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Police: 2 Kan. teens hospitalized after shot during drug transaction

SHAWNEE COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating a shooting and have a suspect in custody.

Trevon Williams photo Shawnee Co.

Just after 7:30 p.m. police responded to an apartment complex in the 3500 block of SW 29th in Topeka in reference gunshots in the area, according to Lt. Andrew Beightel.

While officers were investigating the crime scene at the apartment, one  juvenile teen male and one juvenile teen female arrived at an area hospital by private vehicle with non-life threatening gunshot wounds. The victims are expected to make a full recovery.

Through the investigation it was discovered that this incident was a direct result from a narcotics transaction, according to Beightel.

Information gleaned from the investigation, police were able to locate and arrest the suspect, later identified as Trevon Leson Williams, 18 yrs. old of Topeka.

Police booked Williams into the Shawnee County Jail on requested charges of aggravated battery and criminal discharge of a firearm.

 

Kansas again keeping foster kids in offices

By JOHN HANNA Associated Press

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Abused and neglected children are again sleeping overnight in the offices of Kansas foster care contractors because homes cannot be found for them quickly enough.

Since January, when Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly took office, more than 70 children have been kept overnight in the offices of the two nonprofit agencies providing foster care services. Her Republican predecessor’s administration kept children from sleeping in offices during its final months after threatening publicly to fine contractors — a threat Kelly’s administration has dropped.

The state Department for Children and Families provided statistics in response to questions from The Associated Press after it received a tip that the practice had returned. Kelly, legislators and child welfare advocates have repeatedly cited the practice as a sign of serious problems in the child welfare system since it came to lightin 2017.

“We need to build capacity to make sure that we’re able to find stable placements with family or with licensed foster homes or in the right facility for every youth,” DCF Deputy Secretary Tanya Keys said during an interview. “So, one is too many.”

Kelly, a state senator before being elected governor last year, was a vocal critic of fiscal and social services policies under former Republican Govs. Sam Brownback and Jeff Colyer. She said during her campaign last year that fixing the troubled child welfare system was a top priority and told The AP in February, “These kids are ultimately in my charge.”

“She is aware of the problem,” spokeswoman Ashely All said, adding that the governor receives frequent briefings on child welfare issues. “She is working with the (DCF) secretary to address it quickly.”

The department’s statistics showed that four children were kept overnight in the offices of its two foster care contractors, KVC Health Systems and St. Francis Ministries, in January and February. The figure jumped to 12 in March and 35 in April and was 16 for the first 11 days of May.

The department said no children were kept overnight in contractors’ offices in October, November and December 2018. Colyer, who became governor when Brownback resigned to take an U.S. ambassador’s post in January 2018, cited it as an accomplishmentfor his short administration as he left office.

DCF officials said children began staying overnight in offices again partly because bad winter weather made it less safe to move them. Keys said some children have behavioral problems that make it problematic to put them with other children, so that it’s harder to find homes for them. Others simply have been taken into state custody late in the day, she said.

Also, DCF officials said, the number has tended to spike during April and May, though they could not pinpoint why.

The return to having foster children stay overnight in offices received little public attention since Kelly became governor.

“It doesn’t matter if there’s a Republican in office or if there is a Democrat in office,” said state Sen. Richard Hilderbrand, a Republican from southeast Kansas who’s been monitoring child welfare statistics for weeks. “The kids are the kids. That doesn’t change, and that’s who we’re supposed to take care of.”

The number of foster children sleeping in offices this spring is less than the 85 in April 2018 and 69 in May 2018. The number dropped sharply after that, to four in July 2018.

“We are making progress, but we continue to work on long-term solutions,” All said, citing those numbers. “This continues to be a priority for the governor.”

The problem received fresh attention in September 2018, when the number rose to 14 and an 18-year-old man was criminally charged with sexually assaulting a 13-year-old girlwho had stayed overnight in a contractor’s suburban Kansas City office months before. Kelly called the case a “nightmare.”

Colyer’s DCF secretary, Gina Meier-Hummel, announced plans in September 2018 to fine contractors if foster children slept overnight in their offices, just before the number fell to zero for three months.

“What’s cause the change is backing off the contractors being fined if they don’t address the issue,” said state Sen. Molly Baumgardner, a Kansas City-area Republican, adding that having children sleep in offices again is “very troubling.”

DCF’s current spokesman, Mike Deines, said the agency is forgoing fines to concentrate on “the underlying cause.”

