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Anglers’ secret weapons

ks fishing 2016KDWPT

PRATT–Every angler is searching for that secret lure that will catch more fish than all the others. However, if they exist, they’re expensive and don’t come with a guarantee. Fortunately, there are a few tools designed to help you catch more fish and they are free. The 2016 Kansas Fishing Regulations Summary, 2016 Fishing Atlas, and the 2016 Fishing Forecast are available online and wherever licenses are sold.

To catch fish, you have to be in the right spot with the right equipment at the right time. And to ensure your fishing days are enjoyable, you need to know the regulations. These three publications produced by the Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism will help you find the right spot and know the regulations.

The 2016 Kansas Fishing Regulations Summary includes critical information about license requirements and fees, creel and length limits, special fishing programs, and color illustrations for fish identification. The pamphlet has a complete listing of public waters in the state, including locations and any special regulation. Special fishing programs, such as the trout program and urban fishing program, are highlighted with locations and stocking schedules.

The 2016 Fishing Atlas is an 80-page color publication with maps showing all public fishing areas, including state and federal waters and the Fishing Impoundments and Stream Habitats program (F.I.S.H.) waters. The F.I.S.H. program leases private ponds and stream and river access and opens them up to public fishing. In recent years, the program has opened more than 1,900 acres of private ponds and more than 70 miles of streams to anglers. Most areas are open from March 1-Oct. 31, but some are open to angling year-round. Lease dates, special regulations, and boating restrictions are also designated for each leased tract in the atlas.

The final piece of the angler’s arsenal is the 2016 Fishing Forecast, which is available as a printed brochure, can be downloaded from www.ksoutdoors.com and is included in the March/April issue of Kansas Wildlife & Parks magazine. The forecast summarizes data collected by fisheries biologists throughout the year to help anglers find the best fishing spots statewide. The forecast includes Density, Preferred, and Lunker ratings for 17 species of sport fish in more than 200 state fishing lakes, community lakes and reservoirs. Anglers can use the forecast to find a lake that has a good population of the species they like to catch. For example, if you like to catch white bass, you’ll see that Pomona Reservoir has the No. 1 Density Rating, which refers to the number of white bass that were 9 inches long or longer the biologists caught per unit of sampling effort. Pomona also has the highest Preferred Rating of 11.58, which means that of the fish sampled almost half were longer than 12 inches. However, if you’re interested in large white bass, you might want to try Cedar Bluff Reservoir, which had the No. 1 Lunker Rating, which refers to white bass in the samples longer than 15 inches. Lengths for the various ratings are different for each species, and there are also categories for the biggest fish caught during sampling and the biologist’s ranking. Ratings are separated among reservoirs, lakes and ponds, so anglers can also select the size of the water they prefer to fish.

These three tools, along with the Weekly Fishing Reports at www.ksoutdoors.com, will help you catch more fish this season, guaranteed. Don’t get caught on the water without them.

Kan. man sentenced for killing his girlfriend in store parking lot

Lingenfelser- photo Wyandotte Co.
Lingenfelser- photo Wyandotte Co.

KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — A 29-year-old man has been sentenced to 15 ½ years in prison for the killing of his girlfriend in the parking lot of a home improvement store in Kansas City, Kansas.

The Kansas City Star reports that George Lingenfelser of Bonner Springs was sentenced Thursday. He was convicted of second-degree murder in the December 2014 killing of 29-year-old Janet Billings.

Lingenfelser was originally charged with first-degree murder for shooting Billings in the parking lot of a Lowe’s Home Improvement store.

AG Schmidt asks Kansas Supreme Court to delay DUI-related decisions

duiTOPEKA – Kansas Attorney General Derek Schmidt today asked the state Supreme Court to put on hold recent decisions that declare state DUI-related statutes unconstitutional until the U.S. Supreme Court decides a similar case later this spring.

In a series of four cases announced last Friday, the Kansas Supreme Court overturned state statutes related to DUI, most notably a statute making it a crime for a person suspected of DUI to refuse to submit to a breath test to determine blood-alcohol levels. The state court held that the statute as currently written violates constitutional rights. The Kansas cases are State v. Ryce, State v. Nece, State v. Wilson and State v. Wycoff.

