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Sheriff: Victim identified in possible drowning at Kan. Reservoir

Banner Creek google image

JACKSON COUNTY- Law enforcement authorities are investigating the death of Kansas man in a possible drowning.

Just before 3 pm Sunday, sheriff deputies received a 911 call reporting a body found in the water on the northwest side of Banner Creek Reservoir west of Holton, according to Sheriff Tim Morse in a media release.

The victim identified Dan A. Mehringer, 78, Holton, was reported to have been boating in a kayak, and was wearing a life jacket.

Mehringer’s body  was found near the kayak. He was pronounced dead on the scene by the county coroner and transported for autopsy to determine the cause of death.

The Jackson County Sheriff’s Office, Holton Police and Fire Departments, Potawatomi Tribal Fire Department, Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism and Jackson County EMS responded to the scene.

Kan. school district mourns death of 15-year old student in head-on crash

ELLSWORTH COUNTY – A Kansas teen died in an accident just after 4:30 p.m. Sunday in Ellsworth County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 1990 Chevy 1500 driven by Owen L O’Dell, 15, Lindsborg, was southbound on Kansas 141 seven miles west of Marquette.

The Chevy crossed the center line and struck a 2011 Ford F150 driven by Garrett W. Scritchfield, 30, Lindsborg.

The Chevy came to rest facing west on the southbound shoulder and was fully engulfed in flames.

O’Dell was pronounced dead at the scene and transported to Parsons Funeral Home in Ellsworth.

Scritchfield and passengers in the Ford Kayla A. Scritchfield, 30; Maelah B. Scritchfield, 4; Ava Scritchfield, 2-months-old were transported to Salina Regional Medical Center.

The baby was in an infant car seat at the time of the accident and not injured.

Kayla Scritchfield was not wearing a seat belt, according to the KHP.

Smoky Valley USD 400 wrote on their Facebook page: It is with a heavy heart that we must inform you that Owen Odell, SVHS student, was killed in a two-car accident this afternoon near Kanopolis Lake. The district crisis plan is underway.

The crisis team met this evening. Students are able to gather tonight at Bethany Lutheran Church and will be able to meet in the SVHS Commons throughout the day on Monday.

Please keep both families in your thoughts and prayers.

Police: Man hospitalized after jump from I-70 bridge

SHAWNEE COUNTY – A man was injured in a jump from an Interstate 70 bridge Sunday evening.

Just before 7p.m., police were called to report of subject crawling over the railing of the 6th Street Bridge over Interstate 70 in Topeka, according to a media release.

When officers arrived, they found the adult male had already jumped. Initial reports indicated the subject jumped and was hit by a large box truck that was unable to stop.

Police located the truck driver and learned the vehicle did not hit the victim. It was a near miss, according to police. 

Emergency responders transported the subject with non-life threatening injuries to a local hospital. West bound lanes of Interstate 70 were reopened to traffic just before 7:30 p.m.

Police ask for anyone with information on the incident to call 911.

Indictment: Kansas pizza shop used as front for drug distribution

TOPEKA, KAN. – A Kansas pizza shop owner and nine other people have been indicted on federal drug trafficking charges, according to U.S. Attorney Tom Beall.

A 35-count indictment unsealed Thursday alleges Adolfo Barragan-Rodriguez, owner of Pronto Pizza at 1121 SE 6th Ave. in Topeka, set up a trafficking organization that obtained methamphetamine from California and distributed it to buyers through a network of street dealers in Topeka.

The indictment alleges:

Barragan-Rodriguez used his restaurant as a front for the drug trafficking organization. Investigators kept conspirators under surveillance as they came and went from Pronto Pizza with packages.

Barragan-Rodriguez, who was known by the conspirators as Big Mike, managed the logistics of buying pounds of methamphetamine in California and shipping the drugs to Topeka, leaving other conspirators to handle street sales to users.

Barragan-Rodriguez used Federal Express as a tool for his trafficking operation. For instance, a 4-pound package of meth and a package containing $14,900 in cash that were transported via Federal Express were seized during the investigation.

