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Police: $5K in cash taken in Kansas home burglary

SALINE COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating a burglary and asking for help to locate suspects.

Just before 6:30 p.m. Thursday, a homeowner returned to his residence in the 700 Block of Scott Street in Salina. As he pulled into the driveway, two suspects ran from residence, according to Police Captain Paul Forrester.

The homeowner got back into his pickup and attempted to track down the burglars but was unsuccessful.

The suspects are described as white males, around 5-foot 8-inches tall and they wore white shirts.

Police say that the suspects damaged the French doors at the rear of the house and ransacked two bedrooms.

Over $5,000 in cash was reportedly stolen from the home, according to police.

Police: 1-year-old Kan. girl dead in accidental shooting

DOUGLAS COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating a fatal shooting.

Just after 10:30 a.m. Friday, police were dispatched to a residence in the 600 Block of North Michigan Street in Lawrence after report of a shooting involving a 1-year-old girl, according to a media release.

Despite life saving measures attempted by first responders, the child was pronounced dead at the scene.

Based on witness statements and evidence at the scene, this incident is being investigated as an accidental shooting. Once the investigation is completed, the reports will be forwarded to the Douglas County District Attorney’s Office for review.

 

Police are not looking for any other persons involved in the incident.

No additional details were released.

UPDATE: Suspect jailed, victim identified in Hutchinson murder

Law enforcement authorities on the scene of a home in Hutchinson

RENO COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating a fatal shooting and have made an arrest.

Just after 6:30 a.m. Friday, police were dispatched to a residence located at 1701 East 30th Avenue in Hutchinson on the report of a shooting, according Police Captain Troy Hoover.

Officers found a man dead of an apparent gunshot wounds. A suspect is in custody.

Police are working to notify family and will then release names of the individuals involved, according to Hoover.

Anyone with information about this case is asked to call the Hutchinson Police Department at 694-2816.

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RENO COUNTY —Police are investigating report of a suspicious death at a home on East 30th Street in Hutchinson.

Hutchinson Police Capt. Troy Hoover confirmed is was a shooting investigation.

Check Salina Post for additional details as they become available.

Kansas woman admits she threatened employees in 3 robberies

Messerschmidt- photo Sedgwick Co.

WICHITA, KAN. – A Kansas woman pleaded guilty Friday to robbing three local businesses, according to U.S. Attorney Tom Beall.

Christina A. Messerschmidt, 26, Wichita, Kan., appeared in federal court in Wichita to enter her plea. She admitted to the following robberies:

June 14, 2017: Kwik Shop at 2809 E. Douglas in Wichita. She threatened store employees with a knife and took money from the register.

June 13, 2017: Patricia’s, 6143 W. Kellogg in Wichita. She threatened to strangle an employee and took money from the register.

Dec. 16, 2016: Intrust Bank at 1544 S. Webb. She gave a teller a note saying, “Give me $1,000 or I will shoot you.” She was arrested after a standoff with police at an apartment near the bank.

Sentencing is set for Nov. 13. Both parties have agreed to recommend a sentence of seven years in federal prison.

Vocal Instructor brings experience to Barton Community College; husband to teach guitar

Sara and Curtis Oberle pose for a portrait in the Barton Community College Auditorium.

They’re jacks of all trades, but they might just be masters too. Barton’s new Vocal Instructor Sara Oberle and her husband Curtis, who will teach guitar lessons, bring as much depth as breadth to their respective areas of expertise.

Sara, a Great Bend native, has taught music at every grade level, from pre-kindergarten to college, and to a diverse audience including public and private settings and through programs like the Harmony Project KC, which gives low-income, at-risk children access to music education. She holds a bachelor’s degree in music education from Bethany College and a master’s degree from the University of Missouri Kansas City.

