We have a brand new updated website! Click here to check it out!

16-year-old Kan. boy shot, killed in car packed with teens

KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — Authorities are investigating the fatal shooting of a 16-year-old in Kansas City, Kansas.

Police on the scene of the fatal shooting investigation -photo courtesy KCTV

Police say Taveon Brooks was killed early Sunday when a car packed with youths came under fire.

Brooks was driving and crashed into a tree. Another person in the car also was wounded and is hospitalized in stable condition.

Brooks’ mother, Tionna VanRoss House, said she just got out of prison and was trying to reconnect with her son, who had been living with a relative. She said her son and a group of friends came under fire after sneaking out. Police are investigating what led up to the shooting.

Taveon was a point guard on the F.L. Schlagle High School basketball team. He also enjoyed making music.

Kansas teen dies while waiting for new lungs

ST. LOUIS (AP) — A Kansas teen with cystic fibrosis has died in a Missouri hospital less than a week after Grammy Award winner Jason Mraz serenaded her as she waited for a second double-lung transplant.

Madison Eileen Taliaferro-courtesy Desiree-Razak Tailaferro

The Mercer Funeral Home in Holton says on its website that 18-year-old Madison Eileen Taliaferro, of Holton, died Saturday after spending more than two weeks at St. Louis Children’s Hospital. Madison was 12 years old in November 2012 when she received a double-lung transplant. But The Topeka Capital-Journal reports that her body recently rejected those lungs.

Jason Mraz stopped by her bedside while he was in Missouri for a concert -photo courtesy Desiree-Razak Tailaferro

On Dec. 9, Mraz stopped by her bedside while he was in Missouri for a concert. Taliaferro’s mother, Desiree Taliaferro, shared videos on Facebook. She described her daughter in a post early Monday as “beautiful” and “amazing.”

Kansas teens jailed for 3 armed robberies in 48-minutes

SEDGWICK COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating a series of Sunday armed robberies in Wichita and have two suspects in custody.

Police on the scene of one of Sunday’s armed robberies-photo courtesy KWCH

On Sunday, three armed robberies between 7:45 and 8:33 a.m. in Wichita, according to Officer Paul Cruz.

The robberies occurred at Kwik Shop, 2760 S. Oliver, the Family Express convenience store 1203 E. Pawnee and the Jumpstart convenience store 1601 S. Hydraulic. The suspects took cash and cigarettes from each location. No injuries were reported in any of the robberies.

Through the investigation WPD Officers and Investigators were able to identify two 17-year-old suspects who have been arrested and booked into the Juvenile Detention Center for three counts of aggravated robbery.

 

Police investigate: Kan. man dies after moped accident

SHAWNEE COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating a fatal accident.

First responders on the scene of the accident-photo courtesy WIBW TV

Just after 3:30p.m. Tuesday December 11, police responded to an injury accident at SW 6th Street and SW Mulvane in Topeka, according to Lt. Aaron Jones.

A moped driven by 67-year-old Daniel Manning was involved in  accident with another car.

Manning was cared for at a local hospital and later transferred to a regional hospital and died this weekend, according to Jones.

Next of kin notifications have been made. It is unknown at this time how much or if the accident contributed to his death.

Police: Missing 11-year-old Kansas boy found safe

SEDGWICK COUNTY  — Law enforcement authorities reported Sunday that missing 11-year-old boy has been found and is safe, according to a social media report from Wichita police.

Joan Ibarra -photo courtesy Wichita PD

Just after 10:15a.m. Thursday, Joan Ibarra walked away from Hamilton Middle School, 1407 South Broadway in Wichita, according to office Paul Cruz.

He was last seen in the area of Harry and Broadway and was  wearing black pants, and gray sweater. He is Hispanic approximately 4-foot-8, 80 pounds with black hair and brown eyes.

 

Federal charges expected after laser strike on KHP aircraft

SEDGWICK COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating a suspect for pointing a laser at an aircraft Saturday night.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported their aircraft was intentionally hit by the laser strike over Wichita.

Authorities took a suspect into custody and The Federal Bureau of Investigation is going to file charges, according to a the KHP.

Name of the suspect has not been released.

