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

PREVIEW: Eagle Radio Auction Oct. 18 & 19

The Eagle radio auction is coming up on October 18th and 19th on stations 101.9FM and 94.3FM KAYS. We will have thousands of items to bid on and buy beginning at 8 a.m. each day. To place a bid call 785-301-2211.

You can see a complete sale bill including when each item will sell by clicking HERE.

Below is one of our featured items on this year’s auction:

Snapper Zero Turn Riding Mower from Sawyer’s Ace Hardware in Phillipsburg

Retail Price $3199

Mowing will be a snap. Mower features include a 22 horsepower/646cc Briggs and Stratton Pro Series V-Twin engine and 46-inch cut.

This zero turn mower runs cooler and delivers more power and uses less fuel. The hydrostatic transmission provides maneuverability and a smoother ride. Forward speeds are up to 6 miles per hour and 3 in reverse. The 46-inch 3-blade mower deck has electric height-of-cut adjustment and electric PTO. The easy access control panel has finger-tip control or throttle, mower engagement and height-of-cut. The cast iron axle pivots with ground contours allow the mower to ride smoothly over the lawn.

 

$50 Certificate from Old Chicago in Hays
It’s a family destination for all ages at Old Chicago, 383 Mopar Drive in Hays, now open.

This $50 gift card assures you a great dining experience…menu items from the famous signature pizza choices, the tavern bites and appetizers, all the way to salads, burgers, hand tossed wings, calzones, oven baked pastas, desserts, and more. The food selections are endless at your all new Old Chicago in Hays…visit when you use this $50 gift card, and they promise you’ll be back.

Be sure to join the OC Reward program, and you’ll even earn points and prizes on each visit. Your all new Old Chicago at 383 Mopar Drive just off I-70 in Hays. Amazing Craft beers and Food. Reconnect, Share, Celebrate!! 40 Years Strong.

Police: Kan. man accused of taking bank deposit bag in custody

SALINE COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating a suspect accused of removing a deposit bag on Friday from the counter at a convenience store in the 200 Block of West Magnolia in Salina.

Security camera image -courtesy Saline PD

The suspect asked for a package of cigars and while the clerk was turned around to get the cigars, the suspect took from the bag containing $1,891, according to Salina Police Captain Paul Forrester.

Police released a a security camera image of the suspect identified as 41-year-old Neil Bankhead.

Bankhead -photo Saline Co.

On Saturday, deputies with the Ottawa County Sheriff’s Office located Bankhead in a Minneapolis motel and arrested him on outstanding warrants of failure to appear and probation violation, Forrester said. Bankhead also was charged with felony theft for the taking the deposit bag, according to Forrester.

Since 2005, Bankhead has a dozen convictions for battery, obstruction drug and weapons charges, according to the Kansas Department of Corrections.

Police ask for help to identify Kan. armed robbery suspect

SEDGWICK COUNTY— Law enforcement authorities are investigating armed robbery and asking for help to identify a suspect.

Security camera image courtesy Wichita Police

Just after 3 p.m. Sunday, Police  were dispatched to an armed robbery to the Phillips 66 located in the 500 block of South Market in Wichita, according to officer Paul Cruz.

An employee told police an unknown suspect entered the business and attempted to buy a drink. The suspect then handed the employee a note demanding all the money from the cash register as the suspect displayed a handgun. Money was given to the suspect who fled in a dark colored SUV with light gray on the front driver side, quarter panel of the vehicle. 

The suspect is described as a black male in his 30s, 6-foot tall and wearing black clothing. 
Anyone with information is asked to call Wichita police.

Sheriff: 8 members of Army Reserve hospitalized after Kan. crash

GEARY COUNTY — Eight people were injured in an accident just before 9:30p.m. Saturday in Geary County.

google map

An Army Reserve unit in a Light Medium Tactical Vehicle (LMTV) was westbound on Vinton School Road near the 1000 Block of Old Highway 77, according to the Geary County Sheriff’s Department.

The vehicle failed to stop at a stop sign and crashed into a tree line. Eight reserve unit members were transported for treatment.

Their injuries were not believed to be life threatening, according to the sheriff’s department.

