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Former Junction music minister sentenced in molestation case

By DEWEY TERRILL
Little Apple Post

JUNCTION CITY — Geary County Attorney Steve Opat said Tuesday that Jordan Young, former music minister for Faith Tabernacle Apostolic Church in Junction City, has been sentenced to more than 24 years in prison.

Jordan Young
Jordan Young

The prison term stems from Young’s convictions in an child molestation case.

As part of the sentence handed down in Geary County District Court on Monday, Opat said Young also will be required to register with authorities for the rest of his life and was assessed a “post-release of lifetime.”

“Basically, means if and when he ever gets out on parole or post-release, if he has occasion to screw it up, he goes back to the Department of Corrections,” Opat said.

Young pleaded no contest in November and was found guilty of one count of aggravated criminal sodomy and three counts of aggravated indecent liberties with a child.

According to a stipulation of the facts filed in court, Young was employed as a music teacher at the Apostolic Academy when nine teenage boys came forward on Aug. 5, 2012, and said Young was sexually inappropriate and/or had engaged in sexual acts with the boys.

Young was arrested and charged in the case following a Junction City police investigation in August 2012.

Man commits suicide at home where boy was shot

WICHITA (AP) — Wichita police say a 70-year-old man shot himself to death at a home where a 10-year-old boy was accidentally shot during a game with a gun.

Lt. Doug Nolte says the man was found dead in the backyard of the house in southeast Wichita on Monday night.

He is the same age as a man who was arrested Sunday when the boy was taken to a hospital after he was grazed by a bullet. The child was treated and released.

Police allege the man began playing “quick draw” with two boys, using his .22 caliber handgun, and accidentally fired a shot. A 14-year-old boy was not injured.

Amber Alerts now available on Twitter

TOPEKA – Kansans can now look out for missing children by receiving Amber Alerts on Twitter, Kansas Attorney General Derek Schmidt said in a press release today.
amber_alert

“When a child is missing, the public’s assistance is crucial to returning the child safely,” Schmidt said. “Social media provides us a new way to get information out quickly to the public in the event of an Amber Alert.”

A new Twitter account, @AMBERAlert, was launched this week in conjunction with National Amber Alert Awareness Day. The account, managed by the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, will provide information on all Amber Alerts issued nationwide.

The Kansas Amber Alert system is coordinated by the Kansas Attorney General’s Office and Kansas Bureau of Investigation. When an alert is issued, the media are notified to begin broadcasting the details of the missing child and suspect. Kansans can also receive Amber Alerts on Facebook by liking the Kansas Amber Alert page at www.facebook.com/AmberAlertKS.

The Amber Alert program, named for 9-year-old Amber Hagerman, is a voluntary partnership between law enforcement agencies, broadcasters, and transportation agencies to activate an urgent bulletin in the most serious child-abduction cases. Broadcasters use the Emergency Alert System to air a description of the abducted child and suspected abductor. The goal of an Amber Alert is to instantly galvanize the entire community to assist in the search for and safe recovery of the child.

Since its inception in 1996, this program has successfully brought 679 children home safely. In Kansas, 23 children have been safely returned since 2002.

In addition to the Amber Alert program, the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children maintains a list of all missing children from Kansas. That database can be accessed at www.missingkids.com. Anyone with information about the whereabouts of any of these missing persons should contact a law enforcement agency or call 1-800-KS-CRIME.

For more information, visit www.ag.ks.gov/amber-alert.

Main SE Kansas recycling center has funding woes

PITTSBURG (AP) — The only major recycling center in southeast Kansas is facing a dire future if it doesn’t find a permanent funding source.

The Southeast Kansas Recycling Center in Pittsburg takes in recycling from several southeast Kansas towns and take trailers to collection points in Cherokee County.

But Jim Triplett, president of the center’s board, says the recycling center lost nearly $69,000 last year. He blames the loss on falling commodity prices, building loans and more competition for clothing — which provides money for the center. He also says the center is the only recycling center in Kansas that isn’t financially supported by a city or county.

The Joplin Globe reported the Crawford County Commission recently gave the center a $10,000 temporary payment.

Beanie Babies billionaire could get prison time

CHICAGO (AP) — The billionaire creator of Beanie Babies will soon learn whether he’ll have to spend up to five years in prison for evading taxes on $25 million in income.

beanie babies ty

H. Ty Warner’s sentencing on Tuesday will also give him a chance to apologize at length for hiding his millions in Swiss bank accounts.

The 69-year-old apologized and wiped away tears when he pleaded guilty last year. But the judge in Chicago stopped him and said he could explain himself fully at sentencing.

Defense attorneys are arguing for probation, pointing to Warner’s unhappy childhood and his charity work.

Prosecutors say Warner should spend some time in prison, though they haven’t recommend how much. They also say his philanthropy shouldn’t be “a get-out-jail card.”

