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Suspects caught, woman rescued after Kansas police chase

Police on the scene of the chase Wednesday-photo courtesy KWCH

ROSE HILL, Kan. (AP) — Authorities have rescued a kidnapping victim and arrested three people after a police chase ended in a crash near Wichita.

The chase started Tuesday when officers spotted a vehicle that was believed to be connected to a disturbance at a Wichita hotel in which a witness saw a woman being forced into a vehicle at gunpoint.

Officer Charley Davidson of the Wichita Police Department says the chase ended on the north side of Rose Hill. One of the suspects was arrested after running from the vehicle. Drugs also were found during the arrests.

A woman identified as the kidnapping victim, was treated for minor injuries and released from a hospital. Authorities were interviewing her. Davidson says the suspects and victim knew each other.

Teachers union, state square off for second Kan. court showdown over tenure

A fresh legal challenge to the state’s 2014 elimination of teacher job protections has reached the Kansas Supreme Court, close on the heels of a separate lawsuit that proved unsuccessful six months ago.

At stake are due process rights for thousands — or even tens of thousands — of teachers who had earned them before the Republican-led Legislature passed and Gov. Sam Brownback signed the repeal.

A fresh legal challenge to the state’s 2014 elimination of teacher job protections has reached the Kansas Supreme Court. At stake are due process rights for thousands of teachers who had earned them before the Republican-led Legislature passed and Gov. Sam Brownback signed the repeal.
CREDIT FILE PHOTO / KANSAS NEWS SERVICE

In name, the case is a battle between the school board of a 270-student district in rural Butler County, east of Wichita, and two teachers dismissed from their jobs in 2015.

Read the Kansas National Education Association court brief on behalf of the plaintiffs.

At its heart, however, the case is a showdown between the state’s main teachers union and the state itself. The Kansas National Education Association is representing the plaintiffs, Sallie Scribner and Mark McNemee. Attorneys for Kansas have filed a brief intervening on the side of Flinthills Unified School District 492.

Read the state’s brief intervening on the side of Flinthills Unified School District 492.

 

“We’re here really to protect the constitutional concept that the law matters and process matters,” KNEA general counsel David Schauner said Monday, “and the Legislature isn’t free to do whatever it wants, whenever it wants, without recourse.”

The KNEA argues that taking tenure away from teachers who had already earned it was equivalent to depriving citizens of their property without due process — a violation of the U.S. and Kansas constitutions.

The state rejects that characterization and says teachers never had a constitutionally protected right to keep their job protections. And even if a property right did exist, it argues, the Legislature’s vote to repeal tenure was sufficient to end it.

The repeal was “clearly constitutional,” the state’s brief argues.

“Plaintiffs may disagree with the policy the Legislature adopted,” it says, “but the law does not violate the Due Process Clause.”

The parties finished filing briefs in late June. The KNEA predicted this week that oral arguments, which haven’t yet been scheduled, will take place in September at the earliest.

Read the Flinthills USD 492 brief.

‘Non-probationary’ status

Scribner had worked at Flinthills for 18 years and McNemee for 16.

At the end of the 2014-15 school year, the Flinthills school board informed both in writing that their contracts wouldn’t be renewed, without stating reasons or allowing independent hearings.

Prior to July 1, 2014, the board would have been required to take those steps, but it argues Scribner and McNemee no longer had tenure in light of the 2014 repeal.

A third teacher, Monica Pharr, lost her job at Kansas City Kansas USD 500 in the same manner and sued in Wyandotte County, also with representation by the KNEA. The district court stopped that suit this month, pending the outcome of the Flinthills case at the high court.

The Flinthills case could restore due process for all teachers who had earned tenure before the repeal and haven’t switched employers since then. Under the law as it previously existed, teachers needed to complete three-year probationary periods at their districts before reaching what was formally called “non-probationary status.” This guaranteed them due process in case of termination or contract non-renewal.

The KNEA does not have a reliable count of how many of Kansas’ approximately 40,000 public school educators would regain tenure if the Kansas Supreme Court sides with the union. Schauner said more than 20,000 or 25,000 teachers “would not be at all surprising.”