But the U.S. Supreme Court already has agreed to hear cases from other states that present similar constitutional questions. Those cases, known together as Birchfield v. North Dakota, are scheduled for argument later this spring with a decision expected by the end of June.

“The final word on the meaning of the U.S. Constitution rests with the U.S. Supreme Court,” Schmidt said. “In this case, that final word is near, so it makes sense to put the Kansas decisions on hold until the definitive interpretation of the U.S. Constitution is settled in less than four months and the Kansas court’s interpretation likely is either confirmed or called into question.”

Schmidt today filed motions asking the Kansas Supreme Court to delay formally issuing its decisions, which were announced last Friday, pending the outcome of the federal case. Schmidt acknowledged the request is unusual but argued it is a reasonable approach given the timing of the state and federal cases. He noted that if the Kansas court declines to voluntarily delay its decisions, the state has the option of filing a formal appeal with the U.S. Supreme Court, and under Kansas law that filing would automatically delay the Kansas decisions.

“This less-formal approach appears to be beneficial to everybody involved by minimizing the use of everybody’s resources while waiting for what may be a definitive answer from the U.S. Supreme Court,” Schmidt said. “Of course, because the Kansas case is not before it, there is no guarantee the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in Birchfield will squarely resolve the Kansas matter. But that does appear to be a reasonably likely outcome.”

Kan. man, woman hospitalized after driver fails to yield at stop sign

FINNEY –Two people were injured in an accident just before 6p.m. on Friday in Finney County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2003 Pontiac Vibe driven by Jack O. Bruns, 85, Garden City was southbound on business U.S. 83.

The driver failed to yield at the stop sign at the US 83 Intersection and struck a 2011 Dodge Ram pickup driven by Yvette Rivera, 23, Garden City, which was southbound on US 83/

Bruns and a passenger Cramer Bruns, Donna Jean Cramer Bruns, 85, Garden City, were transported to St. Catherine’s Hospital.

Rivera and four passengers the Dodge were not injured. All were properly restrained at the time of the accident, according to the KHP

Man pleads guilty to attempted firebomb at congressman’s KC office

King- photo KC Police
King- photo KC Police

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — A Kansas City man pleaded guilty to a failed attempt to firebomb an office for U.S. Rep. Emanuel Cleaver.

Eric G. King admitted Thursday that he threw two Molotov cocktails at the building in midtown Kansas City on Sept. 11, 2014. One device didn’t go inside the building and the second did no damage.

Cleaver was in Washington and no staff members were in the building at the time.

King pleaded guilty in federal court to using an incendiary device to commit arson. He faces a minimum sentence of 10 years in federal prison.

Prosecutors say King had expressed anarchist beliefs on social media and was a potential suspect in other anti-government vandalism in the city.

King’s sentencing has not been scheduled.

Driver hospitalized after semi overturns

Screen Shot 2014-07-03 at 5.13.15 AM
REPUBLIC COUNTY – One person was injured in an accident just before 3p.m. on Friday in Republic County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported 2006 Kenworth semi driven by Aponte Yampyer, 31, Miami, FL., was north bound on K139 just north of Cuba.

The truck drifted into the ditch and over turned.

Yampyer was transported to the Republic County Hospital in Belleville.

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

Bill would allow video monitoring by residents of Kan. adult care homes

By ALLISON KITE

 

Photo by Andy Marso Indian Creek Health Care Center in Overland Park
Photo by Andy Marso Indian Creek Health Care Center in Overland Park

Despite some privacy concerns, a bill that would require adult care facilities to allow residents to install video cameras in their rooms found support in the Senate Public Health and Welfare Committee.

Advocates say the measure would help keep residents and their property safe. Senate Bill 456 would require adult care facilities in the state to allow residents or their guardians to set up electronic monitoring systems in the residents’ rooms with a few caveats. The resident or guardian would be responsible for all purchase and setup costs associated with the device.

Notice of the recording device would have to be placed at the door of the room, and the resident or guardian would be civilly liable for any violation of another person’s privacy rights.

Any roommate of the resident would have to consent to the monitoring.

According to the Pew Charitable Trusts, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Texas and Washington have passed bills regarding electronic monitoring. Maryland has a law allowing residents to place cameras with the facility’s permission. A similar law took effect in January in Illinois.

