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Sheriff: Charges filed against suspects who shot pitbull puppy

PAWNEE COUNTY —Law enforcement authorities have requested charges against two individuals in connection with a puppy  found shot in mid August that had to be euthanized in Pawnee County, according to Sheriff Scott King.

The approximately 7 or 8-month-old male pit bull puppy was found on O Road between 110th and 120th Roads just north of Larned, according to Sheriff Scott King.  Someone shot the dog eight times with a .22 caliber rifle

With the assistance of social media, the sheriff’s office posted photos on Facebook and followed leads.

At the time, the sheriff said they would even appreciate anonymous leads on who owned the dog, past history, or other circumstances.

Authorities will identity the individuals after formal charges are filed.

Police identify Kan. woman who died after crash into utility pole

SEDGWICK COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating a fatal Monday night crash and have identified the victim.

First responders on the scene of the fatal crash photo courtesy KWCH

Just after 10p.m. officers were dispatched to an injury accident at the intersection of West 53rd Street North and North Charles Street in Wichita, according to officer Kevin Wheeler.

Upon arrival, they found a partially overturned Ford Escape and a black Honda Crosstour that had collided. After the vehicles collided, the Escape struck an electric utility pole and overturned. Officers located 28-year-old Sierra Frost inside of the Escape unresponsive. EMS performed life-saving measures, but Frost died from her injuries.

The 27-year-old male driver of the Ford was transported to a local hospital with serious, but non-life-threatening injuries. The 72-year-old male driver of the Honda was uninjured.

The investigation revealed that the Ford was southbound on Charles Street and ran a stop sign at W. 53rd Street, according to Wheeler. His vehicle struck the Honda, which was traveling west on 53rd Street.

GOP Kansas state school board member running for US Senate

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A Republican member of the Kansas State Board of Education who shares retiring GOP U.S. Sen. Pat Roberts’ last name is running to replace him in Washington.

Steve Roberts -photo KSBE

Steve Roberts of Overland Park filed paperwork Tuesday with the state to claim a spot on the ballot in the August primary.

Pat Roberts is not seeking re-election after four terms.

Steve Roberts is a math tutor who developed his own online math course who has served on the state school board since 2013. Running for the Senate means he can’t seek another term on the board in 2020.

Other Republicans running for the Senate include ex-Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach, U.S. Rep. Roger Marshall of western Kansas, Kansas Senate President Susan Wagle and former Kansas City Chiefs player David Lindstrom.

Cerner Corporation cuts more jobs in Kansas City

KANSAS CITY (AP) — Cerner Corp. has cut 130 jobs, including 60 in the Kansas City area.

Cerner’s headquarters in North Kansas City.
photo by ELANA GORDON -Kansas News Service

The layoffs announced Tuesday come after the North Kansas City-based company laid off 255 workers in early September.

The health care information technology company said the job reductions comes as it looks for ways to diversify its current operations.

Cerner is the Kansas City area’s largest private employer, with about 14,000 workers across the metropolitan area.

Cerner says it remains committed to creating jobs in Kansas City and has hired several thousand workers this year.

The company recently notified federal regulators that Chief Operating Office Mike Nill will step down at the beginning of next year. The 23-year veteran is among three top executives to leave in recent months.

Police: Man stole truck while employees made home delivery

SALINE COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating a suspect on theft charges after an arrest by the Kansas Highway Patrol.

Watson photo Saline Co.

Just after 2:30p.m. Friday, employees with Lowe’s in Salina were making a delivery  in the 300 block of West South Street in Salina and left the truck running so they could use the power lift, according to Salina Police Captain Paul Forrester.

When the employees came out of the residence, the 17-foot 2016 Isuzu box truck with $400 worth of tools, a $1,000 black LG refrigerator, and a company cellphone still on board was missing.

A couple of hours later, a  Kansas Highway Patrol trooper spotted the truck headed westbound on Interstate 70 just west of the Hedville exit.

