s House said in a statement that he has been placed on unpaid leave and that the charity will continue operating. It serves residents of Miami, Linn and four additional rural counties.

Miami County Attorney Elizabeth Sweeney-Reeder says the charges stem from an incident earlier this month in rural Miami County.

Hurricane-force winds blow Kansas semi off the road

Winds blew this semi off the road in Sedgwick County photo courtesy KWCH
Winds blew this semi off the road in Sedgwick County photo courtesy KWCH

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Strong winds sweeping across Kansas have overturned a tractor-trailer, blown down a fireworks tent, toppled trees and caused electrical outages.

The National Weather Service reported hurricane-force winds of more than 80 mph Thursday in the Wichita area. The storms followed another round of severe weather Wednesday.

In Sedgwick County, emergency crews rescued the tractor-trailer driver who became pinned in his rig when it overturned on Kansas 42.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2008 Sterling Semi driven by Michael S. Kennedy, 56, Wichita, was blown off Kansas 42 at South Hoover Road just after 8:30 a.m. Kennedy was  transported to St. Francis Medical Center.

Further west in Goddard, a fireworks tent was blown down along U.S. 54.

The winds also blew down numerous power poles. Westar Energy reported more than 2,000 customers without power in Sedgwick County. The earlier round of storms left several thousand without power in in Ellis and Russell counties in western Kansas.

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