SPONSORED: Eagle Technology Solutions seeking service coordinator

Eagle Communications is looking for a full-time Service Coordinator to join its Eagle Technology Solutions team. This highly motivated candidate would need to possess excellent customer service skills and be able to perform multiple duties in an exciting, fast paced environment. This position will be based in Hays, KS and will report to the Director of Technology Solutions.

For more information or to apply, click HERE.

Amber Alert suspect charged with rape of 12-year-old Kan. girl

OLATHE, Kan. (AP) — A Minnesota man has been charged with raping a 12-year-old Kansas girl who was the focus of an Amber Alert.

White -photo Johnson County

23-year-old Dechon Michael White, of South St. Paul, Minnesota, was booked Friday into the Johnson County, Kansas, jail, where his bond is set at $250,000.

Federal prosecutors initially charged White with kidnapping after he allegedly took a bus to Minnesota with the girl in July. She had been reported missing two days earlier in Lenexa, Kansas. The kidnapping case was dropped this summer before Kansas prosecutors filed two rape charges.

White met the girl, who is now 13, online. Prosecutors say White and the girl told the girl’s mother that he was 16.

No attorney is listed for him in online court records.

————————-

KANSAS CITY– A Minnesota man was charged Monday July 9, with kidnapping a 13-year-old Kansas girl and taking her to St. Paul, according to U.S. Attorney Stephen McAllister.

The case prompted the state to issue an Amber Alert on July 6. Authorities found the teen and she was safe at a bus station, according to the KBI.

Amber Lynn Rewerts-Schiavoni

Dechon White, 23, St. Paul, Minn., is charged with one count of kidnapping.

Documents filed in the case allege White and the victim met online in February 2018. On July 1, White came to visit the victim Amber Lynn Rewerts-Schiavoni at her home in Lenexa, Kan. He told the victim’s mother he was 16 years old.

During his stay in Lenexa, he had sex with the victim.

On July 4, White and the victim told her mother they were going to a shopping mall. Instead, they went to a Greyhound bus station in Kansas City and took a bus to St. Paul.

White -photo courtesy Dakota County, Minnesota sheriff

After the victim’s mother reported her missing, police found White and the victim at his residence in St. Paul.

If convicted, White faces a penalty of not less than 20 years in federal prison and a fine up to $250,000.

Sears files for bankruptcy protection amid plunging sales, massive debt

NEW YORK (AP) — Sears has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, buckling under its massive debt load and staggering losses.

Sears once dominated the American retail landscape. But the big question is whether the shrunken version of itself can be viable or will it be forced to go out of business, closing the final chapter for an iconic name that originated more than a century ago.

Holdings will also close 142 unprofitable stores near the end of the year. Liquidation sales at these stores are expected to begin shortly. This is in addition to the previously announced closure of 46 unprofitable stores that is expected to be completed by November 2018.

Click HERE for a complete list of closures from USA Today. The Sears Hometown Store at 2706 Vine is not on the list of closings.

The company, which started out as a mail order catalog in the 1880s, has been on a slow march toward extinction as it lagged far behind its peers and has incurred massive losses over the years. The operator of Sears and Kmart stores joins a growing list of retailers that have filed for bankruptcy or liquidated in the last few years amid a fiercely competitive climate. Some like Payless ShoeSource have had success emerging from reorganization in bankruptcy court but plenty of others haven’t, like Toys R Us and Bon-Ton Stores Inc. Both retailers were forced to shutter their operations this year soon after a Chapter 11 filing.

“This is a company that in the 1950s stood like a colossus over the American retail landscape,” said Craig Johnson, president of Customer Growth Partners, a retail consultancy. “Hopefully, a smaller new Sears will be healthier.”

Given its sheer size, Sears’ bankruptcy filing will have wide ripple effects on everything from already ailing landlords to its tens of thousands of workers.

Edward S. Lampert has stepped down from his role as CEO of the company, effective immediately. He will remain chairman of the board. The company’s board has created an Office of the CEO, which will be responsible for managing day-to-day operations during this process.

The filing, which is happening ahead of the crucial holiday shopping season, comes after rescue efforts engineered by Lampert have kept it outside of bankruptcy court — until now.