Jury: Kansas man guilty of murder during drug deal fight

WICHITA — A Kansas man accused in the shooting death of a man at a mobile home in Wichita has been found guilty.

Milo -photo Sedgwick Co.

On Friday, a jury in Judge Ben Burgess’ Sedgwick County courtroom found Keeshaun Milo, 29 of Wichita, guilty of first-degree murder in the December 2, 2016 shooting of Michael Hamilton in the 3800 block of S. Meridian, according to a media release from the Sedgwick County Attorney.

Police responded to the shooting at 11:30p.m. that night and found 45-year-old Michael T. Hamilton with gunshot wounds to his upper body, according to officer Charley Davidson.  Hamilton was transported to a local hospital and died.

Milo and James Welborn were arrested for the shooting death that was in connection with a drug deal dispute and fight, according to police.

Milo is scheduled to be sentenced on January 11th, 2019.

Kansas teen births declining, yet remain higher than U.S. rate

KDHE

TOPEKA – The Kansas Department of Health and Environment (KDHE) Bureau of Epidemiology and Public Health Informatics published the 2017 Kansas Adolescent and Teenage Pregnancy Report on its website at https://www.kdheks.gov/phi/adol_teen_preg/Adolescent_Teenage_Pregnancy_17.pdf.

The statistical summary indicates that the pregnancy rates among Kansas resident females aged 10-19 dropped by 1.6 percent from 2016 to 2017. Rates among females 10-17 and 15-17 as individual age groups also dropped in 2017. However, pregnancy rates among females aged 18-19 years increased 3.2 percent.

“We are encouraged by the continued decline in the teen pregnancy rates for several Kansas counties and the state overall,” said Rachel Sisson, MS, Director of the KDHE Bureau of Family Health. “KDHE remains committed to working closely with local partners and communities to identify, support and spread strategies and interventions that are making a difference.”

The 2017 Kansas pregnancy rate among females 15-17 years of age (9.5 per 1,000 female age-group population) compares favorably with the Healthy People 2020 (HP 2020) national target of 36.2 pregnancies per 1,000 female age-group population. The state pregnancy rate for females aged 18-19 (48.9 per 1,000 age-group population) also compares favorably with the HP 2020 national target of 105.9 pregnancies per 1,000 female age-group population.

While Kansas had lower teen pregnancy rates than the national targets, the state’s birth rates for females aged 15-19 were lower than the national rates from 1996 to 2006.

Since 2008, teen birth rates in Kansas have remained higher than the U.S rate; however, both Kansas and the U.S. teen birth rates have been declining since then. In 2017, the Kansas rate was unchanged from 2016, while the preliminary U.S. rate for 2017 is not yet available.

Kansas gov.-elect: State’s condition ‘even worse than I thought’

Kansas Gov.-elect Laura Kelly insists the state budget she’s preparing can fully fund the state’s schools, expand Medicaid coverage to another 150,000 people and begin to repair a troubled child welfare system — without a tax hike.

The Democrat said Wednesday night she’ll lean on experience and relationships built over 14 years in the Kansas Senate to carve out compromises with lawmakers on those priorities.

Yet she described her job as daunting and state government as broken in several key areas.

In little over a month since she beat Republican Kris Kobach in the race for governor, Kelly said she’s worked on a budget proposal to put to legislators in January and found serious problems in state government.

“No surprises … but I am disappointed that the devastation was even worse than I thought,” she told a crowd of 200-plus at Washburn University in Topeka. “The problems are broad and they’re deep.”

Her comments came at Kansas News Service event.

Kelly said rosy revenue projections — the state’s draw from taxes and fees has beat expectations for 18 months in a row — suggest the ability to deal with “school finances without breaking the bank.”

She’s braced for a push from conservatives in the Capitol to pass an amendment to the state constitution scrubbing out the demand for “suitable” financing to local districts from the state. Much of the Republican leadership in the state contends that would free lawmakers to decide funding levels without ongoing lawsuits dictating what the state should spend.

She promised to oppose such a move, although the Legislature could put a proposed constitutional amendment to voters without her approval. But that’s happened before, and failed.

“I have no doubt,” Kelly said, “the people of Kansas will reject that.”

