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Police make 6th threat arrest at Kansas high school

FORD COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities and USD 443 officials are investigating an alleged school threat and have made an arrest.

Just before 6a.m. Tuesday, police received information about a potential threat of violence to the high school in Dodge City, according to a media release.

Officers immediately began investigating the information and learned that a 14-year-old  high school student made a threat to shoot up the high school and mentioned the different weapons he would use.

Police located the boy at his residence where he was arrested without incident. A case will be filed with the Ford County Attorney’s Office for the alleged charge of felony criminal threat.

Police have made 6 arrests this school year alone for threats of school violence in Dodge City, according to the release.

 

Museum rededication, ribbon-cutting part of Ike’s birthday celebration

Exhibit photos courtesy Eisenhower Presidential Library and Museum

ABILENE — A variety of activities are scheduled this weekend in recognition of President Dwight Eisenhower’s birth.

Unless otherwise noted, events are open to the public at no charge.

A museum rededication and ribbon-cutting ceremony at the Eisenhower Presidential Library and Museum in Abilene highlights the weekend celebration. The ceremony begins at 11 a.m. Saturday with a keynote address delivered by Mary Jean Eisenhower, Dwight and Mamie’s granddaughter.

The museum exhibits open for public viewing following the ribbon cutting at noon. Admission is free all day. This includes the museum exhibits and boyhood home tours. Tickets for scheduled, guided tours of the boyhood home are required and may be picked up in the visitors’ center or museum lobby.

“This ceremony marks the project as complete and we are thrilled to celebrate with our guests,” said Dawn Hammatt, Eisenhower Presidential Library director.

The project planning and fundraising phases were approximately a four-year undertaking with the exhibit renovation beginning in May 2018.

“The exhibits opened on July 29, but we felt it was important to celebrate this significant accomplishment during Eisenhower’s birthday weekend,” added Hammatt.

This is your opportunity to meet Ike and Mamie again…for the first time! Using Ike and Mamie’s own words, the new exhibits are complete with technology and interactive components. Examine historically significant artifacts and documents from the archives that reveal Dwight’s remarkable life. Follow Mamie as she becomes Ike’s life partner and they venture on “their career.” Hear Ike’s voice on issues ranging from D-Day to world peace in the new mini-theaters. Finally, reflect on Ike’s lifetime of public service and his legacy for the future.

Archivist of the United States David S. Ferriero commented on Eisenhower’s importance in his own life.

“Many Americans felt a special connection to Ike. I did, and the Eisenhower Library found two letters I wrote him. One when I was 10 and included with my letter a toy stuffed elephant for him to share with his grandkids, and one when I was 14, stating ‘I admire you deeply,’ and asking for a signed photograph,” Ferriero said. “The new museum will offer those who remember Ike, and those who do not, a greatly enhanced opportunity to follow his remarkable career trajectory from ordinary boy to leader of the free world.”

Following is the full birthday weekend schedule.

Friday
4:30 p.m – Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW) Vigil Begins
(Kansas VFW Chapters stand guard at Dwight Eisenhower’s burial site)

Saturday
7:30 a.m. – VFW Vigil ends

9:30 a.m. – Presidential Wreath Laying Ceremony
(conducted by Ft. Riley on behalf of the President of the United States)

9:45 a.m. – American Legion Pilgrimage
(Kansas American Legion Posts travel to honor President Eisenhower’s birthday)

11 a.m. – Museum Rededication and Ribbon Cutting Ceremony
(Keynote Address presented by Mary Jean Eisenhower)

1 p.m. – Vintage Base Ball Game
(Dwight Eisenhower’s favorite sport)

5:30 p.m. – Eisenhower Foundation Legacy Gala
(Sold out ticketed event)

eisenhowerlibrary.gov

Police: Kan. felon jailed for threatening to kill officers, library patrons

Salina Post

SALINE COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating a suspect for alleged criminal threat.

Delatorre photo Saline Co.

Just after 7:30p.m. Tuesday, police were called to the Salina Public Library, 301 West Elm Street after report of a disorderly subject, according to Salina Police Captain Paul Forrester.

When the two officers arrived, they made contact with  31-year-old Victor Delatorre on the west side of the library.

Delatorre appeared to be intoxicated and allegedly was belligerent and yelling profanities, according to Forrester. During the conversation, Delartorre allegedly threatened to kill the two officers.

During the investigation, three library patrons including a 28-year-old woman a 22-year-old man, and an 18-year-old man told the officers that Delatorre walked up to them and threatened to shoot them, according to Forrester.