Conspirators laundered drug proceeds through transactions at the Prairie Band Pottawattamie Casino north of Topeka.

One of the defendants is charged with unlawful possession of 92 firearms.

Some drugs were stored at a location within 1,000 feet of Mater Dei Catholic School.

Charges in the indictment include conspiracy, possession with intent to distribute methamphetamine, interstate transportation in furtherance of drug trafficking, use of a telephone in furtherance of drug trafficking, possession with intent to distribute methamphetamine within 1,000 of a school, money laundering and unlawful possession of firearms.

In addition to Barragan-Rodriguez, defendants named in the indictment include:

Michelle Belair, 34, Topeka.
Jose Medina-Benuto, 20, Topeka.
Michael Price, 42, Topeka.
Joseph Jones, 41, Topeka.
Linda Hardin, 48, Topeka.
Heather Hurley, 29, Topeka.
Daniel A. Rice, 57, Topeka.
Nicholas Casarona, 41, Topeka.
Jose Ruiz, 37, Topeka.

Upon conviction, the crimes carry the following penalties (see attached indictment for details):
Counts 1, 10, 11, 30, 32: Not less than 10 years in federal prison and a fine up to $10 million.
Counts 7 and 20: Not less than five years and not more than 40 years and a fine up to $5 million.
Counts 4, 6, 9, 13, 18 and 31: Up to 20 years and a fine up to $1 million.
Count 35: Not less than a year and not more than 40 years and a fine up to $2 million.
Count 12: Up to five years and a fine up to $250,000.
Counts 2, 3 and 5: Up to 20 years and a fine of more than $500,000.
Count 8: Up to 10 years and a fine of more than $500,000.
Counts 14-17 and 21-29: Up to four years.
Count 34: Up to 10 years and a fine up to $250,000.
Count 35: Up to 40 years and a fine up to $2 million.

New Kansas program to help immigrants navigate driving exams

ROXANA HEGEMAN, Associated Press

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas is launching a project to help immigrants get driver’s licenses in a meatpacking town by offering free translators during the driving exams.

The effort stems from an agreement between Kansas driver’s license officials and Kearney County Hospital in Lakin.

Meatpacking plants are the largest employers in western Kansas and have drawn a diverse population to the region. But the state offers exams only in English or Spanish.

Starting June 21, a pilot project will offer free translators when people take their written and behind-the-wheel driver examinations in Garden City. The translators will help prospective drivers take the tests in Somali, Arabic, Sudanese, Burmese, Swahili, Filipino and Ethiopian.

The project costs the state nothing because translators are volunteers. The state says it will help bolster safe driving.

Kan. woman enters plea in beating death of her mother

Smith- photo Leavenworth Co.

LEAVENWORTH, Kan. (AP) — A Leavenworth woman has pleaded no contest to fatally beating her 85-year-old mother with a 3-pound mallet.

The Kansas City Star reports that 60-year-old Victoria Smith entered the plea Friday. Authorities say Smith was screaming that she had killed someone when police responded in July 2016 and found her mother, Anna Higgins, dead.

She later admitted to being surprised by being awakened by Higgins. The Leavenworth County Attorney says Smith then struck her mother with a flashlight in the doorway to her bedroom, moved her to the living room and proceeded to strike her several more times with the mallet.

Leavenworth County Attorney Todd Thompson described the case as a “sad situation all the way around.”

Sentencing for the second-degree murder charge is set for July 21.

To Craft School Funding Bill, Kan. Senate Relies On Math From 41 Districts

By CELIA LLOPIS-JEPSEN

The Senate’s potential new formula for funding Kansas schools is based on spending at 41 districts where — according to a recent statistical analysis — students are doing well academically relative to local poverty rates.

The Kansas Legislative Research Department performed the calculations last month at the request of Senate Majority Leader Jim Denning, and the bill based on it would inject around $230 million into K-12 school districts over the next two years.

That’s hundreds of millions of dollars short of what some public education advocates argue is needed to satisfy a Kansas Supreme Court ruling that found existing K-12 funding levels for the state’s 286 school districts unconstitutional. But Denning, an Overland Park Republican, hopes the four-page research memo will help the state withstand courtroom attacks by demonstrating that lawmakers based their dollar figures on sound reasoning.

