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More gift card scams reported by law enforcement in Kansas

SALINE COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are again investigating alleged computer scams involving gift cards.

On Wednesday, a 66-year-old Salina man attempted to use his computer  only to find a message on the screen that said access was denied because the computer had been compromised and that he was to call the phone number listed, according to Salina Police Captain Paul Forrester.

The man called the number and spoke to a person claiming to be with Microsoft who told him that someone had debited $20,000 on a credit card account belonging to the man and his 65-year-old wife and that the alleged Microsoft employee would clean up the problem for a fee paid for in prepaid gift cards, Forrester said.

The man then went to stores throughout Salina and purchased a total of $11,000 worth of gift cards and read over the phone to the alleged Microsoft employee the information on the back of the cards, according to Forrester.

After the couple checked with the credit card company, they determined that there was no such $20,000 transaction on their account.

On Wednesday, Jackson County Sheriff Tim Morse reported his staff was seeing scammers use gift cards to steal money from the unsuspecting public. Scammers are telling their victims to buy gift cards (iTunes – Google Play, etc.,) at Walmart and other retail stores.   A recent victim to this scam was contacted by a scammer who told him that his computer had a “virus”, and the scammer had him believing they would fix the problem once he provided them a payment via a gift card.

Morse reminded, “Anyone who asks you to pay for anything, including tech support services with a gift card is scamming you. No legitimate company will ever ask you to pay with a gift card.”

Kan. bill saying child not ‘aggressor’ in abuse cases headed to governor

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas Senate has approved a bill that would prevent judges from lowering sentences for child sex offenders if they think the victims were willing participants in the crime.

Soden -photo Leavenworth Co.

The bill approved Wednesday comes after a Leavenworth County judge in February reduced the sentence for 67-year-old Raymond Soden because he thought the 13- and 14-year-old girls involved in the case were “aggressors.”

Current state law allows judges discretion in sentencing for “substantial or compelling” reasons.

The new bill prohibits judges from reducing sentences if a victim is a participant or aggressor in a sexually violent crime or electronic solicitation when the victim is under 14 and the offender is 18 or older.

The House approved the bill earlier and it now goes to Gov. Laura Kelly.

Poll: Most in U.S. want changes in how government works

By NICHOLAS RICCARDI and EMILY SWANSON
Associated Press

After more than two years of the Donald Trump presidency, Andrea Petrusky is ready for some fundamental changes in the way the United States government works.

“Right now we’re being shown all of the loopholes, the president being able to do all the things that no president should,” said Petrusky, a 46-year-old elementary school teacher in a Seattle suburb. “It’s time to update what he’s allowed to do and not do. I think it’s time to toddler-proof the presidency.”

Petrusky is not alone in yearning for big changes to the way the United States government is structured. A new survey by the University of Chicago Harris School for Public Policy and The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research shows that 54% of Americans think the system needs major changes and 12% believe it should be completely replaced.

While 61% of Democrats like Petrusky want big changes, 52% of Republicans do as well. About 1 in 10 Democrats and Republicans say they want the system completely replaced, while that view is about twice as common among independents.

The AP-NORC poll finds that discontent with the government system is closely tied with policy concerns. It asked Americans how they think the government is performing on a series of issues as well as whether it has a role in handling those issues at all. Those who are most critical of the way government handles issues they think it should be dealing with are most likely to want changes, with 65% saying they desire major changes and 18% seeking a completely different system of government.

By contrast, among those happiest with the government’s performance on those issues, 48% say they want major changes and 8% want a total overhaul.

Petrusky, who’s trained as an environmental scientist, is aghast at how Trump named a former coal lobbyist, Andrew Wheeler , to run the Environmental Protection Agency.

“Maybe that should be an elected position, too, where you have to prove your worth,” she said.

Don Conford likes what Trump is doing, but he, too, thinks there needs to be big changes in the way the government works, like term limits for members of Congress. The 54-year-old runs his own small construction business from a Los Angeles suburb and thinks government is corrupt.

“These politicians get into office, and they just sit there and sit there and sit there,” said Conford, who goes without health insurance because he can’t afford it. “It’s immigrants’ rights and criminals’ rights up and down the board, and us hardworking citizens have to pay for it.”

Conford is part of the 70% of Americans who feel that people like them have too little influence on the government. In contrast, 81% think wealthy people have too much sway and 78% think large businesses have too much power in Washington.

Lashaunte Halliburton is a 30-year-old unemployed mother of three in Dyersburg, Tennessee, who has held a series of low-wage jobs but couldn’t afford to maintain them and look after her children. She’s upset Trump has cut aid for low-income housing.

“He’s got money, so it’s not hard on him, and it’s not hard on his family,” Halliburton said. “He’s not thinking about us.”