Lampert, the largest shareholder, has been loaning out his own money for years and has put together deals to prop up the company, which in turn has benefited his own ESL hedge fund.

Last year, Sears sold its famous Craftsman brand to Stanley Black & Decker Inc., following its earlier moves to spin off pieces of its Sears Hometown and Outlet division and Lands’ End.

In recent weeks, Lampert has been pushing for a debt restructuring and offering to buy some of Sears’ key assets like Kenmore through his hedge fund as a $134 million debt repayment comes due on Monday. Lampert personally owns 31 percent of the company’s shares. His hedge fund has an 18.5 percent stake, according to FactSet.

“It is all well and good to undertake financial engineering, but the company is in the business of retailing and without a clear retail plan, the firm simply has no reason to exist,” said Neil Saunders, managing director of GlobalData Retail, in a recent analyst note.

Sears’ stock has fallen from about $6 over the past year to below the minimum $1 level that Nasdaq stocks are required to trade in order to remain on the stock index. In April 2007, shares were trading at around $141. The company, which once had 350,000 workers, has seen its workforce shrink to fewer than 90,000 people as of earlier this year.

The company has racked up $6.26 billion in losses, excluding one-time events, since its last annual profit in 2010, according to Ken Perkins, who heads the research firm Retail Metrics LLC. It’s had 11 years of straight annual drops in revenue. In its last fiscal year, it generated $16.7 billion in sales, down from more than $50 billion in 2008.

As of May, it had fewer than 900 stores, down from about 1,000 at the end of last year. The number of stores peaked in 2012 at 4,000, including its Sears Canada division that was later spun off.

In a March 2017 government filing, Sears said there was “substantial doubt” it would be able to keep its doors open — but insisted its turnaround efforts would mitigate that risk.

But its losses continued into this year. In the fiscal second quarter ended Aug. 4, net losses in the quarter swelled to $508 million, or $4.68 per share, compared with a loss of $250 million, or $2.33 cents per share in the same quarter a year ago.

Such financial woes contrast with the promise that Lampert made when he combined Sears and Kmart in 2005, two years after he helped bring Kmart out of bankruptcy. Back then, it operated 2,200 stores in total.

Lampert pledged to return Sears to greatness by leveraging its best-known brands and its vast holdings of land, and more recently planned to entice customers with a loyalty program. But it struggled to get more people through the doors or to shop online.

Jennifer Roberts, 36 of Dayton, Ohio, had been a long-time fan of Sears and has fond memories of shopping there for clothes as a child. But in recent years, she’s been disappointed by the lack of customer service and outdated stores.

“My mom had always bought her appliances from Sears. That’s where my dad got his tools,” she said. “But they don’t care about their customers anymore.”

She said a refrigerator her mother bought at Sears broke after two years and it still hasn’t been fixed for almost a month with no help from the retailer.

“If they don’t value a customer, then they don’t need my money,” said Roberts, who voiced her complaints on Sears’ Facebook page.

Sales at the company’s established locations tumbled nearly 4 percent during its fiscal second quarter. Still, that was an improvement from the same period a year ago when it fell 11.5 percent. Total revenue dropped 30 percent in the most recent quarter, hurt by continued store closings.

The bleak figures are an outlier to chains like Walmart, Target, Best Buy and Macy’s, which have been enjoying stronger sales as they benefit from a robust economy and efforts to make the shopping experience more inviting by investing heavily on remodeling and de-cluttering their stores.

For decades, Sears was king of the American shopping landscape. Sears, Roebuck and Co.’s iconic catalog featured items from bicycles to sewing machines to houses, and could generate excitement throughout a household when it arrived. The company began opening retail locations in 1925 and expanded swiftly in suburban malls from the 1950s to 1970s. But the onset of discounters like Walmart created challenges for Sears that have only grown. Sears faced even more competition from online sellers and appliance retailers like Lowe’s and Home Depot. Its stores became an albatross.

Store shelves have been left bare as many vendors have demanded more stringent payment terms, says Mark Cohen, a professor of retailing at Columbia University and a former Sears executive.

Meanwhile, Sears workers are nervous about what kind of severance they’ll receive if their store closes.

