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Trial Set For Registered Sex Offender In Sex Trafficking Case

(AP) – A registered sex offender faces trial next year on charges of raping two young girls who say their mother drove them to Wichita to have sex with the man.

KWCH-TV reports  a judge scheduled the trial for Jan. 9 after hearing testimony Friday against 47-year-old James Brown, who pleaded not guilty. Brown is charged with 10 counts each of rape and aggravated human trafficking.

The girls, now 13 and 14, testified their mother began drove them from Kansas City, Kan., to a Wichita motel about 40 times beginning in 2005 and forced them to have sex with the man. The younger sister said their mother became angry with the girls when they cried.

The mother is charged with the same 20 counts and will also be tried in January.

Kansas Woman Gets 41 Months For Fatal Hit-And-Run

(AP) – An Overland Park woman who was under the influence of drugs when she hit and killed a grandmother who was gardening in her yard has been sentenced to three years and five months in prison.

Jill Conaghan pleaded no contest Friday to involuntary manslaughter in the July 2009 death of 70-year-old Sandra Carocari. Conaghan also was sentenced to a concurrent term of six months for leaving the scene of an accident.

Carocari was gardening at her Overland Park home when a van driven by Conaghan, then 19, veered off the road and hit her. She died at the scene.

Conaghan, who was under the influence of drugs, left the scene but returned later with her father and admitted the crime.

Gas Firm Wins Legal Skirmish In Condemnation Suit

(AP) – A Nebraska firm seeking to condemn more than 9,100 acres in south-central Kansas has won another legal skirmish.

U.S. Magistrate Judge Donald Bostwick earlier this week sided with Northern Natural Gas. He recommended that the federal judge overseeing the case confirm that the company can condemn all property in an expansion area where gas from its underground storage facility may have migrated.

More than 173 property owners hold some interest in the 40-plus tracts in Pratt, Reno and Kingman counties.

Bostwick also recommended Northern be granted immediate possession of the property after posting reasonable security. On Friday he corrected his order to require to $6.7 million bond in addition to a $3.8 million deposit.

U.S. District Judge Wesley Brown will decide whether to accept those findings.

Kansas Unions Trying To Unite Against Governor’s Policies

(AP) – Labor unions in Kansas are trying to unite in their opposition to Gov. Sam Brownback and his Republican allies in the Legislature.

They launched a new campaign Friday to oppose what they consider anti-worker and anti-family economic policies.

The Working Kansas Alliance had a news conference to introduce itself as dozens of delegates attended the Kansas AFL-CIO’s biennial convention in Topeka. Groups affiliated with the AFL-CIO are part of the new alliance, along with organizations representing teamsters, service workers, teachers and state government employees.

They worry about policies Brownback and the GOP-controlled Legislature will pursue next year on taxes, public pensions, unions’ political fundraising and employee bargaining rights.

But Brownback spokeswoman Sherriene Jones-Sontag says the governor is working to create new jobs.

Topeka Adds Homosexual And Transgender Groups To School Anti-Discrimination Policy

(AP) – The Topeka school district has expanded its anti-discrimination policy to include homosexual and transgender students and staff.

The board voted Thursday night to expand the policy to include the words “sex, sexual orientation, gender identity and expression.”

The district’s attorney, Cindy Kelly, said the additions are designed to help students who are being bullied or harassed because of their sexual orientation or gender identity.

The Topeka Capital-Journal reports that board member Janel Johnson cast the only no vote. She said the current anti-bullying policy already protects all students.

Other board members said they supported the move because it was important to send.

Kansas Group Hosts Public Forum On Wage Theft

(AP) – A nonprofit advocacy group is holding a weekend forum in Wichita on the issue of wage theft.

Sunflower Community Action says the public meeting will be held at 1 p.m. Saturday at the Evergreen Park Recreation Center.

The group contends there’s a growing problem of employees being misclassified and cheated out of proper compensation, which it calls wage theft. It says companies sometime misclassify workers as contractors rather than employees to avoid paying certain taxes and benefits.

