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Kan. woman jailed on drug charge; driving north in southbound lane

 

Mitchell
Mitchell

RENO COUNTY – A Kansas woman arrested Wednesday by South Hutchinson Police for suspicion of being in possession of marijuana in a distribution amount was before a judge Thursday where she was told of the potential charges. 

Mindy Mitchell, 26, also faces a possible charge of transporting an open container and no proof of insurance. 

Police reported they stopped her for driving northbound in a southbound lane just after 4 a.m. near the intersection of Prosperity and Main.

The officer could see an open beer bottle between her legs and another on the floor.

That led to her initial arrest. When officers requested permission to search the vehicle, she became angry and told them they needed a warrant. She eventually admitted that she had drugs in the car. That did lead to a warrant and police say they found marijuana, marijuana wax and marijuana brownies. 

She apparently admitted she came from Wichita after buying the drugs. In court,

In court, the judge told he she needed to be quiet because of discussing the case with no attorney present. 

Her request for a reduction of the $2,700 bond was denied.

Judge allows lawsuit in alleged Kansas inmate rape to proceed

Charles Chaney III-photo KBI Offender Registry

EL DORADO, Kan. (AP) — A federal judge rules that a woman’s lawsuit over an alleged rape while she was being held in the Butler County jail will move forward.

U.S. District Judge Eric Melgren on Wednesday rejected a former Butler County jailer’s request to dismiss the lawsuit.

Charles Chaney III argues in a court motion that he and the female inmate had consensual sex.

Melgren found the question of whether the sex was consensual is a “genuine issue” in the case.

The woman alleges in her lawsuit that Chaney raped her in the jail library while she was an inmate in July 2015.

Chaney is on the state sex offender registry with three counts of misdemeanor sexual battery.

Kansas lawmakers honor victims of sports-bar shooting

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas lawmakers used resolutions to honor the victims of an Olathe bar shooting being investigated as a hate crime, and Gov. Sam Brownback’s proclaimed Thursday as Indian American Appreciation Day in Kansas.

Brownback recognized the two survivors, Alok Madasani and Ian Grillot, and commemorated Srinivas Kuchibhotla, who died in the Feb. 22 shooting at Austins Bar & Grill. The House and Senate also recognized the survivors and passed resolutions honoring them and Kuchibhotla.

Brownback says the “senseless, violent actions” of one man won’t divide the state.

Witnesses say a gunman shouted racial slurs before opening fire on Kuchibhotla and Madasani, both Indian men. Grillot was shot when he intervened.

Adam Purinton remains jailed in Johnson County on murder and attempted murder charges.

3 face more charges in alleged Kansas domestic terror plot

Wright, Allen and Stein-photos Sedgwick Co.

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Three Kansas men accused of plotting to attack Somali immigrants in the state are facing a second federal conspiracy count.

A revised indictment returned Thursday in Wichita against Patrick Stein, Gavin Wright and Curtis Allen of plotting for months last year to “injure, oppress, threaten and intimate” Somalis who lived at a Garden City apartment complex.

While now accusing Wright of lying to the FBI, the new indictment again charges the trio with conspiring to use a weapon of mass destruction. Allen and Stein also remain accused of gun charges.

Federal prosecutors allege the defendants were part of The Crusaders militia group and planned the truck-bomb attack on the apartment building, which also contained a mosque, for the day after the Nov. 8 election.

The three have pleaded not guilty.

Push underway to get 5 Kansas siblings adopted together

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Adoption officials in Kansas are hoping to find a permanent home for five siblings currently in foster care.

The Kansas City Star says the children include two sisters and three brothers, ages 2 to 11.

The Kansas Children’s Services League’s Corey Lada says the children are living in separate foster homes. Lada says placement workers hope to identify a family who will keep them together in Kansas. The league is part of an agency that contracts with the state to run AdoptKSKids.org.

After the website profiled the siblings last weekend, interested adopters filled the Kansas Children’s Services League’s voice mailbox. The league’s email inbox also received 1,500 responses.

Lada calls that response “pretty insane” and unlike anything she’s seen in 13 years on the job.

Kansas zoo mourns death of 40-year-old orangutan

Clyde-photo Rolling Hills Zoo

SALINE COUNTY – Employees and fans of Rolling Hills Zoo are mourning the death of beloved Sumatran orangutan, Clyde. He died Wednesday morning due to medical conditions that are relatively common in orangutans, according to a social media report.

A fan favorite at the Zoo, at 40 Clyde had already outlived the average 28-year life expectancy of orangutans, according to the AZA’s MLE lifespan table.

Born August 1976 at the Cheyanne Mountain Zoo, Clyde came to Rolling Hills Zoo based on an SSP recommendation as a non-breeder in 2011 from the San Diego Zoo. 

Clyde had been a gentle partner for Rusa, Rolling Hills Zoo’s female orangutan. From the day they were introduced he impressed her and she was often found near him. He succumbed to her every whim and let her take whatever she wanted – even the food right out of his mouth. If she was out of sight he would look through the door just to make sure that she was still there. 