Janie Carney, a Wichita resident who testified in support of the bill, said she spoke on behalf of those who couldn’t speak for themselves, including a loved one named Frank with memory issues whom she helped sign into a care facility.

She said she asked to set up a camera when she signed Frank into the Wichita facility. The request was denied on the grounds of privacy of other residents.

She said Frank did not get adequate attention from staff, even though she spent thousands of dollars a month on his care. “When I would walk into Frank’s room in the morning and see how it had been methodically disassembled throughout the night, sometimes with things broken, my mind could only imagine how long he had been left all alone, in a state of frightful confusion,” she said.

She said she knew of other residents with injuries that were undiscovered for hours because no one had been by to check on them patient.

A monitoring system, she said, would ensure the quality care she was promised. Opponents had some concerns about specific language in the bill but said they supported its premise. One concern was the cost.

Mitzi McFatrich, who testified against the bill on behalf of Kansas Advocates for Better Care, said the cost of equipment would be out of reach for the 10,000 people whose nursing home care is covered through Medicaid. She also had concerns about a portion of the bill that makes the resident or guardian civilly liable for violating others’ privacy rights, saying it was too broad and could include members of the staff or vendors.

The bill also didn’t outline a penalty for destroying the device, which she said is a felony in another state with an electronic monitoring law.

Rachel Monger, director of government affairs for LeadingAge Kansas, the state association for not-for-profit aging services, said the bill didn’t go as far as the Texas law on which it was based. She encouraged provisions for safe installation and making sure the facility doesn’t play “musical chairs” to find roommates who consent to monitoring.

Monger said the bill also should require those monitoring the room to report any abuse they saw. Failure to do so would be a misdemeanor, she said. Barbara Hickert, with the Kansas Long-Term Care Ombudsman Program, took issue in written testimony with the requirement to post notice of a camera outside a resident’s room.

Knowledge of whether the room had a camera, her testimony said, would leave residents without monitoring devices vulnerable to abuse. According to her testimony, the bill also should require a physician’s determination that residents can’t make the decision themselves before allowing guardians to begin monitoring the room.

The bill awaits further action by the committee.

Allison Kite is a reporter for KHI news service 

Police ask for help to locate alleged Kansas rape suspect

photo Liberal Police
photo Liberal Police

SEWARD COUNTY- Law enforcement authorities in Seward County are asking for help to find a wanted suspect.

Liberal Police reported they are looking for Lucio Ralios-Juarez, 29, AKA Gustavo Calderon on 3 counts of alleged rape, according to a social media report.

Any person that might have information regarding this the suspect is encouraged to call the Liberal Police Department at (620)626-0150 or the Crime Hotline at (620)624-4000.

Police also reported that individuals providing information leading to his arrest are eligible for a reward.

Governor Brownback signs budget bill, line item vetoes two provisions

office of the governorTOPEKA -Governor Sam Brownback Friday signed House Substitute for Senate Bill 161, the budget bill, according to a media release.

The budget reduces overall spending while also addressing several key areas, including increased pay for officers in the Department of Corrections and Kansas Bureau of Investigation, and provides the funding called for in the Governor’s State of the State Address to enhance the safety of Kansas National Guard recruiters.

“I want to thank every member of the Kansas Legislature for their hard work in passing this budget quickly,” said Governor Brownback. “I look forward to working with the legislature in the coming weeks as we focus on managing spending and growing the Kansas economy.”

Pursuant to Article 2, Section 14 of the Constitution of the State of Kansas, the Governor returned House Substitute for Senate Bill 161 with the following line item vetoes:

Department of Commerce, STAR bonds
Vetoed language that would bar any consideration or approval of STAR bond projects in Wyandotte County until Fiscal Year 2018. The Secretary of Commerce is working with legislators to enact important reforms to the program. However, there is no precedent for prohibiting them in a single county while they remain available everywhere else.

Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services, mental health screenings
Vetoed Section 48(o) in its entirety. While the Governor supports these screenings, the federal government’s Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) has threatened to reduce federal funding to Kansas by millions of dollars if we continue this policy. Our discussions with CMS will continue throughout this month and the Governor likely will revisit the issue with the legislature when further clarification has been received.
The Governor has now signed five bills into law this session and vetoed one.

Click here to read the Governor’s veto message..

