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

Tips help police arrest Kan. felon wanted for stabbing woman

Dunn photo Sedgwick Co.
Security camera images of the suspect just before the stabbing

SEDGWICK COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities continue to investigate a September 23, stabbing in Wichita that left a 28-year-old woman in critical condition and have made an arrest.

Following a release of home security camera video and a photo of the suspect’s shirt, police received enough information from citizens to arrest 30-year-old Wade Dunn on requested charges of attempted first degree murder, criminal possession of a weapon and a federal warrant from the U.S. Marshal’s office, according to Police Chief Gordon Ramsay.

Police arrested him early Saturday without incident.

Dunn is a convicted felon and has previous convictions for Criminal threat, theft and burglary, according to the Kansas Department of Corrections.

The victim remains hospitalized in the intensive care unit but has been able to talk to investigators, according to Ramsay. There is no connection between the victim and the suspect.

Ramsay thanked citizens for their tips in helping them make the arrest.

KHP looking for witnesses in fatal hit and run crash

WYANDOTTE COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating a hit and run crash that killed a woman walking along northbound Interstate 35 in Wyandotte County at 7th street.

According to the Kansas Highway Patrol the woman was struck just after midnight.

Police have not released her identity.  The KHP is asking any witnesses to call *47 with any information regarding this incident.

The Latest: Child hospitalized after shooting, suspect arrested in Kansas City

Webb photo Jackson Co.

KANSAS CITY (AP) — A 27-year-old Kansas City man is charged in a shooting that wounded a 5-year-old boy.

The Kansas City Star reports Maurice Webb was charged Friday after a shooting Thursday in Independence. The child was shot in the arm.

Webb, who was on parole and being monitored with an ankle bracelet, was arrested more than 20 miles (32.2 kilometers) away at a restaurant in Kansas City. He is charged with unlawful use of a weapon, armed criminal action and unlawful possession of a firearm,

Charging documents say a man and woman were arguing over the custody of their 18-month-old child.

Webb, who was sleeping in a nearby car, heard the woman yell for help and allegedly shot several rounds into the man’s vehicle as it was driving away.

___

KANSAS CITY (AP) — Authorities say one person has been arrested after a child was shot and wounded in a suburban Kansas City.

Police on the scene of the shooting investigation photo courtesy KSHB TV

Officers in Independence, Missouri, responded to the scene around 2:30 p.m. Tuesday. Police spokesman Officer John Syme says the shooting happened “during some type of altercation.” The child is in stable condition at a hospital.

The suspect was arrested more than 20 miles away at a restaurant in Kansas City. No other details were immediately released, including the child’s age or what led to the altercation.

Reward offered, FBI working to identify Kan. bank robbery suspect

SEDGWICK COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities continue their investigation of bank robbery and have released new security camera images of the suspect.

Bank robbery suspect photo courtesy Wichita Police

Just after 2:30 p.m. September 16, police responded to a bank robbery call at the Fidelity Bank in the 2100 block of North Bradley Fair in Wichita, according to officer Charley Davidson.

Upon arrival, officers contacted employees who reported a suspect entering the bank and handing a note to a teller indicating a gun. Money was given to the suspect who then fled the business on foot. There were no injuries in this case.

Police and the FBI are still working to  identify the suspect.  We’re asking for tips to be submitted to Crime Stoppers.  If a tip leads to an arrest, the tipster will be eligible for a cash reward of up to $2,500.

Seeking nominations for Kansas Water Legacy and “Be the Vision”

KWO

TOPEKA – The Kansas Water Office (KWO) is accepting nominations for the Water Legacy Award as well as the “Be the Vision” recognition to be presented at the Governor’s Water Conference on the Future of Water in Kansas November 7-8 at a new location, the Hyatt Regency in Wichita, Kansas.

The Water Legacy Award recipient will be selected based on significant contributions and lasting impacts on the future of water in the state. Past recipients of the award include: Wayne Bossert in 2015, Joe Harkins in 2016, Pat Sauble in 2017 and David Pope in 2018.

“Be the Vision” recipients, which can be individuals, municipalities, companies or organizations, will be selected as an entity or individual taking extraordinary measures to conserve, reuse or adopt better practices to help ensure the future of our state’s water resources.

The deadline for both of these nominations is October 11. In addition to these awards, student poster research and photo contest entries are being accepted. Each of these will be part of the upcoming conference.