Clyde was affectionately called, “a grumpy old man” by his caretakers, and at age 40 he did things in his time while teaching them patience.

Clyde was also featured in the 2016 April issue of National Geographic as part of Joel Sarore’s Photo Ark.

 

Investigators ask for help to determine who set rural Kan. fires

 

Rural Geary Co. fire
Rural Geary Co. fire

GEARY COUNTY – Law enforcement authorities and fire officials in Geary County are investigating several suspicious fires since late January in eastern and southeastern Geary County and asking for help to identify those responsible.

The most recent fire occurred during the evening hours on Wednesday, March 15 and involved the destruction of approximately 110 large bales of brome grass. Loss to the owner was approximately $5,000.00.

The agency is requesting the public to report information on any suspicious activity or suspicious vehicles on remote gravel roads in Geary County.

Anyone with information about these fires is asked to call Junction City/Geary County Crimestoppers at 762-TIPS, 1-800-KS-CRIME or the Geary County Rural Fire Department at 785-238-1290. Investigators from the Office of the State Fire Marshal are assisting the local investigators.

Teacher jailed after 100-mile-per-hour Kan. chase resigns

Gantenbein

SALINE COUNTY- School district officials say a teacher jailed after a Tuesday morning high-speed chase is out of a job.

Law enforcement authorities in Saline County are investigating a suspect after a Tuesday morning high-speed chase.

Just before 1:30 a.m., a deputy pulled over a 2013 GMC Sierra driven by Adam Gantenbein, 30, Abilene, for improper driving left of center in the 2200 block of Kansas140 Highway, according to Saline County Sheriff Roger Soldan

When the Deputy attempted to approach the vehicle, the Gantenbeine fled at a high rate of speed.

The deputy pursued the suspect at speeds of 100-miles-per-hour and turned south on Burma Road.

Gantenbein eventually pulled the truck over as he approached Smolan Road.

He was booked into the Saline County jail for driving under the influence, flee and elude and speeding.

The Abilene school district accepted Gantenbein’s resignation as a special ed teacher  at Tuesday night’s meeting, according to district spokesperson Jennifer Bradford Vernon.

Update: Kan. Supreme Court receptive to protecting abortion rights

JOHN HANNA, AP Political Writer

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas’ highest court appeared receptive Thursday to declaring for the first time that the state constitution recognizes abortion rights, with a majority of the justices skeptical of the state’s argument against the idea as it defended a ban on a common second-trimester procedure.

The state Supreme Court heard arguments in a lawsuit filed by Kansas City-area father-daughter physicians against a 2015 first-in-the-nation law that has become a model for abortion opponents in other states. The key issue is whether the Kansas Constitution protects abortion rights independently of the U.S. Constitution, which would allow state courts to invalidate restrictions that have been upheld by the federal courts.

Abortion opponents fear that such a decision by state courts could block new laws — or invalidate existing ones — even if President Donald Trump’s appointments result in a more conservative U.S. Supreme Court. Janet Crepps, an attorney for the New York-based Center for Reproductive Rights, which is representing the doctors, argued that it’s important for Kansas residents to know what rights their constitution protects.

“The federal constitutional protection seems to ebb and flow with the political tide,” Crepps said.

Abortion-rights supporters contend broad language in the state constitution’s Bill of Rights protects a woman’s right to obtain an abortion. The Bill of Rights says residents have “natural rights” including “life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness” and that “free governments” were created for their “equal protection and benefit.”

The state argues there’s no evidence that when the constitution was written in 1859, its drafters contemplated the issue in a legal environment in which abortion generally was illegal.

But four of the court’s seven justices peppered state Solicitor General Stephen McAllister with questions about the state constitution affording no protections for abortion rights now. Justice Dan Biles asked McAllister whether the state would face any limits on its power to restrict abortion, so that it could force a woman to carry a pregnancy to term even if she faced dying.

As McAllister struggled to answer, Justice Carole Beier said, “The uncomfortable answer you’re trying not to give is, ‘No.'”

Yet the justices appeared to struggle with what standard the state courts would use in reviewing abortion restrictions. McAllister noted that after the U.S. Supreme Court issued its landmark Roe v. Wade decision in 1973, more than four decades of contentious court battles over abortion followed.

And Justice Caleb Stegall, the only appointee of conservative Republican Gov. Sam Brownback, worried about Crepps’ argument that constitutional rights evolve to reflect a changing society and “the general march of progress.”

“How is this anything other than just a blank check to judges?” Stegall said.

Abortion opponents worried enough about the lawsuit’s outcome that they waged an unsuccessful, pre-emptive campaign to oust four justices from Kansas’ highest court in last year’s election, including Beier and Biles.

Six justices were appointed by Democratic or moderate Republican governors. The justices have faced strong criticism in the past from the Republican-controlled Legislature and Brownback over past rulings in a wide variety of cases.