John Germann, 46, works full-time and makes $14 per hour as the lead worker unloading merchandise from trucks at the Chicago Ridge, Illinois store, which has been drastically reducing its staff since he started nine years ago. Germann now has only 11 people on his team, compared with about 30 a few years ago.

“We’re doing the job of two to three people. It’s not safe,” he said. “We’re lifting treadmills and refrigerators.”

Real estate experts believe that Sears’ move to further shutter stores as part of its restructuring would be a mixed blessing for landlords. For the healthy malls, landlords would welcome a Sears departure, allowing them to cut up the space and fill it with several smaller successful stores that combined would bring in higher revenue.

But for the struggling malls, Cohen says it will be a “death knell” since it will be harder for them to bring in new tenants. Many of these malls already have had difficulty filling in the void from J.C. Penney and Macy’s closures.

Saunders of GlobalData Retail spared no criticism of Sears in his analyst note, listing failing after failing of the company.

“The problem in Sears case is that it is a poor retailer,” he wrote. “Put bluntly, it has failed on every facet of retailing from assortment to service to merchandise to basic shop keeping standards. Under benign conditions, this would be problematic enough but in today’s hyper-competitive retail environment it is a recipe for failure on a grand scale.”

1,600 pounds of THC edibles, wax, marijuana found in traffic stop

SEWARD COUNTY, NE —State troopers arrested two people and seized more than 1,600 pounds of edible marijuana products, THC wax, and marijuana during a traffic stop on Interstate 80, approximately 160 miles north of Salina, Kan., according to a media release from the Nebraska State Patrol.

Photo courtesy Nebraska State Patrol

The traffic stop occurred at approximately 2:30 p.m. October 11, when a trooper observed an eastbound 2018 Dodge Caravan speeding near mile marker 385. During the traffic stop, the trooper detected criminal activity and conducted a search of the vehicle.

Troopers found 488 boxes containing 50 THC candy bars in each box, 465 units of THC wax, and 11 pounds of marijuana. The total weight was 1,640 pounds. Estimated street value of the illegal products is more than $550,000.

The driver, Anthony Iovieno, 44, and passenger, Casey Pichette, 38, both of North Grafton, Massachusetts, were arrested for possession of controlled substances with intent to deliver. Both were lodged in Seward County Jail.

Kan. man faces 20-years in prison, left fingerprints during robbery

WICHITA, KAN. –  A Kansas man pleaded guilty to robbing a Quik Trip in Wichita, according to U.S. Attorney Stephan McAllister.

Vliet -photo Sedgwick Co.

Samuel L. Vliet, 26, Wichita, Kan., pleaded guilty to one count of robbing a commercial business. In his plea, he admitted that on July 18, 2018, he robbed a Quik Trip at 110 S. Rock Road in Wichita. After Vliet left the store with money from the register, investigators lifted prints from a door where the clerk saw the robber touch the glass. The prints helped investigators identify Vliet and arrest him.

Sentencing is set for Jan. 3. He faces a maximum penalty of 20 years in federal prison and a fine up to $250,000.

 

Division of Vehicles to launch improved, modernized service

KDOR 

TOPEKAMany Kansas drivers will have the option to renew their license online starting October 23, just one customer service improvement in a list that includes new Monday hours and faster customer processing time, the Division of Vehicles announced.

The option for some drivers to renew using the iKan mobile application comes alongside the launch of KanLicense, a software program that updates the interface used by driver’s license examiners from an outdated mainframe system to a cloud based application. The modernized software program should decrease customer processing time.

“We are so pleased to jumpstart improved customer service with these new applications,” Director of Vehicles David Harper said. “The combination of these two new platforms set the stage for the long-term reinvention of the process of obtaining or renewing a license or ID across Kansas.”

Starting October 29, the new schedule for most driver’s license offices will be 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. The addition of Monday service, plus the option for mobile renewals and faster counter service should ease pressure and wait times during the week. Opening for service on Saturdays will remain an option during peak times such as spring break.

“We are significantly expanding our capacity to serve our customers,” Director Harper said. “We will be open normal business hours everyone is accustomed to, but also offer 24/7 access for renewals on the iKan mobile application.”