Keys said the department is working to recruit new foster parents to add to the state’s 2,000 or so licensed foster homes and to find relatives for children more quickly. The state had about 7,600 children in its foster care system in April — 46 percent more than 10 years ago.

“We don’t have any evidence that there were any fines levied,” Deines said.

The practice came to light during a September 2017 meeting of a task force created by the Legislature to investigate problems in the child welfare system. Kelly said at the time that it had probably been happening for some time and that she’d rather have children safe in caseworkers’ offices than “dumped off somewhere.”

“It will always be an issue if we don’t keep on top of it,” Hilderbrand said.

Police ask for help to locate woman in connection with Kan. shooting

SHAWNEE COUNTY —Law enforcement authorities are investigating a shooting and asking the public for help to locate a suspect.

Jessica Spencer photo Topeka PD

Just before 8p.m. Thursday, police were dispatched to a residence in the 1500 Block of SE 23rd Street in Topeka in reference a disturbance and argument between two people known to one another, according to Lt. Andrew Beightel.

While enroute to the call a person that was at the scene called into police dispatch and advised that one of the parties had been shot. Upon officers arrival they located an adult male victim suffering from a non-life threating gunshot wound. He is expected to make a full recovery.

Officers interviewed witnesses, the victim and collected evidence from the scene. Through the investigation it was discovered that this incident was a result from the argument that citizens originally had called in.

Officers are now looking to speak with 36-year-old Jessica Joann Spencer in connection with this incident. If you know her whereabouts or any information on this incident please contact the Topeka Police Criminal Investigation Bureau at (785) 368-9400 or Shawnee County Crime Stoppers at (785) 234-0007. You can also make anonymous tips online at www.p3tips.com/128

2 charged in death of missing Kan. man after body found in stolen RV

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Two people are charged with first-degree murder in the stabbing death of a man whose body was found inside a vehicle taken from his home.

Royce Thomas has previous convictions for violation of offender registration from a previous sex crime in Colorado, according to the KBI offender registry
Micaela Spencer photo Sedgwick Co.

25-year-old Royce Thomas and 24-year-old Micaela Spencer, both of Wichita, are both charged in the death of 50-year-old William Callison.

Police say friends reported they last saw Callison on Sunday evening. On Monday afternoon, they called police to report someone was driving Callison’s truck.

Investigators later found the truck and a connected recreational vehicle in the driveway of a private home. Callison’s body was inside the RV.

Thomas and Spencer made their first court appearances Thursday.

They both also face two counts of theft and other charges.

They each remain jailed on $500,000 bond.

Despite protests, Missouri’s Legislature passes 8-week abortion ban

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) — Missouri’s Republican-led House on Friday passed sweeping legislation designed to survive court challenges, which would ban abortions at eight weeks of pregnancy.

If enacted, the ban would be among the most restrictive in the U.S. It includes exceptions for medical emergencies, but not for pregnancies caused by rape or incest. Doctors would face five to 15 years in prison for violating the eight-week cutoff. Women who receive abortions wouldn’t be prosecuted.

Republican Gov. Mike Parson is expected to sign the bill .

Several women dressed as characters from the “The Handmaid’s Tale” watched the debate silently. The Margaret Atwood book and subsequent Hulu TV series depicts a dystopian future where fertile women are forced to breed.

The Missouri legislation comes after Alabama’s governor signed a billWednesday making performing an abortion a felony in nearly all cases.

Supporters say the Alabama bill is meant to conflict with the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision that legalized abortion nationally in hopes of sparking a court case that might prompt the current panel of more conservative justices to revisit abortion rights.

Missouri Republicans are taking a different approach.

GOP Rep. Nick Schroer said his legislation is “made to withstand judicial challenges and not cause them.”

“While others are zeroing in on ways to overturn Roe v. Wade and navigate the courts as quickly as possible, that is not our goal,” Schroer said. “However, if and when that fight comes we will be fully ready. This legislation has one goal, and that goal is to save lives.”

Kentucky , Mississippi , Ohio and Georgia also have approved bans on abortion once fetal cardiac activity can be detected, which can occur in about the sixth week of pregnancy. Some of those laws already have been challenged in court , and similar restrictions in North Dakota and Iowa previously were struck down by judges.

If courts don’t allow Missouri’s proposed eight-week ban to take effect, the bill includes a ladder of less-restrictive time limits that would prohibit abortions at 14, 18 or 20 weeks or pregnancy.

“Laundry, bleach, acid bitter, concoction, knitting needles, bicycle spokes, ballpoint pens, jumping from the top of the stairs or the roof,” Democratic Rep. Sarah Unsicker told colleagues on the House floor. “These are ways that women around the world who don’t have access to legal abortions perform their own.”