Download the May 2017 legislative research memo on school funding.

“They talk about showing your work,” Denning said of the state Supreme Court’s March ruling, in which the justices ordered Kansas to fix K-12 funding by the end of June. “So they want to actually see your source documents, how you arrived at any base aid and formula.”

A legislative researcher graphed Kansas school districts according to their graduation rates and standardized test scores, and isolated 41 with notable outcomes relative to the percentage of children they serve from low-income families.

The Senate’s potential new formula for funding Kansas schools is based on spending at 41 districts where — according to a recent statistical analysis — students are doing well academically relative to local poverty rates.

The Kansas Legislative Research Department performed the calculations last month at the request of Senate Majority Leader Jim Denning, and the bill based on it would inject around $230 million into K-12 school districts over the next two years.

That’s hundreds of millions of dollars short of what some public education advocates argue is needed to satisfy a Kansas Supreme Court ruling that found existing K-12 funding levels for the state’s 286 school districts unconstitutional. But Denning, an Overland Park Republican, hopes the four-page research memo will help the state withstand courtroom attacks by demonstrating that lawmakers based their dollar figures on sound reasoning.

Download the May 2017 legislative research memo on school funding.

“They talk about showing your work,” Denning said of the state Supreme Court’s March ruling, in which the justices ordered Kansas to fix K-12 funding by the end of June. “So they want to actually see your source documents, how you arrived at any base aid and formula.”

A legislative researcher graphed Kansas school districts according to their graduation rates and standardized test scores, and isolated 41 with notable outcomes relative to the percentage of children they serve from low-income families.

Hover over each highlighted school district for more information.

Research shows a correlation between poverty rates and academic outcomes. The Senate’s bill relies on spending levels at the 41 districts to calculate how much the state should put into the pot for its K-12 education system as a whole.

Mark Tallman, a lobbyist for the Kansas Association of School Boards, disagrees that lawmakers should ground the formula in this analysis.

“This is useful information,” Tallman said but added, “We do question whether this alone should be the factor that would be used.”

Meanwhile, two academics who study school finance took issue this week with the memo, but for different reasons.

Eric Hanushek, a senior fellow at Stanford University’s Hoover Institution who testified for the state in the ongoing Gannon v. Kansas lawsuit, said the Legislature faces a difficult legal reality: the need to show the court it is putting enough money into schools, when there is no way to prove it.

“We don’t have a way to do those calculations. Period,” he said. “We don’t have that.”

Figuring out how much money schools with desirable outcomes spend in the course of educating children doesn’t mean, Hanushek said, that those spending levels would boost achievement elsewhere. Instead, he said, policymakers can move the academic needle by giving teachers and schools incentives. That can mean, for example, basing teacher pay on performance instead of set pay scales.

Bruce Baker, a school finance professor at Rutgers University who also testified in the ongoing school finance lawsuit — but for the alliance of school districts suing the state — is also skeptical of the recent legislative research memo. He has concerns about this type of analysis, as well as how it figured spending among the 41 districts.

Baker suggested looking back at approaches used in more detailed work that Kansas legislative auditors published in 2006.

“It’s actually more methodologically appropriate,” he said of the decade-old audit that he described as “far more refined.”

The Legislature — which back then faced a school finance lawsuit similar to today’s — ordered research in 2005, and Legislative Post Audit in 2006 released a 340-page document into the cost of K-12 education. Auditors re-released an abridged version in 2015, saying the information remained largely relevant despite the time lapse.

Calculations at the time of the original publication pointed to a potential state funding increase for the following school year of more than $300 million or $400 million.

Denning signaled this week he is confident the Senate’s bill is adequate.

“This is based on actual outcomes, data, statistical analysis,” he said, adding that it reflects school districts of a variety of sizes and demographics. “It was all mathematically driven.”

The Senate’s proposal to inject $234 million more into schools drew the backing of 23 of 40 senators in a final vote Wednesday. Senators will next need to reach an agreement with their colleagues in the House, which has proposed about $50 million more in its bill.