Director Harper noted that high demand will remain as Kansans come into the office to upgrade to a Real ID credential ahead of the October 1, 2020 federal implementation date.

“We are modernizing the credential process for the long-term, but many people will still have to come in to get their Real ID before the one-time federal implementation event,” Director Harper said. “We continue to encourage our customers to make sure they have all the documents they need before getting to the office.”

Driver’s and ID holders can use a Real ID checklist at ksrevenue.org/realid to ensure they have the necessary documents.

Driver’s license offices statewide will be closed Saturday, October 20 to prepare for the launch of the KanLicense system.

Felon admits guilt to gun charge after KC hit-and-run, police chase

KANSAS CITY – A Kansas City man who was involved in a hit-and-run accident before leading police on a car chase that ended when he crashed into a pole and another vehicle, pleaded guilty in federal court Friday to illegally possessing a firearm.

Coleman -photo Mo. Dept. of Corrections

James C. Coleman, 48, pleaded guilty before U.S. District Judge F. Sachs to being a felon in possession of a firearm.

According to court documents, Coleman was involved in a hit-and-run accident at the intersection of E. 67th Street and College Avenue in Kansas City, Mo., at approximately 1 a.m. on Oct. 4, 2017. The driver of the vehicle that was hit told police officers that a Volkswagen station wagon (later determined to be driven by Coleman) failed to stop for the stop sign and struck his vehicle. He also told police officers that Coleman, who appeared to be high, got out of his car but then left the scene of the accident without exchanging any information.

A Kansas City police officer saw Coleman’s vehicle shortly after the hit-and-run accident. The officer fell in behind Coleman’s vehicle and watched as the station wagon struck a curb. The officer activated his patrol car’s emergency lights and siren, but Coleman refused to stop and a pursuit began.

The car chase continued until Coleman struck a city utility pole and crashed into a Lincoln Continental in the 6800 block of Bales Avenue in Kansas City. Officers noted the vehicle had damage on all sides with multiple air bag deployments. Coleman, who was still inside the overturned vehicle, was lying on his back across the passenger door with his legs coming out of the vehicle’s sun/moon roof. Coleman appeared as though he had tried to crawl out of the passenger side of the vehicle.

A police officer saw a loaded Smith and Wesson 9mm pistol lying inside Coleman’s vehicle. After pulling Coleman out of the vehicle, an officer saw a clear baggie that contained what was later determined to be six individual baggies of cocaine. Coleman was transported by ambulance to a nearby hospital for evaluation and treatment of his injuries.

Under federal law, it is illegal for anyone who has been convicted of a felony to be in possession of any firearm or ammunition. Coleman has three prior felony convictions for drug trafficking and a prior felony conviction for stealing.

Under federal statutes, Coleman is subject to a sentence of up to 10 years in federal prison without parole. The maximum statutory sentence is prescribed by Congress and is provided here for informational purposes, as the sentencing of the defendant will be determined by the court based on the advisory sentencing guidelines and other statutory factors. A sentencing hearing will be scheduled after the completion of a presentence investigation by the United States Probation Office.

This case is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Matthew Moeder. It was investigated by the Kansas City, Mo., Police Department.

Dodge City Boot Hill Museum plans expansion project

DODGE CITY, Kan. (AP) — Groundbreaking for an expansion project at the Dodge City Boot Hill Museum is scheduled for Nov. 1.

Plans are to construct a new 12,000-square-foot building to house nine new exhibits, a gift shop and a 3,000-square foot temporary exhibit hall.

Daily gunfights, shows, and dinners will continue during the summer season as they have for more than 60 years.

The museum expansion project will have an estimated cost of $5.5 million. STAR bond money will cover about 78 percent of the new building, leaving the museum to fund the rest.

The museum has raised $1 million to fund most of the interior costs of the new building. It will be the largest expansion project in the history of the museum, which opened in 1947.

LKM: Gov. Colyer brought open dialogue with cities in Kansas

Governor Jeff Colyer held a press conference on June 11, 2018 announcing an increase in the exchange rate for local public agencies seeking to fund local projects with state funds through the Federal Fund Exchange Program. His office worked to return the exchange rate to $.90 in state funds made available for every $1.00 in federal funds awarded a local agency, upon the agency’s request.