The trooper stopped the truck and arrested Carlo Watson, 53, of San Francisco, Calif., on suspicion of felony theft and operating a motor vehicle without a valid driver’s license, Forrester said.

All property was returned undamaged.

Trailer with thousands of meals for homeless vets stolen in Kansas

photo courtesy FISH Lenexa

LENEXA, Kan. (AP) — Lenexa police are investigating the theft of thousands of meals intended for homeless veterans.

A trailer containing meals packed by bank employees last week was stolen last week. The meals were intended for Friends In Service of Heroes, a veteran service organization.

The trailer carried 12,100 meal packets, with each packet making eight meals — for a total of nearly 97,000 meals. The food was going to be delivered to the Kansas City VA Medical Center Nov. 21.

Police say the 5-by-8 interstate trailer was parked at the Friends In Service Of Heroes headquarters in Lenexa when it was stolen between 8 p.m. Saturday and Monday morning. The trailer has two bumper stickers with the FISH logo and Johnson County, Kansas, license plate 133 KMA.

Wellington couple donates $1.6 million to Kansas State

MANHATTAN — The estate of Otis and Wanda Gilliland, Wellington, has given $1.6 million to Kansas State University, according to a media release from the university.

Photo courtesy KSU Foundation

This gift has established the Gilliland K-State Family Scholarship, which creates match opportunities for 50 scholarships in support of students in the university’s College of Business Administration.

New gifts of $30,000 will be matched with $30,000 from the Gillilands’ gift. Also, $10,000 will go into an expendable scholarship fund, making $2,000 scholarships immediately available to students for up to five years. The remaining $50,000 will go into the endowment, ensuring future generations of Wildcats will receive scholarships as well.

Both Otis and Wanda Gilliland graduated from Kansas State University. Otis Gilliland earned a bachelor’s degree in electrical engineering from the Carl R. Ice College of Engineering in 1948 and a bachelor’s in business administration from the College of Business Administration in 1949. Wanda Gilliland earned her bachelor’s degree in interior design in 1949 from the College of Health and Human Sciences. Otis Gilliland worked as an engineer for Boeing Aircraft Company in Wichita  before his retirement in 1985. Wanda Gilliland died in 2013, and Otis Gilliland died in July 2019.

“The scholarships made possible from the Gilliland family’s gift will have a profound impact on our student body,” said Kevin Gwinner, Edgerley family dean of the College of Business Administration. “With these scholarships, we will attract more student leaders, further challenge high-achieving students, and fully engage those who desire our unique academic offerings and extracurricular experiences that make our business graduates so highly demanded by employers. Because these scholarships will be endowed, the Gillilands’ generosity toward the business college will be felt for generations.”

Kansas woman rescued from water after deer carcass crash

LYON COUNTY — A Kansas woman avoided serious injury Monday following an accident and water rescue.

First responders on the scene of Monday’s water rescue photo by Tagan Trahoo courtesy KVOE

Just after 6p.m., deputies were dispatched to northbound Interstate 35 near 6th Avenue in Lyon County for a vehicle in the water on the south side, according to Deputy Jody Myers.

A Honda Fit driven by Danelle Hagan, 42, Wichita, struck a deer carcass lying in the left lane of the highway.

She lost control of the the Honda and the vehicle slid down an embankment coming to rest in about three and a half feet of water.

She was able to exit the Honda and get on top of it, according to Myers.

A passerby reported the accident. Lyon County-Emporia Water Rescue was able to extend a ladder to the Honda for Hagan to get to solid ground. She was treated on scene and not transported by Lyon County EMS.

She was wearing her seatbelt at the time of the accident, according to the sheriff’s department.

 

Man, woman and child killed in fire near Kansas City

CLINTON, Mo. (AP) — Authorities say a man, woman and young girl have been killed in an apartment fire in Missouri.

Clinton Fire Chief Leo Huff says the fire was reported around 2:20 a.m. Tuesday. He says a second story apartment in the 12-unit building was in a free burning state when crews arrived. The blaze was brought under control within about 20 minutes, and the victims were found inside. Their names weren’t immediately released. He says the girl was 4 or 5 years old.