Police arrested Delatorre on requested charges that include Five counts of criminal threat, Disorderly subject and Obstruction/interference with a law enforcement officer.

He has a previous convictions for DUI, according to the Kansas Department of Corrections.

Police identify Kan. man who died in wrong-way, head-on crash

SEDGWICK COUNTY — One person died in an accident just after 4a.m. Wednesday in Sedgwick County.

Early morning fatal crash scene photo courtesy KWCH TV

A 2018 Kia Sportage driven by Stephen McClain, 72, Wichita, was westbound in the eastbound lanes of West Kellogg at Maize in Wichita, according to officer Charley Davidson.

The vehicle collided head-on with a Chevy Silverado driven by a 50-year-old man.

McClain was pronounced dead at the scene, according to Davidson. The other driver was transported to a local hospital for treatment of non-life-threatening injuries.

The accident remains under investigation, according to Davidson.

1966 Thunderbird stolen from Salina man

Salina Post

SALINA — A 51-year-old Salina man is without his 1966 Ford Thunderbird after someone stole it.

Salina Police Captain Paul Forrester said Wednesday that sometime between 9:45 p.m. Monday and 6 p.m. Tuesday, someone stole the car from where it was parked in the 300 block of Otto. The owner, who still has the keys, had moved the car outside from where it was stored so he could do some painting, Forrester said.

The car was described as being maroon with a black top and having a Kansas antique license tag of 212461, he said. The car was valued at $18,000, Forrester said.

The car was seen by a patrol officer at 2 p.m. on Tuesday near the intersection of South Kansas Avenue and Gypsum Avenue, but at that point, the car had not been reported stolen, he added.

K.C. company makes bid to acquire rural Kansas hospital out of bankruptcy


Hillsboro Community Hospital in Hillsboro, Kansas, about 50 miles north of Wichita, has kept its doors open through a receivership and bankruptcy. Dan Margolies / KCUR 89.3

By DAN MARGOLIES
Kansas News Service

HILLSBORO —

A Kansas City-based company that specializes in turning around financially distressed hospitals is proposing to purchase Hillsboro Community Hospital in rural Kansas for $6.9 million.

The company, Rural Hospital Group, was formed in 2017 and has acquired three other rural hospitals: one in Wellington, Kansas; another  in Boonville, Missouri; and a third in Marion, Kentucky. It has since sold the hospital in Boonville.

Hillsboro Community Hospital was placed in receivership in January and then in Chapter 11 bankruptcy after its previous owner defaulted on its bills and other financial obligations.

Through a subsidiary, Rural Hospital Group has submitted a “stalking horse” bid for Hillsboro, meaning if any other bidders emerge, RHG’s bid will set the floor for other bids. So far, Rural Hospital Group appears to be the only bidder.

“We have signed an asset purchase agreement, which starts the stalking horse process,” said Dennis Davis, one of RHG’s principals.

Davis said he expects the purchase to close before the end of the year.

“If there are no other bidders, our bid will be accepted as the bid and we will close fairly quickly,” he said.

The 15-bed hospital has endured multiple owners and a bankruptcy over the last couple of years.

In 2017, its operations were taken over by a group of Miami businessmen led by Jorge Perez, a group that had acquired control of nearly two dozen distressed rural hospitals across the United States.

Last week, a member of the group, David Byrns, was charged in federal court in Kansas City with one count of conspiracy to commit health care fraud. Byrns was CEO of Putnam County Memorial Hospital in Unionville, Missouri, another 15-bed hospital taken over by Perez’s group before it was ousted by the hospital’s board of trustees.

The Unionville hospital was the subject of a scorching audit more than two years ago by Missouri State Auditor Nichole Galloway, who questioned the legality of a lab billing scheme orchestrated by the group.

Byrns stands accused of submitting fraudulent laboratory test claims on behalf of patients who never set foot in Putnam County Memorial Hospital. Court documents indicate the criminal case has been transferred to Florida for a future plea and sentencing.

Late last year, Perez’s group, Empower HMS, began missing payments on Hillsboro Community Hospital’s bills, and the town, which lies about 50 miles north of Wichita, threatened to cut off the hospital’s electricity. The Bank of Hays eventually sought to foreclose on the hospital after it defaulted on a construction loan, which led to the appointment of a receiver to run the hospital’s affairs. The receiver, Cohesive Management + Consulting, in turn put the hospital in Chapter 11 bankruptcy in March.

About a dozen other hospitals operated by Perez and his associates are now in bankruptcy. Unlike Hillsboro, those hospitals have remained under the group’s control and their bankruptcy cases have all been consolidated in North Carolina.

