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Hutch man in court Wednesday on child sex charges

Hutch Post

HUTCHINSON — A 25-year-old Hutchinson man facing child sex charges is scheduled to be in court Wednesday for a preliminary hearing.

Michael Wayne Stahl is charged with four counts of aggravated indecent liberties with a child, two counts of electronic solicitation and one count of attempted indecent liberties with a child. Two of the counts of aggravated indecent liberties with a child are alternate counts, meaning the state has different theories of the crimes.

Stahl is alleged to have been communicating with two 13-year-old girls through Facebook and text. Authorities say that led to him meeting the girls and then the sexual encounters occurring.

Police became involved in the case after two reports. A detective reportedly posed as a 14-year-old girl, which led to Stahl showing up at an abandoned residence where thought he was meeting the 14-year-old. He instead met police instead.

Topeka to reinstate ban on domestic battery

TOPEKA (AP) — Domestic battery will be banned again in Topeka, but not until next year.

City governing body members voted Tuesday evening to reinstate the ban on domestic battery, beginning Jan. 1, 2015.

The delay was approved because City attorney Chad Sublet told governing board members it would cost $300,000 to effectively prosecute domestic battery cases this year, and that money is not in the city’s budget.

The city dropped the ban in 2011 when District Attorney Chad Taylor said budget cuts prevented his office from prosecuting domestic batteries committed in Topeka. After the ban was repealed, Taylor eventually resumed prosecuting the cases.

The Topeka Capital-Journal reported Sublet told governing body members the city would need to create four new jobs to resume prosecuting domestic batteries next year.

315 Colorado DUI arrests on Super Bowl weekend

DENVER (AP) — The Colorado State Patrol says 315 people were arrested on DUI charges over the Super Bowl weekend.

Authorities said Tuesday that was down from 421 arrests last year.

Nearly 100 law enforcement agencies took part in stepped-up patrols from Jan. 31 through Feb. 3.

Authorities are also promising tougher enforcement over St. Patrick’s Day weekend. The next campaign begins March 14 and lasts through March 17.

Ex-Garmin worker admits theft of GPS devices

KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — A former warehouse worker at the Kansas headquarters of the Garmin International has pleaded guilty to stealing GPS devices that were later sold on eBay and elsewhere.

The U.S. Attorney’s office says 31-year-old Terrence Heathington pleaded guilty Tuesday to one count of mail fraud.

Heathington was indicted in August on 40 counts of mail fraud. The indictment alleged he caused about 165 cases of GPS devices worth more than $1 million to be shipped to his home and those of high school friends living in Atlanta, Ga.

Heathington worked from March to September 2008 at Garmin in Olathe (oh-LAY’-thuh), where he lived at the time. He later moved to Atlanta.

Prosecutors say Heathington faces up to 20 years in prison at sentencing, which will be scheduled later.

Garden woman changes jobs to comply with insurance mandate

By DAVE RANNEY
KHI News Service

GARDEN CITY — Until recently, 50-year-old Tammy Ryan had never had health insurance.

“I kept hearing about how everybody was going to have to have insurance,” she said, referring to the onset of the Affordable Care Act, also known as Obamacare. “So I quit my waitressing job, which didn’t have insurance that I could afford, and took a job with the school district. I’m making less money now, but I have insurance.”

Ryan said she isn’t sure what her new policy will cover.

“I have a doctor’s appointment in a couple weeks, I’ll find out then,” she said. “There’s a lot I don’t know because up until now, I’ve never gone to see a doctor unless I was really, really sick.”

Ryan is a single mother who reared three children and now cares for three grandchildren. She said she’s been told she has heart disease. She may have diabetes, too.

“My mother, my youngest daughter, my brother and my sister all have diabetes,” she said. “I might have it, I don’t know. I feel alright now.”

Though she’s in relatively good health, Ryan said she has more than $10,000 in medical bills.

“I don’t have that kind of money, so I just kind of ignore them,” she said. “I know they’re there, but I don’t know what else to do. I’m barely making it as it is.”

Ryan said she expects to earn between $9,000 and $10,000 annually at her new job, which involves preparing and transporting school lunches. She works 35 hours a week.

“When I had my taxes done last year I got a note that said I should apply for Medicaid because I was probably eligible,” she said. “I went ahead and applied, but they said I made too much money.”

Ryan said the grandchildren, ages 5, 7 and 8, have lived with her “since they was babies.”

Ryan said she tries not to think too much about her family’s health care.

“I just hope and pray that things work out. I take everything day by day,” she said. “But when I do think about it I get angry. I’ve been a single mom most of my life. I raised my kids all by myself, and now I’m raising my grandkids. And then I see people who have more kids than I do and who aren’t working, and they’re on Medicaid and they’re getting food stamps. It doesn’t seem fair to me. It angers me.”

Police searching for Junction City woman

JUNCTION CITY (AP) — Police are looking for a 24-year-old woman who was last seen at a motel in Junction City.