The 2014 changes

The Legislature ended tenure in 2014 amid protests at the Statehouse by hundreds of red-clad teachers from across the state.

The Kansas Supreme Court had ordered lawmakers to increase funding for poorer school districts — part of a long-running and still ongoing school finance lawsuit.

The Legislature, controlled at the time by conservative Republicans, complied with a funding increase but included a tenure repeal. The process angered opponents because it involved late-in-the-night votes, and because the topic surfaced through an amendment on the Senate floor without hearings in either chamber.

The KNEA sued that summer, contending lawmakers had violated a Kansas Constitution clause that bars cramming unrelated matters into a single bill.

It lost at the district court and appealed. In January the Kansas Supreme Court ruled the 2014 legislation hadn’t run afoul of the restriction.

The claim in the new lawsuit — that the state unconstitutionally stripped tenured teachers of their property — bears similarities to an argument that another branch of the National Education Association made in North Carolina after that state ended tenure in 2013.

The idea that a property right had been violated resonated with North Carolina’s Court of Appeals. But the state’s Supreme Court ultimately struck down the retroactive tenure repeal without weighing in on the property argument. Instead, it found the law had violated contractual obligations.

The property rights argument was not successful at Butler County District Court, prompting the KNEA to appeal.

Celia Llopis-Jepsen is a reporter for the Kansas News Service, a collaboration of KCUR, Kansas Public Radio and KMUW covering health, education and politics. You can reach her on Twitter @Celia_LJ.

Kansas man returning to prison after new drug conviction

Jeremy Hands

PAWNEE COUNTY – A Kansas man has been sentenced in Pawnee County District court on two separate methamphetamine convictions.

Jeremy Hands, 43 of Larned, will spend 44 months in prison, according to a media release from the county attorney.

In December of 2016, Sheriff’s deputies found Methamphetamine in Hands’ vehicle following a traffic stop.

In January 2017, deputies arrested Hands a second time for driving while suspended at which time the Sheriff’s Department again located methamphetamine.

At the sentencing, Hands requested probation citing his completion of drug treatment while on bond. Pawnee County Attorney Douglas McNett opposed the request noting the defendant’s twenty plus year criminal history and two prior failures on felony probation.

Hands voluntarily surrendered himself to the Pawnee County Sheriff on July 22 to begin serving his sentence.   He has previous convictions for theft, drugs and criminal damage in Barton and Pawnee County, according to the Kansas Dept. of Corrections.

Trump: No transgender individuals will serve in U.S military

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump says he will bar transgender individuals from serving “in any capacity” in the U.S. armed forces.

Trump said on Twitter Wednesday that the government “will not accept or allow Transgender individuals to serve in any capacity in the U.S. Military.

 

Trump added that “Our military must be focused on decisive and overwhelming victory and cannot be burdened with the tremendous medical costs and disruption that transgender in the military would entail.”

Transgender service members have been able to serve openly in the military since last year, when former Defense Secretary Ash Carter ended the ban.

Military chiefs recently announced a delay on allowing transgender people from enlisting. But transgender troops are already serving openly in the military.

Kansas anti-abortion protester acquitted of battering guard

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Jurors have acquitted a Wichita anti-abortion protester of battering a clinic guard in a dispute over a sign.

The Wichita Eagle reports that jurors returned the verdict Tuesday after 74-year-old David Schmidt appealed his municipal court conviction to Sedgwick County District Court.

Schmidt credited his lawyers with getting him “out from under a pile of manure.” One of his attorneys works for the Thomas More Society, a national nonprofit law firm that litigates abortion and religious-liberty cases.

The charge against Schmidt stemmed from a July 2016 incident outside the Trust Women South Wind Women’s Center, which offers reproductive care, including abortions. It is housed in the facility where George Tiller performed late-term abortions until he was fatally shot in 2009 at his Wichita church by an abortion opponent.

Colyer speaks to lieutenant governors across the country about KanCare

Kansas Lt. Gov. Jeff Colyer, M.D.