Under the auspices of its Chapter 11 bankruptcy trustee, Hillsboro Community Hospital’s finances have stabilized. Davis said the hospital still has not been able to access financial statements predating the bankruptcy because Perez’s group installed its own electronic records system and cut off access to it after they were ousted.

“So if you just look at day one, which is like January of this year, right to this day, that’s the only financial information we have had to make our evaluation,” Davis said. “But at least we know that’s been prepared honestly.”

Davis said his group’s turnaround strategy generally entails reducing staff, renegotiating contracts, updating a hospital’s fees and installing its own electronic system.

“A lot of this almost doesn’t really apply to Hillsboro because Hillsboro went through a unique situation,” he said. “But generally speaking, most rural hospitals that are in financial trouble either have poor governance or poor management or both.”

RHG plans to fund its purchase with its own money as well as a loan from the Bank of Hays, according to bankruptcy court documents.

Brent King, Hillsboro’s Chapter 11 trustee, said he was looking forward to establishing a relationship with RHG.

“They understand rural healthcare and they will serve the Hillsboro community with pride,” he said.

Dan Margolies is a senior reporter and editor at KCUR. You can reach him on Twitter @DanMargolies.

86-year-old former minister deemed sexually violent

SARCOXIE, MO (AP) — Jurors have ruled that an 86-year-old former minister is a sexually violent predator who should remain confined even though he has completed a 15-year prison sentence for sodomizing teenage boys.

Peckham photo MDC

Jurors reached the verdict last month in the case against Donald Peckham, but the case records weren’t publicized until Tuesday. Prosecutors say Peckham, who is from Sarcoxie in Southwest Missouri, sexually abused at least 14 boys between 12 and 16 years old over the course of 30 years and continued to victimize young boys until he was 67 years old.

Defense attorney Amy Clay says the decision to indefinitely commit Peckham to a treatment program run by the Missouri Department of Mental Health amounts to a “life sentence” because few people get through it.

Police: Search continues for 2nd suspect in deadly Kan. bar shooting

KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — The hunt continues for a second suspect in a weekend Kansas bar shooting that left four dead and five wounded after officers searched two homes in the area without finding the fugitive.

Hugo Villanueva-Morales photo KCK Police
Alatorre photo KCK Police

On Tuesday, police looked for 29-year-old Hugo Villanueva-Morales first at a duplex that is less than 1 mile away from the Tequila KC bar. Gunfire erupted there early Sunday about two hours after Villanueva-Morales got into an argument and was forced to leave. Police Officer Jonathon Westbrook says police also searched a second home before determining Villanueva-Morales wasn’t there.

Villanueva-Morales and 23-year-old Javier Alatorre are charged with four counts of first-degree murder. Alatorre was arrested later Sunday in Kansas City, Missouri. Police say Villanueva-Morales should be considered “armed and dangerous.”

___

Man sentenced for 27 armed robberies in Kansas, Missouri

KANSAS CITY – A man was sentenced in federal court Tuesday for his role in a three-months-long conspiracy that included more than 27 armed robberies, culminating in the armed robbery of a Walgreens in Blue Springs, Missouri, in which a suspect was fatally shot by law enforcement officers.

Thomas-Mo. Dept. of Corrections

Shannon R. Thomas, 29, Kansas City was sentenced by U.S. District Judge Greg Kays to life in federal prison without parole, followed by a consecutive sentence of 72 years in federal prison without parole.

On May 9, 2019, Thomas was found guilty at trial of participating in the conspiracy as well as participating in 10 armed robberies. He was also found guilty of 10 counts of brandishing a firearm in furtherance of a violent crime, and one count of being a felon in possession of a firearm. The life sentence was imposed for Thomas’s conviction of brandishing a firearm during the Walgreens robbery that resulted in the death of Jermon Seals.

Thomas and co-conspirators robbed 27 businesses in Blue Springs, Independence, North Kansas City, Raytown, and Kansas City, Missouri, and in Kansas City, Kansas, at gunpoint from Jan. 2 to March 24, 2016. In addition to the armed robberies charged in the indictment, evidence was introduced during the trial of other, uncharged robberies that were committed in furtherance of the conspiracy. Victim businesses included convenience stores, pharmacies, and other businesses.

The robberies followed a similar pattern: Two or three conspirators entered the business armed with handguns, wearing gloves, hoodies, and/or masks. The hoodies were drawn tightly over their faces to obscure their features. The employees were forced at gunpoint to hand over money from the cash register and the safe. The thieves wore the same hoodies in nearly all the robberies; Thomas wore a blue Kansas City Royals hoodie for the majority of the robberies he committed.

