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2 OB-GYNs help with special delivery at Kansas zoo

SEDGWICK COUNTY — Officials at the Sedgwick County Zoo are sharing an inside look of the special delivery on September 7, when two Kansas OB-GYNs assisted with the birth of a baby orangutan.

Photos Sedgwick County Zoo

According to the zoo’s social media page, “When Daisy the orangutan began to show signs of labor, everything was progressing normally, until it wasn’t

Contractions had stopped and zoo staff began to notice too much blood.

Daisy had experienced a placental abruption and zoo staff called local OB-GYNs Laura Whisler and Janna Chibry to help.

There were a couple of very scary hours when we weren’t sure if either Daisy or her baby would survive. The emergency C-section saved both of their lives. Two-and-a-half weeks later, both Daisy and Lily are doing very well. Daisy is still healing and keepers are caring for Lily until Daisy is physically ready to take over.”

Whisler and Chibry are University of Kansas trained and providers at College Hill OBGYN in Wichita.

Police arrest Kan. man wanted for 15 business burglaries

SHAWNEE COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating a series of business burglaries and have a suspect in custody.

Swopes -photo Shawnee Co.

On Monday, police arrested a person of interest in at least 15 business burglaries that occurred throughout the Topeka community that spanned several months, according to Lt. Andrew Beightel.

Police booked Eric Darnell Swopes, 44, Topeka, into the Shawnee Co Department of Corrections on requested charges of burglary, theft and criminal damage of property (x15).

Kansas man dies in rear-end semi crash

BROWN COUNTY —One person died in an accident just before 5p.m. Monday in Brown County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2004 Chevy Cavalier driven by Ronnie D. Myers, 47, Hiawatha, was eastbound at 783 U.S. 36.  The vehicle rear-ended a semi that was turning into a private drive.

Myers was pronounced dead at the scene and transported to Frontier Forensics.

The semi driver Martin E. Lawrence, 53, Wetmore, was possibly injured, according to the KHP report.  Myers was not wearing a seat belt, according to the KHP.

Sheriff alerts residents to fake check scam in Kansas

CLARK COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are alerting citizens in southwest Kansas of a scam involving checks that arrived in the mail.

A citizen in Clark County received two checks in separate envelopes and one required a signature.  They came from the same sender address, had the same check paper but with different company and account information.

Fortunately, they were not cashed at local banks, according to a social media report from the Clark County Sheriff.

The sheriff reminded residents “Pay attention. If you are not expecting a check or refund from a company that you deal with, use extra caution. The citizen who received the checks wanted to share this information to help keep others safe. The sheriff’s office removed their information prior to sharing.

Reward doubled, police investigate Kan. animal cruelty case

SEDGWICK COUNTY —Law enforcement authorities are investigating a case of animal cruelty and have increased a  reward from $500 to $1000 for information leading to those responsible for cutting a month-old puppy’s ear off  with a sharp object, according to Beauties and Beasts Animal Rescue in Wichita.

Photo courtesy Beauties and Beasts Animal Rescue

Doctors at Veterinary Emergency & Specialty Hospital of Wichita performed surgery on the puppy named Brooks after the animal rescue organization rapidly received donations to cover costs of the care. 

Anyone with information on the case should contact the Wichita Police animal cruelty investigator [email protected] or you can send a message to Beauties and Beasts Animal Rescue.

 

Police K-9 assists with Kansas drug arrest

BARTON COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating two suspects on drug charges after a traffic stop.

Foster-photo Barton County
Meeks -photo Barton Co.

Just after 3a.m. Monday, a deputy sheriff on patrol conducted a traffic stop on a white Mitsubishi bearing Kansas tags in the 1000 block of Heizer in the City of Great Bend, according to Sheriff Brian Bellendir. 

During the course of the traffic stop, a Great Police Department K-9 unit arrived at the scene. Further investigation uncovered almost 5 grams of methamphetamine, marijuana and drug paraphernalia in the vehicle.  

Deputies arrested the driver, Esteban Foster, 19, of Great Bend. He was booked on charges of possession of a controlled substance, possession of marijuana, possession of drug paraphernalia as well as driving without a license.  Foster is being held in lieu of a $10,000 bond.

The passenger identified as Damaris Meeks, 18, of Great Bend was placed under arrest and booked on charges of possession of marijuana and possession of drug paraphernalia. Meeks is being held in lieu of a $2500 bond. 

