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Kansas felon arrested for child endangerment after traffic stop

SHAWNEE COUNTY —Law enforcement authorities are investigating a Kansas felon on new charges.

Godspeed-photo Shawnee Co.

Just before 7p.m. Friday, officers conducted a traffic stop of a vehicle in the area of SE Morrison and SE Minnesota in Topeka, according to Lt. Jerry Monasmith. 

During the course of the traffic stop, officers found the driver to be in possession of a firearm and methamphetamine. Officers arrested Krystal Lee Goodspeed, 22, for the criminal charges of Felon in Possession of a Firearm, Possession of Methamphetamine, and Child Endangerment.

Goodspeed was on parole for a drug conviction, according to the Kansas Department of Corrections.

Kansas motorcyclist charged in wreck that killed woman

OLATHE, Kan. (AP) — A suburban Kansas City motorcyclist has been charged in a wreck that killed the woman who was riding behind him.

Kane -photo Johnson Co.

42-year-old Fredrick Wilson Kane, of Mission, was booked into jail Friday. He is charged with involuntary manslaughter while driving under the influence in the death of 35-year-old Sierra Crooks. She was killed on June 25 when he crashed in Shawnee.

His bond is set at $250,000. His attorney, Keith Drill, didn’t immediately return a phone message.

Kansas woman dies after SUV hits concrete KDOT drain

SEDGWICK COUNTY — One person died in an accident just before 6a.m. Saturday in Sedgwick County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2010 Suzuki Grand Vitara driven by Mareco Donzell

Bonds, 47, Wichita, was  northbound on Interstate 235 exiting to Central. The vehicle left the roadway, entered the east ditch and struck a concrete KDOT drain.

Bonds and a passenger in the Suzuki Kelsey Claire Louise Hanna, 24, Newton, were transported to St. Francis where Hanna died.  She was not wearing a seat belt, according to the KHP.

Kansas woman admits role in murder conspiracy

JUNCTION CITY – A Kansas woman Friday pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit murder and a related drug crime, according to Kansas Attorney General Derek Schmidt.

Edison -photo Geary County

Amanda Lynn Edison, 34, Junction City, pleaded guilty to one felony count of conspiracy to commit murder in the first degree and one count of conspiracy to possess marijuana with the intent to distribute. The crimes occurred between May and August.

Judge Steven L. Hornbaker accepted the pleas in Geary County District Court today. A sentencing date has not yet been set.

The case was investigated by the Kansas Bureau of Investigation, the Junction City Police Department and the Grandview Plaza Police Department. Assistant Attorneys General Lyndzie Carter and Michael Serra of Schmidt’s office are prosecuting the case.

Kan. congresswoman Lynn Jenkins registers lobbying firm

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Rep. Lynn Jenkins of Kansas is launching a new lobbying firm even before her term in the U.S. House officially ends.

Jenkins chose not to seek re-election this year and her term will end the first week of January. Her new business, LJ Strategies, has already registered with the state.

Ethics watchdogs suggested Jenkins’ decision reinforces public distrust of politicians

Jenkins’ office said in a statement she consulted with the House Ethics Committee before forming the business. Her spokeswoman, Lee Modesitt, says the business won’t actively seek clients until Jenkins leaves office.

Jenkins, but not her firm, can’t lobby at the federal level for a year after her term ends. She will be able to lobby in Kansas immediately.

Jenkins business was registered with the state on Nov. 20,

🎥 Kan. Supreme Court: Raw marijuana smell can support residential search

The Kansas Supreme Court has ruled for the first time regarding raw marijuana smell emanating from a residence in probable cause for a search by law enforcement.

KS SUPREME CT.

TOPEKA – A divided Kansas Supreme Court has ruled that the smell of raw marijuana coming from a residence, when combined with other circumstances, can supply probable cause to support a residential search by police.

This ruling is the first time the court addressed the issue and settled a conflict between Court of Appeals decisions.

The Supreme Court affirmed Lawrence resident Lawrence C. Hubbard’s misdemeanor convictions of possession of marijuana and possession of drug paraphernalia in Douglas County District Court.

