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Kansas man dies after SUV, pickup crash

WILSON COUNTY- A Kansas man died in an accident just before 7p.m. on Thursday in Wilson County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2003 Chevy Trailblazer driven by Chad Stacy, 34, Louisburg, was eastbound on Kansas 39 at U.S. 75.

The driver failed to stop at the stop sign and collided with a 2013 GMC pickup driven by Ronald Young, 43, Overbrook, that was northbound on U.S. 75.

The SUV rolled in the middle of U.S. 75 and came to rest on its wheels.

Stacy was pronounced dead at the scene and transported to Frontier Forensics. He was not wearing a seat belt, according to the KHP.

Young was not injured.

Kansas teen, woman back in court for rollover crash in stolen truck

Currie-photo KDOC

RENO COUNTY– A Kansas man and woman arrested December 28 accused of stealing a truck following a rollover accident were back before a judge on Thursday.

Alex Currie, 19, and Heather O’Gorman, 24, both of Hutchinson were charged with auto burglary, two counts of felony theft and felony criminal damage.

The pickup belonged to a corrections officer at the Hutchinson Correctional Facility.

Just after 8:30 a.m. on December 28, Reno County Sheriff Deputies were dispatched to 11713 S Victory Road after report of a suspicious vehicle.

The description matched the description of a vehicle reported stolen just after 5:30 a.m. at residence in the 1500 block of West 12th Street in Hutchinson.

Deputies along with a trooper from the Kansas Highway Patrol were able to locate the vehicle driving westbound on Illinois
Street from Yoder Road.

The vehicle went north on Halstead as deputies were still trying to get catch up with the vehicle it turned east on Blanchard at a high rate of speed.

The driver lost control on the curve and left the roadway to the right, entering the ditch, and overturning onto its top. O’Gorman was transported to the hospital for treatment. Currie was arrested at the scene

Stolen vehicle involved in a Dec. 28, accident in Reno County-photo courtesy KWCH

Both were also involved in another case involving burglary from March 28, of 2016. They are accused of breaking into another vehicle, stealing a woman’s wallet, forging a $600.00 money gram and causing damage to the vehicle.

Currie remains jailed on a $24,000 bond while O’Gorman is jailed on a bond of $9,000.

Police ask for help to identify Kansas robbery suspect

Photos Wichita Police

SEDGWICK COUNTY – Law enforcement authorities in Sedgwick County are investigating a robbery and asking for help to identify a suspect.

On December 29, The Family Mart in the 1500 block of south Meridian in Wichita was robbed, according to a social media report.

On Thursday, police released photos of the suspect.

If you are able to identify of this person or you have any additional information about the crime please call Crime Stoppers at 267-2111.

Ruling could change prison sentence in fire that killed 6 KC firefighters

Sheppard-courtesy photo

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The youngest of five people convicted in the deaths of six Kansas City firefighters will be resentenced in February.

Bryan Sheppard was sentenced to life in prison for an arson fire that sparked an explosion and killed the firefighters. Sheppard was 17 at the time of the November 1988 explosion.

The Kansas City Star reports Sheppard was granted a new sentencing hearing after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled it was unconstitutional to impose life without parole sentences on juveniles.

Sheppard, now 45, will be resentenced Feb. 15 and 16.

Firefighters Thomas Fry, Gerald Halloran, Luther Hurd, James Kilventon Jr., Robert D. McKarnin and Michael Oldham died in the explosion at a construction site in south Kansas City.

Airplane engineering company moves to Wichita State University

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A European plane maker that established a U.S. engineering outpost in Wichita 14 years ago has moved to a new building at Wichita State University.

The Wichita Eagle reports that Airbus Americas Engineering’s final group of Wichita employees began working at the two-story, 90,000-square-foot building this week.

Brandi Chandler, who coordinated the multi-stage move for Airbus, says it began the first week of December and involved 300 employees.

Vice president of Airbus Americas Engineering John O’Leary says the transition “went extremely smooth.”

O’Leary says the move not only was a means to consolidate its work from two buildings to one, but was also a way to be closer to at university’s new Innovation Campus, where there’s a pipeline for the company’s future workforce.

Kansas man sentenced for shooting a man, throwing kitten against wall

Looney-photo Sedgwick Co.

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas man was sentenced to more than 20 years in prison for shooting another man and throwing a kitten against a wall, causing it to be euthanized.

