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Kan. man hospitalized after collision while stopped for a crash

Screen Shot 2013-12-13 at 8.39.21 PMPLATTE COUNTY, Mo. – A Kansas man was injured in an accident just before 9p.m. on Sunday in Platte County.

The Missouri State Highway Patrol reported a 2011 Hyundai Elantra driven by Patricia M. Coffey, 50, Kansas City, was southbound on Interstate 29 just north of Interstate 635.

The vehicle hit a 2006 Scion XA driven by Hayden O’Gorman, 21, Prairie Village, that was stopped in the left lane as the result of a prior crash.

O’Gorman was transported to KU Medical Center in serious condition and not wearing a seat belt, according to the Missouri State Highway Patrol.

Coffey was transported to Truman Medical Center.

CBS switches 2 series episodes because of Paris attacks

Screen Shot 2015-11-16 at 6.11.55 AMNEW YORK (AP) — CBS is swapping out episodes of two prime-time series on Monday night because of sensitivity concerns following the deadly Paris attacks.

The network said Sunday it will replace an episode of the new series “Supergirl” that was supposed to deal with a bombing. In its place will be an early Thanksgiving episode in which Kara’s character suspects her foster mother disapproves of her new role as a superhero.

The network is also shelving an episode of “NCIS: Los Angeles” about recruitment of young women by the Islamic State group. It will be replaced by an episode concerning a missing woman.

Television networks usually scour their schedules in the event of major tragedies to scrub out material that might trigger bad memories for viewers.

County OKs new Kan. aquatic center naming rights

Photo Shawnee County Parks and Rec
Photo Shawnee County Parks and Rec

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Shawnee County commissioners have approved a plan to name an aquatic center after a Topeka company that’s contributing $1 million to the project.

The Topeka Capital-Journal reports that the commissioners on Thursday approved a resolution naming the center the Midwest Health Aquatic Center. Midwest Health operates senior living communities, including independent and assisted living and skilled nursing.

The agreement allows the county to remove the “Midwest Health Aquatic Center” name if that company fails to meet payment obligations.

Groundbreaking on the $8 million aquatic center project is scheduled for Monday. Construction is expected to be complete around Memorial Day of next year.

Western Kan. lawmaker among those removed from ed committee

Rep. Dierks
Rep. Dierks

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Two Kansas lawmakers who voted against school funding changes have been removed from a Kansas House committee that oversees education.

The Lawrence Journal-World reports that Reps. Diana Dierks, of Salina, and John Ewy, of Jetmore, were notified this week that they had been taken off the committee. Their replacements voted in favor of the bill that replaced the state’s per-pupil formula for distributing aid to districts with stable “block grants” based on what districts received previously. The plan is to use the block grants for two years while the system for funding public schools is revamped.

Dierks says that when she asked why she was removed from the education committee, she was told it was for the betterment of the caucus. She was moved to the elections committee.

Majority of Kansas precinct seats empty for both parties

KDOT image
KDOT image

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas has more than 7,000 precinct seats per party, but fewer than a fifth of Democratic seats are occupied and less than half of Republican seats are filled.

Precincts are geographical units within the electoral system. Each Kansas precinct has two seats per political party.

The Topeka Capital-Journal tallied precinct seats for all of Kansas’ 105 counties using data from election offices and political parties. The data showed 51 percent of Republican precinct seats appear to be vacant, as well as 83 percent of Democratic seats. Forty counties have no Democratic precinct leaders.

Political scientists and party leaders cite several reasons why precinct seats remain unfilled, ranging from apathy to awkward boundary lines that sometimes result in precincts with few or no residents.

KU Student Exec Committee demands top student leaders resign

KU students at last week's forum on alleged racism
KU students at last week’s forum on alleged racism

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Racial tensions are growing at the University of Kansas with a call for three top Student Senate leaders to resign and a recent graduate initiating a hunger strike.

The Lawrence Journal-World reports that the Senate’s Student Executive Committee is demanding that Student Body President Jessie Pringle, Student Body Vice President Zach George and Chief of Staff Adam Moon step down by Wednesday.

The committee took up the issue Friday, voting 6-3 that it had no confidence in the three leaders. One member abstained from the vote.

The three embattled leaders released a statement Saturday, saying they plan to continue serving and professing support for minority groups.

Meanwhile, a white 2014 University of Kansas graduate began a hunger strike on campus Friday morning in solidarity with student group movements.

Police investigate fatal shooting in Great Bend

policeGREAT BEND- Law enforcement authorities in Barton County are investigating a shooting in Great Bend.

