We have a brand new updated website! Click here to check it out!

Woman jailed; allegedly violated Kan. protection order by co-workers

Rose

SALINE COUNTY – Law enforcement authorities in Saline County are investigating a woman who allegedly violated a protection from stalking order.

On Thursday, police arrested Marlyce Rose, 74, Salina, during a traffic stop, according to Police Captain Paul Forrester.

Rose was wanted on a warrant after she allegedly violated the October 2016 protection order on February 27 and March 2.  The victims, former co-workers of Rose, included a 71-year-old Salina man and his wife, according to Forrester. 

Rose faces charges including battery, two counts of stalking and two counts of violating a protection order.

Semi overturns, freeing dozens of cows on Kansas highway

Law enforcement rounding up 55-60 head of cattle loose from overturned semi on Friday-photo KDOT

LENEXA, Kan. (AP) — A modern day cattle roundup shut down traffic ramps for about four hours on a busy section of Kansas highways in Johnson County.

The Kansas Department of Transportation closed ramps about noon Friday near Kansas 10 and Interstate 435 after an semi-trailer truck overturned on the westbound Interstate 35 lanes to Kansas 10, releasing dozens of cows.

At one point, between 55 and 60 cows were running loose.

The ramps were reopened about 4 p.m. Friday after the cattle were all rounded up and the truck was hauled away.

Several law enforcement agencies were involved in the roundup.

It wasn’t immediately clear what caused the truck to overturn.

Search underway for man who ran from 2 Kansas traffic stops

DeHerrera-photo GC Police

FINNEY COUNTY – Law enforcement authorities in Finney County are asking the public for help to locate a suspect who ran from two traffic stops.

Just before 10 a.m. Thursday, Officers of the Garden City Police Department conducted a traffic stop on a vehicle in the 1700 Block of North 8th Street for a traffic violation. After the vehicle stopped a male passenger fled from the vehicle on foot, according to a media release.

Officers checked the area but were unable to locate the suspect.

Other occupants of the vehicle identified the person that fled as John DeHerrera, 41, no known address. Further investigation revealed DeHerrera has active arrest warrants for his arrest from the Garden City Municipal Court for theft and a Warrant from Kearny County for Failure to Appear on traffic charges.

A short time later deputies of the Finney County Sheriff’s Department conducted a traffic stop on a vehicle in the area of 4101 E Highway 50.

During the stop, a passenger fled from the vehicle. After an interview with the driver, it was learned the passenger that fled was again John DeHerrera.

Deputies and Officers searched the area. During the search of the area, two schools Charles O’ Stones and Victor Ornelas, were notified of the incident and went into lockdown procedures as a precaution.

The suspect has not been located.

Anyone with information on DeHerrera should call the Garden City Police Department (620) 276-1300, Crime Stoppers (620) 275-7807, or text your tip to Garden City PD, text GCTIP and your tip to Tip411 (847411).

Kansas Senate Bill Would Improve Behavioral Health Care

By Mallory Houser
KU Statehouse Wire Service

Executive Director of Compass Behavioral Health Ric Dalke -courtesy photo

TOPEKA—With a nationwide shortage of psychiatrists, Senate Bill 32 would broaden the Medical Student and Resident Loan Act to include psychiatry, providing an incentive for psychiatry students to practice in Kansas upon graduation.

While there is a psychiatric specialist deficit across the state, rural areas are especially suffering.

Compass Behavioral Health is one of the 26 community mental health centers in Kansas that covers 11,000 square miles of the state. Eight of the 13 counties it serves are considered “Frontier,” with less than six persons per square mile. In these counties, one psychiatrist covers approximately 5,000 lives within 683 square miles, opposed to urban areas where one psychiatrist covers approximately 900 lives within one square mile.

Executive Director of Compass Behavioral Health Ric Dalke faces geographical and resource barriers daily to provide mental health services to rural Kansans. To address this issue, the center has established a tele-psychiatry program, providing services completely on tele-video. While this has been beneficial, Dalke said it is secondary to face-to-face services.

“If people in the eastern part of Kansas can see a psychiatrist face-to-face, people in the western side Kansas should also be able to see a psychiatrist face-to-face,” Dalke said. “It is the best way to provide psychiatric service.”

Another issue Dalke faces is recruiting psychiatrists who are under retirement age and will practice for more than a few years. Dalke believes adding an incentive such as a medical student loan repayment is a step to fix this issue.

“If we can get people out, and they see and experience the people and the culture of rural and frontier Kansas, many of those people stay,” Dalke said.

Legislative Liaison for the Kansas Sheriffs Association Ed Klumpp has similar concerns about Kansans mental health, as law enforcement officers interact daily with people who have mental health issues.

“Law enforcement is usually the primary conduit for getting people help,” Klumpp said.