Kansas teen arrested after running from traffic stop

chase policeFINNEY COUNTY- Law enforcement authorities in Finney County are investigating a teen suspect after he tried to run from police following a traffic stop.

Just before 4 am on Friday, officers of the Garden City Police Department attempted to stop a traffic violator for speeding, according to a media release.

The vehicle pulled to the side of the road and stopped in the 300 block of East Hackberry Street.

As the Officer approached the vehicle the driver put the vehicle in gear and fled the scene.

The officer returned to his patrol vehicle and initiated a vehicle pursuit to the 300 block of Fleming Street where the driver stopped the vehicle and fled on foot into the residence of 309 Fleming St #1.

Officers located the driver hiding in a bedroom and arrested him without incident.

Angel Rueda, 19, Garden City, was arrested and is being held in the Finney County Jail and could face the possible charges of: Fleeing and Eluding,
Interference with a Law Enforcement Officer, Driving Under the Influence of Alcohol (2nd Offense) Transportation of an Open Container of Alcohol Reckless Driving
Minor in Consumption of Alcohol, and Other Traffic Charges

There were no injuries or property damage in this incident, according to police.

KBI will not investigate alleged Great Bend school bus assault

KBIGREAT BEND – Despite earlier reports, the Kansas Bureau of Investigation is not going to investigate the alleged assault on a USD 428 school bus, according to a media release.

The KBI notified the Barton County Sheriff’s Office that the Bureau had declined participation in the investigation into an alleged battery that occurred February 6.

In a letter dated March 3, the KBI cited excessive caseload due to the tragic Hesston shooting incident, as well as a substantial current caseload.

A battery case reported to the Barton County Sheriff’s Office and the Great Bend Police Department on February 6, was initially believed to have occurred in Saline County.

The incident, involving the school swim team on the way home from Salina, may have occurred in Barton County, according to the Saline County Sheriff.

The Barton County Sheriff’s Office will reopen the investigation.

Kan. man facing 2nd-degree murder in crash that killed 6-year-old

Law enforcement authorities at the scene of the fatal October 2015 crash in Manhattan
Law enforcement authorities at the scene of the fatal October 2015 crash in Manhattan

MANHATTAN – A Kansas man appeared in Riley County Court on Friday for a preliminary hearing in connection with a fatal pickup crash.

Joshua Mall, 39, Riley, was charged with 2nd-degree murder, reckless homicide under the circumstances that show indifference to human life, and the alternate charge of Involuntary Manslaughter DUI, according to Riley County Attorney Barry Disney.

On the night of October 5, 2015, Mall was the driver of a 2001 Ford Ranger traveling in the 2400 Block of Tuttle Creek Boulevard. He lost control of the vehicle at Northfield Road and collided with a 2013 Chevy Cruz.

Immediately following the initial impact the Ford left the roadway and collided with a tree.

A child in the Ford, Madilyn Mall, 6, Riley, was transported to Via Christi where she died.

According to testimony, officers found marijuana and half of a bottle of Kentucky Deluxe whiskey in the pickup.

Several glass bottles were also noted to be found in the vehicle at the crash site.

An officer with Riley County police also testified that the passenger airbag was disengaged at the time of the accident.

Sheriff: Camper stolen from Kansas business

This trailer was stolen from the lot of a Salina business on February 21st.
This trailer was stolen from the lot of a Salina business on February 21st.

SALINA – Law enforcement authorities in Saline County are investigating the theft of a travel trailer.

The 32-foot Solaire Palomino was taken from a lot at Lorenson Industries, 461 E. Avenue A, in Salina on February 21st, according to Salina Sheriff’s Captain Roger Soldan.

The owner had dropped it off at the business for repairs and after the repairs were made, the trailer was placed on the lot.

Surveillance cameras show a Dodge Crew Cab diesel pickup, possible gray or silver with black trim, remove the trailer at 11:29 p.m.

The pickup appears to have a dent on the tailgate near the handle, a sticker in the back window, and cab lights on the top of the truck.

Photos: Saline County Sheriff's Office
Photo: Saline County Sheriff’s Office

The trailer is valued at $31,000.

Anyone with information on the suspect vehicle is asked to contact the Saline County Sheriff’s Office at 785-826-6500 or Crime Stoppers at 785-825-TIPS.

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