The cause of the fire is under investigation, and Huff said he didn’t know where it started. One other unit in the apartment building also sustained water and fire damage.

Clinton is about 75 miles southeast of Kansas City.

Parents: Kan. foster care system is chaotic, deceptive, traumatizing

Shelley Owens of Topeka, right, attended a protest of the Kansas foster care system Saturday, saying her three grandchildren were arbitrarily taken from her. She said the agency has traumatized the children and her family.
EVERT NELSON / TOPEKA CAPITAL-JOURNAL

 
Kansas News Service

Parents of kids who are in the Kansas foster care system described it Saturday as chaotic, deceptive and traumatizing to children.

About two dozen people rallied on the steps of the statehouse in Topeka, calling on lawmakers to bring more accountability to the Kansas Department for Children and Families, an agency long under fire for losing kids and housing them in offices.

Shelley Owens of Topeka came to the protest hoping to find help for her three grandchildren, who were taken from her and her husband recently without warning. The children, ages 1, 2 and 10, were placed in Kansas City, Kansas, but Owens said she rarely sees them because of DCF’s “miscommunication, abuse of power and lies.”

“It’s been traumatic,” Owens said. “They said they’d help us but they have lied to us from the beginning.”

The protest was organized by parents after a series of stories by KCUR and the Topeka Capital-Journal brought to light the dramatic increase in children added to the state foster care system after former Republican Gov. Sam Brownback reduced aid for poverty programs.

About two dozen people turned out to the Kansas statehouse on Saturday to protest the state’s foster care system. CREDIT EVERT NELSON / TOPEKA CAPITAL-JOURNAL
Asked for comment about the protest, DCF spokesman Mike Deines said the agency “continues to focus on our efforts to strengthen the system and work with our partners to develop effective supports for youth and families.”

Kansas faces a lawsuit filed by Kansas Appleseed, Children Rights and the National Center for Youth Law alleging civil rights violations. The state’s 7,500 foster children are often moved anywhere from 30 to 100 times, forcing them to “couch surf” or to stay unsupervised in “kid’s zones” in contractors’ offices, said Christina Ostmeyer of Kansas Appleseed.

“Bad things happen to these kids while they are in the state’s custody,” she said. “We are ripping childhood from these children who are in our state’s custody.”

Protesters said they will next meet inside the statehouse in January when lawmakers are in session. They also called on Gov. Laura Kelly, a Democrat, to make systematic changes to the foster care system, reminding her that she had said it was one of her top priorities.

Last month’s joint investigation found that the volume of children in the Kansas foster care system swelled from 5,214 in fiscal year 2011 when Brownback took office, to 7,484 in July, a 43.5% increase. The rate of runaways surged as the growing number of kids in foster care overwhelmed child placement contractors. The joint investigation also revealed that at least 13 girls had run away from foster care and got trapped in sex trafficking.

Parents on Saturday recounted long stories of problems with DCF and its two private foster care providers, KVC Kansas and St. Francis Community Services. Heidi Beal, a Butler County woman who said she advocates for families who have lost custody of their children, said the system doesn’t need more money.

“What they need to do is stop throwing a broad net and pulling children into the system who do not need to be in the system,” she said.

Peggy Lowe is on Twitter at @peggylowe.

Kansas felon in fatal chase, crash moved from hospital to jail

Brandon Jordan photo Shawnee County

TOPEKA— A Kansas felon involved in a chase and fatal crash November 7 in Topeka is out of the hospital and in jail facing a murder charge.

Brandon Jordan, 48, was booked Sunday  and is being held on a $500,000 bond in the Shawnee County Department of Corrections on requested charges of first-degree murder in the commission of a felony, interference with law enforcement, obstruction, failure to yield at a stop sign, flee or attempt to elude. He is also being held on charges of forgery and a probation violation, according to online records.