Police officers testified they smelled the strong odor of raw marijuana while standing at Hubbard’s apartment door questioning him about another matter. They directed the occupants to leave the apartment while they applied for a search warrant. The officers conducted a security sweep to preserve evidence, and then waited for a judge to issue the warrant. It was during that search they found 25.07 grams of raw marijuana in a Tupperware container inside a safe, a small amount of marijuana on a partially burnt cigarillo in the living room, and several bongs, which were clean and had no marijuana residue.

Hubbard challenged the officers’ ability to smell raw marijuana at his doorway. The district court disagreed, noting the officers’ experience in detecting the odor. Hubbard also argued the officers needed to be qualified as expert witnesses to give their opinions about what they smelled.

In affirming the conviction, the Supreme Court split 4-3. The majority noted Kansas has recognized for several years that the odor of marijuana detected by an officer trained and experienced in identifying the smell provided probable cause to search a vehicle. In applying those same principles to a residential search, the majority noted an officer’s testimony about smelling the odor of an illegal substance was simply part of the circumstances that a court considers when deciding if there is probable cause to believe a crime is being committed or that the residence contains evidence. In rejecting the argument that officers needed to be qualified as experts, the majority opinion, written by Justice Dan Biles, observed, “We are not dealing with sommeliers trying to identify a white wine as a Loire Valley Chenin Blanc.”

The dissent, written by Justice Carol Beier, and joined by Justices Eric Rosen and Lee Johnson, agreed with Hubbard that the officers needed to be qualified as expert witnesses.

Below is the oral argument video.


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Deadline near for Kansans seeking individual health insurance

KID

TOPEKA – Ken Selzer, CPA, Kansas Commissioner of Insurance, is reminding Kansans that the deadline to sign up for individual health insurance plans for 2019 is December 15.

The federal government established the time period, the Commissioner said, and it applies to Affordable Care Act (ACA)-compliant plans sold on and off the federal online marketplace, www.healthcare.gov.

“When applying for coverage on the marketplace Kansans should be aware that subsidies are available based on income,” Commissioner Selzer said, “to offset the cost of coverage. Subsidies are not available if coverage is purchased off the marketplace.”

“Also, it is important to understand how the policy you purchase works from a network perspective,” said Commissioner Selzer. “Not all plans are available in all Kansas counties. Talk to your doctors, other providers or your insurance company to find out if specific medical providers are part of the insurance health plan network you choose.”

For more information, read the Department’s “2019: Overview of the Health Insurance Market in Kansas,” which is located on the department’s website at https://www.ksinsurance.org/documents/healthlife/health/KID-Issue-Brief.pdf .

3 charged with capital murder of couple at Barton County Fair

GREAT BEND – Three individuals have been charged with capital murder in connection with two deaths in July in Barton County, according to Attorney General Derek Schmidt. Two other individuals are charged with related crimes.

Kimberly Younger -photo Crawford Co.
Rusty Frazier -photo Crawford County

Schmidt filed criminal charges against Kimberly Younger, 52, McIntosh, Fla.; Michael Fowler, Jr., 54, Sarasota, Fla.; Rusty Frasier, 35, Aransas Pass, Tex.; Christine Tenney, 38, Santa Fe, Tex.; and Thomas Drake, 31, Van Buren, Ark. The charges are in connection with the deaths of Alfred “Sonny” Carpenter and Pauline Carpenter, both of Wichita, at the Barton County Fair in July.

Michael Fowler – photo Crawford Co.

The charges were filed yesterday and arrest warrants executed today.

The most serious charges against the individuals are as follows:

  • Younger is charged with one count of capital murder, one count of conspiracy to commit murder, one count of criminal solicitation and one count of theft. Bond has been set at $1 million. The Younger complaint is available at https://bit.ly/2Ebm3PQ
  • Fowler is charged with one count of capital murder and one count of theft. Bond has been set at $1 million. The Fowler complaint is available at https://bit.ly/2BWAXbg
  • Frasier is charged with one count of capital murder. Bond has been set at $1 million. The Frasier complaint is available at https://bit.ly/2RCVzuM
  • Tenney is charged with three counts of obstructing apprehension. Bond has been set at $10,000. The Tenney complaint is available at https://bit.ly/2GimrPB
  • Drake is charged with three counts of obstructing apprehension. Bond has been set at $10,000. The Drake complaint is available at https://bit.ly/2E5OGOG

Artists sought for National Career Development Poetry & Art Contest

KDC

TOPEKA – The Kansas Department of Commerce is partnering with the National Career Development Association (NCDA) to participate in the 53rd NCDA Annual Poetry and Art Contest.