Law enforcement agencies depend on local services to assist people into treatment before they reach a mental health crisis where officers must take action if they become a risk to themselves or others. Especially in rural areas, Klumpp said SB32 could fill the deficit of psychiatric professionals to prevent escalated instances.

“It’s a matter of having a quantity of trained professionals to provide services,” Klumpp said. “It’s a step in the right direction.”
SB32 was passed in the Senate with a 35-5 vote on last month, and is now in the House Health and Human Services committee. The bill will continue to be discussed once the legislature reconvenes.

Mallory Houser is a University of Kansas junior journalism major from Dallas.

Kansas woman admits using a gun in series of vandalism

Security camera image courtesy Great Bend Police

BARTON COUNTY- Law enforcement authorities in central Kansas are investigating a suspect for a series of vandalism using a gun.

On February 10, Police responded to a complaint of vandalism to the Yoga Central studio, 6003 10th Street in Great Bend.

Security camera footage showed a person pulling up in front of the studio, getting out of a van, and shooting several rounds through the front of the studio.

Detectives quickly found that several other area law enforcement agencies were investigating similar occurrences.

A jailer at the Pawnee County Jail recognized the suspect as someone that had recently been booked into their jail.

Using this information detectives were able to locate a suspect for the crime in Rush County.

In subsequent interviews, the suspect Michele Cresci confessed that she was the person in the video of the Yoga Central shooting.

The Rush County Sheriff’s Office arrested Cresci for charges related to Pawnee County Sheriff’s Office’s investigation.

The Great Bend Police Department is currently in the process of arranging for charges to be pressed against Cresci in Barton County as well.

UPDATE: Pilot goes missing after crashing landing in rural Kansas

Plane involved in Thursday crash -photo Courtesy Shawn Anderson

ROXBURY, Kan. (AP) — Authorities say a pilot went missing for several hours after a small propeller plane crash-landed in a central Kansas field.

Kansas Highway Patrol Trooper Ben Gardner says the plane went down around 3:30 p.m. Thursday in a rural area near the small town of Roxbury. The Federal Aviation Administration says wind caught the Maule M-5 and that the left wing struck the ground during the landing.

Gardner says troopers tried reaching out to hospitals in the area in an effort to locate the pilot but were unsuccessful. Gardner says the patrol didn’t hear from the pilot until he called dispatchers about six hours later.

Gardner says the pilot’s plane was disabled and that it’s unclear how he left the scene. Gardner says investigators are trying to determine what happened.

——–

North Central Kansas Student a Truman Scholarship Finalist

Zabel

LAWRENCE — Two KU juniors are finalists for Harry S. Truman Scholarships, which provide up to $30,000 for graduate study, according to a media release from the University of Kansas.

The awards are given to college juniors for leadership in public service. The Harry S. Truman Scholarship Foundation reviewed more than 750 files from 315 institutions before selecting its finalists.

From that pool, the foundation chose 199 finalists from 136 institutions. Those students will now compete for about 60 awards.

KU’s finalists:

Taylor Zabel of Smith Center is majoring in biochemistry. He graduated from Smith Center Junior-Senior High School. He is the son of John and Laura Zabel. At KU, Zabel has been involved in the University Honors Program, Student Senate, is on the advisory board of KU’s Counseling & Psychological Services (CAPS) and was active in the Provost’s Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Advisory Group. He has held national internships with the Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta and with the National Institutes of Health

The other finalist is Tomas Green of Lynnwood, Washington. He is majoring in chemical engineering and minoring in public policy.

The foundation will interview finalists in March and April before announcing the 2017 Class of Truman Scholars in late April.

The awards are selected on the criteria including an extensive record of campus and community service, commitment to a career in government or the nonprofit and advocacy sectors, communication skills and a high probability of becoming a “change agent,” and a strong academic record with likely acceptance to the graduate school of the candidate’s choice. The campus nomination process is coordinated through the Office of Fellowships & Scholarships, which is housed in the University Honors Program and open to all KU undergraduates.

Scholars receive priority admission and supplemental financial aid at some premier graduate institutions, leadership training, career and graduate school counseling, and special internship opportunities within the federal government.

Since 1981, 18 KU students have become Truman scholars. Ashlie Koehn was the last KU student to receive the honor in 2015.

The Truman Scholarship Foundation was established by Congress in 1975 as the federal memorial to President Harry S. Truman.

 

 

Survivor of Kansas sports-bar shooting released from hospital

Image courtesy University of Kansas Hospital

KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas man who survived an apparently racially motivated shooting at a suburban Kansas City bar has been released from the hospital.

Ian Grillot was one of three men shot Feb. 22 at Austins Bar & Grill in Olathe, Kansas. One of the men, Srinivas Kuchibhotla, was killed. Kuchibhotla’s friend, Alok Madasani, was wounded.

Watch his comments here.

The University of Kansas Health System said in a statement Thursday that Grillot was released from the hospital Tuesday. A bullet hit Grillot in the hand and entered his chest when he tried to stop the suspected gunman, 51-year-old Adam Purinton, of Olathe. Purinton is charged with murder and attempted murder.