Police say Amanda Clemons was last seen Friday night leaving a room at the Budget Host Motel. Witnesses told police she was being placed in a sliver vehicle occupied by two men and two women.

Clemons is described her as a light-skinned black woman standing 5-feet-7 inches tall and weighing 215 pounds.

Anyone with information about Clemons is asked to contact Junction City police or Crime Stoppers.

Whoops! Glitch leads to penny gas at Illinois station

WOODSTOCK, Ill. (AP) — An error at northern Illinois gas station caused pumps to sell fuel for a penny a gallon.

Gas Pump 001

The Northwest Herald reported a Shell station in Woodstock wound up mistakenly selling the nearly-free fuel for about two hours Sunday night.

As word spread, cars lined up and jostled to fill-up.

Woodstock Police Sgt. Dennis Leard says authorities had to use an emergency shut-off to stop the sales before the gas station closed in order to reset the pumps to regular prices.

But before that, cars were blocking traffic and lining up on the street to reach the cheap gas.

Leard says the station clerk working at the time wasn’t aware of the glitch.

It wasn’t clear how much gas was sold.

Woodstock is 50 miles northwest of Chicago.

Lawrence couple gives 165 acres to Land Institute

SALINA (AP) — A Lawrence couple has donated 165 acres of woodlands and pasture to the Land Institute in Salina.

The land from Jim and Cindy Haines is west of Lawrence is known as the Gorrill Farmstead. The Haines also gave 65 acres to the Land Institute in July.

The Land Institute is a Salina-based environmental agriculture group. It will use the new donation for research in ecology and plant genetics.

The Lawrence Journal-World reported the new donation includes 50 acres of farmland and a 3,000-square-foot stone-built home listed on the Register of Historic Kansas Places.

The Land Institute is forming a research consortium with the University of Kansas, Kansas State University and the Konza Prairie.

Body of man found in freezer in Kansas City, Kan.

KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — Kansas City, Kan., police say the body of a man was found in a freezer in a detached garage behind a home.

The body was found Sunday afternoon in a top-loading freezer. A woman who was cleaning found the body.

The coroner’s office said Monday the body was intact but a full autopsy could not be performed until the body thawed.

The police department’s major case unit is investigating the case but the death has not been ruled a homicide.

Police investigate homicide at Communications company

WICHITA (AP) — Wichita police are investigating the death of a man found in the basement of a communications company as a homicide.

KFDI-FM reported an employee of Steckline Communications found the body around 8 a.m. Monday. The company operates the Mid America Ag News Network and several radio stations.

Investigators said the man was in his mid-20s and had blunt force trauma to his head along with other injuries.

Police Sgt. Police Troy Nedbalek declined to say if the victim was a Steckline employee but that he was authorized to be in the building. There were no sign of forced entry, and it’s not clear when the man died.

Powerball jackpot hits $284M; still below record

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — The Powerball jackpot is climbing again, though it will take some time before it breaks any major record.

The Multi-State Lottery Association says the jackpot is up to an estimated $284 million after no winning ticket was selected Saturday. The top prize could grow before the next drawing Wednesday.

The jackpot is well below the kind of prize money that catches a casual player’s attention these days. But it shows how changes to top lottery games have created bigger jackpots in shorter periods of time.

A $636 million Mega Millions jackpot in December was the second-largest in U.S. lottery history.

Powerball is played in 43 states, Washington, D.C., and the U.S. Virgin Islands. The odds of matching all six numbers in the game are 1 in about 175 million.

Derby company ordered to cease and desist for securities violations

WICHITA (AP) — Kansas Securities Commissioner Josh Ney has ordered Derby-based Proud Veterans and its chief executive officer to stop selling securities in violation of state laws.

The agency on Monday announced preliminary findings that the company and CEO Nick Gnemi committed securities fraud by selling an unregistered security, making untrue statements and omitting material statements about the security.

At issue are investments toward stock and commodities of grain and milk that would be delivered to foreign countries.

Gnemi says Proud Veterans is primarily an agricultural, engineering and construction company that had solicited a couple of investors to work with it.

He says the service-disabled veterans’ company did not understand the state’s requirements and acknowledged that as a business it would do whatever is required to comply.

Registration still open for Kansas Commodity Classic

MANHATTAN — Registration is still open for Thursday’s Kansas Commodity Classic, which will be at Four Points by Sheraton, 530 Richards Drive, Manhattan.
wheat kansas

The event will be emceed by 2011 National Farm Broadcaster of the Year Greg Akagi from WIBW and the Kansas Agriculture Network.

The agenda includes comments from Kansas Secretary of Agriculture Jackie McClaskey and a presentation on water usage/conservation.

John Floros, dean of K-State College of Agriculture and director of K-State Research and Extension, is scheduled to speak, along with the “Voice of the Kansas City Chiefs” Mitch Holthus, a native of Smith Center.

To register for the free event, call (866)759-4328 or email [email protected]. For more information, visit our website at kswheat.com.

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