State record pumpkin on display in Manhattan

MANHATTAN — The largest pumpkin on record grown in Kansas is on display at the Flint Hills Discovery Center for a short time this fall.

Photo courtesy Jacob Marintzer

The pumpkin officially weighed in on September 8, 2018 in Dewey, OK at 1,176 lbs., a record for any Kansas grown pumpkin, according to grower, owner Jacob Marintzer of Westmoreland, Kansas.

This pumpkin beat Marintzer own official record set in 2016 of 940lbs.

The pumpkin is on display at the Discovery Center Atrium until October 5, so there is no fee to see it.

The seeds, and not the pumpkin are where the real excitement is, according to Marintzer. While the giant pumpkin is a great spectacle to behold, it’s the price that a giant pumpkin seed fetches that really makes all the work worthwhile.

The price for a pumpkin seed that comes from a pumpkin this large can run between $15 to $600 per seed. More info can be found here: www.bigpumpkins.com

The family also has a Youtube channel where they have documented the progress of their pumpkin growing process.

Marintzer described the growing process, “There is a main organization called the GPC Giant Pumpkin Commonwealth. This is the main group which makes all of the rules and regulations. Under them are all of the clubs, some states have 1 club some states have many clubs. These clubs must pay their fees to be part of the GPC and they also must have a certified scale to weigh these pumpkins. I took my pumpkin to a weigh-off in Oklahoma. I took it there and not the State fair because the state fair isn’t part of the GPC and they don’t have a certified scale so any pumpkins weighed there don’t count as an official state record.

The largest ever weighed in Kansas unofficially was 1040 pounds. I had the official state record 2 years ago at 938 pounds that pumpkin was weight in Pawnee City, NE. The pumpkin I grew this year set the record at 1176 pounds. So right now it is the largest pumpkin ever grown in Kansas. Somebody could weigh one here in the upcoming weeks and beat it but I’m not aware of any bigger at the moment.”

 

 

Kansas man jailed for criminal use of explosives

SEDGWICK COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating a suspect in connection with use of explosives at his home.

Redd -photo Sedgwick County

Just after 4:30p.m. Sunday, police responded to a check for explosion call in the 3300 Block of South Glenn in Wichita, according to office Charley Davidson.

Just after the initial call, officers were also sent to report of an injury associated with an explosion at a home in the 3300 Block of South Vine. At the residence, officers contacted 43-year-old Travis Redd of Wichita.  According to investigators, Redd used a large firework in a manner in which it was not designed to explode an item on the ground behind his residence, according to Davidson.

When the firework detonated, fragments hit Redd in the chest.  He was transported to an area hospital for treatment of non-life-threatening injuries and released. Officers then booked him into the Sedgwick County Jail for criminal use explosives, according to Davidson.

There were no other injuries.

The Wichita Police Department Bomb Squad and Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms agents assisted with the investigation.

As aid checks go out, farmers worry bailout won’t be enough

By JULIET LINDERMAN
Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — Farmers across the United States will soon begin receiving government checks as part of a billion-dollar bailout to buoy growers experiencing financial strain from President Donald Trump’s trade disputes with China.

But even those poised for big payouts worry it won’t be enough. And while support for Trump is near unwavering in the heartland, some growers say that with the November election nearing, such disappointing aid outcomes could potentially affect their vote.

“It’s pretty obvious that the rural agriculture communities helped elect this administration, but the way things are going I believe farmers are going to have to vote with their checkbook when it comes time,” said Kevin Skunes, a corn and soybean grower from Arthur, North Dakota and president of the National Corn Growers Association.

Corn farmers get the smallest slice of the aid pie. Corn groups estimate a loss of 44 cents per bushel, but they’re poised to receive just a single penny per bushel.

“If these issues haven’t been resolved, there could be a change in the way farmers vote,” Skunes said. “A person has to consider all things.”

Farmers are already feeling the impact of Trump’s trade tiffs with China and other countries. China has hit back hard, responding with its own set of tariffs on U.S. agricultural products and other goods.
The Trump administration is providing up to $12 billion in emergency relief funds for American farmers, with roughly $6 billion in an initial round. The three-pronged plan includes $4.7 billion in payments to corn, cotton, soybean, dairy, pork and sorghum farmers. The rest is for developing new foreign markets for American-grown commodities and purchasing more than two dozen select products, including certain fresh fruits and vegetables, nuts, meat and dairy.

Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue announced last month that soybean growers will get the largest checks, at $1.65 per bushel for a total of $3.6 billion. China is the world’s leading buyer of American soybeans, purchasing roughly 60 percent of the U.S. crop. But since Beijing imposed a 25 percent tariff on soybean, imports prices have plunged.

The lack of initial detail about how the calculations were made left farmers scratching their heads.
Asked about the confusion, Rob Johansson, the Agriculture Department’s chief economist, responded that the USDA took into account a number of factors “including the share of production that is exported and the value of trade directly affected by the retaliatory tariffs.”

“The level of damage is not the same for each commodity,” he said in a written response to questions submitted by The Associated Press.

He estimated that there would be more than 784,000 applications for relief.

The USDA has since released a detailed analysis of how the department made its calculations.

The breakdown has stunned corn and wheat farmers who say the payments are uneven and won’t do much of anything to help keep struggling farms afloat.

A lobbying group that represents wheat growers is challenging the way the administration determined payments for wheat farmers, who are set to receive 14 cents a bushel. Chandler Goule, CEO of the National Association of Wheat Growers, said the USDA assumed U.S. wheat would be sold to China this year when it made its calculations. But the assumption was flawed, he said.

China typically makes its requests for American wheat between March and June. U.S. wheat farmers have sold, on average, 20 million bushels of wheat to China over the past three years. But none came this year, Goule said, as Trump escalated his threatening rhetoric on trade with Beijing. He hopes the per-bushel rate for wheat goes up if there’s a second round of payments.

“I am very certain that we will not sell any wheat to China this year,” Goule said. “The window we sell in has come and gone.”

The response among farmers has been mixed. While some are grateful for the help, most are eager for the trade disputes to be quickly resolved.

“Nobody wants to have an aid package. I mean, if you’re a farmer you’re in the business of producing a crop. We just want a fair price for it,” said Joel Schreurs, a soybean and corn producer near Tyler in southwestern Minnesota who sits on the board of both the American Soybean Association and the Minnesota Soybean Growers Association.

His personal operation is about 1,000 acres. He farms an additional 500 acres with his son-in-law and other relatives. He estimates that the tariffs would cost him $40,000 to $50,000 in lost income and that he would get $16,000 to $20,000 in emergency aid.

Schreurs worries that it will be hard for farmers to get back the buyers they’ll lose as a result of the trade wars. “And in the short term we have to find another home for those beans, otherwise they’re going to pile up and it will keep prices depressed,” he said.

In the Midwest, growers typically farm both corn and soybeans. Those farmers would get payments for both under the program, which began sign-ups Sept. 4.

Perdue said checks could start going out as soon as the end of September for crops that have already been harvested; payouts are based on yield.

In a recent C-SPAN interview, Perdue said he understands growers’ frustrations.

“Farmers always live in unpredictable times,” he said. “They’re very resilient, but obviously the longer trade issues go on the longer it bears on them regarding what is the future.”

Jack Maloney says corn farmers will be getting so little in bailout aid that for roughly 200,000 bushels of corn a farmer would get only about $2,000 for their losses.

“That’s not even beer money,” said the Brownsburg, Indiana, corn and soybean grower.

Maloney, 62, began farming full time in 1978 and now has two employees. He said some fellow farmers are angry and upset.

“Agriculture has always been the butt of all the trade wars,” he said, adding that this isn’t the first time he’s seen trade disruptions affect the agricultural markets.

Maloney said he had already cut back on expenses during the past three years and hasn’t taken a paycheck from his farm for more than a year because of tough times before the trade war began. He said the recent tumult has dashed hopes for stabilizing agricultural markets anytime soon.

“We were seeing a little light at the end of the tunnel — the markets were improving a little,” he said, “and then this tariff thing happened and this trade war.”

Daniel Weinand worries the market downturn could be the death knell for his farm. Weinand, 30, grows corn, canola and yellow peas on 900 acres of rented land near Hazen, North Dakota. He said he expects to reap about 30,000 bushels of corn, and to receive about $300 in aid.

“A penny a bushel on corn, it’s not that it’s entirely worthless. But it almost is,” he said. “I don’t know how many more years I can weather.”