Office of the Governor

NASHVILLE – Kansas Lt. Gov. Jeff Colyer, M.D., addressed the National Lieutenant Governors Association annual conference in Nashville today to discuss Kansas’ Medicaid managed care program, KanCare, which has saved the state over a billion dollars in health-care costs while expanding coverage to an additional 65,000 Kansans.

“In 2011 when I took office, the growth rate of our Medicaid expenditures was not fiscally sustainable. Implementing KanCare allowed us to focus on Medicaid beneficiaries’ holistic needs, significantly improving care and treatment while curtailing costs,” said Dr. Colyer, who is originally from Hays. “Our cost-increase curve has been reduced to a sustainable level, health outcomes are improving, and we’re serving more Kansans.”

Dr. Colyer, a practicing physician and surgeon, spearheaded the effort to create KanCare, which launched in January of 2013, and is now in its fourth year. Unlike other states’ managed care programs, KanCare incorporates the provision of non-medical home and community-based services for the elderly and individuals with disabilities, as well as serving traditional Medicaid populations.

“We are now working on KanCare 2.0, the next phase of KanCare scheduled to go into effect in January of 2019. In addition to building on our current successes, we have initiated a process improvement working group to streamline processes and procedures for the KanCare managed care organizations (MCOs) and for our provider groups in order to standardize the way the KanCare network is structured,” he said. “We are listening carefully to the voices of stakeholders in our efforts to fine-tune KanCare and better serve the people of Kansas.”

Representative Dan Hawkins, chair of the Health and Human Services Committee, serves on the KanCare improvement working group. “KanCare has met one of its principal goals—that of controlling Medicaid costs by emphasizing health, prevention and early detection, while at the same time implementing lasting reforms that sustain improvements in the health and well-being outcomes for those on KanCare,” said Rep. Hawkins. “It has been a win-win for the State of Kansas, and other states would do well to look to KanCare for a model.”

While more work remains to be done, the working group has engaged partners and stakeholders to generate solutions, including surveying providers to determine training needs, developing a comprehensive training database; conducting ongoing reviews of prior authorizations, denial codes, and data metrics; streamlining the CARE assessment process for nursing home admissions; and creating a standardized process for grievances and appeals.

“We are making significant progress in these and other areas,” Dr. Colyer said. “I believe these new processes and procedures will better serve members of KanCare, our providers and our state.”

Number of reported rapes in Manhattan continues to climb

Riley County Police arrested Sangala Stevens, 27, in March of 2016 for an alleged rape and other charges.
He was sentenced for sexual battery, criminal restraint and aggravated battery, He is currently being held in the Norton Correctional Facility.

RILEY COUNTY – Law enforcement authorities in Manhattan are investigating another alleged rape and looking for a suspect. Police reported the rape, kidnapping and aggravated assault in a media release Tuesday.

A 24-year-old woman reported that an unknown suspect threatened and raped her at her Manhattan residence, according to police.
Police released no additional information.

Riley County authorities say the number of rapes reported in Manhattan and surrounding areas has doubled during the first quarter of this year compared with the same time last year.

Sixteen rapes were reported in the first quarter of 2017, up from eight in the same period in 2016.
Authorities say some of the rapes reported this year came from one investigation, after detectives identified other victims while investigating the original report.

A total of 40 rapes were reported in 2016.

Anyone with information on the crime reported Tuesday is asked to contact the RCPD at 537-2112 or Manhattan Riley County Crime Stoppers at 539-7777.

Judge denies another delay to Kan. teen’s sentence for murder

Sam Vanochen listens to testimony during his 2016 trial pool photo Hutch News

RENO COUNTY— In a hearing Tuesday, Reno County District Court Judge Trish Rose denied a request from the defense attorney for 18-year-old Samuel Vonachen to delay his sentencing for two counts murder, attempted murder and aggravated arson.

A year ago, A Reno County jury convicted the teen for the murder of his mother and sister who died after he set fire to the family home in September 2013. His father was able to escape.