Labor activists are trying to build support for Kansas legislation to penalize businesses and individuals who repeatedly violate wage laws. Sunflower Community Action also wants to give the state Labor Department more resources.

https://salinapost.com/2011/11/18/kansas-group-hosts-public-forum-on-wage-theft/

State To Hold Star-Studded Pheasant Hunt In Oakley

(AP) – State officials, sports celebrities and Fort Riley soldiers are scheduled to take part in the inaugural Kansas Governor’s Ringneck Classic pheasant hunt.

The three-day event starts Friday in Oakley with the hunt taking place in the surrounding area. Gov. Sam Brownback, Lt. Gov. Jeff Colyer and Wildlife, Parks and Tourism Secretary Robin Jennison will lead the hunt along with other elected officials.

Organizers say the event is designed to highlight hunting opportunities in northwestern Kansas to hunters around the Midwest.

The expected group of 50 hunters include Kansas City Royals Hall of Famer George Brett, golfer Tom Watson and four soldiers from Fort Riley’s 1st Infantry Division who recently returned from deployment in Iraq.

Kansas Bank Robbed In Middle of the Afternoon; Police Searching For Suspect

(AP) – Riley County police are looking for a man who robbed a bank in downtown Manhattan, just blocks from a similar holdup last month.

A branch of Kansas State Bank was robbed shortly before 3 p.m. Thursday by a white male wearing a dark coat, black beanie, sunglasses and jeans. Bank officials say the man gave a teller a note demanding and was last seen leaving the area on foot. No weapon was displayed.

On Oct. 4, Community First National Bank near downtown Manhattan was robbed by a white man wearing a heavy coat, sunglasses and a winter hat. That man also presented a note demanding money. The teller said she could see a gun in his waistband.

No arrest has been made in that holdup.

Lower Birth Rates For Young Women Tied To Economy

(AP) — The economy may well be the best form of birth control.

U.S. births dropped for the third straight year – especially for young mothers – and experts think money worries are the reason.

A federal report released Thursday showed declines in the birth rate for all races and most age groups. Teens and women in their early 20s had the most dramatic dip, to the lowest rates since record-keeping began in the 1940s. Also, the rate of cesarean sections stopped going up for the first time since 1996.

Experts suspected the economy drove down birth rates in 2008 and 2009 as women put off having children. With the 2010 figures, suspicion has turned into certainty.

“I don’t think there’s any doubt now that it was the recession. It could not be anything else,” said Carl Haub, a demographer with the Population Reference Bureau, a Washington, D.C.-based research organization. He was not involved in the new report.

U.S. births hit an all-time high in 2007, at more than 4.3 million. Over the next two years, the number dropped to about 4.2 million and then about 4.1 million.

Last year, it was down to just over 4 million, according to the new report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

For teens, birth rates dropped 9 percent from 2009. For women in their early 20s, they fell 6 percent. For unmarried mothers, the drop was 4 percent.

Experts believe the downward trend is tied to the economy, which officially was in a recession from December 2007 until June 2009 and remains weak. The theory is that women with money worries – especially younger women – feel they can’t afford to start a family or add to it.

That’s true of Mary Garrick, 27, an advertising executive in Columbus, Ohio. She and her husband, David, married in 2008 and hoped to start having children quickly, in part because men in his family have died in their 40s. But David, 33, was laid off that year from his nursing job and again last year.

He’s working again, but worries about the economy linger. “It kind of made us cautious about life decisions, like having a family. It’s definitely something that affected us,” she said.

Kristi Elsberry, a married 27-year-old mother of two, had a tubal ligation in 2009 after she had trouble finding a job and she and her husband grew worried about the financial burden of any additional children. “Kids are so expensive, especially in this day and age. And neither of us think anything’s going to get better,” said Elsberry, of Leland, N.C.

Many of the report’s findings are part of a trend and not surprising. There was a continued decline in the percentage of pre-mature births at less than 37 weeks gestation. And – as in years past – birth rates fell in younger women but rose a little in women 40 and older, who face a closing biological window for having children and may be more worried about that than the economy.

But a few of the findings did startle experts.