Jordan was  driving a 2003 Acura TL linked to a bad-check cashing case and caused a deadly crash while trying to get away from a Kansas Highway Patrol trooper.

The chase westbound on Holly Lane in Topeka lasted only a couple seconds, according to the KHP.
Jordan ran a stop sign and crashed into a 2016 Ford Explorer driven by Dennis E. Affolter, 69, Topeka. EMS transported Affolter to Stormont Vail where he died.

Jordan has 19 previous convictions that include forgery, burglary, theft, obstruction and for drugs, according to the Kansas Department of Corrections.

Protections for 660,000 immigrants on line at Supreme Court

WASHINGTON (AP) — Protections for 660,000 immigrants are on the line at the Supreme Court.

The justices are hearing arguments Tuesday on the Trump administration’s bid to end the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program that shields immigrants brought to the U.S. as children from deportation and allows them to work in the United States legally.

The program was begun under President Barack Obama. The Trump administration announced in September 2017 that it would end DACA protections, but lower federal courts have stepped in to keep the program alive.

Now it’s up to the Supreme Court to say whether the way the administration has gone about trying to wind down DACA complies with federal law.

A decision is expected by June 2020, amid the presidential election campaign.

Some DACA recipients who are part of the lawsuit are expected to be in the courtroom for the arguments. People have been camping out in front of the court since the weekend for a chance to grab some of the few seats that are available to the general public. Chief Justice John Roberts has rejected a request for live or same-day audio of the arguments. The court will post the audio on its website .

A second case being argued Tuesday tests whether the parents of a Mexican teenager who was killed by a U.S. border patrol agent in a shooting across the southern border in El Paso, Texas, can sue the agent in American courts.

If the court agrees with the administration in the DACA case, Congress could put the program on surer legal footing. But the absence of comprehensive immigration reform from Congress is what prompted Obama to create DACA in 2012, giving people two-year renewable reprieves from the threat of deportation while also allowing them to work.

Federal courts struck down an expansion of DACA and the creation of similar protections for undocumented immigrants whose children are U.S. citizens.

Trump’s anti-immigrant rhetoric was a key part of his presidential campaign in 2016, and his administration pointed to the invalidation of the expansion and the threat of a lawsuit against DACA by Texas and other Republican-led states as reasons to bring the program to a halt.

Young immigrants, civil rights groups, universities and Democratic-led cities and states sued to block the administration. They persuaded courts in New York, San Francisco and Washington, D.C., that the administration had been “arbitrary and capricious” in its actions, in violation of a federal law that requires policy changes be done in an orderly way.

Indeed, the high court case is not over whether DACA itself is legal, but instead the administration’s approach to ending it.

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WASHINGTON (AP) — The Supreme Court is taking up the Trump administration’s plan to end legal protections that shield 660,000 immigrants from deportation, a case with strong political overtones amid the 2020 presidential election campaign.

All eyes will be on Chief Justice John Roberts when the court hears arguments Tuesday. Roberts is the conservative justice closest to the court’s center who also is keenly aware of public perceptions of an ideologically divided court.

It’s the third time in three years that the administration is asking the justices to rescue a controversial policy that has been blocked by several lower courts.

The court sided with President Donald Trump in allowing him to enforce the travel ban on visitors from some majority Muslim countries, but it blocked the administration from adding a citizenship question to the 2020 census.

Roberts was the only member of the court in the majority both times, siding with four conservatives on the travel ban and four liberals in the census case. His vote could be decisive a third time, as well.

The program before the court is Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, an Obama-era program that aimed to bring out of the shadows people who have been in the United States since they were children and are in the country illegally. In some cases, they have no memory of any home other than the U.S.

With Congress at an impasse over a comprehensive immigration bill, President Barack Obama decided to formally protect people from deportation while also allowing them to work legally in the U.S.

But Trump made tough talk on immigration a central part of his campaign and less than eight months after taking office, he announced in September 2017 that he would end DACA.

Immigrants, civil rights groups, universities and Democratic-led states quickly sued, and courts put the administration’s plan on hold.