The state may yet need to add money for aid to local school districts in the wake of a Kansas Supreme Court decision. A plan to add  hundreds of millions to that formula in coming years was approved by the Legislature and Republican Gov. Jeff Colyer earlier this year.

But more money may still be needed to account for inflation. Kelly said she’s been studying the state budget and recent improvements in tax revenues.

“We will find when the budget comes out we can afford” to cover her top priorities, she said, without raising taxes.

Republicans have already begun to challenge her definition of a tax hike. Federal tax cuts pushed through by the Trump administration last year had the unintended effect of increasing what a small minority of taxpayers owe the state. Some people simply can’t itemize things like they did before.

That’s produced a windfall in state revenues. Broadly speaking, Republican lawmakers say failing to rewrite state tax law to return that money amounts to a tax hike.

Kelly sees it differently.

She argued again Wednesday that Kansas policymakers don’t yet fully understand the impact of the partial reversal in 2017 of sweeping tax cuts enacted under former Gov. Sam Brownback five years earlier. She also said state officials still need to better fathom how the Trump tax cuts will change state finances.

Only well into 2019, she said, will those things become clear.

“It’s at that point we can look” at whether to return the windfall, she said.

Yet she talked confidently about corralling votes in the Legislature for an expansion of Medicaid in line with the federal Affordable Care Act, or Obamacare.

She was vague about how much her plan for that expansion would cost Kansas taxpayers — and suggested it might not cost them anything. But Kelly promised to study other states in search of a model that can work in Kansas.

A fight will come in the Legislature, where conservatives are already girding for battle. In the end, she said Democrats and moderate Republicans — what she calls “the moderate majority” — can push through a plan.

This year’s elections replaced some moderates with either conservatives or Democrats. But Kelly said the math is roughly the same as when lawmakers approved expansion in 2016 and came just three votes shy of overcoming a Brownback veto.

The difference this year: “We don’t have to override vetoes.”

She used her most urgent language of the evening to describe the state’s shortcomings in how it cares for children.

A fast-growing foster caseload has added to chronic problems in recent years. Kids have been forced to spend nights in the offices of placement contractors. Some children were shuttled among more than 100 foster homes. Young people have been assaulted while in state custody.

That’s generated frustration with the Department for Children and Families.

“We are literally in a life-or-death situation on DCF,” Kelly said.

In a brief interview after her appearance on stage, the incoming governor said the state needs to hire more people to better manage the cases of children in crisis.

“There is no doubt that we have a lack of qualified social workers,” Kelly said.

DCF, helpd, needs to put more work into family preservation efforts to help parents keep their children. For those children who end up in foster care, Kelly said the agency needs to devote more people to helping them adjust when they’re reunited with their biological families.

“That’s a clear, critical need,” she said.

Yet she didn’t say how much improving those child welfare functions might cost. And Kelly said she’s not yet sure if she’ll approve DCF’s pending plans to expand the number of contractors it hires for that work to five firms from the current two.

Still, the lawmaker from Topeka said Kansas will have enough money for that problem, for robust school spending, for expanding Medicaid, for roads.

Among other things she said in a rare public appearance since her election:

  • She’s exploring whether the state must enforce a law passed this year allowing some state-hired faith-based adoption agencies to deny placements with same-sex parents.
  • Kelly will collect proposals on what she called “common sense” gun control, but seemed to suggest any proposal won’t come soon. “I’m not sure how quickly we can get that policy together and round up the votes.”
  • Her efforts on climate change will focus on working with the state’s congressional delegation and western governors. She also promised to push for more renewable energy use in the state.
  • Kelly said tighter welfare rules are part of the reason more kids are landing in foster care. Changing those rules, she said, is “a priority” for fixing DCF.
  • She gave Brownback credit for his efforts to deal with the state’s dwindling water supply. “The problem is,” she said, “there was absolutely no funding, very little funding, put into it.”
  • Kelly said the state’s criminal sentencing practices need dramatic reform and locks up non-violent offenders too often and for too long. “Those people belong in prison no more than you or I.”

Scott Canon is digital editor of the Kansas News Service. You can reach him on Twitter @ScottCanon.

