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Mississippi National Guard unit gets commander from Kansas

BILOXI, Miss. (AP) — Mississippi’s largest Army National Guard unit has a new commander, but he’s from Kansas.

Sunday’s ceremony in Biloxi photo courtesy Mississippi National Guard
Jason P. Nelson
Colonel

Col. Jason Nelson took charge of the 155th Armored Brigade Combat Team on Saturday in Biloxi.

Nelson takes over command from Col. Ralph D. Ferguson, who led the unit during a nine-month deployment to the Middle East as part of Operation Spartan Shield. The trip to Kuwait was the unit’s third deployment to the Middle East since 2001.

WLOX-TV reports Nelson deployed with the unit to Kuwait as deputy brigade commander.

The Tupelo-based brigade has units in McComb, Senatobia, Starkville, Amory, Monticello and Meridian, as well as Kansas City, Kansas. Integrating the Kansas portion of the unit has taken four years.

Ferguson has been named deputy commander of the Kansas-based 35th Infantry Division.

Police investigate suspicious package near SW Kan. elementary school

FINNEY COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities were investigating a suspicious package and had asked residents to stay away from the 1200 -1400 Block of North 8th Street in Garden City, according to police.

Authorities did not believe it to be a threat to or related to Abe Hubert Elementary School, 1205 A Street.  The area is secured as a precaution. 

Authorities have released no additional details on the investigation but expected to road to be closed for an extended period of time.

Police identify 2 who died in shooting at Kansas City community center

KANSAS CITY (AP) — Authorities say two men have been killed in a shooting in the parking lot of Kansas City community center.

Investigators on the scene of the fatal shooting Sunday-image courtesy KCTV

Police say gunfire erupted around 6:30 p.m. Sunday after the Brush Creek Community Center closed for the night. One victim died at the scene and another at a hospital.

Police identified the men as 28-year-old Cortez Seals and 29-year-old Marcus Neal. It wasn’t immediately clear what sparked the shooting. Police are investigating.

Kan. hikers recovering after rescue from Arizona trail due to heat

Rescue of the hikers photo courtesy Superstition Fire & Medical District

PINAL COUNTY, AZ — Members of a group from Kansas are recovering after they were rescued during a hike in the Arizona heat.

Just before 7:30p.m. on August 22, the Pinal County Sheriff’s office received a call from a hiker on the Flat Iron Trail in Lost Dutchman State Park requesting help, according to Sheriff Mark Lamb.

When the Superstition Arizona Search and Rescue team arrived, they learned that it was a group of 44 fitness instructors from Kansas that needed assistance due to the heat which reached 106 degrees.

State Parks spokeswoman Michelle Thompson said the hikers didn’t begin their hike until 3 p.m. and they were advising against making the hike that time of day “but they insisted.”

 

Rescue personnel and Lost Dutchman State Park rangers helped most of the hikers walk back to the park from a trail on an adjacent national forest.

Two of the hikers were extracted by the DPS Ranger Helicopter and two were led out by UTV. One of those was transported by ground to the hospital.

 

 

 

Deadline: Planned Parenthood asks judge to block Missouri abortion law

KANSAS CITY (AP) — Critics of a new Missouri ban on abortions at or after eight weeks of pregnancy are asking a judge to block the law from taking effect this week.

Attorneys for Planned Parenthood and the American Civil Liberties Union head to court Monday to ask U.S. District Judge Howard Sachs to put the law on hold while their legal challenge against it plays out in court. They face a tight deadline: The law is set to take effect Wednesday.

Planned Parenthood and ACLU lawyers in a court filing wrote that unless Sachs blocks the law, it will severely limit access to abortion and prevent the “vast majority of patients from obtaining the constitutionally protected medical care they seek.”

“As a result, some patients will be prevented from obtaining abortion care entirely, and be forced to carry their pregnancies to term against their will_for some, even in the face of significant health risks that nevertheless would not qualify as a ‘medical emergency’ under the Bans,” attorneys wrote.

They added that other patients will seek abortions out of state or “outside the medical system,” despite health risks.

The law includes exceptions for medical emergencies, but not for rape or incest. If courts don’t uphold the eight-week ban, the bill includes a series of less-restrictive bans ranging from 14 weeks up to 20 weeks. The bill also bans abortions based solely on race, sex or a diagnosis indicating the potential for Down syndrome.

Attorneys for the state argue that courts have allowed limits on abortions based on the gestational age of the fetus, although similar abortion restrictions in North Dakota and Iowa have been struck down by judges. In court documents, they told the judge that the state’s goal is “protecting fetal life” as well as protecting women.

Federal law allows states to prohibit abortions after fetuses are viable outside the womb, which can be from 24 to 28 weeks.