The contest theme is “Using Careers to Break Barriers, Empower Lives & Achieve Equity.”

The National Career Development Association promotes career development through its annual celebration of National Career Development Month. Every November, career development professionals are encouraged to celebrate with career related activities including the annual Poetry and Art Contest.

Entries will be judged on how they celebrate and inspire career development with a positive tone while emphasizing the national theme.

ELIGIBILITY

Every adult and student enrolled in school is eligible, as well as adult practitioners who are not in school. Contest divisions areas include:

o    Primary – grades K-2

o    Intermediate – grades 3-5

o    Middle – grades 6-8

o    Senior – grades 9-12

o    Adult Student – ages 18 and older, enrolled in school

o    Open Adult – ages 18 and older (student teachers, parents, professionals, etc.)

 

REQUIREMENTS FOR POEMS

Poetic Form: Acceptable poetic forms, e.g. cinquain, free verse, diamante, haiku, limerick, metered, rhyming, blank verse

Size: Submit each poem on a single sheet of paper 8.5″ x 11″ in 12-point font.

REQUIREMENTS FOR ART

Lettering: Simple bold lettering is preferred. Captions are to be used to convey the theme, attract attention, and to achieve goals of clarity, vigor and originality. All lettering will be considered part of the design.

Media:

Category 1 (C1): Standard use of ink, pencil, poster paints, magic marker, acrylics, and oils.

Category 2 (C2): Use of photos, clipart, graphic art software, collage, cut and pasted paper, and mixed media.

Size: All art must be created in 8.5″ x 11″ format, including matte, to be eligible.

All state award winners will be notified and sent to NCDA by Feb. 20, 2019.

The winning entries for each division will be recognized on the NCDA website in May 2019 and displayed at the Annual Global Career Development Conference in June. National winners will also receive a special certificate and a congratulatory gift from the NCDA.

Please submit any entries to [email protected] by January 14, 2019.

Submissions may also be sent by mail to:

Kansas Department of Commerce, Poetry and Art Contest

1000 SW Jackson St., Suite 100, Topeka, Kansas 66612

Kansas agency defends new process for child welfare services

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Despite concerns over a new process being used by the Kansas Department of Children and Families to choose care providers, the agency’s leader said the process is more transparent than at any time in the past.

DCF Secretary Gina Meier-Hummel during Thursday’s conference-photo courtesy Kansas DCF

The agency is now awarding grants rather than seeking bids for contracts to nonprofits and other providers for services such for foster care, adoption and family preservation. The new process will remove oversight by the Department of Administration and give the DCF more control over who receives the grants, The Kansas City Star reported .

Some critics are questioning why the agency changed a process it has used for decades.

“There was never a rationale given as to why they were going with grants,” said Lori Ross, a longtime child advocate in Kansas and Missouri. “Only now is the cloud lifting. DCF is able to pick and choose who they do business with. They can avoid going through bids, the blind process.”

On Thursday, DCF Secretary Gina Meier-Hummel introduced three providers that will soon receive grants for foster care and family preservation. She said awarding of the grants, and the period leading up to it, has been the “most transparent process we have ever had.” She said under the grants, the agency would have regular contact with contractors to oversee their services.

The grants run four years, starting July 1. The state expects to spend $245 million on foster care during the fiscal year beginning on that date, a 17 percent increase over the current fiscal year.

DCF announced in late May that it was moving to the new process and, in some cases, that would mean the Department of Administration isn’t involved and the secretary of the DCF would have final say on who receives the money.

In picking the grant recipients for foster care and family preservation services, two internal teams at the agency analyzed and blind-scored each bid submission and negotiated with those who submitted proposals.

John Milburn, spokesman for the Department of Administration, said issuing grants “is more the exception than the rule.”

“Typically, when you go through the bid process and you run it through a request for proposals, you’re being more transparent, you’re being more open about it,” Milburn said. “And hopefully, in most cases you’re going to get multiple bids to provide those goods and services.”

Meier-Hummel said even when contracts are awarded, the DCF always chose the service providers.

“So ultimately it was always the secretary’s decision who gets these grants and contracts … it’s just that the paperwork went through the Department of Administration and it’s not now,” she said.