Conference registration is now available online at www.kwo.ks.gov. Conference details, tentative agenda, brochure, speakers, sponsors and hotel information can be found online as well. Deadline to register for the conference is October 24.

The Governor’s Conference on the Future of Water in Kansas is hosted by the KWO and K-State /Kansas Water Resource Institute. Major sponsors for the event include 96 Agri Sales, Inc., Black & Veatch, Burns & McDonnell and Great Lakes Dredge & Dock.

US probe of vaping illnesses focuses on THC from marijuana

NEW YORK (AP) — U.S. health officials said Friday that their investigation into an outbreak of severe vaping-related illnesses is increasingly focused on products that contain the marijuana compound THC.

Most of the 800 people who got sick vaped THC, the ingredient in marijuana that causes a high, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. But officials said they didn’t know if the THC is the problem or some other substance added to the vaping liquid, such as thickeners.

“The outbreak currently is pointing to a greater concern around THC-containing products,” said the CDC’s Dr. Anne Schuchat.

So far, investigators have not identified a particular electronic cigarette, vaping device, liquid or ingredient behind the outbreak. But officials say patients have mentioned the name Dank Vapes most frequently. Many of the people who got sick in Illinois and Wisconsin said they used prefilled THC cartridges sold in Dank Vapes packaging.

“It’s a generic product name that doesn’t really tie back to one store or one distributor,” said Dr. Jennifer Layden, chief medical officer for the Illinois Department of Public Health.

“Folks are getting it from friends or folks on the street, with no understanding of where it came from prior to that,” she said Friday.

Until a cause is pinned down, the CDC continues to advise Americans to consider avoiding all vaping products, though the agency on Friday added the phrase “particularly those containing THC.”

“We didn’t feel comfortable dropping the broader recommendation yet,” said Schuchat.

This week, the CDC reported 805 confirmed and probable cases of the lung illness. Thirteen people have died. Only the U.S. has reported such an outbreak, although Canadian officials this week confirmed that country’s first case.

On Friday, the agency provided more details in two reports:

— The first case in the U.S. began in late March. Cases ramped up in late June and rose dramatically in late July.

— Median age for the illnesses is 23. But the median age of those who died is much older — 50.

— Nationally, 9 in 10 cases required hospitalization. Many young and previously healthy adolescents and young adults needed machines to help them breathe.

—The most illnesses have occurred in California, Illinois, Texas and Wisconsin.

— In Illinois and Wisconsin, patients mentioned 87 different product names and many vaped more than one.

Doctors say the illnesses resemble an inhalation injury. Symptoms have included shortness of breath, fatigue, chest pain, diarrhea and vomiting.

Officials continue to find a substantial numbers of U.S. patients — the new report says 16% — who said they vaped only nicotine, and not THC. But the report noted that in Wisconsin, five patients who initially denied using products with THC turned out to have used them.

In Wisconsin and Illinois, recreational marijuana use is currently illegal.

Since 2016, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration has lightly regulated the manufacture and ingredients used in nicotine-based e-cigarettes. But there is no FDA review of THC products, which are illegal under federal law.

The outbreak of illnesses and a surge in underage use of e-cigarettes has brought demands for tighter regulation from politicians, public health officials and parents.

Autism study shows atypical brain activity when coordinating visual and motor information

People with autism performed a precision grip-force test like this one while being scanned inside an MRI machine. (Credit: Life Span Institute/Leilani Photographs)

KU NEWS SERVICE

LAWRENCE — A new study in the Journal of Neurophysiology by researchers at the University of Kansas Life Span Institute is the first to look at functional brain activity in people with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) while they performed precision visuomotor behavior — in this case, a grip-force test.

The authors found new evidence sensorimotor changes in people with autism involve abnormal cortical and subcortical organization “that may contribute to key clinical issues in patients.”

People with autism performed a precision grip-force test while being scanned inside an MRI machine. They watched a display containing two horizontal bars set against a black background. The subjects controlled the bars in specific ways by pressing a device in their right hand. So did a control group of people without ASD.

“In areas of the brain for dynamically incorporating and adjusting your motor behavior based on information you’re receiving, those circuits were deficient,” said lead author Kathryn Unruh, a postdoctoral researcher at KU’s Life Span Institute and Kansas Center for Autism Research and Training (K-CART). “But then we also show that people with autism are potentially compensating for those deficits by using other areas of the brain.”

While ASD is diagnosed based on deficits in social-communication skills and the presence of certain restricted and repetitive behaviors, those are difficult for researchers to objectively measure, as opposed to brain activity during visuomotor tasks, Unruh said.