Damion Looney, 29, Wichita, was sentenced Thursday after being found guilty in November of several charges.

District Attorney Marc Bennett said in a statement that Looney shot Quinton Edwards at a home in July 2015 after Looney argued with his girlfriend in a Wichita bar. The shooting caused Edwards to lose an eye.

While investigating the shooting, authorities discovered a video showing Looney throwing a kitten against a wall. The animal was later euthanized.

Looney pleaded guilty to felony cruelty to animals in that case.

Kan. man hospitalized after pickup rear ends KDOT snow plow truck

Truck involved in Thursday accident-photo KDOT

RILEY COUNTY – A Kansas man was injured in an accident just after 11a.m. on Thursday in Riley County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2004 Chevy Silverado driven by Maxwell Kenneth Kelly, 28, Topeka, was westbound on Interstate 70 five miles east of Kansas 177.

The pickup rear-ended a KDOT Dump Truck with Plow Blade in the left lane blading snow south into the median with its emergency lights activated.

Kelly was transported to the hospital in Topeka.

The KDOT driver Gerald A. Cox, 54, Wamego, was not injured.

The Interstate was backed up for over an hour while crews clean up the accident.

New guideline: Giving peanut-based foods to babies early prevents allergies

WASHINGTON (AP) — New guidelines say most babies should start eating peanut-containing foods well before their first birthday, to lower their chances of developing the dangerous food allergy.

Thursday’s guidelines from a National Institutes of Health panel mark a shift in dietary advice. They spell out exactly how to introduce infants to peanut-based foods and when — for some, as early as 4 to 6 months of age — depending on whether they’re at high, moderate or low risk of becoming allergic to peanuts.

Babies are at highest risk if they have a severe form of the skin rash eczema or egg allergies, and need a doctor’s check before introduction of peanut-based foods. Most other tots can start eating age-appropriate options at home.

The guidelines are being published in pediatric and allergy journals.

Wanted Kansas man captured after vehicle gets stuck

Kenny W. Smith-photo KDOC

RENO COUNTY – A Kansas wanted for absconding in a theft case was arrested Wednesday after he ran from a Reno County Sheriff’s Deputy.

Kenny Wayne Smith, 32, was spotted driving in the area of 4th & Wilshire Road just west of Hutchinson, according to the sheriff’s department.

The deputy saw the car turn onto 4th and began to follow.

He did a check of the tag, which indicated it didn’t match the vehicle.

The driver began to speed up and the deputy turned on his lights and siren and the car sped away, going up a long drive in the 1700 block of west 4th.

The vehicle eventually got stuck.

Deputies identified the suspect as Smith and arrested him.

He faces potential charges of felony flee and elude, driving while suspended, illegal display and interference with law enforcement.

He was also arrested on the warrant for the earlier case. Bond in the case set at $6,450.

Smith has two previous theft convictions from 2014 in Reno County, according to the Kansas Department of Corrections.

Kan. teen hospitalized after SUV rolls off bridge, catches fire

CLOUD COUNTY- A Kansas teen was injured in an accident just before 9a.m. on Thursday in Cloud County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 1991 GMC SUV driven by Tristan L. Mikesell, 15, Sabetha, was westbound on Oat Road five miles southwest of Concordia.

The SUV slid of the roadway, rolled off a bridge and caught on fire.

Mikesell was transported to the Cloud County Hospital.

He was properly restrained at the time of the accident, according to the KHP.

Kansas school district, teachers at contract impasse

Frank Ruston Elementary is one of the schools at a contract impasse with the district-google image

By SAM ZEFF

Another metro school district is at a contract impasse with its teachers.

Teachers and the Kansas City, Kansas Public Schools are heading into non-binding fact finding after failing to reach a deal.

The two sides held talks with a mediator twice last month but that also failed to result in a contract.

Teachers and the district say the dispute is not over how much of a pay hike to give but rather how to distribute the two percent raise.

The union says it wants to reward veteran teachers who’ve been stuck at the same pay grade for years. But to make sure any new contract is approved it must have something for everyone. “We’re trying to be fair to everyone,” says Ollie Carroll from the Kansas NEA.

The district wants to target the money towards younger teachers, according to Carroll.

The KCK district says it believes its offered a fair in contract and the two percent bump is in line with what most other district employees have received. “We need to be competitive at all levels, so we can compete with all districts,” says KCK Chief of Staff David Smith.