The defense asked for the delay because it wanted an expert witness to present a report on Vonachen. The report is from Dr. Kathleen Heidi, who testified during the trial. It was Heidi who testified that Vonachen had no idea what he was doing the night he set fire to the family home killing his mother and sister. Dr. Heidi stood by her diagnosis even though two psychologists found that Vonachen was able to form the intent to commit the murders and concluded that he may be a “psychopath.”

It was also noted to the jury at that time that Heidi is not a licensed psychologist in Florida where she lives, or in the state of Kansas.

What Heidi would have to present during the sentencing is unknown, but the motion for an extension was denied. The defense then stated that it would file a motion to split the sentencing with the prosecution presenting its side and allowing the defense time to rebut the prosecution’s case.

That motion will be addressed during sentencing on Friday afternoon.

UPDATE: Obamacare repeal blocked after Kan. senators vote to debate healthcare

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Latest on the effort by congressional Republicans to pass a health care bill (all times local):

The Senate has blocked a wide-ranging proposal by Republicans to repeal much of former President Barack Obama’s health care law and replace it with a more restrictive plan.

Senators voted 57-43 late Tuesday to reject the plan in the first vote on an amendment to the bill. Those voting “no” included nine defecting Republicans.

The vote underscored problems Republicans will have in winning enough votes to recast Obama’s statute.

The rejected proposal included language by Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell erasing the Obama law’s tax penalties on people not buying insurance and cutting Medicaid.

 

Language by Texas Republican Sen. Ted Cruz would let insurers sell cut-rate policies with skimpy coverage. And there was an additional $100 billion to help states ease costs for people losing Medicaid sought by Midwestern moderates.

———

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Both Kansas Sens. Pat Roberts and Jerry Moran have voted in favor of having the Senate debate health care legislation.

The two Republicans were on the same side Tuesday even though they’ve taken different stances on a proposal from GOP leaders for overhauling health care.

Roberts has backed the measure, although he acknowledged in an interview last week that he is not entirely pleased with it.

Moran made national headlines for opposing the plan, costing it enough GOP votes to pass and stalling the health care debate.

Moran said in a statement that he’s still opposed to the GOP plan. But he said he will vote to repeal former President Barack Obama’s signature 2010 Affordable Care Act and work on a replacement over the next two years.

——-
3:10 p.m.

The Senate Tuesday voted to move ahead on health care legislation aimed at dismantling the Obama health law. Both Kansas Senators voted in favor of the measure.

The vote was 51-50 on Tuesday, a victory for Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and President Donald Trump. Last week, McConnell was forced to postpone the vote, lacking the support of conservatives and moderates.

Vice President Mike Pence cast the tie-breaking vote.

In a dramatic turn, Sen. John McCain returned from Arizona where he is battling brain cancer to cast a crucial vote on proceeding on health care.

The vote sets up days of debate and votes on repealing and replacing Barack Obama’s health care law. Whatever the Senate approves still requires a vote in the House.

__

2:35 p.m.

Protesters temporarily disrupted the Senate proceedings on the health care bill.

Shouting “Kill the bill” and “shame,” the demonstrators stood in the visitors’ gallery and chanted. They were led out of the chamber by police but could still be heard.

The vote got underway on moving head on health care with the goal of erasing much of Barack Obama’s law. The Senate chamber was packed, with lawmakers standing to cast their votes.

__

Catholic priest charged in Kansas with child sex crimes

Father Scott Kallal-Photo hscatholic.org

KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — Authorities say a Catholic priest charged in Kansas with child sex crimes has been arrested in Maryland.

The Wyandotte County, Kansas, prosecutor’s office announced Tuesday that the Rev. Scott Kallal was charged Friday with two counts of aggravated indecent liberties with a child. Online court records show the 35-year-old was arrested Monday in Rockville in Maryland’s Montgomery County.

Prosecutor’s office spokesman Jonathan Carter said he didn’t know whether Kallal had an attorney. No details were provided about the allegations.

The Archdiocese of Kansas City in Kansas announced last week that Kallal was pulled from public ministry duties after two sources accused him of “boundary violations.” The archdiocese said its preliminary investigation revealed violations of guidelines governing youth interactions.