She has participated in two Carnegie Hall Professional Training Workshops and performances by audition: one with famed conductor Robert Shaw and one with noted German tenor Peter Schreier. Other career highlights include co-conducting a choir tour of Scandinavian countries and attending the Voice Care Network, the World Choral Symposium and national and regional ACDA conventions.

These experiences have molded her into a potent example for rural students; living proof that grand adventures and great accomplishments are waiting to be seized by anyone with enough work ethic and passion. She said she hopes to help other central Kansas students unlock their potential while building upon the tradition established at Barton.

“Not a lot of people return to rural areas, but I felt a call to share what I have learned,” she said. “I hope to share it with the students and give them exposure and inspiration, and encourage them.”

She said the work has so far been exactly as expected.

“I’ve always wanted to teach full time at a college,” she said. “What I like about community college is the pace and the ability to really become acquainted with colleagues and students. Barton has a healthy culture among the faculty.”

Curtis said his wife is up for the task, and shares her passion for that mission.

“It’s important for us to bring that perspective,” he said. “I always thought big opportunities were for other people, but then when I enjoyed those opportunities in my career I realized they’re for everyone.”

Curtis hails from Claflin and started playing guitar professionally in bands at the age of 16 and gained experience with a variety of stringed instruments including bass, banjos, ukuleles, mandalins and more.  Hand him something with strings and he’ll make it sing.

“My college resume was spotty because I would take off to go perform as I received calls from bands needing a guitar player,” he said, adding that he eventually found himself in the Berkley College of Music in Boston. “There were more guitar players there than people in Claflin.”

He also received a master’s degree in music from Kansas State University.

His experience is as varied as his talents. Besides playing for bands, Curtis has played guitar for the Kansas City Chiefs band and national traveling Broadway shows including “Shrek the Musical” and “The Lion King.” At the other end of the spectrum, he has performed at birthday parties and weddings. He has also taught guitar playing through private lessons and at the college level at KSU and Park University.

Curtis and Sara met at Bethany College, but then went separate directions. They later met during a summer between semesters in Great Bend when “sparks flew.” They have been married for 23 years and enjoy sailing, gardening and cooking together, when they’re not singing and playing.

The Oberles said they’re glad to be back in central Kansas.

“It feels like home,” Curtis said. “It’s nice to be back where the people are nice and the air is clean.”

Connie Jean Grossardt

CLAFLIN — Connie Jean Grossardt, 61, died Sept. 20, 2017, at Via Christi St. Francis Regional Medical Center, Wichita. She was born Nov. 10, 1955, at Great Bend, the daughter of Malvern P. and Evelyn E. (Burhenn) Schartz. She married Roger W. Grossardt July 23, 1976, at Claflin.  A lifetime Barton County resident, Mrs. Grossardt worked at north Dillons in Great Bend for 16 years, was a medication aide and CNA for Woodhaven Care Center, Ellinwood, and Cheyenne Meadows, Hoisington, and worked as a clerk at R&D’s Convenience Store, Claflin.

Mrs. Grossardt enjoyed playing Bingo and the lottery, flower gardening, decorating for Christmas and Halloween, cooking and spending time with loved ones.

Survivors include her husband, Roger W. Grossardt, of the home; one son, Brandon Grossardt of Rochester, Minn.; three daughters, Tasha Krebaum and her husband Dr. Kyle of Great Bend, Amber Grossardt of Salina, and Heather Grossardt of Ellinwood; three sisters, Darlene Jenisch of Paola, Joan Brown and her husband Gary of Raymond, and Karen Jamison of Everett, Wash.; and six grandchildren, Mya Krebaum, Logan Krebaum, Devon Grossardt, Hannah Bates, Henry Grossardt and Hailey Grossardt. She was preceded in death by her parents; one brother, Alvin Schartz; and one granddaughter, Makinna Ann Krebaum.