A total of 3,903 abortions occurred in Missouri in 2017, the last full year for which the state Department of Health and Senior Services has statistics online. Of those, 1,673 occurred at under nine weeks and 119 occurred at 20 weeks or later in a pregnancy.

About 2,900 abortions occurred in 2018, according to the agency.

The wide-ranging bill also bans abortions based solely on race, sex or a diagnosis indicating the potential for Down Syndrome.

It also requires a parent or guardian giving written consent for a minor to get an abortion to first notify the other parent, except if the other parent has been convicted of a violent or sexual crime, is subject to a protection order or is “habitually in an intoxicated or drugged condition.” A change was made after hours of late-night negotiations in the state Senate to also remove the requirement when the other parent lacks legal or physical custody.

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Kansas governor vetoes 2nd GOP tax relief plan

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly has vetoed a tax relief plan from the Republican-controlled Kansas Legislature for the second time in two months.

Kelly’s action Friday is likely to lead to an effort by GOP lawmakers to override her veto on May 29, their last day in session this year.

She said the measure would “decimate” the state budget.

The bill was designed to provide relief to individuals and businesses that have been paying more in state income taxes because of changes in federal tax laws at the end of 2017.

It would save taxpayers roughly $90 million during the budget year beginning in July and about $240 million over three years. It was less than half the size of a GOP tax relief plan that Kelly vetoed in late March.

Visitation canceled at Larned Correctional Mental Health Facility

KDOC

Larned Correctional Mental Health Facility has been experiencing an increase in the presence of contraband drugs in the facility.  This has resulted in one offender death and several offenders being hospitalized as a result of drug use.  Contraband interdiction efforts have been increased.

As a result, all visitation with offenders has been suspended this weekend, May 18 – 19, 2019. 

This weekend’s Hays-area garage sales

Hays-area garage sales

Scroll to the bottom for a map of garage sale locations. Hays Post offers FREE garage sale listings weekly. Having a garage sale next weekend? Click HERE to submit your information.


207 West 33rd St, Hays

May 17th 8am -8 pm

Girls clothes & shoes, men’s clothes, women’s clothes, kitchen items, home decor, childrens books, kitchen stove, washer & dryer, lots of misc.

2410 Virginia Dr, Hays
Friday 5/17 from 10am-7pm?; Saturday 5/18 8am-11:30am

Most items $1! Women’s Clothing & Shoes (Size Juniors through Women’s large; Shoes sizes 9 & 10), Few Men’s Clothing, Baby-3T Girls Clothes and Shoes, Baby Items, Toys, Household Items & Decor, Coffee Table, Kitchen Items, Plastic Hangers, Glider and ottoman, clothing rack, camping equipment, tools, garden items, and other misc!

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2607 C Augusta Ln, Hays
Friday May 17, 11am-4pm. Saturday May 18, 11am-4pm

Lots of clothing and much more

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1402 E 25th, Hays
Friday 5/17 4pm-Dark Saturday 5/18 8am-2pm

Moving sale after 25 years! Too many Items to list… Everything from Furniture, household appliances, books, clothing (women’s and children’s) Electrical appliances garden pots, decor, etc… Everything must go!

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2206 Drum Ave, Hays
May 30 from 3:00 pm to dark and May 31 from 8:00 am to dark

3 saddles & tack, protable dishwasher, 3 dressers, cedar chest, child’s table & 4 chairs (wood), head and foot board (full size), 220 hp motor, kitchen items & small appliances, size 6 (small) clothes, decorations, Louis L’Amour books, other misc.

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311 E 20th St, Hays
June 1- 7:30 to 3

WIDE Variety. Women and Men Clothing. Twin Bed. Household Items. Decorations. College supplies perfect for new homes!

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311 E 20th St Hays
June 1- 7:30 to 3

WIDE Variety. Women and Men Clothing. Twin Bed. Household Items. Decorations. College supplies perfect for new homes!

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U.S. trade reps expect deal will be reached with China, eventually

By BRENT MARTIN
St. Joseph Post

United States trade representatives express optimism that a trade dispute with China will be resolved, eventually.

Chief US Agricultural Negotiator Gregg Doud says trade negotiations with China began in earnest a year ago, leading to 20-plus negotiating sessions before talks broke down.

“These conversations have been historic, in my opinion. We have spent hours and hours and hours together, talking about an enormous number of issues in agriculture,” Doud tells farm broadcasters gathered in Washington, D.C., including KFEQ Farm Director Melissa Gregory.

