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Creator of malware used to infect 50M computers sentenced

Aleksandr Andreevich Panin- courtesy photo
Aleksandr Andreevich Panin- courtesy photo

KATE BRUMBACK, Associated Press

ATLANTA (AP) — The Russian creator of a computer program that authorities say has been used to drain bank accounts in multiple countries has been sentenced to serve 9 ½ years in federal prison.

Aleksandr Andreevich Panin, also known by the online aliases “Gribodemon” and “Harderman,” was sentenced Wednesday in federal court in Atlanta. He’s accused of creating the malware program SpyEye and selling it through cybercrime forums online.

A second man, Hamza Bendelladj, an Algerian who used the online alias “Bx1,” will be sentenced Wednesday afternoon. Prosecutors said he sold versions of SpyEye online and used the malware to steal financial information.

Prosecutors say SpyEye was the pre-eminent malware from 2010 to 2012 and was used to infect more than 50 million computers and cause nearly $1 billion in damage.

The Latest: Kansas estimated budget shortfall now $290M UPDATE

money downTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The Latest on Kansas’ new fiscal forecast (all times local):

6:45 p.m.

Republican Gov. Sam Brownback says it would not be useful for Kansas legislators to debate raising taxes in looking for ways to balance the budget.

But Kansas Senate Democratic Leader Anthony Hensley of Topeka said Wednesday that the governor is in “denial” about the failure of his tax policies.

The GOP-dominated Legislature slashed personal income taxes in 2012 and 2013 at Brownback’s urging to stimulate the economy.

But a growing number of Republican lawmakers want to reverse a key policy that exempted 330,000 farmers and business owners from personal income taxes. Hensley also supports the move.

Brownback Budget Director Shawn Sullivan said the policy has helped the economy.

But the state has struggled to balance its budget since and a new fiscal forecast Wednesday reduced projected revenues through June 2017.

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6:30 p.m.

Republican Gov. Sam Brownback is pushing for higher spending for the state’s troubled mental hospital in offering proposals to cut elsewhere to help balance the budget.

Budget Director Shawn Sullivan said Wednesday that the governor is proposing an additional $17 million in spending over the next 15 months at Osawatomie State Hospital in eastern Kansas and Larned State Hospital in western Kansas.

The proposals contrasted with plans announced by Sullivan to delay highway projects and cut spending at state universities to help balance the budget following new, more pessimistic revenue projections.

But the state has been trying for months to boost staffing at the hospitals.

The federal government decertified Osawatomie in December over the reported rape of an employee by a patient in October and other safety issues.

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6:15 p.m.

Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback plans to delay major highway projects and make cuts to funding for state universities to help balance the state’s budget.

Budget Director Shawn Sullivan announced those actions Wednesday and other proposals for legislators to consider in filling budget shortfalls through June 2017.

The governor also proposed selling off the rights to collect part of the state’s portion of a national legal settlement with tobacco companies to get a one-time infusion of $158 million to help balance the budget.

As alternatives to the tobacco-money plan, Sullivan proposed either delaying contributions to public employee pensions or making $139 million in spending cuts that would include a reduction in aid to public schools.

Sullivan announced the budget measures after a new fiscal forecast for state government slashed projected tax collections.

4:50 p.m.

The top Republican in the Kansas House says there’s much good news in the state’s economy despite a new fiscal forecast that slashed projected revenues.

House Speaker Ray Merrick pointed Wednesday to the state’s low unemployment rate of 3.9 percent in March and said businesses are adding jobs.

Merrick said that even with the lower revenue projections issued Wednesday, the state would see tax collections increase fiscal year over year.

The Stilwell Republican said in a statement that lawmakers would work to keep the budget balanced with what he called “a broad, clear-headed view of the actual situation.”

The fiscal forecast issued by state officials and university economists reduced projections for state tax collections through June 2017 by a total of $348 million.

4 p.m.