Police in a media release reported officers responded on Sunday morning to a home on Lakin Street where a man had been shot.

The victim was treated by emergency medical staff at the scene and transported to Great Bend Regional Medical Center where he died.

The name of the victim has not been released.

The Kansas Bureau of Investigation is also involved in the investigation, according to police.

No additional details have been released.

Kansas court’s approval of death sentence not seen as shift

John E. Robinson
John E. Robinson-photo Kan. Dept. of Corrections

JOHN HANNA, AP Political Writer

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas isn’t likely to see executions soon or a shift in how its Supreme Court handles capital murder cases after it recently upheld a death sentence for the first time under the state’s 1994 capital punishment law.

Several prosecutors are encouraged by the court’s decision in the case of John E. Robinson Sr. He was sentenced to die for killing two women in 1999 and 2000 and tied by evidence or his own admissions to the murders of seven women and a teenage girl in Kansas and Missouri, starting in 1984.

But two Kansas law professors said the 415-page decision in Robinson’s case earlier this month suggests the Supreme Court will keep scrutinizing capital cases thoroughly.

A national expert said he doesn’t read too much into a death sentence standing.

Police suspect abuse in death of 17-month-old Kan. girl

police emergencyWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A 17-month-old girl has died from injuries that Wichita police suspect are the result of child abuse.

The Wichita Eagle  reports that the girl was pronounced dead around 8:10 a.m. Saturday. Her mother’s boyfriend has been charged with child abuse and aggravated battery.

Wichita police Capt. Jeff Weible says that when emergency crews arrived Monday, they were told the girl had fallen about 30 minutes earlier. The boyfriend had been caring for the girl and her 4- year-old sister while their mother was working.

Weible says the baby had multiple bruises and other internal injuries that are “indicative of child abuse.”

USGS: 4.3 magnitude Oklahoma earthquake, felt across Kansas

FAIRVIEW, Okla. (AP) — The U.S. Geological Survey has recorded a 4.3 magnitude earthquake near Fairview in northwestern Oklahoma, about 60 miles south of the Kansas state line.

 

The quake was recorded at 3:45 a.m. Sunday, 18 miles northwest of Fairview — about 155 miles northwest of Oklahoma City.

Fairview police say there are no reports of injury or damage.
A recent paper by the Geological Survey singled out Oklahoma, concluding that quakes are induced by injecting deep into the earth massive amounts of wastewater that are the byproduct of oil and gas production.

Police: Bicyclist killed in 3-car Kansas collision

fatal crash accidentWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Authorities say a bicyclist has been killed in a three-vehicle crash in Wichita.

The Wichita Eagle reports that the crash happened around 4:40 p.m. Saturday. Wichita police Sgt. Troy Nedbalek says a man on a bicycle was attempting to cross a street when two cars collided head-on. A third car then turned into the two cars.

Nedbalek says the bicyclist was caught in the middle of the wreck and was pronounced dead at the scene. The man’s name wasn’t immediately released. Nedbalek says three other people sustained non-life-threatening injuries in the collision.

Kansas attorney gets jail time for attempting to cheat the IRS

Reno County JailWICHITA, KAN. – A Wichita attorney was sentenced Thursday to 30 months in federal prison for evading federal taxes, according to U.S. Attorney Barry Grissom.

In July, U.S. District Judge Eric Melgren found Eldon L. Boisseau, 67, Wichita, Kan., guilty on one count of tax evasion.

In a written decision, the court found that during 1998 through 2000, 2002 through 2005 and 2007 through 2008 Boisseau attempted to evade paying federal income taxes, as well as a trust fund recovery penalty from 1999. He interfered with the government’s efforts to collect the taxes he owned by putting his law firm in the name of a nominee, terminating his own pay agreement with the law firm and then having the firm pay for his personal expenses.

Grissom commended the Internal Revenue Service, Assistant U.S. Attorney Alan Metzger and Sean Green, Trial Attorney with Justice Department’s Tax Division, for their work on the case.

GM, government actions questioned in car fire recalls

Screen Shot 2015-11-11 at 10.36.40 AMTOM KRISHER, AP Auto Writers
DEE-ANN DURBIN, AP Auto Writers

DETROIT (AP) — Shortly after Elizabeth Berry parked her bright yellow 2003 Chevrolet Monte Carlo SS on the street in front of her family’s home in May 2014, flames engulfed the engine, destroying the car and scorching her mailbox.

“I was hysterical. That was like my third baby,” she says of the car.

Compounding the shock was the fact that five years earlier, Berry had answered a recall notice from General Motors for a repair that was supposed to prevent engine fires.