Doud uses numbers to make his point about the difficulty in negotiating with China and the stance of the Trump Administration, which has led to trade tensions between the two countries, leading both to slap tariffs on the goods of the other.

Doud says U.S. agriculture reached a peak in its exports to China in 2017, when China imported $19.6 billion in American agricultural products. That total dropped to $9.3 billion in 2018 even though total U.S. agricultural exports grew by $2 billion to $145 billion in 2018.

China last year imported $124 billion in agricultural goods.

“So, in a good year, we’re getting 20 out of 124 of what China imports and the point I have made from the beginning of this conversation and continue to make with my counterpart in China is that 20 out of 124 just isn’t going to cut it,” Doud says.

Doud says talks broke down after China backed off of agreements the two countries reached. Doud says structural agricultural trade issues must be resolved before the trade dispute between the two countries can be ended.

Undersecretary of Trade and Foreign Agricultural Affairs Ted McKinney is confident the U.S. will reach a trade deal with China. McKinney also reiterates a point he has been making, that the U.S. needs to work with other countries, some in Africa, to expand trade. He says there can be long-term benefits establishing trade ties with several countries.

“So, if we take the long-term view and not look at quarter-by-quarter results like the corporate financial sector or the Nasdaq, I think we have an opportunity out there and we must never forget that we’re still driving toward feeding nine to 10 billion, the number varies, by 2050. It’s going to take a lot of protein to do that,” McKinney says.

McKinney admits the country is going through “choppy waters” right now in wake of trade talks breaking with China, but he insists the long-term outlook is favorable. He adds the Trump Administration is committed to protecting the income of farmers during the current disagreement.

 

Police: Kansas boy hit while riding bike remains hospitalized

TOPEKA—  The boy injured Tuesday after hit by a car while riding a bicycle remains hospitalized.

Scene of Tuesday evening’s investigation photo courtesy WIBW TV

Just before 7p.m.,  police responded to the intersection of SW 4th and Taylor in Topeka where the vehicle struck the 11-year-old on a bicycle.

EMS transported the boy to a local hospital with what was determined to be life threatening injuries. He remains in serious condition, according to Topeka Police Lt. Andrew Beightel.

The Topeka Police Accident Reconstruction Team have have investigated the incident. Police have not released additional details.

Kan. school district will pay principal to settle equal-pay lawsuit

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission has settled its lawsuit against a Kansas school district that paid a female principal less than it paid the man she had replaced and less than the man who succeeded her.

A consent decree filed Thursday in federal court requires the Unified School District 245 Leroy-Gridley in Coffey County to implement policies prohibiting pay inequity. It requires it to collect wage data by sex for all employees and report it each year to the commission until 2012.

The lawsuit stems from the commission’s lawsuit last year alleging the school district violated the Equal Pay Act in its compensation of Julie Rosenquist as principal of Gridley Elementary and Southern Coffey County Middle School.

The decree requires the district to pay Rosenquist an additional $11,250.

Police: 1 dead, 1 hospitalized after shooting at Kansas home

SHAWNEE COUNTy — Law enforcement authorities are investigating a fatal shooting in Topeka.

Police were investigating the fatal shooting at this residence in Topeka. Photo courtesy WIBW TV

Just after 6p.m. Thursday, police responded to 3900 block of SW Atwood Terrace on a report of a shooting, according to Lt. Manuel Munoz.

Upon arrival, police located two individuals inside the residence. One individual was deceased and the other one was transported to a local hospital with life threating injuries.

Detectives and other officers were still on the scene and all parties involved are accounted for, according to Munoz.

Police have not reported an arrest and released no additional details early Friday.

Kan. Governor cancels no-bid contracts worth more than $110 million

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Gov. Laura Kelly’s administration is canceling two no-bid contracts valued at more than $110 million that were negotiated by Kansas Revenue Department officials from previous administrations.

The 10-year contracts with CGI Technologies were awarded to overhaul and outsource its information technology systems.

The state has paid $28 million to CGI under the agreements reached while Republicans Sam Brownback and Jeff Colyer were governor.

Revenue Secretary Mark Burghart said CGI didn’t adequately perform its contractual obligations.

Kelly said the no-bid contract process produced agreements that weren’t in the state’s best interests. She said the bidding process ensures contracts are transparent.

The governor sent a letter terminating the contacts Thursday but her administration had been reviewing IT operations in the revenue department since taking office in January.

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