Lawrence district will manage virtual high school

LAWRENCE (AP) — The Lawrence school district plans to take over management of Lawrence Virtual High School, at least through the end of the school year.

District Superintendent Rick Doll announced Monday that the company currently managing the school, K12 Inc., will be paid through the end of its contract on June 30.

But the district began operating the school at the start of the second semester, after it reported a graduation rate last year of just 26.3 percent. Doll says the school board will have to decide later this year whether to continue operating the virtual school.

The Lawrence Journal-World reported the Lawrence district already manages a virtual school for K-8 students. The virtual high school had 292 students enrolled last year, including 34 seniors.

Retired BTK investigator Landwehr dies at 59

WICHITA (AP) — Retired Wichita police Lt. Ken Landwehr, who supervised more than 600 homicide investigations during his career, has died at the age of 59.

KAKE-TV reported Landwehr died Monday at his home. Police Chief Norman Williams said Landwehr had kidney cancer.

Landwehr retired in 2012 after a 35-year career with the Wichita Police Department.

He investigated many of Wichita’s most infamous homicides and was credited with breaking the BTK serial killer case. The suspect, Dennis Rader, was arrested in February 2005 and pleaded guilty to killing 10 people in the Wichita area between 1974 and 1991.

Landwehr also led investigations that led to arrests in two quadruple homicides within a week of each other in 2000.

Salina residents ask for flouride-free water

By JOSH BARNHART
Salina Post

SALINA — Residents showed up in droves at Monday’s Salina City Commission meeting to protest fluoride in the city water supply.

Those participating provided information alleging fluoridation of the water causes diabetes, heart disease and also effects the nervous system.

A study was mentioned giving information that fluoride could take up to 20 years before the effects are seen in the body.

Participants asked the Salina city commissioners to immediately withdraw fluoride from the water supply.

One person asked the commissioners outright if they are for or against fluoride. When Commissioner Aaron Householter was asked directly, he stated regarding the anti-fluoride debate, “Everything you discuss today is a tenth of the truth, all the info presented could be found on a Google search. … If we submerge ourselves in water, we might drown.”

Officially, commissioners Householter, Jon Blanchard, Barb Shirley and Randall Hardy agreed they are in favor of fluoridation. Kaye Crawford said she will withhold her decision at this time.

Reward doubles for return of ring of dying woman

WICHITA (AP) — The reward has doubled for return of a wedding ring stolen from a dying woman last month in Wichita.

The Wichita Crime Commission says it is now offering $4,255 for information leading to recovery of the ring belonging to 43-year-old Danielle Zimmerman. She died in December after suffering an aneurysm at a fast-food restaurant. While she was unconscious, someone stole the ring and several other items from her car.

The Wichita Eagle reported the crime commission announced a $2,000 reward last Friday but said donations from the public have increased the amount.

Three men have been arrested and some of Zimmerman’s possessions have been recovered but the ring is still missing. Zimmerman’s husband has publicly pleaded for someone to the return the ring.

Kan. sex trafficking trial delayed for evaluation

WICHITA (AP) — The trial of a couple accused of sex trafficking at Asian massage parlors in Wichita remains in limbo after a last-minute request for a mental evaluation.

Prospective jurors for Monday’s trial of Gary H. Kidgell, of Waltham, Mass., and his wife, Wichita resident Yan Zhang, were sent home. U.S. District Judge Eric Melgren granted an oral motion by Zhang’s attorney for the evaluation.

An indictment alleges sex trafficking by force, fraud or coercion. One count also charges Kidgell with harboring for financial gain an immigrant who was in the country unlawfully.

The couple is accused of recruiting women from around the country to come to Wichita to work at massage parlors, then coercing them into prostitution. A woman who worked for them has pleaded guilty to a harboring count.

Kansas Legislature officially kicks off 2014 session

TOPEKA (AP) — Kansas legislators have begun the 2014 session with seven new members in the House.

The two chambers convened at 2 p.m. Monday with agendas consisting mostly of opening-day formalities.

Several issues will be addressed this week, including proposals to change the penalties for certain murders and to abolish the death penalty. Kansas enacted a death penalty law in 1994 but has not yet carried out any executions.

Legislators also are awaiting a Kansas Supreme Court ruling on school funding.

News of record corn crop offset by feed, ethanol usage

Kansas State Research and Extension

COLBY — U.S. farmers produced a record-high 13.9 billion bushels of corn last year, but demand from livestock and ethanol producers is helping support corn prices and may provide modest selling opportunities for producers in the coming months, according to a Kansas State University agricultural economist.

“The markets responded positively to the corn data,” said Dan O’Brien, crops marketing specialist with K-State Research and Extension, referring to gains posted in corn futures after the Jan. 10 release of the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Crop Production 2013 Summary. “The corn production number (at 13.9 billion bushels) came in at the low end of market analysts’ estimates. That coupled with (USDA’s estimated) increases in feed and ethanol usage had the effect of lowering projected carryout stocks.”