LKM

TOPEKA  —  At the League of Kansas Municipalities Annual Conference last week, the League presented Governor Jeff Colyer, M.D. with the 2018 Intergovernmental Leadership Award.

Since 1995, the Intergovernmental Award seeks to honor those who support cooperation between the various levels of government. Recipients of this award have demonstrated, in both promise and practice, an understanding that public servants at all levels serve the same citizens and should work together to provide the best service possible.

“We are pleased to present Governor Colyer with our Intergovernmental Leadership Award,” said Erik Sartorius, Executive Director of the League. “Upon assuming the governorship, Governor Colyer brought a renewed commitment to open dialogue with cities in Kansas. Cities have been asked for opinions, ideas, and feedback during his tenure. The tone he set has carried throughout the levels of state government.”
Colyer was sworn into office as the 47th Governor of Kansas on January 31, 2018 and was twice elected as Lieutenant Governor in 2010 and 2014. Prior to his statewide leadership role, he served in the Kansas Senate from 2009 to 2011 and the Kansas House of Representatives from 2007 to 2009.
“The wonderful thing about the American government is that it is ‘of the people, by the people, and for the people’,” said Governor Jeff Colyer. “At every level, be it national, state, or local, we have a responsibility to do what is right for those we represent. Part of that responsibility is finding ways to make different levels of government work together effectively. When I took office, one of my main goals was to have open lines of communication and cooperation between my office and the various local governments in Kansas. I am proud that in my time as Governor I have been able to strengthen the lines of communication among all levels of government and I hope that the benefit is passed on to those who I have been honored to represent.”

The Governor’s Office was supportive of some of the League’s legislative efforts during the 2018 session. He signed bills authorizing the Joint Legislative Transportation Task Force and the Statewide Broadband Expansion Planning Task Force, both of which have League representation. He signed HB2597 which amends when a mayor is considered a member of the governing body under K.S.A. 12-104. The Governor also signed H Sub for SB310, the bill that clarified the previously adopted Amusement Ride Act.  In June, the Governor announced that the Federal Fund Exchange Program, which assists local governments in funding local transportation projects, would return to the $.90-cents-on-the-dollar exchange rate (the level was decreased in 2017).

Governor Colyer launched the “Land in Kansas” strategic economic development initiative in July which takes a comprehensive, multi-agency approach to economic growth. The key components of the plan include a new state marketing campaign, a top-down review of economic development programs in the state, and a pilot program to enable communities across the state to better target specific areas for economic growth. Under the plan, several state agencies will each appoint an economic development liaison who will serve as the primary contact for economic development projects. The campaign will highlight the opportunities for individuals and industry to live and do business in Kansas, while also showcasing the strategic advantages of the state – including our central location, well-trained workforce, and pro-business atmosphere.

“As Kansas residents, we all want this state to succeed and grow and become the envy of other states,” said Sartorius. “To bring this about, all levels of government need to be able to cooperate and recognize the important roles they each play in providing services to residents. We at the League are grateful for Governor Colyer’s partnership and leadership this year.”

The Governor signed SB331, a bill that designated the Flint Hills Trail State Park and Little Jerusalem Badlands State Park as part of the state park system. The bill also established the Flint Hills Advisory Council to study and assess the development, staffing, maintenance, and promotion of the Flint Hills Nature Trail. Other bills were signed in the 2018 legislative session which address municipal concerns including alcoholic liquor taxation, asset forfeiture, and new rules for law enforcement personnel records.

Governor Colyer is a fifth-generation Kansan raised in Hays. Dr. Colyer earned a bachelor’s degree in Economics from Georgetown University, a master’s degree in International Relations from Cambridge University, and a medical doctorate from University of Kansas, School of Medicine. Colyer was a White House Fellow under Presidents Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush, working in international affairs. Dr. Colyer and his wife Ruth reside in Johnson County and have been married since 1991. They have three daughters Alexandra, Serena, and Dominique.

We appreciate Governor Colyer’s efforts and public service. We appreciate his willingness to engage in an open dialogue and work to foster a greater quality of life for the residents of Kansas.

Copyright Eagle Radio | FCC Public Files | EEO Public File