Missouri’s bill also includes an outright ban on abortions except in cases of medical emergencies, but that would take effect only if the landmark 1973 U.S. Supreme Court’s Roe v. Wade ruling that legalized abortion nationwide is overturned.

Missouri already has some of the nation’s most restrictive abortion regulations. Just one clinic in the state performs abortions.

Driver dies in Kan. crash after car flips end over end

LYON COUNTY — One person died in an accident just before 1:30p.m. Sunday in Lyon County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2004 Acura TL driven by Jimmy Lee Coleman, 36, Kansas City, was northbound on Interstate 35 three miles east of Emporia at a high rate of speed.

The vehicle exited Interstate 35 at County Road R1.

The driver lost control and left the roadway to the right. The vehicle traveled through the ditch, vaulted approximately 20 feet, landed upright in the ditch, continued through the ditch and struck the ditch, flipped end over end and landed upside down

Coleman was pronounced dead at the scene and transported to Roberts-Blue-Barnett Funeral Home.  He was properly restrained at the time of the accident, according to the KHP.

Kansas felon sentenced for robbery at beauty salon

HUTCHINSON, Kan. — A Kansas man convicted of attempted robbery of a Hutchinson beauty salon was sentenced Friday to 21-months in prison.

Crenshaw -photo KDOC

Jackie Crenshaw, 66, Hutchinson, entered a plea to attempted robbery for going into the Anima Bella Salon, 16 S. Main in Hutchinson, and taking $360 from one of the employees. The state amended the complaint to attempted robbery as part of a plea agreement.

Both sides had recommended that Crenshaw serve the aggravated number of months in the sentencing grid box and that was 21-months.

Crenshaw has over two dozen prior convictions for forgery, theft, burglary and drugs according to the Kansas Department of Corrections.

Kansas man admits driving getaway car during KFC robbery

TOPEKA —A Kansas man has pleaded guilty to driving a getaway car during a fast-food restaurant robbery, according to U.S. Attorney Stephen McAllister.

McClelland photo Shawnee Co.

Justin Alexander McClelland, 32, Topeka, pleaded guilty one count of aiding and abetting bank robbery. In his plea, McClelland admitted he drove a co-defendant to a Kentucky Fried Chicken restaurant where a co-defendant committed the robbery. Then McClelland drove the co-defendant away from the robbery.

 Co-defendant Joshua Musgraves, 26, Topeka, Kan., pleaded guilty to robbery and is set for sentencing Oct. 7.

McClelland is set for sentencing Nov. 5. Both parties have agreed to recommend a sentence of three years in federal prison.

Texas man traveled to Kansas for sex with 15-year-old

WICHITA, KAN. – A Texas man was sentenced Thursday to 25 years in federal prison for taking a Hutchinson, Kan., girl across state lines for sex, U.S. Attorney Stephen McAllister said.

Carmona -photo Butler Co.

Juan Carlos Carmona, 37, Houston, Texas, pleaded guilty to one count of traveling from Texas to Kansas to have sex with a minor and one count of transporting a minor from Kansas to Texas to have sex with her.

In his plea, Carmona admitted that in mid-2017 he began communicating over the internet with a minor female. In April 2018, he traveled from Houston to Hutchinson, Kan., to meet the 15-year-old. His purpose was to obtain a hotel room and to have sex with the girl. After doing so, he returned to Houston.

In May 2018, Carmona returned to Kansas and picked up the 15-year-old girl. He transported her to Houston, where he intended to have sex with her.

Sheriff: Sausage plant in Kansas evacuated after fire

JACKSON COUNTY — Authorities are working to determine the cause of fire at sausage plant in Kansas.

Banner Creek, LLC google image

Just before 2p.m. Saturday, The Jackson County Sheriff’s Office 911 center received a report of a fire at the Banner Creek, LLC /Johnsonville Sausage Plant in the 600 Block of East 4th Street in Holton, according to Sheriff Tim Morse.

The Holton Fire Department, Jackson County EMS, the Holton Police Department and the Jackson County Sheriff’s Office responded to the scene.

The building was evacuated and the fire was extinguished. Traffic on 4th Street near the plant was diverted for a short period. The extent of damage to the facility is not yet available. 

Court: Electoral College members in Kansas not bound by popular vote

DENVER (AP) — A U.S. appeals court in Denver said Electoral College members can vote for the presidential candidate of their choice and aren’t bound by the popular vote in their states.

The 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled last week that the Colorado secretary of state violated the Constitution in 2016 when he removed an elector and nullified his vote because the elector refused to cast his ballot for Democrat Hillary Clinton, who won the popular vote.

The ruling applies only to Colorado and five other states in the 10th Circuit: Kansas, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Utah and Wyoming.