“Motor behaviors are deficient across individuals with autism, regardless of their level of functional ability,” she said. “Sometimes it may look like something very subtle in their eye movements that you would never be able to see without special equipment. It could look like handwriting problems or sometimes could also look like having problems with more general motor coordination, like playing sports.”

The precision grip test used by the researchers allowed them to isolate and examine one task and its associated brain activity as they measure differences among 20 subjects with ASD and 18 without.

“We’re able to quantify this very precisely,” Unruh said. “Trying to put a number on someone’s social ability or their communication — it is very difficult. So, this is an attractive way of measuring behavior. Here, we’re getting a much closer approximation of what the brain is actually doing.”

Senior author Matt Mosconi, director of K-CART, an associate scientist in the Life Span Institute and associate professor in the Clinical Child Psychology Program at KU, said in ASD patients sensorimotor problems can be frustrating for them, and they often go overlooked because communication and behavioral issues are the things others usually focus on.

“Sensorimotor issues, or difficulties coordinating and controlling our movements, are common in ASD and often a major source of frustration as they affect many of our daily activities,” he said. “Studying sensorimotor issues is therefore important for understanding the diverse challenges experienced by individuals with ASD.”

Not only did the study show the brain is organized differently in individuals with ASD in terms of its function for basic sensorimotor behaviors, but these functions can differ between people with autism.

“Importantly, as we know every individual with ASD shows different sets of skills and challenges, we also found differences in brain organization varied across our individuals highlighting the importance of testing measures of brain function in relation to different behaviors, rather than just relying on simple comparisons of individuals with ASD and individuals without ASD,” Mosconi said.

The researchers found ASD patients’ ability to rapidly integrate multisensory information and precisely adjust motor output is compromised. Further, reduced ability “to maintain steady-state levels of sensorimotor output may contribute to multiple developmental issues affecting social-communication abilities and cognitive processing.”

Along with Unruh and Mosconi, authors of the new study are Laura Martin of the Hoglund Brain Imaging Center and Department of Preventive Medicine and Public Health at KU Medical Center, Grant Magnon of the University of Pittsburgh, David Vaillancourt of the University of Florida and John Sweeney of the University of Cincinnati.

The researchers are actively seeking individuals with ASD and individuals without ASD ages 10-35 years for ongoing NIH-funded studies of sensorimotor behavior and brain function. Contact [email protected] for more information.

2 from SW Kan. arrested in Colorado after twice fleeing from police

BACA COUNTY, Colo. – Two Kansas residents were arrested Friday in Baca County, Colo. after twice fleeing from police this week when authorities attempted to arrest them for outstanding warrants.

Moody photo Grant Co.
Shoemaker photo Seward Co.

According to a media release from the Kansas Bureau of Investigation, Nicholas D. Moody, 40, of Ulysses, had three warrants issued for his arrest. The warrants were out of Grant County for two counts of distribution of methamphetamine, and one count of distribution of marijuana. Brandy K. Shoemaker, 38, of Ulysses, had a warrant out of Finney County for absconding from community corrections.

On Wednesday, Sept. 25, the two were observed leaving Liberal, Kan., traveling north on Highway 83 in a tan colored Toyota passenger car. Moody was driving and Shoemaker was a passenger in the vehicle. At approximately 9:45 p.m., a traffic stop was initiated by the Kansas Highway Patrol, and Moody and Shoemaker fled the scene. The Kansas Bureau of Investigation (KBI), the Finney County Sheriff’s Office, the Haskell County Sheriff’s Office, the Seward County Sheriff’s Office, and the Liberal Police Department responded to help locate the vehicle. Despite a short pursuit, they were able to elude police.

On Friday, Sept. 27, information was received by the KBI that indicated that Moody and Shoemaker might be in Baca County, Colo. The KBI gained the valuable assistance of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and the Baca County Sheriff’s Office to help locate the offenders.

Friday, at approximately 9 a.m. MDT, the FBI, the KBI, and the Baca County Sheriff’s Office located Moody and Shoemaker. The offenders again fled authorities, so the FBI, and the Baca County Sheriff’s Office engaged in a vehicle pursuit for approximately 15 miles until the two surrendered near a ravine northwest of Springfield, Colo.

The Baca County Sheriff’s Office and the FBI took Moody and Shoemaker into custody, and they were booked into the Baca County Jail. Extradition proceedings are expected. Nothing further will be released at this time.