Ben & Jerry creating special flavor to support Kan. congressional candidate

MONTPELIER, Vt. (AP) — The founders of Ben & Jerry’s ice cream in Bernie Sanders’ home state are putting their ice cream expertise to work to support seven congressional candidates in the midterm elections who they call progressive.

Vermont’s Ben Cohen and Jerry Greenfield, known for their clever marketing and quirky flavors, are working with political action committee MoveOn to create ice cream flavors that reflect the values of each of the candidates. They are seeking the public’s help in naming the flavors. After picking winners, Cohen says he will make about 40 pints of each flavor by hand in his kitchen to be raffled off to support the candidates.

“We need a Democratic majority to check President Trump’s unrestrained power. And we also need to send progressive champions to Congress who will fix our healthcare system with Medicare for All, protect clean air and water, and get big money out of politics,” the duo said in a press release on MoveOn.org.

Wichita civil rights lawyer James Thompson is the Democratic candidate for the 4th Congressional District seat.
CREDIT COURTESY OF THE THOMPSON CAMPAIGN

The candidates are James Thompson in Kansas, Jess King in Pennsylvania, Lauren Underwood in Illinois, Aftab Pureval in Ohio, J.D. Scholten in Iowa, Ammar Campa Najjar in California and Stephany Rose Spaulding in Colorado.

The flavors will be announced on a rolling basis starting on Oct. 7 at Iowa State University in Ames, Iowa, according to a consultant working with Cohen and Greenfield. People can sign up starting Oct. 1 to enter the raffle to win the limited edition pints. Winners will be announced Nov. 1 and the ice cream will be shipped by mid-November.

Scholten’s campaign in Iowa wasn’t notified of the ice cream challenge. “It’s fantastic,” said Irene Lin, his campaign manager. “We’re very, very grateful,” she said, adding that supporters are having fun trying to come up with flavor names and ingredients.

It’s not the first time the ice cream makers have tried to sweeten a candidate’s campaign. Cohen created “Bernie’s Yearning” in 2016, during Sen. Sanders’ run for the Democratic nomination for president in 2016.

The ice creams are not associated with the company, Ben & Jerry’s Homemade, Inc.

9-year-old Kan. boy accidentally shoots, wounds sister

MERRIAM, Kan. (AP) — Authorities say a 9-year-old boy has accidentally shot his 10-year-old sister in the leg in suburban Kansas City.

Police on the scene of Saturday’s shooting investigation-photo courtesy KCTV

Police in Merriam, Kansas, said in a news release that the shooting happened around 8:30 p.m. Saturday after the gun was left unattended. Police say the girl’s wound wasn’t life threatening. She was taken to a hospital.

No one has been arrested. The shooting remains under investigation.

Police urged gun owners to properly secure their firearms in the news release.

Woman critically injured in Kansas house fire

SEDGWICK COUNTY — One person was critically injured in a Kansas house fire on Monday.

Crews on the scene of Tuesday’s house fire-photo courtesy KWCH

Just before 2:30a.m., fire crews responded to a house fire in the 300 Block of South Vassar in Wichita, according to Captain Jose Ocadiz.

The calling party was inside the home at the time of the 911 call and as fire crews responded, according to Ocadiz.

Upon arrival, first responders found smoke and fire coming from the front of the home.  The engine company fire captain forced open the back door and found a female victim and pulled her to safety. She was transported code red to the Via Christi Burn Unit, according Ocadiz.

The fire investigation unit determined the fire was started by someone smoking while on oxygen, according to Ocadiz.

Damage to the home was approximately $40,000.  Red Cross responded to assist two others victims including a grandchild at the home.

Priest defrocked for alleged child abuse still holds Kan. medical license

KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — A former Kansas priest still holds medical licenses in Kansas and Missouri despite being defrocked this year after Archdiocese of Kansas City leaders determined that he abused three minors decades ago.

The Missouri Board of Registration for the Healing Arts is investigating the allegations against 71-year-old John Wisner, who remains a licensed psychiatrist in both states. The Kansas board declined to comment on whether it was looking into Wisner’s case.

Wisner declined to comment on the allegations or the investigation. It’s unclear if he’s still practicing medicine.

Patrick Wall is a former Catholic priest who works as an investigator for a law firm that represents sexual abuse victims. Wall says the Kansas archdiocese should’ve reported Wisner to licensing boards when it learned of the allegations six years ago.

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