Corn for March 2014 delivery at the CME Group closed up 19-3/4 cents at $4.31-3/4 bushel on Jan. 10 after the report was released. December futures closed up 17 cents at $4.58-1/4.

“We still have a very large crop, but this demand adds a bit of support and might give producers at least marginally attractive selling opportunities,” said O’Brien, who is based at K-State’s Northwest Research-Extension Center in Colby.

USDA reported corn carryout at 1.631 billion bushels, which was also below analysts’ expectations, O’Brien said, noting that although USDA did not change its average projected corn price of $4.40 per bushel, the data reflected a tightening of the stocks-to-use ratio.

The 13.9 billion bushel corn estimate for 2013 is 29 percent higher than production in 2012. USDA also estimated the average U.S. yield at 158.8 bushels per acre, down 1.6 bushels from earlier USDA estimates, but up 35.4 bushels from the 2012 yield of 123.4 bushels.

Grain sorghum        

The USDA cut its estimate for 2013 U.S. grain sorghum production and ratcheted down its ending stocks and stocks-to-use ratio, which should support grain sorghum prices – particularly important in Kansas, the largest U.S. grain sorghum producer, the economist said.

The report estimated 2013 U.S. grain sorghum production at 389 million bushels, down 6 percent from its December estimate, but up 58 percent from the drought-ravaged 2012 crop.

Soybeans

Last year’s U.S. soybean production was pegged at 3.29 billion bushels, up from the USDA’s last estimate and up 8 percent from 2012. That makes the 2013 crop the third largest on record. The average yield per acre was estimated at 43.3 bushels, 3.5 bushels above the previous year’s average. The number of acres harvested was down slightly from 2012 to 75.9 million acres – the fourth highest on record.

“What we’re seeing in soybeans is strong exports for the time being,” O’Brien said of the response of soybean futures to the USDA data.

As competitors to U.S. soybeans on the global market, Brazil and Argentina’s crops will be very influential in the coming months, he added, noting that March soybean futures closed up 4-3/4 cents at $12.78-1/2 on Jan. 10 after the report’s release, while new crop November 2014 futures closed down 1-3/4 cents at $10.99-3/4 a bushel.

“Soybean prices are expected to be pushed lower by U.S. production and South American production as we move further into 2014,” O’Brien said.

Winter Wheat   

Also in a Jan. 10 report, USDA estimated that U.S. winter wheat seeded area for harvest in 2014 was 41.9 million acres, down 3 percent from 2013. The data included estimates for hard red winter (HRW) wheat seeded area – the class grown in Kansas – at 30.1 million acres, up 2 percent from 2013. Soft red winter wheat seeded acreage was down 16 percent to 8.44 million, and white winter wheat seeded acreage was down 3 percent to 3.39 million.

“The seeded acreage number for winter wheat was down,” O’Brien said of USDA estimates. “Typically that would be positive (for prices) but USDA estimated less wheat being fed to livestock and raised wheat ending stocks to 608 million bushels.”

“That means ending stocks-to-use went up to 25.3 percent, but it’s still the tightest wheat stocks-to-use figure in several years,” the K-State economist said. “The market is focused on the increase in domestic supplies and stocks relative to use since the USDA’s December reports. The supply-demand balance sheets projected growing stocks relative to use compared to a month ago.”

On Jan. 10 after the report, HRW wheat for March delivery closed at $6.26 a bushel, down 13 cents from the previous day’s close. July closed at $6.20-1/4 a bushel, down 12-3/4 cents.

“The accumulation of stocks here and abroad is having a negative impact on projected prices,” O’Brien said, adding however, that the smaller winter wheat acreage number may curb the downward potential of prices later in 2014.

One thing O’Brien is watching closely is the outlook for another year of drought in key wheat-growing areas. He referred to a Dec. 31 report www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/expert_assessment/mdo_summary.html which indicated that drought conditions could persist in western Nebraska, western Kansas, western Oklahoma and west Texas.

“There’s not complete confidence that we’ll avoid another year of drought in the U.S. Great Plains region. That leaves a lot of uncertainty in the wheat market,” he said.

More information about agricultural economics, including information from O’Brien is available at www.agmanager.info.

Kan. group working on Medicaid plan, but GOP wary

TOPEKA (AP) — The Kansas Hospital Association is working on a proposed alternative to expanding Medicaid under the federal health care overhaul, but Republican leaders remain wary. 

kansas hospital associationHospital Association Vice President Cindy Samuelson said Monday that the association doesn’t know what form its proposal will take.

One option is using additional federal funds promised under the federal health care law to help Kansans buy private coverage. Arkansas and Iowa are taking that approach.

Samuelson said the association is seeking what she called a unique Kansas solution.

Republican Gov. Sam Brownback and GOP legislative leaders are still critical of the federal health care overhaul championed by Democratic President Barack Obama.

The hospital association has hired a firm headed by former U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Mike Leavitt to help with a plan.

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