The court has the power to send lawmakers back to the drawing board this summer if justices find the legislation falls short of providing for suitable public education in Kansas — an obligation that is written into the state’s constitution.

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

Kansas man dies in head-on semi crash

GREENWOOD COUNTY – A Kansas man died in an accident just before 1a.m. Sunday in Greenwood County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 1998 Pontiac van driven by Vernon Kirkpatrick, 59, Fall River, was eastbound on U.S. 400 two miles west of Fall River.

The van traveled left of center into the path of a westbound semi.

Kirkpatrick was pronounced dead at the scene and transported to Country Side Funeral Home.

The truck driver Scott L. Kraeger, 51, Lawrence, and a passenger were not injured.

Kirkpatrick was not wearing a seat belt, according to the KHP.

UPDATE: Police identify victim in suspicious death

Police on the scene of Friday’s fatality-photo courtesy WIBW TV

SHAWNEE COUNTY – Law enforcement authorities are investigating a suspicious death.

Just before 10p.m. Friday, police responded report of victim down in the 1000 Block of SW Wanamaker in Topeka.

Officers found an unresponsive man identified Saturday evening as 34-year-old Jason Baker, in the parking lot of the gas station. He was bleeding from numerous injuries.

Despite the effort of first responders, the man died. Detectives and a K-9 unit responded to the scene. Name of the victim was not released early Saturday.

———

SHAWNEE COUNTY – Law enforcement authorities are investigating a suspicious death.

Just before 10p.m. Friday, police responded report of victim down in the 1000 Block of SW Wanamaker in Topeka.

Officers found an unresponsive man in the parking lot of the gas station. He was bleeding from numerous injuries.

Despite the effort of first responders, the man died. Detectives and a K-9 unit responded to the scene. Name of the victim was not released early Saturday.

3 rescued after accident during Arkansas River float trip

Saturday river rescue in Reno County

HUTCHINSON– First responders were called to execute a water rescue in the Arkansas River in Reno County Saturday around 3:20 p.m.

According to HFD Chief Steve Beer three people were on a float trip from the 4th Avenue bridge when they overturned and became hung up in a tree.

Rescue crews were able to put a boat in the water and all three were brought ashore unharmed.

EMS transported them for observation.

They were not wearing life jackets and were not very good swimmers according to Beer.

No additional details were released.

Police ask for help to identify suspect in Kan. sport bar burglary

Photos courtesy Valley Center Police

SEDGWICK COUNTY Law enforcement authorities are investigating a burglary and asking the public for help to identify a suspect.

Between 5:40 and 6:00 a.m. Friday, two unidentified individuals burglarized Spirits Pub, 231 E. Main in Valley Center, according to a social media report.

Police released images taken from surveillance cameras of the crime.

Anyone with information about this incident, or recognize the mask or clothing worn is encouraged to call police 755-7325 or dial 911.

Fear on the Farm: Trump to cut federal crop insurance, other subsides

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Farm groups and some members of Congress from farm states are decrying proposed cuts to crop insurance and other safety net programs for farmers included in President Donald Trump’s budget.

The proposed cuts come as farmers are facing their fourth straight year of falling income. They could particularly affect farm states such as Iowa, Kansas and Nebraska that helped Trump win the November election.

One proposal would cut the federal crop insurance program by $28 billion over 10 years. Programs that provide crop subsidies would lose $9 billion.

But Republican Sen. Charles Grassley, an Iowa farmer, says the crop insurance cuts won’t make it through Congress.

The Trump administration says the proposed cuts help fulfill a campaign promise to balance the federal budget.

Kansas teen dies in van rollover accident

MEADE COUNTY – A Kansas teen died in an accident just after 11:30 a.m. Saturday in Meade County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 1980 Chevy van driven by Kincaid Myers, 15, Meade, was southbound on 18 Road six miles south of Kansas 23.

The vehicle left the road to the right and the driver overcorrected. The vehicle entered the east ditch, rolled multiple times and came to rest on its top.

Meyers was pronounced dead at the scene. He was not wearing a seat belt, according to the KHP.

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