African Americans like Halliburton and Inez Parker, an 81-year-old retired office assistant in Currie, North Carolina, are more likely than white Americans to think the system needs a complete replacement, 24% to 10%, while white Americans are more likely than black Americans to think it needs only minor changes or none at all, 36% to 19%.

Parker thinks there should be term limits for senators, naming Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, a Republican, as someone who needs to be barred from office.

“Mitch McConnell has been up there forever, and he’s catering to the president and you cannot pass any laws or get anything done,” said Parker, a Democrat. “You should have term limits, and ordinary people should be voted from our neighborhoods to go up there in Washington, D.C.”

Voters like Parker who are frustrated at how the Republican Party has been able to retain its power despite losing the popular vote in 2016 are part of the reason Democratic candidates for president have been pushing major structural changes, like abolishing the Electoral College and adding seats to the Supreme Court to deprive the GOP of the majority it held when it refused to appoint President Barack Obama’s final nominee to the top court. Parker thinks Trump’s two appointments to the court are illegitimate.

“They’re crooked,” she said of the justices, Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh.

Not everyone thinks the system needs a makeover. William Walker, a 33-year-old high school baseball coach in Orlando, Florida, is a Democratic-leaning independent. He’s no fan of the president or his policies. But he also doesn’t see major structural changes as the answer.

“I think our democracy works pretty effectively,” Walker said. “It has some opportunities for mischief and craziness, but all do. I prefer ours.”

Still, the poll shows that close to 3 in 10 Americans say the government can’t work well no matter who is elected, with that view more common among Republicans (38 than Democrats (16%).

Tara Marsh sees government as inherently bloated and inefficient. And she’s unhappy with much in public life — the way people treat each other, the spread of pornography and of what she sees as excessive transgender rights.

But the 51-year-old office administrator and registered Republican in Bend, Oregon, doesn’t think there’s much government can do about it.

“The government,” she said, “can’t fix the human heart.”
___
The AP-NORC poll of 1,003 adults was conducted March 14 to 18 using a sample drawn from NORC’s probability-based AmeriSpeak Panel, which is designed to be representative of the U.S. population. The margin of sampling error for all respondents is plus or minus 4.2 percentage points.
Respondents were first selected randomly using address-based sampling methods, and later interviewed online or by phone

Woman outside wrecked car killed by passing vehicle in Kansas

OVERLAND PARK, Kan. (AP) — Authorities say a woman was killed after she got out of a wrecked car and was struck by a passing vehicle in suburban Kansas City.

The crash happened around 12:30 a.m. Thursday on U.S. 69 in Overland Park, Kansas.

Police say the woman was a passenger in a car whose driver lost control and crashed into a median. The woman then got of the vehicle and was hit. She died later at a hospital.

The crash is under investigation.

NFL’s Giants advise Washburn’s Ballentine to skip camp after shooting

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. (AP) — The Giants have told Corey Ballentine to skip the team’s upcoming rookie minicamp to mourn the death of a Washburn University teammate who was killed in a shooting that also wounded New York’s sixth-round pick just hours after being taken in the NFL draft.

Corey Ballentine photo Washburn Athletics
Dwane Simmons photo Washburn Athletics

The Giants draft choices and rookie free agents were to report on Thursday. Practices are scheduled on Friday and Saturday.

In a statement released by the Giants on Wednesday, the team said it has been in contact with Ballentine since Sunday.

“We have encouraged Corey to stay in Kansas this week to be with his family and friends as they mourn the loss and celebrate the life of his good friend and teammate Dwane Simmons,” the statement said.

Simmons, a fellow defensive back, was killed early Sunday outside an off-campus party. Ballentine was wounded. He was treated and released from a hospital on Sunday.

The university said Ballentine is expected to make a full recovery. No one has been arrested.

“Corey will be with us when it’s appropriate,” the Giants said.

Services for Simmons of Lee’s Summit, Missouri, are scheduled for Saturday.

Update: Suspect who stole new Mustang GT from Kansas dealer identified

SEDGWICK COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating a report of alleged fraud and theft and have identified the suspect.  

Kenneth Eastham-photo Sedgwick County

According to a social media report from Crime Stoppers of Wichita-Sedgwick County, the man suspected of providing a fraudulent credit application to Rusty Eck Ford in the 7300 Block of East Kellogg in Wichita and then driving away in a 2019 Ford Mustang after the dealership employee went to run the report has been identified and is in custody, according to Wichita police. 

Kenneth Dion Eastham, 46, is being held on requested charges that include criminal depravation of a vehicle, flee or elude law enforcement, flee and elude reckless driving, speeding, driving while suspended or revoked and a variety of other traffic violations, according to the Sedgwick County Booking report.