There are two questions before the Supreme Court: whether federal judges can even review the decision to end the program and, if they can, whether the way the administration has gone about winding down DACA is legal.

In that sense, the case resembles the dispute over the census citizenship question, which focused on the process the administration used in trying to add the question to the 2020 census. In the end, Roberts wrote that the reason the administration gave for wanting the question “seems to have been contrived.”

There also are similarities to the travel ban case, in which the administration argued that courts had no role to play and that the executive branch has vast discretion over immigration, certainly enough to justify Trump’s ban. In the Supreme Court decision, Roberts wrote that immigration law gives the president “broad discretion to suspend the entry of aliens into the United States. The President lawfully exercised that discretion.”

The Supreme Court fight over DACA has played out in a kind of legal slow motion. The administration first wanted the justices to hear and decide the case by June 2018. The justices said no. The justice Department returned to the court a year ago, but the justices did nothing for more than seven months before agreeing to hear arguments.

The delay has bought DACA recipients at least two extra years because a decision now isn’t expected until June 2020, which also could thrust the issue into the presidential campaign.

In part the court’s slow pace can be explained by a preference to have Congress legislate a lasting resolution of the issue. But Trump and Congress failed to strike a deal on DACA.

Janet Napolitano, the University of California president who served as Obama’s homeland security secretary when DACA was created, said the administration seems to recognize that ending DACA protections would be unpopular.

“And so perhaps they think it better that they be ordered by the court to do it as opposed to doing it correctly on their own,” Napolitano said in an interview with The Associated Press. She is a named plaintiff in the litigation.

Solicitor General Noel Francisco, who is arguing the administration’s case at the Supreme Court, pushed back against that criticism.

“We think the way we did it is entirely appropriate and lawful. If we did it in a different way, it would be subject to challenge,” Francisco said at a Smithsonian Institution event exploring the current Supreme Court term.

The Trump administration has said it moved to cut off the program under the threat of a lawsuit from Texas and other states, raising the prospect of a chaotic end.

Then-Attorney General Jeff Sessions determined DACA to be unlawful because Obama did not have the authority to adopt it in the first place. Sessions cited an expansion of the DACA program and a similar effort to protect undocumented immigrants who are parents of American children that were struck down by federal courts. A 4-4 Supreme Court tie in 2016 affirmed the lower court rulings.

Texas and other Republican-led states eventually did sue and won a partial victory in a federal court in Texas.

The administration’s best argument is a simple one, said Josh Blackman, a professor at South Texas College of Law in Houston: “The Supreme Court should allow the Trump Administration to wind down a policy it found to be unlawful, even if reasonable judges disagree about DACA’s legality.”

Trump has said he favors legislation on DACA, but that it will take a Supreme Court ruling for the administration to spur Congress to act.

On at least one point, Trump and his DACA critics agree.

“Only legislation can bring a permanent sense of stability for all of these people,” said Microsoft president Brad Smith. Microsoft joined the challenge to the administration because, Smith said, 66 employees are protected by DACA.

The Department of Homeland Security is continuing to process two-year DACA renewals so that in June 2020, hundreds of thousands of DACA recipients will have protections stretching beyond the election and even into 2022.

If the high court rules for the administration, it is unclear how quickly the program would end or Congress might act.

Mother sentenced for drowning death of 6-month old son

Sydney Jones photo Buchanan Co.

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. (AP) — A woman who drowned her 6-month-old son has been sentenced to life in prison.

The St. Joseph News-Press reports Sydney Jones was sentenced last week for child abuse resulting in death. Jurors found her guilty in July after a prosecution witness testified that he found Jones holding her son, Keith Lars III, down in the water in 2017.

Police have testified that she acted strangely, saying she was “a child of God.” A psychologist testified that she believed state mental health workers missed a diagnosis of paranoid schizophrenia, noting that Jones said she felt possessed.

Jones said during the hearing that, “I wake up every day and think I couldn’t save my son.” A jail official testified that Jones had gotten into several fights while incarcerated.

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