A new fiscal forecast for Kansas has slashed the state’s projected tax collections by $348 million for the current and next fiscal years.

The new forecast drafted Wednesday would leave the state with budget shortfalls totaling more than $290 million.

The figures were included in documents prepared by legislative researchers ahead of a Wednesday evening Statehouse news conference and obtained by The Associated Press from another source.

The forecasters reduced the projection for total tax collections for the current fiscal year by $177 million, or 2.9 percent, to about $5.86 billion.

They also cut the estimate for the next fiscal year that begins in July by nearly $171 million, or 2.7 percent, to $6.04 billion.

Gov. Sam Brownback’s budget director planned to outline budget-balancing proposals during the news conference.

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3 p.m.

Kansas legislators are bracing for bad fiscal news and proposals from Republican Gov. Sam Brownback for keeping the state’s next budget balanced.

State officials, legislative researchers and university economists met Wednesday to draft revised projections for tax collections through June 2017.

The new forecast was being released Wednesday evening during a Statehouse news conference and was expected to be more pessimistic than the current one issued in November. Tax collections have fallen short of expectations 11 of the past 12 months.

Budget Director Shawn Sullivan was expected to outline budget measures during the same news conference.

The Kansas House and Senate budget committees were scheduled to meet Thursday to review the governor’s proposals. The full Legislature returns next week from its annual spring break to tackle budget issues.

Potentially high lead levels detected in water of Kan. neighborhood

photo city of Olathe
photo city of Olathe

OLATHE, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas City suburb is providing bottled water to residents of one neighborhood as a precaution after potentially high lead levels were detected.

The city of Olathe said in a news release that residents of about 105 homes are affected. The release says the city is conducting follow-up testing of water drawn from residents’ taps. The potential problems were detected in samples taken from outside water meters, and no details on the results were provided.

City spokesman Tim Danneberg says testing at the meter can be inaccurate in detecting lead levels. That’s because the samples can be contaminated by such things as lead from surrounding soil and welding joints. He says health officials only recognize the results of samples taken from the tap.

Danneberg says previous tests showed no problems.

2 arrested for allegedly selling drugs on Kan. community college campus

drug arrestHUTCHINSON -Two Hutchinson Community College students were arrested Tuesday on drug distribution charges.

Raashid Jamal Arnold, 19 and Jaleen Cook, 21 were arrested for suspicion of distribution of marijuana within a thousand feet of a school, possession of drug paraphernalia with intent to distribute and no drug tax stamp.

Police were apparently told that Arnold was selling drugs out his vehicle in one of the parking lots at the college.

That led to a search of his dorm room where they allegedly found drugs and paraphernalia.

Police later located him and he gave consent to search his vehicle.

They again found drugs as well as a magazine to an assault rifle.

He informed them that this belonged to a friend, Jaleen Cook.

His car was parked next to Arnold’s and they allegedly found drugs, shotgun shells and an assault rifle in that vehicle.

They are being held in the Reno County Correctional Facility where Cook was able to post bond. Arnold is being held on a bond of $13,500.

He appeared via video from the jail where he asked for a reduction of bond. Magistrate Judge Cheryl Allen denied the request.
He’ll be back in court on April 27.
Cook will make an initial court appearance sometime next week.

Lawsuits: KSU ignores off-campus fraternity rapes

image courtesy KSU
image courtesy KSU

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Two female students have sued Kansas State University, alleging it has refused to investigate their rapes at off-campus fraternity houses.

The two civil rights lawsuits filed Wednesday in U.S. District Court in Kansas contend the university’s practice endangers students and violates federal law by creating a hostile learning environment for victims.

Kansas State declined to comment.

The suits say Kansas State is under a federal Title IX investigation.

The students’ attorney, Cari Simon, says the U.S. Department of Education has said schools have an obligation to respond to such complaints, even if they occur off campus. She says Kansas State’s position is an outlier.

