WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A federal appeals court sided with Boeing and one of its suppliers in the whistleblower lawsuit brought by three ex-workers at the aircraft manufacturer’s former plant in Wichita.
The 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals agreed on Monday with a federal judge’s decision that the former workers failed to show Boeing defrauded the U.S. government in a $1.6 billion contract.
The three-judge appellate panel said it found no evidence Boeing knowingly submitted a false claim to the government. It upheld the 2014 summary judgment in favor of Boeing and California-based supplier Ducommun Inc., rejecting claims brought by former employees Taylor Smith, Jeannine Prewitt and James Ailes.
Their 2005 lawsuit alleged that Boeing defrauded the government in a contract for two dozen 737 Next Generation aircraft by using “bogus parts.”
KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas judge has ruled that a woman accused in her 7-month-old stepson’s death is mentally fit to stand trial for murder.
Separately, Wyandotte County District Attorney Jerome Gorman confirmed Monday that remains found on a Kansas City, Kansas, property that the family was renting belonged to the boy.
Michael Jones and his wife, Heather, are charged with murder in the death of Michael Jones’ son and they are both jailed on multi-million dollar bonds.
Wyandotte County District Judge Michael Grosko last week found Heather Jones competent to stand trial in the killing.
Police investigating a disturbance last November found juvenile remains in a livestock area on the property. Authorities have not publicly confirmed media reports that the child’s remains were fed to pigs.
SEDGWICK COUNTY – A woman from Hutchinson and one from Newton were among three injured in an accident just before 3p.m. on Monday in Sedgwick County.
The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2011 Toyota Camry driven by Barbara Aileen McCune, 77, Newton, was northbound on 167th West at Kansas 96.
The Camry entered the intersection in front of a 2008 Chrysler driven by Dayvon Andre Williams, 20, Belaire, which was eastbound on Kansas 96. The Chrysler struck the driver’s side of the Camry.
McCune, Williams and a passenger in the Chrysler Brooke LeeAnn Whitford, 19, Hutchinson, were transported to St. Francis Medical Center.
All three were properly restrained at the time of the accident, according to the KHP.
Miss Johnson County, Kendall Schoenekase, the new Miss Kansas 2016- courtesy photo
PRATT, Kan. (AP) — The newly crowned Miss Kansas says a personal experience inspired her platform to combat texting and driving.
The Hutchinson News reports that 22-year-old Kendall Schoenekase of Overland Park was a passenger in a car in June 2014, when the driver began to text. The driver crossed the centerline and collided with another vehicle. Schoenekase suffered minor injuries and a young girl was also injured.
Schoenekase, who is registered nurse, started an awareness campaign before the Miss Kansas pageant, using her position as Miss Johnson County to create public service announcements about texting and driving.
The 2016 Miss Kansas is now preparing for the Miss America pageant, where she will attempt to become the fourth Miss Kansas to win the national crown.
BARTON COUNTY- Law enforcement authorities in Barton County are investigating four suspects on drug and burglary charges.
Deputies with the Barton County Sheriff’s office were executing a search warrant on South US 281 highway.
The search warrant was the result of an investigation stemming from a burglary report. An ATV was stolen from Transmission Exchange on South 281 highway, according to a media release.
Sheriff’s deputies developed suspects and were watching the area.
Officers observed a suspect vehicle with invalid registration and conducted a traffic stop.
The stop resulted in the arrest of Rebecca Ann Muckenthaler, 33 of Colorado. Muckenthaler was charged with possession of methamphetamine, possession of marijuana, possession of paraphernalia, illegal registration and no proof of insurance.
Also arrested in the vehicle was Jerrod Espinosa, 30, Great Bend. Espinosa was booked on charges of possession of methamphetamine as well as an outstanding warrant for probation violation.
Further investigation led officers to the residence at 166 S. US 281 highway, which resulted in the arrest of Joshua Graves, 29, Great Bend. Graves was arrested for criminal damage to property and burglary. Graves also had six outstanding warrants from various jurisdictions.
Also arrested at the scene was Jennifer Lopez, 30, Great Bend, for possession of methamphetamine with intent to distribute, possession of cocaine with intent to distribute, possession of marijuana with the intent to distribute, possession of drug paraphernalia, no tax stamp and aggravated child endangerment.
The stolen ATV was recovered. The Sheriff’s Office believes there will be further arrests stemming from the investigation.
The Sheriff’s Office was assisted at the scene by the Great Bend Police Department detectives as well as the Great Bend Police Department K-9 unit.