Two weeks ago, Berry learned that she is one of 1,345 car owners in towns across the U.S. whose cars caught fire even after getting the repair called for in the recall. GM acknowledged the fix didn’t work and issued a new recall involving 1.4 million older cars, some for a second time.

GM advised drivers to park the cars outside until the repairs are done, for fear of flames spreading to nearby structures.

The post-recall fires raise questions about whether GM should have acted sooner, whether the government should have taken notice and stepped in, and whether the ineffective fix should have been approved in the first place.

After a series of mishandled recalls that involved deaths and injuries, criminal investigations, class-action lawsuits and costs running into the billions of dollars, the auto industry has improved its spotting and reporting of safety troubles. Over the past two years, automakers have recalled about 100 million cars and trucks in an effort to clean up lingering safety issues and catch new ones before they escalate to millions of vehicles. Of GM’s 41 recalls this year, the company says about half cover fewer than 10,000 cars or trucks.

But cases such as the GM fires, and the government’s recent punishment of Fiat Chrysler for numerous delayed recalls show that an old culture of resistance and procrastination can still haunt the industry and car owners. It also shows that despite reforms that have made the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration more aggressive, problems can still go undetected.

“Over 1,000 fires is a huge number that should have generated a safety recall by GM before now,” says Clarence Ditlow, head of the nonprofit Center for Auto Safety, a watchdog group. “To make matters worse, NHTSA missed the defect in its complaint database.”

Problems with the cars, including the Monte Carlo, Pontiac Grand Prix, Chevy Lumina and Impala, Buick Regal and Oldsmobile Intrigue from the 1997 to 2004 model years, surfaced as early as 2006. In one North Carolina case, flames spread from a Pontiac and damaged two houses. Overall, GM has reported 19 minor injuries and at least 17 structure fires.

The problem: oil seeping through valve cover gaskets designed to keep it inside the engine. The gaskets can deteriorate over time, and inertia from hard braking can cause oil to drip onto the hot exhaust manifold on the 3.8-liter V6 engines, where it could ignite.

In 2008 and 2009, GM issued separate recalls for two versions of the V6, covering 1.7 million cars. In some cars the gasket was replaced, but in the majority, only flammable plastic parts near the manifold were replaced.

GM spokesman Alan Adler said two weeks ago that if any oil dripped and caught fire, it would cause a small “pilot flame,” that company tests showed would burn out on its own. “We were trying to remove anything that would allow the flame to spread,” he said.

But Jake Fisher, a former GM engineer who now is Consumer Reports’ director of auto testing, says the recall should have addressed the oil leak on all the cars. He was surprised GM would allow an open flame under the hood. “I can’t imagine a scenario where that would be acceptable,” he says.

Erik Gordon, a lawyer and University of Michigan business professor, says the decision not to fix the leak shows that GM’s culture was to find the cheapest, easiest repair. “This is a ‘we’ll get out the duct tape’ kind of approach,” he says. “We’re not going to replace the gaskets because that’s too expensive.”

Valve cover gaskets are relatively cheap, but the labor to do the repairs is where the cost lies. It takes about 48 minutes to replace the gasket and do the other recall repairs, according to documents. At a labor rate of around $100 per hour, fixing 1.4 million cars would cost GM roughly $112 million.

It’s unclear why NHTSA didn’t act sooner or whether GM could be fined for not reporting the post-recall fires faster. NHTSA spokesman Gordon Trowbridge wouldn’t comment on either issue. Automakers are required by law to report safety defects within five days of discovery.

A review by The Associated Press of NHTSA’s complaint data on just one model, the 2001 Grand Prix, shows 466 complaints of engine fires, including 33 concerning fires after recall repairs were made. Complaints of fires on recall-repaired cars started in June of 2009, more than six years ago.

Elizabeth Berry says that after her Monte Carlo burned last year she called GM and a representative told her that recall repairs hadn’t fixed the problem. She says GM offered her $2,000 and asked her not to have the car towed or to contact insurance. But her insurance company offered her four times more, so she took that offer and bought a Mazda6.

The fires are still occurring. On Sept. 9, freshman Joe Jarmoluk’s white 2004 Grand Prix caught fire after he left it in a parking lot at Grand Valley State University near Grand Rapids, Michigan. By the time the fire was out, the car was totaled. It damaged four nearby vehicles, melting tires, a bumper and a tail light.

Other drivers, Jarmoluk says, were mad at him, with one complaining he’d been left stranded by the fire. Jarmoluk had to buy a new car, and GM has turned down his claim for compensation.

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