The union says it also has disagreements over planning time and due process rights for teachers.

The two sides have yet to agree on a fact finder. Once that’s done, a hearing will be scheduled.

Sam Zeff is co-host of the political podcast Statehouse Blend. Follow Sam on Twitter @SamZeff.

KHP: 2 adults, 3 children hospitalized after head-on crash

SALINE COUNTY – Five people were injured in an accident just before 10:30 a.m. on Thursday in Saline County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2005 Dodge pickup driven by Stacy Lynn Warta, 26, Geneseo, was eastbound on Kansas 140 in the city limits of Brookville.

The driver lost control due to snowy road conditions.

The pickup crossed the centerline and hit a Dodge Van driven by Khali Marie Anderson, 23, Ellsworth, head-on.

Warta and two passengers in the pickup Leah Rhyan Warta, 6, and Kolt Warta, 1, were transported to Salina Regional Medical Center.

Anderson and a passenger in the van Aiyana E. Brown, 17, Wichita, were also transported to the hospital in Salina.

All five were properly restrained at the time of the accident, according to the KHP.

Four charged with hate crime after anti-Trump videotaped beating

CHICAGO (AP) — The latest on the beating of a man in Chicago that was broadcast live on Facebook:

1 p.m.

Prosecutors have filed hate crime and aggravated kidnapping charges against four black suspects accused of beating and taunting a white man during an attack streamed live on Facebook

Cook County prosecutors on Thursday announced charges against three 18-year-olds — Jordan Hill of Carpentersville, Brittany Covington of Chicago and Tesfaye Cooper of Chicago — and 24-year-old Tanishia Covington of Chicago.

Prosecutors say the four are also charged with aggravated unlawful restraint and aggravated battery with a deadly weapon. Three have also been charged with residential burglary.

The charges stem from an incident that went on for as many as 48 hours. Police have said the victim has “mental health challenges.”

___

10:30 a.m.

The grandmother of a young woman associated with a live video on Facebook of a beating says her granddaughter “had her ups and downs,” but is “a good person.”

Priscilla Covington of Chicago says she raised the young woman “since she was a baby.” She says her granddaughter no longer lives at the family home but still lives in Chicago.

The grandmother says the video doesn’t reflect the young woman she raised.

She says she’s worried because her family, including the woman’s younger sisters, have been threatened since the video was posted online.

She says she saw and talked to her granddaughter about four days ago, and “she was OK.”

___

9:20 a.m.

Chicago police say authorities are considering whether an attack on a white man that was broadcast live on Facebook falls under hate crimes statutes.

Chicago Police Department spokesman Anthony Guglielmi said Thursday morning that the four black suspects made “terrible racist statements” during the assault but that police believe the victim was targeted because he has “special needs,” not because of his race.

Still, Guglielmi says investigators are looking at whether the assault falls under hate-crime laws.

Guglielmi says charges are expected later Thursday. He says the four suspects are all adults.

___

7:45 a.m.

Chicago police say they don’t believe a man beaten in an assault broadcast live on Facebook was targeted because he was white.

Police spokesman Anthony Guglielmi said Thursday morning that charges are expected soon against four black suspects. Guglielmi says the suspects made “terrible racist statements” during the attack, but that investigators believe the victim was targeted because he has special needs, not because of his race.

Guglielmi says it’s possible the suspects were trying to extort something from the victim’s family.

Video from Chicago media outlets appears to show someone off-camera using profanities about “white people” and President-elect Donald Trump. Chicago Police Superintendent Eddie Johnson said Wednesday that the victim has mental health challenges, and he called the video “sickening.”

Guglielmi said police are working with prosecutors “to build the strongest case.”

___

6 a.m.

Chicago police say charges are expected against four people who police say beat a man in an assault that was broadcast live on Facebook.

The victim is a suburban resident who Police Superintendent Eddie Johnson says has “mental health challenges.”

Johnson called the attack and the video “sickening” at a news conference Wednesday. Johnson questioned why individuals would treat someone so harshly.

Police Cmdr. Kevin Duffin said Wednesday that he anticipated charges within 24 hours.

While police officials did not confirm the races of the suspects or victim, video from Chicago media outlets appeared to show someone off-camera using profanities about “white people” and President-elect Donald Trump.

Police say it’s too soon to determine whether the attack was racially motivated.

Police haven’t identified the individuals in custody, but say three are Chicago residents and one is from suburban Carpentersville.

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