BARTON COUNTY- A Kansas teen was injured in an accident just after 1a.m. on Sunday in Barton County.
A 1999 Chevrolet Tahoe driven by Zachary Phlugheoft, 19, Ellinwood, was southbound in the 1000 block of Southeast 20 Road, according to the Barton County Sheriff’s office.
The driver failed to negotiate a curve. The vehicle went off the roadway into the south ditch, traveled several hundred feet before striking a culvert and became airborne.
The vehicle landed on its wheels and continued more than 200 feet.
Pflughoeft was transported to Ellinwood District Hospital and later transferred to a Wichita area hospital.
A 17-year old juvenile passenger was not injured, according to the sheriff.
SALINE COUNTY – Law enforcement authorities in Saline County are investigating a phone scam that cost a victim a substantial amount of money.
A man in his 40’s received a call from someone claiming to be from the National Institute of Health who told the victim he qualified for a grant in the amount of $14,566, according to Salina Police Captain Mike Sweeney.
The victim was told to wire $361 to China because he would receive the grant money sooner by sending money overseas.
After sending the money, the man was called again saying his credit score was not high enough for the grant, but if he sent an additional $999, he would qualify for a grant of $27,000.
The victim sent another money gram and received another call giving instructions to send another $500, which he did.
After considering what he had done, the victim realized he had been scammed and called police.
A new study by Georgetown University’s Health Policy Institutefinds stark differences between states that have expanded Medicaid eligibility under the Affordable Care Act and those — like Kansas and Missouri — that haven’t.
Researchers conducted interviews with leaders of major hospital systems and federally qualified health centers in seven states. Three of the states had not expanded Medicaid (Missouri, Tennessee and Utah), while the other four (Arkansas, Colorado, Kentucky and Nevada) had. The goal was to see the effect on the health care delivery system in each state.
Expansion would extend health coverage to an estimated 150,000 Kansans who make less than 138 percent of the federal poverty level, which is annual income of $16,242 for an individual and $33,465 for a family of four. In Missouri, 452,000 more people would be covered if Medicaid were expanded.
Gov. Sam Brownback and other Kansas legislative leaders remain opposed to Medicaid expansion, as does Republican-majority Missouri legislature.
Jack Hoadley, one of the Georgetown researchers, said during a Wednesday conference call on the study that hospitals and clinics in expansion states had far fewer patients who couldn’t pay for their care, meaning the facilities were much stronger financially.
The additional financial resources led to better relationships with other health providers and better coordination of health care services, he said, and health systems in expansion states were more likely to have the resources needed to integrate behavioral health care with primary care.
“Often the results we see in a study are somewhat ambiguous,” Hoadley said. “You see some factors pointing you in one direction, some factors pointing you in another direction. But this is a case where we really saw consistently and dramatic differences between what we were being told by the executives who worked in facilities in Medicaid expansion states versus those who came from non-expansion states.”
One of the executives interviewed for the study was Paul Taylor, CEO of Ozarks Community Hospital, a safety net provider based in Springfield, Missouri. The organization has hospitals and clinics in southwest Missouri, which has not expanded Medicaid, and across the border in northwest Arkansas, where Medicaid eligibility was expanded in 2014.
“We’re also a living experiment because our patient payer mix is 90 percent governmental and uninsured,” Taylor said. “The bargain of the Affordable Care Act was supposed to be that you’re ultimately going to get paid less by the governmental payers — by Medicare, and to some extent by Medicaid — in exchange for which a large percentage of your uninsured patients were then going to be covered under Medicaid.
“Hospitals that have a large commercial insurance patient payer mix were able to soften the blow in non-expansion states. Those like OCH that did not were hit the hardest.”
Before Medicaid expansion, 33 percent of the emergency room patients at Taylor’s hospitals in both Missouri and Arkansas were uninsured. With Medicaid expansion, that figure has fallen to around 10 percent in Arkansas. Meanwhile, the uninsured rate among ER patients in Missouri has ticked up to at least 40 percent, he said.
As a consequence, Taylor cut the number of full-time employees at his organization’s Missouri hospital by about 100. A similar number of employees have been added at the Arkansas hospital.
“We hung on, frankly, as long as we could in Missouri, waiting for the Legislature to change its mind about expansion, but we finally just simply had to give up,” Taylor said. “If we hadn’t reduced our payroll in Missouri, we were jeopardizing the entire system. … If it weren’t for the positive operating margin we’re experiencing in Arkansas, the entire system would be out of business.”
