We have a brand new updated website! Click here to check it out!

1 dead after KHP trooper involved in 4-vehicle crash

Accident scene on Tuesday- photo courtesy KWCH
Accident scene on Tuesday- photo courtesy KWCH

FORD COUNTY – A Kansas woman died in an accident just after 7a.m. on Tuesday in Ford County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2015 Dodge Charger driven by trooper Dillon S. Keller, 24, Dodge City, was responding to an accident on U.S. 50 at Road 130 in Ford County.

The Trooper was eastbound on U.S. 50 with lights and siren activated near the Spearville Truck Stop.

A 1999 Freightliner semi driven by Larry Weimer, 71, St. John, was exiting from the truck stop to go eastbound on US 50.

The State Trooper took an evasive action to avoid the semi and drove on the eastbound shoulder while hard braking.

The State Trooper corrected back onto the eastbound lane, crossed the centerline into the eastbound lane and collided with a 2007 Chrysler Sebring driven by Lucinda Lampe, 59, Offerle, that was slowing or stopping on the westbound shoulder.

The Sebring was pushed backwards and it hit a 2004 Chevy HHR driven by Brian S. Herbert, 49, Dodge City, that was behind it.

Lampe was pronounced dead at the scene and transported to Frontier Forensics.

Keller was transported to Western Plains Medical Center.

Weimer and Herbert were not injured.
All four were properly restrained at the time of the accident, according to the KHP.

The accident investigation shut down U.S. 50 between Dodge City and Kinsley for several hours on Tuesday.

The Ford County Sheriff’s Department continues to investigate the accident.

Kansas man sentenced for fatal shooting

photo- Kingman Co.
photo- Kingman Co.

KINGMAN, Kan. (AP) — A Kingman man has been sentenced to more than 16 years in prison for a fatal shooting in December 2014.

The Wichita Eagle  reports that Kingman County District Court Judge Francis Meisenheimer ordered 52-year-old David Michael Younger to serve 195 months in prison on Tuesday.

In May, Younger was convicted of second-degree murder in the slaying of 62-year-old Danny R. Ely.

Authorities say Ely was found dead from a gunshot wound in the head after officers responded to a suspicious death report on December 15, 2014. Younger was arrested the same day.

Kansas Attorney General Derek Schmidt says Younger was also ordered to serve three years of probation after he completes his prison sentence.

Kansas zoo mourns death of popular bald eagle

Buddy -photo Lee Richardson Zoo
Buddy -photo Lee Richardson Zoo

GARDEN CITY -Lee Richardson Zoo staff is mourning the passing of Buddy the bald eagle.

One of the zoo’s oldest residents, Buddy was 30 years old when she died on Monday, according to a social media report.

The median life expectancy for bald eagles is 16.5 years.

On Sunday animal care staff found Buddy in her pond with her talon in her disabled wing. Already under veterinary care, staff worked together diligently to help her through this additional health challenge.

“She appeared to be doing better. She was eating, drinking and moving around her habitat like usual but then she went downhill fast,” according to General Curator Jordan Piha.

The results of the necropsy performed Tuesday pointed to an infection as the primary cause of death.

Buddy came to the zoo in 1986 after being found in a lake in Alaska with a broken wing. Due to her injury she was declared non-releasable and found a new home in Garden City where she helped many visitors learn about birds of prey.

Kan. woman charged with murder in 85-year-old mother’s death

Smith- photo Leavenworth Co.
Smith- photo Leavenworth Co.

LEAVENWORTH, Kan. (AP) — A Leavenworth woman is charged with premeditated first-degree murder in the death of her 85-year-old mother.

Leavenworth County Attorney Todd Thompson says 59-year-old Victoria Smith was charged Tuesday. Her mother, Anna Higgins, was found dead Sunday at a home in Leavenworth.

Police have not said how Higgins was killed.

Smith was taken into custody at the home after her mother’s body was discovered.

She requested a court-appointed attorney during a hearing Tuesday in Leavenworth County District Court.

Police seek suspect who dragged Kansas officer with car

Photos of the suspect vehicle- courtesy Lawrence Police
Photos of the suspect vehicle- courtesy Lawrence Police

DOUGLAS COUNTY – Law enforcement authorities in Douglas County are searching for a suspect who injured an officer during a traffic stop on Tuesday.

Just after 4:30 p.m., a Lawrence Police Officer conducted a traffic stop in the 1100 block of Rhode Island Street, according to a media release.

During the traffic stop, the Officer was drug as the vehicle, a white Ford Fusion bearing Missouri license plate: SM6W3R, fled the scene southbound on Rhode Island Street.

The driver of the Ford Fusion is described as a male wearing a blue suit with a white shirt and a red tie.

The suspect was wearing “aviator style” sunglasses and described as being “clean cut”.

Screen Shot 2016-07-05 at 7.47.36 PMThe Officer was injured as a result of being drug by the vehicle and was transported to a hospital for treatment.

Police are asking anyone with information regarding this incident and or possible suspect identification to contact the Lawrence Police Department at 785-832-7509.

ACLU: Kansas official ‘deliberately’ creating voter chaos

voteWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Civil rights groups are calling on Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach to rescind instructions telling local election officials to throw out votes in local and state races cast by tens of thousands of people who register at motor vehicle offices without proving U.S. citizenship.

The organizations wrote a letter Tuesday noting a Kansas judge has already twice ruled Kobach lacks the legal authority to operate such a two-tiered election system.

Their letter says that for him to disregard the court’s rulings and knowingly operate an illegal system shows a “troublingly cavalier attitude” toward the rule of law and disrespect for voters.