Witnesses say Purinton shouted racial slurs before shooting Kuchibhotla and Madasani, natives of India who were engineers at GPS-maker Garmin.

Kansas Commerce announces Global Manufacturing Summit

kansas-invest-thrive-prosper-logoKDC

TOPEKA–The 2017 Global Manufacturing Summit, hosted by the Kansas Department of Commerce, in partnership with Pittsburg State University will take place on Thursday and Friday, April 6 – 7, 2017. The Global Manufacturing Summit will bring together industry experts to discuss modern issues and innovative and practical solutions for the future of manufacturing.

“The Global Manufacturing Summit will showcase Kansas’ hard-working manufacturers as well as the industry’s high-tech, innovative practices,” said Kansas Governor Sam Brownback. “It speaks volumes to the Kansas manufacturing sector that global industry-leaders are coming here to discuss the future of manufacturing.”

Governor Sam Brownback will be the keynote speaker at the Summit’s lunch and Mr. Cliff Pemble, CEO of Garmin, will provide the keynote address at dinner. In addition, six panels will be offered on the following topics related to manufacturing:

  • Packaging/Graphics & Imaging Technology
  • Transportation Manufacturing
  • Agriculture & Heavy Equipment
  • Sustainable Materials
  • Construction Manufacturing
  • Emerging Technologies

Expert speakers from industry-leading companies will provide insight to the panel discussions, including speakers from companies such as, M&M/Mars Chocolate, Inc., BlackRock Alternative Investors, POET Ethanol, GE Plastics of Brazil, AGCO, Inc., Dairy Farmers of America, Kenny Construction of Chicago, Fosber Manufacturing of Green Bay and Western Forms.

The Manufacturing Summit will provide an opportunity to engage with industry leaders and discover new and innovative ways manufacturers around the world are engaging with the industry. For more information please contact Nicole Randall at [email protected].

Kan. legislative leaders: Work underway to fix school funding

Senate Pres. Susan Wagle

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas Legislature’s top leaders say a state Supreme Court ruling on education funding won’t require lawmakers to change course on drafting a new school finance law.

Senate President Susan Wagle and House Speaker Ron Ryckman Jr. said their chambers of the Republican-controlled Legislature already were working on a new school funding law before the court’s decision.

The court said the state isn’t adequately funding its schools and lawmakers must enact a new education funding law by June 30.

Wagle and Ryckman put a positive spin on the court’s decision by saying it recognized the Legislature’s power to set school funding policy and appropriate money.

While the court said the state’s current funding is in adequate, the justices did not specifically say how much spending needs to increase.

___

Search continues for Kan. suspect who fired gun during robbery

Photo courtesy Topeka Police

SHAWNEE COUNTY-Law enforcement authorities in Shawnee County continue investigating an armed robbery and asking for help to identify a suspect. On Thursday, they released new images of the suspect.

Just after 7 a.m. on Monday February 27, police responded to report of an armed robbery in the 900 Block of SW 37th in Topeka, according to a media release.

A suspect, described as a white male in his 20s had entered the business, fired a gun into the ceiling and demanded money.

He was last seen running north from the business and then west on Devon.
Anyone with information is asked to contact police.

Investigators determine cause of fire in Aggieville

Thursday fire in Aggieville Photo Manhattan Fire Dept.

MANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) — Investigators have determined that a fire in the Aggieville bar and shopping district near the Kansas State University campus was accidental.

The Manhattan Fire Department says in a news release that floor finishing materials sparked the blaze.

The fire was reported around 3:45 a.m. Thursday in a building that had housed a bookstore called the Dusty Bookshelf and was being renovated into another business. Thirty firefighters fought the blaze before it was extinguished about four hours later. No one was hurt.

The fire also caused smoke damage to adjoining businesses that sell doughnuts and T-shirts. A cat was rescued from one of the businesses.

Investigators estimated $673,000 in damages to the former Dusty Bookshelf building and its contents. Another $149,000 in damages occurred in the other two buildings.

Indictment: Kan. veteran claiming blindness defrauded government

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — An Army veteran has been indicted for pretending to be blind to collect $63,000 in benefits.

A federal indictment unsealed Thursday charges 61-year-old Billy J. Alumbaugh and his ex-wife, Debra K. Alumbaugh, both of Turon, with conspiracy to defraud the government and theft of government funds.

Court records do not show they have attorneys.

Prosecutors allege he fraudulently obtained a supplemental monthly pension of $700 between June 2009 and January 2017 by claiming he was legally blind.

The indictment says that in October 2016 his wife drove him to the VA hospital in Wichita and drove away with him after his appointment. But after a few blocks, the couple stopped the car and switched seats so he could drive.

He held a driver’s license that did not require corrective lenses.

Copyright Eagle Radio | FCC Public Files | EEO Public File