The archdiocese said in a follow-up statement Tuesday that it would continue to cooperate with law enforcement.

Police: 5 jailed for hiding Kansas armed robbery suspect

Montgomery-photo KDOC

SEWARD COUNTY – Law enforcement authorities are investigating a robbery and have six suspects in custody.

Just before 4a.m. on Tuesday, July 4, officers responded to a robbery at Love’s Country Store located at 208 W. Pancake Blvd. in Liberal. Following an investigation, an arrest warrant was issued for 26-year-old Codies Antonio Montgomery, according to a media release.

Just after 5:30p.m. on Monday, the Liberal Police Department Special Response Team served a search warrant at a residence in the 400 block of North Pershing Avenue.

Officers found Montgomery hiding in the residence and was taken into custody without incident.

Police also arrested three other men and two women at the residence for outstanding warrants and charges of aiding a felon. No injuries were reported. All of the suspects are being held at the Seward County Jail.

Montgomery has a previous conviction for aggravated battery in Seward County, according to the Kansas Department of Corrections.

Kansas Sexual Assault Kit Initiative announces findings, makes recommendations

Sexual assault evidence in a KBI laboratory

KBI

TOPEKA – The Kansas Bureau of Investigation (KBI) is pleased to announce that the Kansas Sexual Assault Kit Initiative has identified the underlying factors which contributed to the accumulation of unsubmitted sexual assault kits throughout the state of Kansas.

In 2014, the KBI initiated the Kansas Sexual Assault Kit Initiative and formed a statewide multidisciplinary working group tasked with evaluating the financial, legal, and systematic barriers to sexual assault kit testing. Since then, the group – which includes members of law enforcement, prosecutors, laboratory professionals, medical professionals, and victim advocates from across the state – worked to identify factors that contributed to the accumulation of over 2,220 unsubmitted sexual assault kits in Kansas.

With the group’s input, the KBI developed recommendations intended to prevent future accumulation of sexual assault evidence.

“We had many partners who came together to pinpoint the diverse factors contributing to this accumulation,” said KBI Director Kirk Thompson. “This collaboration sets the stage for effective implementation of the findings and recommendations identified.”

A Kansas Sexual Assault Kit – a kit used for sexual assault evidence collection.

The initiative is directed by KBI Executive Officer Katie Whisman, who co-authored a publication describing the working group’s efforts and findings. The publication, which can serve as a model for other states across the country, cites a lack of training, a lack of resources, a lack of policy, and a lack of societal awareness as factors contributing to the accumulation. Additionally, it identifies specific recommendations that Kansas stakeholders can utilize when developing standards and policies in an effort to create a sustainable and effective response to sexual assaults.

The publication was approved by the U.S. Department of Justice’s Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), who awarded the KBI a National Sexual Assault Kit Initiative (SAKI) federal grant in 2016. The grant is helping the KBI reduce the number of unsubmitted sexual assault kits across the state, arrest and prosecute violent offenders, and support victims.

The findings and recommendations will be shared with agencies in Kansas who have a role in responding to sexual assault, in an effort to prevent another accumulation of kits. The ultimate goal of the initiative is to prevent victimization by identifying more perpetrators of sexual assault, including serial offenders, while gaining justice for more victims and increasing public safety.

Former Kansas legislative candidate enters pleas in abuse case

Vanwyhe-photo Douglas Co.

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — A former Kansas Legislature candidate who was charged last year with sex crimes has pleaded to less severe charges.

The Lawrence Journal-World reports that 27-year-old Nicolas Vanwyhe of Lawrence pleaded no contest to two felony counts of aggravated battery Friday in Douglas County District Court.

Vanwyhe originally was charged with one count of aggravated criminal sodomy and one count of aggravated sexual battery. Court documents say both crimes occurred in November 2015 and involved the same alleged victim, who couldn’t consent because of mental deficiency, disease or the effect of alcohol or drugs.

Vanwyhe unsuccessfully ran for the Kansas House District 10 seat as a Republican in 2014.

His attorney, Casey Meek, declined to comment, citing the ongoing case.

Vanwyhe’s sentencing is scheduled for September.

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