76-year-old Kansas man enters plea to attempted rape of 4-year-old

Galen Hurt photo Leavenworth Co.

LEAVENWORTH, Kan. (AP) — A 76-year-old Kansas man has pleaded guilty to trying to rape a 4-year-old girl.

Galen Hurt, of Linwood, pleaded Thursday in Leavenworth County court to attempted rape and aggravated child endangerment.

Hurt was originally charged in 2018 with rape of a child. Investigators say the girl told her mother that Hurt touched her inappropriately while she was at his house.

Leavenworth County Attorney Todd Thompson said his decision to offer the plea out of consideration for the girl, who is now 6.

Update: Sheriff works to identify man who allegedly tried to lure boy into car

SALINE COUNTY — According to a media release from the Saline County Sheriff, just after 7:30a.m. Friday, deputies responded to a belated suspicious activity call that occurred in the 600 block of East Shipton Road in Saline County.

Google map

A juvenile, waiting on his bus in that area, reported he was approached by a white or possibly Hispanic male and ordered to get in the man’s vehicle. The juvenile ran away and the vehicle fled the scene.

A short time later, a bus driver observed the suspect vehicle driving in the area. The Sheriff’s Office immediately saturated the area, conducting traffic stops on vehicles matching the description, but the suspect is still outstanding.

The male suspect has been described as a shorter, medium-built, white or Hispanic male with dark hair (possibly black), which appeared combed to the side and appeared to be over his ears. The suspect possibly had a dark goatee or facial hair and a scruffy appearance. The suspect was wearing a white tank top and had a gold necklace around his neck. The suspect was described as having tattoos on both arms and he spoke with a low, scratchy voice.

The suspect vehicle has been described as a dark-colored, possibly black or dark green, older model four-door passenger car with tinted windows. The vehicle was covered in dust and very dirty. The vehicle’s appearance was described as similar to an older model Pontiac Grand Prix or Grand Am or an older model Buick LeSabre.

—————-

SALINE COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating report of a man who allegedly tried to lure a grade-school boy into his car just before 7:30 a.m. Friday in Saline County.

A Bennington school bus driver reported that when she stopped in the 600 block of East Shipton Road to pick up a student, the boy told her that a man tried to lure him into a car, according to Saline County Sheriff Roger Soldan.

The school bus driver did not see the driver but saw the car described as a dirty black or dark green 1980s Pontiac Grand Prix or Grand Am.

The boy had come down the drive to wait for the bus when the car pulled up.

When the man, who the boy described as a scruffy white male in his late 30s, attempted to lure the boy into the car, the boy started running back to his house until he saw the school bus pull up.

Soldan asked that anyone in the area with home surveillance video to please check the video for the car described and to contact the Saline County Sheriff’s Office at 785-826-6500 if their video captured images of the car.

Kansas sheriff’s deputy arrested for alleged theft

SEDGWICK COUNTY —Law enforcement authorities are investigating a suspect for alleged theft.

A theft occurred on September 5, at the Hidden Lake Golf Course, according Lt. Tim Myers with the Sedgwick County Sheriff’s Department.

Whiteman photo Sedgwick Co.

Authorities believed 23-year-old Sedgwick County Detention Deputy Alexander Whiteman took a range finder from the pro shop. During the investigation into the theft of the range finder, it was discovered Whiteman also took $320 in U.S. currency from a residence on the same day, according to Myers.

A warrant for Whiteman’s arrest was issued Friday and he was taken into custody on requested charges of theft. Whiteman has been employed by the Sheriff’s Office for approximately 2 years and 2 months.

He has been placed on administrative leave.

 

Police: Shots fired but no active shooter at Kan. high school

SEDGWICK COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are  investigating a reported of shots fired that temporarily locked down East High School in Wichita, according to Wichita Police Chief Gordon Ramsay.

Wichita Police Chief Gordon Ramsay near the scene of Friday’s shooting investigation -photo courtesy WPD

Police responded to the report just after noon near Roe and Douglas Street. Two cars were involved in the shots fired as they were traveling southbound.  Police do not know if students were in the cars.  One passing vehicle had a window shot out, according to Ramsay. There are no reports of injuries.

East High School was immediately placed on lockdown. Due to social media interaction, there was some panic about an active shooter at the school, according to Ramsay. There is not and was not an active shooter incident at East High School.  Police are now sure what or if the shooting had a connection to the school.

Copyright Eagle Radio | FCC Public Files | EEO Public File