Kobach did not immediately respond to an email seeking comment.

Micah Kubic, executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union, says Kobach is “deliberately creating chaos” for voters.

Wheat harvest wrapping up in portions of Kansas

truck harvest farmWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A new government report says growers have cut about 79 percent of their winter wheat crop in Kansas.

The National Agricultural Statistics Service said Tuesday that progress is near the five-year average for this time of year.

Harvest is almost wrapped up in parts of Kansas. More than 90 percent of the crop is now in the bin in central, south-central northeast, east-central and southeast regions of the state.

Harvest is 43 percent finished in the northwest corner of the state, with 58 percent of the crop cut in the west-central region.

The agency also gave mostly favorable crop condition updates this week to corn, soybean and sorghum crops now growing across the state.

Kansas City Zoo fixing orangutan exhibit after brief escape

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The Kansas City Zoo is taking steps to improve an orangutan exhibit after one of the animals got a brief taste of freedom.

View the Orangutan camera here.

Kali, a 7-year-old orangutan, climbed to the top of the wall surrounding the exhibit Sunday. She never left the exhibit or came in contact with people.

The Kansas City Star reports workers on Tuesday were installing more electrified wire and taking other steps to increase security. For now, the seven Bornean orangutans are confined inside the $6 million exhibit.

Zookeepers think Kali grabbed glass panes that separate zoo visitors from the animals and pulled herself 14 feet to the top. When she jumped to a faux rock wall, zoo officials sent visitors into buildings.

The commotion ended when Kali climbed back down into the exhibit.

Kansas Turnpike to use video enforcement in some K-Tag lanes

KTA camera near Lawrence
KTA camera near Lawrence

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas Turnpike Authority will eliminate gates at three K-Tag lanes this week as part of a pilot program to test video enforcement.

Turnpike spokeswoman Jeri Biehler says video enforcement will begin this week at Interstate 70 toll plazas in east Topeka and Kansas City, Kansas, and at a toll plaza on Interstate 35 on the Oklahoma border.

The Lawrence Journal-World reports the new program uses overhead video cameras, instead of gates, to monitor K-Tag express lane traffic. Transponders in K-Tags will be read in the lane. The cameras will capture the license plates of drivers who use the lanes without K-Tags. Those drivers will receive invoices in the mail.

After the system is tested for efficiency, KTA plans to fully implement the program later this summer.

2 Kansas men arrested for allegedly helping wanted suspect

Dominic Aita and Adam Spaney.
Dominic Aita and Adam Spaney.

SALINE COUNTY – Law enforcement authorities in Saline County are investigating two suspects for
allegedly assisting a suspect wanted by authorities for stabbing two men during a disturbance early Sunday morning.

On Monday, Dominic Aita, 30, Salina, and Adam Spaney, 25, Gypsum were booked into the Saline County Jail on requested charges of aiding a felon.

John J Brown, 34, was being sought for stabbing 30-year-old Joseph Mullen and 25-year-old Sheldon Freeman at 212 S. Penn around 2:30a.m. Sunday morning.

Mullen was stabbed in the hand and Freeman in the torso.

The victims were taken to Salina Regional Health Center for treatment of their wounds.

Brown was taken into custody Monday afternoon at a home in southeast Saline County.

Brown was arrested on a warrant charging him with attempted first-degree murder, and aggravated battery.

Kansas names first director of unmanned aircraft systems

Robert Brock- photo KDOT
Robert Brock- photo KDOT

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A retired Air Force lieutenant colonel will lead Kansas’ efforts to establish policies and procedures for the use of Unmanned Aircraft Systems, or drones.

Kansas Transportation Secretary Mike King on Tuesday announced the appointment of Bob Brock, a Pittsburg native.

Brock worked with drones during his 22-year Air Force career. He also was a flight safety officer and instructor pilot.

King said in a news release that protecting the privacy and public safety of Kansans as the use of drones increases will be Brock’s top priority.

Brock will have offices in Topeka and at the Kansas State University Polytechnic Campus in Salina.

Judge: Kansas can’t cut Planned Parenthood’s Medicaid money

Planned ParenthoodTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A federal judge has blocked Kansas from cutting off Medicaid funding for two Planned Parenthood affiliates.

U.S. District Judge Julie Robinson in Kansas City, Kansas, issued the temporary order Tuesday in a lawsuit filed by local Planned Parenthood affiliates.

The Kansas Department of Health and Environment planned to cut off funding Thursday for services such as exams and cancer screenings for poor patients receiving health coverage through Kansas’ Medicaid program.

Federal courts have prevented other states from cutting Medicaid funding for Planned Parenthood.

Kansas state health officials have cited a dispute over a clinic inspection in December and allegations against Planned Parenthood affiliates in Oklahoma and Texas that Planned Parenthood has called unfounded.

Planned Parenthood says it’s being targeted because it provides abortions, even though Medicaid funds don’t cover abortions.

Lockdown lifted at Kansas prison

jail  prisonLEAVENWORTH, Kan. (AP) — Lansing Correctional Facility’s maximum-security unit returned to normal operations after being on lockdown since Thursday.
Corrections spokesman Adam Pfannenstiel says normal operations returned Tuesday and visitation for inmates in the maximum custody unit also resumed.

The lockdown was imposed Thursday after different inmates attacked staff in what is believed to be four unrelated incidents.
Pfannenstiel says the staff members involved suffered only minor injuries.

He says an investigation to confirm the attacks were unrelated is continuing.

Copyright Eagle Radio | FCC Public Files | EEO Public File