The lawsuits cite police reports that indicate at least 11 rapes were alleged to have happened at Kansas State fraternities since 2012.

2 Kan. men charged with invoking Trump, Sanders in clash

image Wichita Police-store video
image Wichita Police-store video

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A Wichita gas station clash in which authorities say racial slurs and the names of presidential hopefuls Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders were shouted has led to misdemeanor charges.

Joseph Bryan, a white 33-year-old, and Christian Saldana-Banuelos, a 19-year-old Hispanic student at Wichita State University, face charges that include disorderly conduct. Warrants were issued Friday, but police said they hadn’t been arrested as of Wednesday. Neither had listed phone numbers or attorneys.

Saldana-Banuelos and Wichita State’s Muslim student body vice president alleged that a man identified as Bryan called a black person a racial slur before the clash ensued.

Saldana-Banuelos is accused of provoking Bryan by shouting Sanders’ name and asking if the two of them were going to fight. The college students said Bryan rode away on a motorcycle after shouting Trump’s name.

Kansas abortion opponent faces trial in threat case

Dillard  Image -Tallgrass films courtesy Joe Winston
Dillard
Image -Tallgrass films courtesy Joe Winston

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A judge has spurned a last-ditch effort to throw out before trial the lawsuit against an abortion opponent accused of sending a letter to a Wichita doctor saying someone might place an explosive under her car.

U.S. District Judge J. Thomas Marten on Wednesday rejected claims by anti-abortion activist Angel Dillard that a law guaranteeing access to abortion clinics is unconstitutional. Dillard faces a jury trial May 3 in federal court in Wichita.

The Justice Department sued Dillard in 2011 for sending the letter to Mila Means, who had been training to offer abortions. At the time, no doctor was performing abortions in Wichita in the wake of Dr. George Tiller’s murder.

Marten also ruled on what evidence jurors will hear to determine whether Dillard’s letter constituted a “true threat.”

Interim president at Kansas State doesn’t plan many changes

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photo KSU
photo KSU

MANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) — The new interim president of Kansas State University says he’s not planning to make many changes while the Board of Regents searches for a permanent president.

Richard Myers, a retired four-star general and the former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said Wednesday he has no interest in replacing Kirk Schulz, who stepped down in March to become president of Washington State University.

The Topeka Capital-Journal reports (https://bit.ly/22O24sB ) Myers acknowledged Wednesday he has little experience in academia and promised he wouldn’t “pretend to know things I don’t know.” Myers is a former combat pilot and winner of the Presidential Medal of Freedom. He graduated from Kansas State in 1965 and joined the Air Force through the ROTC program at the university.

Court rejects religious challenge to Kan. public school science standards

Screen Shot 2016-04-20 at 10.41.56 AMWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A federal appeals court has rejected a nonprofit group’s claim that science standards for Kansas public schools promote atheism.

The 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Denver affirmed on Tuesday a lower court ruling that had dismissed the lawsuit brought by a nonprofit group calling itself Citizens for Objective Public Education.

At issue in the lawsuit are guidelines adopted in 2013 by the Kansas Board of Education that treat evolution and climate change as key scientific concepts.

The appeals court agreed with U.S. District Judge Daniel Crabtree that opponents of the standards had no standing to sue because they could not show an injury.

Its decision notes the standards themselves recommend objective curricula and allows districts the option not to adopt the standards or to teach alternative origins theories.

Kansas man hospitalized after truck hits a tree

KHPSEDGWICK COUNTY – A Kansas man was injured in an accident just before 7a.m. on Wednesday in Sedgwick County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2000 Chevy truck driven by Joshua Velvin Zimmerman, 32, Derby, was northbound on Interstate 135.

The driver took the ramp to Harry Street and lost control of the truck. It traveled into the ditch and struck a tree.

Zimmerman was transported to Via Christi St. Joseph.

He was properly restrained at the time of the accident, according to the KHP.