Police have released no additional details on the arrest.

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SEDGWICK COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating  an alleged fraud and theft.

Photos courtesy Wichita Sedgwick County Crimestoppers

According to a social media report from Crime Stoppers of Wichita-Sedgwick County, this man suspected of providing a fraudulent credit application to Rusty Eck Ford in the 7300 Block of East Kellogg in Wichita.  

The suspect then stole a 2019 Ford Mustang after the dealership employee went to run the report.

Anyone who can you identify the suspect is asked to Call Crime Stoppers anonymously at 267-2111.

The Latest: Medicaid expansion backers in Kan. may hold budget hostage

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Advocates for expanding Medicaid in Kansas are looking to block passage of the state’s next annual budget to force an expansion plan through the Republican-controlled Legislature over conservative leaders’ objections.

Legislators reconvened Wednesday after an annual spring break, and the state Senate rejected an effort by its top Democrat to expedite an expansion debate. The Senate has yet to act on a measure approved by the House in March, and top Republicans want to delay action until next year.

The next Senate vote was 23-13 on pulling an expansion billout of the committee where it’s been stuck for weeks, one short of the 24 votes supporters needed under the chamber’s rules. Even before the vote, expansion supporters were focusing on the alternative of tying up the $18 billion-plus budget that lawmakers must pass to keep state government operating after June.

“It’s the best leverage we have right now,” said House Minority Leader Tom Sawyer, a Wichita Democrat. “There’s been a lot of discussion.”

Medicaid expansion is one of new Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly’s priorities and its approval would be her biggest victory so far in her first months in office. Expansion has enjoyed bipartisan support for at least several years, but Kelly’s conservative Republican predecessors were vocal critics of the 2010 federal Affordable Care Act that encouraged it.

During an Associated Press interview, Kelly brushed aside top Republicans’ concerns about needing more time to consider the details of an expansion as “just a stall tactic.” She said he doubted that lawmakers could draft a better plan with more time.

“It is very clear that a strong majority in the Kansas Senate support Medicaid expansion and want the opportunity to debate and vote on it this year,” Kelly said after the vote. “Now is the time to get it done.”

A small group of expansion supporters stood outside the entrance to the Statehouse parking garage Wednesday morning, holding signs and chanting, “Health care is a human right! Expand Medicaid now!” Advocates have been pushing for an expansion for at least five years.

Still, top Republicans argue that Kelly is trying to rush the debate and that they want to avoid pitfalls that could drive up the state’s costs.

“It needs a lot of due diligence and structure to protect the patients as well as the taxpayers,” said Senate Majority Leader Jim Denning, a conservative Kansas City-area Republican.

Kelly’s plan for expanding Medicaid health coverage to up to 150,000 additional Kansas residents is based on a bill that passed in 2017 with bipartisan support, only to be vetoed by then-Gov. Sam Brownback, a Republican.

Denning called the House-passed expansion bill “regurgitated” and said the state needs policies in place to curb health costs and encourage Medicaid participants to seek preventative care. GOP lawmakers also have mentioned imposing work requirements and even drug testing.

Denning said he agrees with Kelly that expansion “is inevitable” but added, “She’s going to have to wait, I hope, until the second year so we can do the massive and complicated plan correctly, rather than in a rush.”

The Affordable Care Act was Democratic former President Barack Obama’s signature domestic policy and it encouraged states to expand Medicaid by promising that the federal government would cover most of the cost. Thirty-six states have expanded Medicaid or seen voters approve ballot initiatives.

Kelly’s administration has projected that the first full year of Kansas’ expansion would come with a net cost of $34 million to the state. Some supporters believe the influx of federal dollars will spur economic activity, generate new state tax revenues and offset those costs. Many Republicans are skeptical and believe the state’s next costs could be much higher.

The Senate’s top Democrat, Minority Leader Anthony Hensley, of Topeka, tried to pull the expansion bill from a Senate committee.

Democrats hold only 11 seats in the Senate and were forced to rely on Republicans to bypass the normal committee process. It was a tough sell to some moderate GOP senators who lead committees themselves and don’t want to face a similar tactic in the future.

“This issue’s not going to go away,” Hensley said after the vote.

Blocking the budget is “all we have left,” said Rep. Susan Concannon, a moderate Republican and expansion supporter from western Kansas.

“If we support Medicaid expansion, that’s our leverage,” she said.

Search continues for Kansas felon for Tuesday shooting incident

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

Oneal photo Topeka Police

Just after 6:30 p.m. Tuesday, a shooting was reported in the 2200 block of SE Turnpike Avenue it Topeka, according to Lt. Aaron Jones.