The spree of robberies culminated on March 24, 2016. Thomas, along with co-defendant Deonte J. Collins-Abbott, 25, of Grandview, Missouri, and Jermon Seals of Shawnee, Kansas, robbed the Walgreens at 7 Highway and Duncan in Blue Springs. Thomas placed a Springfield Armory .40-caliber semi-automatic pistol to the back of an employee’s head and took money from the front register. Collins-Abbott and Seals went over the pharmacy counter and took prescription grade cough syrup at gunpoint from the pharmacist. They left the business but were confronted by law enforcement officers as they were walking back to the vehicle. They failed to comply with the officers’ commands; Seals turned towards the officers, pointing a gun in their direction. Officers returned fire and Seals was fatally struck in the exchange. Thomas and Collins-Abbott were apprehended by officers after a short foot chase.

Collins-Abbott pleaded guilty and was sentenced to 25 years in federal prison without parole. Collins-Abbott admitted that he committed eight armed robberies between Feb. 3, 2016, and March 24, 2016.

Parrise K. Black, also known as “Kilo,” 27, of Grandview, pleaded guilty and was sentenced to 10 years in federal prison without parole. Demetrius Nelson, 26, of Kansas City, Missouri, pleaded guilty and was sentenced to eight years in federal prison without parole. Co-defendant Kevin T. Thompson-Randell, 24, of Kansas City, Missouri, pleaded guilty and was sentenced to five years in federal prison without parole.

Frank A. Garner, Jr., 25, of Grandview, pleaded guilty and is scheduled to be sentenced on Oct. 18, 2019.

Police attempt to identify man wanted for lewd behavior on KU campus

Photos courtesy KU office of public satety

DOUGLAS COUNTY —Law enforcement authorities are investigating after two female students on the University of Kansas campus reported a man exposed himself to them Tuesday morning, according to a media release from the university office of public safety.

The incident occurred on a sidewalk between Hashinger and Lewis Halls. Authorities released security camera images of the suspect who left the area in a dark 4-door vehicle.

Police need help identifying the suspect. If you have information, call police.

Jury rules for Kansas abortion clinic operator in stalking case

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A federal jury has sided with the operator of a Wichita abortion facility who contended she had reasonable grounds to seek a protection-from-stalking order against an abortion protester.

The verdict returned Tuesday follows a seven-day trial in the lawsuit filed by anti-abortion activist Mark Holick against clinic operator Julie Burkhart.

The lawsuit stems from anti-abortion protests in 2012 and 2013 in front of Burkhart’s home and neighborhood. She got a temporary protection-from-stalking order against Holick that was dismissed two years later. He then sued her.

Jurors found Holick failed to prove his claim for malicious prosecution.

Burkhart says in a news release that she opened the clinic after Dr. George Tiller was killed for providing abortions. She says that’s why she finds threats against her and her family “particularly chilling.”

Analysts: 23-day UAW strike has cost GM 165,000 vehicles

DETROIT (AP) — Industry analysts say the 23-day strike by General Motors workers has cost the company production of 165,000 cars and trucks and has passed the point where the GM can make up lost volume.

Governor Laura Kelly met with striking workers in Kansas last month-photo courtesy office of Kansas Governor

That means losses are growing for GM, even though dealers have enough inventory to get by for several more weeks.

The strike by 49,000 United Auto Workers including 2,400 in Kansas began Sept. 16.

GM made another offer Monday and talks continued Tuesday but were hung up on large economic issues.

A person briefed on the talks says the union wants hourly wage increases versus lump-sum payments favored by the company. They’re also haggling over pensions, faster wage increases for workers hired after 2007, and products for U.S. factories.

The person didn’t want to be identified because the talks are confidential.

Greyhound apologizes to man forced off bus in Kansas

FORT WORTH, Texas (AP) — Greyhound Lines has apologized for forcing a Texas man off a bus in Kansas and for accusing him of being unruly and uncooperative.

Statement from Greyhound

Mohammad Reza Sardari was traveling from Dallas to Kansas City, Missouri, in November 2017 when he was thrown off a Greyhound bus at a bus station in Wichita, Kansas.

Sardari, who is Iranian, sued Greyhound in 2018 saying the bus driver discriminated against him after looking at his ticket and seeing his name.

In a statement last month, the bus company said Sardari wasn’t unruly or uncooperative and that he was not removed from the vehicle by police as the company claimed in an earlier statement.

Greyhound apologized in the statement but maintains it didn’t discriminate against Sardari.

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