KDA to exercise foreign animal disease response

KDA

Manhattan — The Kansas Department of Agriculture will lead an emergency preparedness exercise, named Rampart, Dec. 17–20, 2018, in Manhattan, Kansas, to practice the state’s response plan to a foreign animal disease event.

The four-day functional exercise, which will be based out of KDA headquarters in Manhattan, will enable KDA and its partners in other state agencies, federal and local government, industry, university and 16 other states to practice the state’s foreign animal disease response plan. More than 200 individuals will participate in the Rampart exercise, which will be based on a fictional scenario involving the confirmation of foot-and-mouth disease in the United States.

In addition to KDA, which will operate as the Incident Command Post for the exercise, the Kansas Division of Emergency Management and multiple Kansas counties will activate emergency operations centers as part of the Rampart exercise.

Foot-and-mouth disease was last identified in the United States in 1929. FMD is a highly contagious disease of cattle, sheep, swine, goats, deer and other cloven-hooved animals. It is not a human food safety concern nor a public health threat. It is a primary concern for animal health officials because it could have potentially devastating economic consequences due to disrupted trade and lost investor confidence.

The exercise has been partially funded with a grant provided by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.

KBI: 15-year-old shot after strangling woman, escaping on horse

SMITH COUNTY – The Kansas Bureau of Investigation (KBI) is investigating the attempted murder of a woman in Smith County, as well as an officer involved shooting which occurred as police attempted to apprehend the 15-year-old suspect.

Google map

According to a KBI media release,  just after 10:20 a.m. Saturday, the Smith County Sheriff’s received a 911 call, and responded to 10021 O Road in Smith Center. Upon arriving, they located a 66-year-old white female victim who reported being restrained, beaten, and strangled. She was taken to a local hospital, and is expected to recover.

The suspect, a 15-year-old black male, fled the area on horseback. When he was located by Kansas Highway Patrol troopers at 100 Road and L Road, in Smith County, he was armed with a firearm. KHP and Smith County Sheriff’s deputies spent a few hours attempting to apprehend the suspect. Then just before 2:20 p.m. the suspect fired at troopers. Two troopers returned fire, striking the subject.

They rendered medical aid and EMS responded. EMS transported him to a local hospital. He was then flown to a Kearney, Nebraska hospital where he underwent surgery. His condition is currently unknown. The identity of the subject will be withheld because he is a juvenile.

No law enforcement officers were injured during the incident.

Kan. business owner observes burglary suspects on security system

SHAWNEE COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating two suspects on burglary charges.

Emitt -photo Shawnee Co.
Jacob Johnson -photo Shawnee Co.

Just before 5a.m. Friday, sheriff’s deputies responded to a burglary alarm in the 2700 block of NW Button Road, according to Shawnee County Sgt. Todd Stallbaumer.

The business owner was able to view a suspicious vehicle on the property through a security surveillance system.

Deputies responded in the area and located a white four-door Buick with two male occupants.

Deputies arrested two suspects in connection with the burglary.

Jacob M Johnson, 32 years old, of Carbondale, was booked into the Shawnee County Department of Corrections with charges of Criminal Trespass and Theft.

James G Emitt, 44 years old, of Topeka, was booked into the Shawnee County Department of Corrections on charges of Criminal Use of a Weapon, Theft, Criminal Trespass, and Driving While License Suspended.

 

 

 

Massive fire destroys 28,000 square-foot Kansas warehouse

PARK CITY, Kan. (AP) — Authorities say a massive fire has destroyed a 28,000 square-foot warehouse in a Wichita suburb.

Fire destroys Park City Warehouse-photo courtesy KWCH

The fire at the Park City warehouse was reported around 9 p.m. Friday. Arriving firefighters found the huge warehouse fully engulfed in flames.

No injuries were reported in the fire that saw five area fire departments respond to help battle the flames. It took more than two hours to get the blaze under control.

Sedgwick County Fire Capt. Bill Herold says the loss from the fire is estimated at $1.6 million.

The warehouse held two businesses — a maintenance facility for 18-wheelers and an electrical company.

Copyright Eagle Radio | FCC Public Files | EEO Public File