The Kansas law at issue bars physicians from using forceps or similar instruments on a live fetus to remove it from the womb in pieces, using the non-medical term “dismemberment abortion” to describe the procedure. Such instruments are commonly used in dilation and evacuation procedure, which the Center for Reproductive Rights has described as the safest and most common abortion procedure in the U.S. in the second trimester.

The Kansas law was model legislation drafted by the National Right to Life Committee. The group says similar bans have been enacted in six other states — Oklahoma, West Virginia, Mississippi, Alabama, Louisiana and Arkansas.

Abortion providers reported performing 629 dilation and evacuation procedures in Kansas in 2015, according to the latest state health department data available. That was 9 percent of the state’s total abortions.

The lawsuit against the Kansas law was filed by Drs. Herbert Hodes and Traci Nauser, who operate a women’s health center in the Kansas City suburb of Overland Park. A Shawnee County district judge’s ruling put the law on hold beforehand; the Kansas Court of Appeals split 7-7, allowing the judge’s decision to stand.

 

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JOHN HANNA, AP Political Writer

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Abortion opponents have enjoyed a long string of legislative victories in Kansas in recent years.

But now they worry that a legal challenge to a first-in-the-nation ban on a common second-trimester procedure could doom other restrictions they’ve won.

The Kansas Supreme Court will hear arguments Thursday in a lawsuit filed by Kansas City-area father-daughter physicians against a 2015 law that is a model for abortion opponents in other states.

The key issue is whether the Kansas Constitution protects abortion rights independently of the U.S. Constitution.

If the justices agree with a lower-court judge’s decision saying so, state courts could invalidate restrictions that have been backed by federal courts.

Abortion opponents in Kansas are worried while colleagues elsewhere anticipate President Donald Trump’s appointments moving the U.S. Supreme Court to the right.

Police: Neighbor’s dog helps officers catch Kan. felony suspect

Brody-photo courtesy El Dorado Police

BUTLER COUNTY –Law enforcement authorities in Butler County are crediting a neighbor’s dog for helping catch a wanted suspect.

On Tuesday, officers with police in El Dorado were serving a felony warrant at a home. The suspect decided to run from police, according to a social media report.

The suspect jumped several fences. The dog, “Brody,” happened to be in the last yard and delayed the suspect long enough that officers were able to make an arrest.

Officers provided a tip to felony suspects “If you decide to run from the police, don’t jump into a yard with a dog like Brody.”

Kan. man dies from injuries after 3-vehicle motorcycle crash

Saturday’s accident in Salina- courtesy photo

SALINE COUNTY – A Kansas man died from injuries in a weekend accident in Salina.

Just after 2p.m. on Saturday, a 2016 Nissan Rogue driven by Lisa Hochman, 51, Florida, was eastbound on Iron Avenue in Salina, according to Police Sgt. James Feldman.

The driver failed to stop at a red light at Ohio Street and collided with a 2000 Harley-Davidson Road Glide motorcycle driven by John Pihl, 60, Salina. A Kia SUV then collided with the Nissan.

Phil was transported to a Salina Regional Medical Center and then transferred to a hospital in Wichita. He died on Wednesday, according to Salina Police Capt. Paul Forrester.

A private vehicle transported Hochman to Salina Regional Medical Center.

No other injuries were reported.

Pihl was wearing a helmet, according to police.

Ranchers deliver hay to Kansas ranchers affected by wildfire

STEAMBOAT SPRINGS, Colo. (AP) — Ranchers in northern Colorado have been helping out counterparts in southern Kansas who were affected by wildfires.

The Steamboat Pilot & Today reports that a group of Routt County ranchers donated money and 15 tons of hay to ranchers in Kansas who lost livestock and property to the fires.

Rancher Kyle Monger organized the humanitarian effort after he heard a friend had lost most of his ranch near Ashland, Kansas. Monger says he’s grateful that the Routt County community quickly came together for those in need.

 
Hayden trucker Donnie Hayes says the family he delivered the hay to lost everything except for their vehicles and some cattle that had sought refuge in a pond as fire engulfed the ranch.

Rape allegation: Motion to dismiss lawsuit against KSU denied

MANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) A federal judge has dismissed part of a Title IX lawsuit filed against Kansas State by two women who allege they were raped at off-campus fraternity houses.

The Manhattan Mercury reports (https://bit.ly/2nqOL7X ) the court dismissed the claims of one former Kansas State student because her alleged assault occurred at a private apartment complex.

But U.S. Judge Julie Robinson denied Kansas State’s motion to dismiss the part of the lawsuit that deals with off-campus fraternity houses.

The two students say in their lawsuit the university didn’t investigate when they reported they were raped in off-campus fraternities. They argued the university has substantial control over off-campus fraternities and are required to investigate.

Kansas State has argued laws don’t require the university to investigate sexual assaults when they happen off campus.

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