One involved a statistic called the total fertility rate. In essence, it tells how many children a woman can be expected to have if current birth rates continue. That figure was 1.9 children last year. In most years, it’s more like 2.1.

More striking was the change in the fertility rate for Hispanic women. The rate plummeted to 2.4 from nearly 3 children just a few years ago.

“Whoa!” said Haub, in reaction to the statistic.

The economy is no doubt affecting Hispanic mothers, too, but some young women who immigrated to the United States for jobs or other opportunities may have left, Haub said.

Another shocker: the C-section rate. It rose steadily from nearly 21 percent in 1996 to 32.9 percent in 2009, but dropped slightly to 32.8 last year.

Cesarean deliveries are sometimes medically necessary. But health officials have worried that many C-sections are done out of convenience or unwarranted caution, and in the 1980s set a goal of keeping the national rate at 15 percent.

It’s too soon to say the trend has reversed, said Joyce Martin, a CDC epidemiologist who co-authored the new report.

But the increase had slowed a bit in recent years, and assuming the decline was in elective C-sections, that’s good news, some experts said.

“It is quite gratifying,” said Carol Hogue, an Emory University professor of maternal and child health and epidemiology.

“There are strong winds pushing against C-sections,” she said, including new policies and education initiatives that discourage elective C-sections in mothers who have not reached full-term.

Hogue agreed that the economy seems to be the main reason for the birth declines. But she noted that it’s possible that having fewer children is now more accepted and expected.

“Having one child may be becoming more `normal,'” she said.

Kansas Man Sentenced For Buying Child Porn From Italy

(AP) – A northeastern Kansas man has been sentenced to more than five years in federal prison for buying child pornography from a supplier in Italy.

The U.S. Attorney’s office says 57-year-old Daniel Aldridge, of Overland Park, was also fined $12,500 under the sentence he received Tuesday. Aldridge pleaded guilty earlier to one count of receiving child pornography.

The investigation began in 2007 when Interpol agents investigated a suspected child porn ring in more than 30 countries.

U.S. Attorney Barry Grissom says investigators found Aldridge’s name among 50,000 emails between the Italian supplier and his customers. Prosecutors say Aldridge ordered a half-dozen CD’s containing child porn from a postal inspector posing as a dealer.

Kansas Hospital Experienced Online Security Breach

(AP) – Officials at Lawrence Memorial Hospital are anticipating a federal investigation and possible fine after an online security breach potentially compromised 8,000 patients’ financial information.

The Lawrence Journal World reported that the hospital mailed letters to patients this week.

The problem occurred in September when a company that hosts the hospital’s online bill paying service was doing a system upgrade.

The company apparently left a portal open that contained payment records from 28 patients. That information was accessed by Google, which then cached the page and kept the information public.

Hospital officials also believe that portal provided a way to access a database that contained information on every patient who had used the online bill pay system.

‘Occupy Lawrence’ Protesters Plead Not Guilty, Reject Plea

(AP) – Ten members of the Occupy Lawrence movement pleaded not guilty to violating city park hours.

The protesters made their first court appearance Tuesday. They rejected a plea offer of a $200 fine, $60 in court costs, a six-month-suspended jail sentence and a year of unsupervised probation.

The Lawrence Journal-World reports that the protesters’ next court appearance was scheduled for Dec. 12.

The 10 people were ticketed last month for violating city park hours after protest members began camping in South Park.

The group was told on Oct. 25 that it could no longer stay overnight in the park. A city ordinance bans use of the park from 11:30 p.m. to 6 a.m.

UPDATE: 2 Kansas Prison Escapees Turn Themselves In

Matthew Allender

Two men who escaped from the Lansing Correctional Facility turned themselves into police.

Prison officials say 28-year-old Matthew Glen Allender and 22-year-old Chad Duane Amack surrendered to police Wednesday night in Kansas City, Kan.

They had escaped from the prison’s minimum security unit on Tuesday.

Amack is serving a 23-month sentence for theft and aggravated burglary in Shawnee County.

Chad Amack

Allender is serving a 23-month sentence for a theft case from Shawnee County.

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