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Group cuts ‘Little Mermaid’ song over ‘toxic masculinity’

PRINCETON, N.J. (AP) — An all-male a cappella group at Princeton University has pulled a Disney movie song from its act following a student newspaper column that suggested the lyrics helped promote “toxic masculinity.”

The Princeton Tigertones have performed “Kiss the Girl,” a song from “The Little Mermaid,” for years. During performances at the Ivy League school, a female audience member would be brought onstage to decide whether or not a man from the crowd could kiss her.

Noa Wollstein, who wrote the column, claimed the song’s message is misogynistic and that too many women have been pulled on stage for unwanted encounters.

“I have seen a queer student brought on stage have to uncomfortably push away her forced male companion,” Wollstein, a sophomore from New York, wrote in her column. “I have heard of unwilling girls being subjected to their first kisses. I have watched mothers, who have come to see their child’s performance, be pulled up to the stage only to have tension generated between them and the kid they came to support.”

In a response published in the newspaper, Tigertones’ President Wesley Brown apologized to anyone made uncomfortable by the tradition. He said the group won’t perform the song until it can find a way to do so without offending any audience members.

Brown, a senior at Princeton, wrote the group has taken steps to try to make audience participation voluntary and consensual, but did not provide specific examples. He said the group had tried to bring a lighthearted, youthful energy to its performance of the song but failed to ensure comfort for audience members brought on stage.

“Performances of this song have made participants uncomfortable and offended audience members, an outcome which is antithetical to our group’s mission and one that we deeply regret,” he wrote.

In “The Little Mermaid,” the song’s lyrics are sung by Sebastian the crab as he encourages Prince Eric to kiss Ariel, who can’t talk because she traded her voice in order to become human for him.

“My oh my/ Look like the boy too shy/ Ain’t gonna kiss the girl,” the crab sings with help from other sea creatures. “Ain’t that sad?/ It’s such a shame/ Too bad/ You’re gonna miss the girl.”

Other lyrics include, “Don’t be scared/ You better be prepared/ Go on and kiss the girl.”
Wollstein also criticized “The Little Mermaid” song for “unambiguously encourage men to make physical advances on women without obtaining their clear consent.”

“Removed from its cushioning context of mermaids, magic, and PG ratings, the message comes across as even more jarring,” Wollstein wrote.

Christmas Cash website launched for unclaimed property

TOPEKA–At the beginning of this season of giving, Kansas State Treasurer Jake LaTurner has launched a website with the hopes of helping Kansans find a little Christmas cash they didn’t know they had.  The division of Unclaimed Property in the Kansas State Treasurer’s Office began accepting claims at www.ChristmasCash.ks.gov.

There is currently over $350 million dollars in unclaimed property being held by the state of Kansas.

“The average claim for many Kansans is about $225, which for most of us would go a long way at Christmas time, whether for giving to our favorite charity, paying off bills, or buying something for a loved one,” said Kansas State Treasurer Jake LaTurner. “We want to make Christmas easier for as many Kansans as we can, and we encourage them to go to our website and see if they might be one of the many with unclaimed property waiting to be found.”

Claims can be made for both individuals and businesses through the site.  Some claims require more processing time than others. The department plans to fulfill as many requests as possible prior to the Christmas holiday, but requests claims be made before December 15th in order for them to have their best chance at fulfilling them before Christmas Day.

More information on filing and receiving claims can be found on the website: www.ChristmasCash.ks.gov.

Man convicted of dragging Kan. officer during traffic stop

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — A driver has been convicted of dragging and injuring a Lawrence police officer with his car.

Aramis Neal Hernandez -photo Lawrence Police

Jurors found 38-year-old Aramis Hernandez, of Topeka, guilty Thursday of battery on a law enforcement officer during a July 2016 traffic stop.

When the officer asked Hernandez for his driver’s license, Hernandez told the officer that he “didn’t need” a license. The officer explained that a license was required. Hernandez continued to argue that under “common law” it wasn’t necessary.

The camera system in the officer’s vehicle showed that after a few minutes, Hernandez started to pull away with the officer hanging onto the side of the vehicle. Hernandez then drove off. The officer was treated for cuts and bruises.

Sentencing is set for Dec. 21.

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