It could influence future cases nationwide in the unlikely event that enough Electoral College members strayed from their states’ popular vote to affect the outcome of a presidential election, constitutional scholars said.

The Electoral College system is established in the Constitution. When voters cast a ballot for president, they are actually choosing members of the Electoral College, called electors, who are pledged to that presidential candidate. The electors then choose the president.

Electors almost always vote for the popular vote winner, and some states have laws requiring them to do so.

But the split decision by a three-judge panel on the Denver appeals court said the Constitution allows electors to cast their votes at their own discretion. “The state does not possess countervailing authority to remove an elector and to cancel his vote in response to the exercise of that Constitutional right,” the ruling said.

The elector at the center of the case, Micheal Baca, was part of a group known as “Hamilton electors” who tried to convince electors who were pledged to Clinton or Donald Trump to unite behind a consensus candidate to deny Trump the presidency.

After a flurry of filings in state and federal courts, the electors met on Dec. 19, 2016, and Baca crossed out Clinton’s name on his ballot and wrote in John Kasich, the Republican governor of Ohio who also ran for president.

Then-Secretary of State Wayne Williams refused to count the vote and removed Baca as an elector. He replaced him with another elector who voted for Clinton.

Colorado’s current secretary of state, Jena Griswold, decried the ruling Tuesday in Colorado but did not immediately say if she would appeal.

“This court decision takes power from Colorado voters and sets a dangerous precedent,” she said. “Our nation stands on the principle of one person, one vote.”

Baca’s attorneys said the U.S. Supreme Court will likely hear the case because it conflicts with a decision from Washington state’s Supreme Court. That court said in May that electors could be fined for not casting ballots for the popular vote winner.

Constitutional scholars were skeptical, saying a conflicting opinion from a state court system has less influence on the Supreme Court than one from another federal appeals court. No other federal appeals court is believed to have ruled in a similar case.

“The court just might think this isn’t something that demands our attention right now,” said Michael Morley, a professor at the Florida State University College of Law.

The court ruling in Denver could be important if a future Electoral College is so closely divided that a handful of “faithless electors” change the outcome by casting a ballot contrary to the popular vote, said Ned Foley, a professor at Ohio State University’s law school.

“This opinion would be taken very seriously,” he said. “It would be considered judicial precedent.”

But that kind of split in the Electoral College is unlikely, said Morley.

“So many individually unlikely events would have to fall in place for that,” he said.

Hundreds of electors have cast votes in the history of the nation, “and only a handful have been cast by faithless electors,” Morley said.

It wasn’t immediately clear what impact the ruling would have on a new Colorado law that pledges the state’s Electoral College votes to the winner of the national popular vote if enough other states with a total of at least 270 electoral votes do the same.

It would ensure the winner of the popular vote wins the Electoral College and becomes president.

Tuesday’s ruling could undermine the law by prohibiting the state from requiring electors to vote for the popular vote winner, said Frank McNulty, an adviser to Protect Colorado’s Vote, which wants voters to overturn the law. But the ruling could also free electors to decide on their own to support the candidate with the most votes nationally, he said.

“It is a double-edge decision,” he said.

Kan. man shot by police during seat-belt traffic stop given probation

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — A Lawrence man who was shot by police after a traffic stop has been sentenced to a year of probation.

Police on the scene of the officer-involved shooting investigation-photo courtesy WIBW TV

Akira Lewis pleaded no contest Thursday to battery of a law enforcement officer. He will be required to take anger management courses.

Lewis was stopped in May 2018 for a seat belt violation. Police video shows Lewis refusing to provide his license and demanding that a supervisor be called. When officer Ian McCann tried to physically remove Lewis from the car, Lewis began hitting McCann. Another officer, Brindley Blood, shot Lewis. She told investigators she meant to use her Taser but accidentally grabbed her gun.

Lewis, who is black, claimed he was racially profiled.

Blood was charged in the case but those charges were dismissed . She resigned from the force.

Kansas State to reopen first floor of fire damaged library

MANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) — Students returning to Kansas State for fall classes next week will be greeted by a new Hale Library.

Collaboration space in the new Dave & Ellie Everetts Learning Center on Hale’s 1st floor photo Courtesy KSU

fire in May 2018 damaged 85% of the library’s interior. The building was undergoing renovations when the fire started.

The first floor will reopen Wednesday, after renovations funded by $7 million in donations and $58 million from the university’s insurance policy.

Library dean Lori Goetsch says the floor now features 14 collaboration rooms for student study spaces. Library officials hope to begin 24-hour operations from Sunday to Friday later this semester.

Eventually, the library will house an innovation lab and a second cafe. It also has a new sprinkler system.

Renovations on the rest of the library are expected to be complete by the end of 2020.

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