Taylor said Ozarks Community Hospital made a commitment to integrated medical and behavioral care. Psychologists are stationed in the medical clinics so they can provide same-day mental health care for patients found to have behavioral needs during a regular medical check-up.
“We’re doing it, even in Missouri, even though a number of the patients that are getting that model of care are uninsured, and so we’re simply covering the cost,” he said. “And, frankly, the way we’re covering the cost is because we have a positive operating margin in Arkansas. So, the expansion state is benefiting Missouri to a certain extent simply because we’re able to continue the mission because we’re making a little bit of money down there.”
Taylor also said he sees a cross-border “brain drain.” Providers who have a choice are opting to practice in Arkansas, the state they perceive as having a brighter economic future.
The mood among hospital administrators from Missouri and Arkansas is as different as night and day, Taylor said.
“It’s gloom and doom with my fellow small and rural hospital administrators in Missouri. They’re all just hanging on,” he said. “And none of them are optimistic that there’s going to be Medicaid expansion in the state of Missouri.”
But things are looking up in Arkansas. He recently replaced the radiology equipment at a hospital in Gravette, Ark., at a cost of close to $3 million.
“There’s no way I guarantee an expenditure like that for my hospital down there unless I’m real confident that the future looks bright,” Taylor said. “There’s an imaginary dividing line in the border between Missouri and Arkansas, but there’s a real qualitative difference in what’s going on in health care right now.”
Bryan Thompson is a reporter for KHI News Service in Topeka, a partner in the Heartland Health Monitor team.
HUTCHINSON— The case of a teen charged with two counts of first-degree murder, attempted murder and aggravated arson was before a judge Monday morning where a trial date was set.
Samuel Vonachen is accused of setting a fire to his family’s home that killed his mother and sister.
He was 14 at the time and the state has charged him as an adult for those crimes.
The trial date was set for Aug 22, after a defense request to suppress the video interview officers did with the defendant where he allegedly confessed to the crimes was denied.
The case centers on Vonachen allegedly spreading gas through the downstairs of his family’s home, then setting it on fire on Sept. 26, 2013.
GARDEN CITY – A Garden City medical provider’s license has been suspended, according to a media release from the Kansas Board of Healing Arts.
On June 8, a petition was filed against Joel Erskin, P.A., which alleges he solicited professional services through false or fraudulent advertising. See the KSBHA petition here.
Erskine is part owner and operator of Renovo Medical LLC, and University Medical LLC.
The Board of Healing Arts petition was signed on June 10 and released Monday.
A state judge had ordered Erskin to stop doing business with consumers pending the outcome of a lawsuit that accuses him of failing to tell customers he used Botox purchased from overseas suppliers that was not approved by the Food and Drug Administration for use in the United States, according to Attorney General Derek Schmidt.
On June 1, Schmidt filed a consumer protection lawsuit in Finney County District Court against Erskin.
WASHINGTON — Legislative leaders from Kansas have expressed their thoughts following the deadliest shooting in modern U.S. history.
Donald Trump is asserting there are thousands of people in the United States “sick with hate” and capable of committing the kind of shooting rampage that killed at least 50 people in a Florida nightclub. Trump also says Muslims in this country know who these radicals are and “should turn them in” to authorities.
Hillary Clinton told NBC’s “Today” show that she has a plan to defend the nation from “lone wolf” attacks. But she says she’s “not going to demonize and demagogue” as she says Donald Trump does, because “it’s plain dangerous.”
Our sympathy and prayers go out to the victims and all those who lost loved ones in the attack in Orlando today.
My prayers are with the people of #Orlando, the victims and their families. Thank you to the first responders for acting quickly. — Lynn Jenkins (@RepLynnJenkins) June 12, 2016
Our thoughts and prayers go out to the victims of the terrible attack in Orlando. Thankful for law enforcement who saved more than 30 lives.
Photo by Susie Fagan Senate Vice President Jeff King –
JOHN HANNA, AP Political Writer
TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Republican legislators who want to limit the power of the courts to force changes in how Kansas funds its public schools could revive several long-standing proposals for revising the state constitution.
Lawmakers convene June 23 for a special session called by Gov. Sam Brownback to respond to a state Supreme Court order last month. The court said the state’s school funding system remains unfair to poor school districts.
The court warned that public schools won’t be able to reopen after June 30 unless legislators rewrite school funding laws.
Senate Vice President Jeff King said he’s drafting a proposed constitutional amendment to prevent courts from closing schools. GOP legislators like King have talked about such a change for more than a decade, along with alternatives for curbing the courts’ power.