Huelskamp: TSA will resume passenger screening at Salina Airport

Submitted from the office of Congressman Tim Huelskamp

WASHINGTON – Congressman Tim Huelskamp was pleased to learn from Salina Airport Authority’s Executive Director Tim Rogers that the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) has agreed to resume services in Salina.

TSA felt the pressure from Congressman Huelskamp and his colleagues in the U.S. House of Representatives when the House unanimously passed the common sense Treating Small Airports with Fairness Act (H.R.4549) last week to ensure the Salina Regional Airport and airports in similar situations across the country get the service the TSA security screening needed to provide commercial passenger service to larger airport hubs like Denver, CO.

Huelskamp was a cosponsor of bill and spoke on the House floor about the need for TSA to fulfill its mission to ‘ensure freedom of movement for people and commerce.’

 

Huelskamp and Senators Moran and Roberts also reached out to TSA and the Department of Transportation on the issue, noting how this service is critical for the Salina community to grow and thrive. “Pressure from Congress and the Salina community has caused TSA to see the light and reverse their denial of service,” said Huelskamp. “I’m confident the Great Lakes Airlines flights that are planned to begin in June, with TSA screening services, will contribute to our region’s continued economic growth.”

 

Anonymous donors give $8M to KSU College of APDesign

Seaton Complex construction underway on Wednesday morning-image KSU
Seaton Complex construction underway on Wednesday morning-image KSU

MANHATTAN — Kansas State University’s College of Architecture, Planning & Design, or APDesign, has announced an $8 million gift — the largest gift in the college’s history, according to a media release.

According to APDesign Dean Tim de Noble, the alumnus and spouse, longtime Kansans, were positively impacted by their higher education and desire to help others achieve. The funds, to arrive through their estate in the future, will be invested with an expected distribution of about $400,000 annually.

A majority of annual distributions will support full-ride scholarships for Kansas students with financial need and a minimum 3.5 grade point average in at least their third year of study in the College of Architecture, Planning & Design. The donors, who asked to remain anonymous, also designated a portion of the distributions to support the dean’s excellence fund, which provides flexibility to the college’s leader to address emerging opportunities and priorities.

“Our drive toward academic excellence is fueled by alumni and friends,” de Noble said. “Our margin of excellence in scholarship, teaching, and facilities will be dramatically advanced by such a transformational gift. We are truly grateful for this investment in the college and the impact it will have now and in the future.”

The gift is a part of Kansas State University’s $1 billion Innovation and Inspiration Campaign, which includes a $28 million goal for the College of Architecture, Planning & Design. Philanthropic priorities for the college include excellence funding, student success, faculty development and $13.5 million in private support for the Seaton Complex revitalization and expansion, currently underway. To date, the college has secured private commitments of over $8 million in funding for the project, which will renovate 80,000 square feet and add 114,000 square feet of adjoining new construction.

Philanthropic contributions to Kansas State University are coordinated by theKansas State University Foundation. The KSU Foundation was established in 1944 as the official fundraising arm of Kansas State University. It is a separate, independent entity chartered by the state of Kansas as a 501(c)(3) nonprofit education corporation. The foundation is leading the $1 billion Innovation and Inspiration Campaign, which has recorded gifts of more than $850 million thus far to advance Kansas State University.

Police: Kansas man dies after hit by a train

photo Edmonds police
photo Edmonds police

EDMONDS, WASHINGTON –Investigators are working to determine what led to a man from Kansas being struck by a train on Tuesday in downtown Edmonds.

Just after noon on Tuesday, first responders responded to 911 calls for reports of a collision involving a train and a pedestrian near the Edmonds train station. The victim has been identified as a 43-year-old man from Wichita, according to a media release.

Officers were able to quickly determine that that man had died at the scene.

Witnesses to the incident were identified and interviewed by investigators. Representatives from Burlington Northern also responded to speak with their personnel and assist with the investigation.

Name of the victim has not been released.

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