Police identified 35-year-old Mario Dewun ONeal, Sr.  as the suspect. ONeal left the scene in a black SUV with a 60-day tag. Police have no make or model information of the SUV.

A second vehicle, a silver 2002 Pontiac Grand Am, was also involved in the crime.

ONeal may be armed with a handgun. Probable cause exists for an arrest of ONeal at this time, according to Jones. He has five previous drug convictions and additional driving convictions, according to the Kansas Department of Corrections.

Anyone with information regarding this crime is encouraged to contact the Topeka Police

Flags to be at half-staff Friday for Law Enforcement Memorial Ceremony

Gov. Laura Kelly has ordered flags to belowered at half staff from sunup to sundown Friday, in honor of the 37th annual Kansas Law Enforcement Memorial Ceremony.

Kan. officer ruled justified in shooting, wounding of teen

OLATHE, Kan. (AP) — A prosecutor has determined that a suburban Kansas City police officer was justified in shooting and wounding an 18-year-old homicide suspect.

Bibee -photo Johnson Co.

The Johnson County, Kansas, district attorney said Tuesday in the ruling that Matthew Bibee Jr. made comments that indicated his intent to kill the officer.

Bibee began shooting on March 31 after an officer confronted him because he matched the description of a suspect in an attempted carjacking. Bibee sustained shrapnel wound to his wrist. Investigators said that as Bibee was being led to a police car, he shouted that he was trying to take the officer’s “life first.”

Bibee is jailed on $1 million bond on charges that include battery on a law enforcement officer and first-degree murder in the March 29 killing of 17-year-old Rowan Padgett.

Kansas man enters plea, must register as violent sex offender

Benjamin Paredes-photo Pawnee Co.

PAWNEE COUNTY— A Kansas man was sentenced Tuesday in Pawnee County Court after on a charge of aggravated indecent liberties with a child under the age of fourteen.

In February Benjamin Paredes, 29, Larned, entered a no contest plea in the  incident at a private residence in August of 2018, according to a media release from the Pawnee County Attorney.

After hearing statements of counsel, District Judge Bruce Gatterman sentenced Paredes to the standard sentence under the Kansas Sentencing Guidelines of 94 months in the custody of the Kansas Department of Corrections (KDOC).

Paredes -photo KBI offender registry

The Court further ordered the defendant be subject to lifetime registration as a violent sex offender.

The case was investigated by the Larned Police Department with the assistance of the Family Crisis Child Advocacy Center of Great Bend.

Police: Employee slashed with knife during Kan. armed robbery

SEDGWICK COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating an armed robbery and ask the public for help to identify possible suspects.

Location of Tuesday night’s armed robbery google image

Just before 10p.m. Tuesday, police responded to report of a robbery in the 1300 Block of North Oliver in Wichita, according to officer Charley Davidson.

A 32-year-old female and 35-year-old male employee told police that two unknown suspects armed with knives entered the business and demanded money. During the robbery they slashed the female employee with a knife that caused a minor injury, according to Davidson. The suspects took money and fled the store.

One suspect is described as an unknown race male in his mid 20s, 5-foot-5, weighs approximately 140 pounds, wore a black hoody, blue jeans, blue or purple gloves and wore a skeleton mask. The other suspect is described as an unknown race male in his mid 20s, 5-foot-5, weighs approximately 140 pounds, wore a black jacket over a maroon hoody, grey sweats, a black stocking cap, a black glove on one hand and a skeleton mask.

Anyone with information is asked to call police.

KBI: Fund established to assist Rice County Undersheriff’s recovery

RICE COUNTY – The Kansas Bureau of Investigation (KBI) and the Rice County Sheriff’s Office provided a brief update on the investigation taking place in Rice County.

Rice County Undersheriff Chad Murphy

The Rice County Undersheriff is currently in serious condition, and the prognosis for his recovery is good.

A fund was established for those inquiring about how they can assist during his recovery. Donations can be made at the Alden State Bank in Sterling, or mailed to the bank at:
Alden State Bank
Attn: Chad Murphy Fund
P.O. Box 288
Sterling, KS 67579
Donations will be used for medical expenses, or other personal or family expenses related to this incident.

The investigation into the shootings in Sterling and Raymond has brought up questions related to the investigation into the 2015 disappearance of Megan Foglesong. This missing person case remains open, and considerable efforts continue in an effort to solve the case. David Madden is suspected to have been involved in Foglesong’s disappearance.

If any new information or evidence is discovered during the course of the current investigations taking place in Rice County, it will be pursued and fully investigated. However, presently, no new information or leads have emerged since the recent shootings. If anyone has information about the disappearance of Megan Foglesong, please contact the KBI at 1-800-KS-CRIME.

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