Funeral services will be at 10:30 a.m., Tuesday, Sept. 26, 2017, at First United Methodist Church, 120 3rd St., Claflin with the Rev. Gene Langhofer officiating. Burial will be in Claflin Cemetery, Claflin. Friends may call from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m., with the family receiving friends from 6-8 p.m., Monday, Sept. 25, 2017, at Bryant Funeral Home in Great Bend. Memorials are requested to Makinna Ann Hope Foundation or Claflin EMS, in care of Bryant Funeral Home.

Condolences may be sent and notice viewed at www.bryantfh.net

                      Arrangements by    Bryant Funeral Home        

1425 Patton Road       Great Bend, Kansas         67530

 

Viola Leach

Viola Regina (Beran) Dice Leach, died August 4, 2017, in Carlsbad, California.

Viola was born February 26, 1924, to Anton Beran and Hattie Prosser Beran in a farmhouse east of the small town of Odin, Kansas.  At around age 2 she had a devastating illness that nearly cost her life. She suffered permanent partial hearing damage but recovered to live a long and productive life as the second oldest of 8 children.  She and her siblings spoke mostly German until they started school in the Odin School.

During her youth she experienced the effects of the Depression and the Dust Bowl in central Kansas.  Her family moved from Barton County to Larned, Kansas, where they farmed.  She recalled the prairie grass fire that she watched her father and their neighbors fight to keep from engulfing their farmhouse.  Her father moved their growing family back to the Odin area in the mid 1930s.  At the beginning of the 1940s, to help the family’s finances, she was sent to stay with her aunts at the St. Rose Dominican Convent and Hospital in Great Bend, Kansas, where she finished her high school in her final year.  While there she found lodging in the home of a small family and in exchange she cleaned and babysat as well as worked at the hospital as a nurse’s aide, earning her high school diploma at Great Bend High in 1942.

Meanwhile, the war starting in 1941, opportunities for women opened and upon graduating she headed to Kansas City, Missouri.  In short order, she found a job at a bank, and within a few months moved on to City National Bank where she worked as a teller for several years.  During the war she studied voice and piano, and went to the USO where she enjoyed dancing and meeting young people.

Living in a boarding house with several other young women, she eventually met the brother of one, and by 1950 met her future husband of 35 years.  She and Thomas Dice were married in September, 1950, at the same church in which she was baptized in Odin.  Tom was in the US Navy and they immediately left for School in Point Naval Station near Winter Harbor, Maine.

Vi and Tom had one daughter, Patricia Ann, born during this time.  Shortly after the birth of their only child they headed back to Kansas, where Vi and Pat stayed until Tom could arrange for them to join him at his next assignment in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. When they were finally able to join him, he was reassigned shortly after.  Vi stayed behind in Wahiawa, Oahu, until they could join him in Kwajelein in the Marshall Islands.  She worked at the NEX in Kwaj.  There they stayed until 1954 when Tom contracted an illness and they were sent back to the states.

Back in the Kansas City area, Vi was able to return to City National Bank.  When Tom was released from the Veterans Hospital in Excelsior Springs, Missouri, he completed electronics studies and was hired by KKTV, a CBS affiliate in Colorado Springs, Colorado.  The family moved to Security, Colorado in 1960.

Vi worked as a teller and then a New Accounts representative at First National Bank (now Chase Bank) in Colorado Springs and remained there until her retirement in the 1980s.  During her time at the bank she joined the choir, which performed at Christmas in the bank, often singing solo parts.  She was an avid bowler, coin collector, and crossword puzzle addict, and Denver Broncos, Colorado Rockies and Avalanche fan.   She and Tom were members of Holy Family Parish in Security and took part in the Knights of Columbus activities, Tom being a Fourth Degree Grand Knight.

After Tom died in 1985, Vi remained a widow until 2007 when she married LeRoy Leach of Lyons. Kansas.  Moving to Lyons, she was widowed again when Lee died in January of 2012.  In July of 2012 she moved to her daughter’s home in San Marcos, California.  She remained there until numerous illnesses resulted in hospital stays and nursing homes followed by assisted living at the Silvergate Community in San Marcos.  In the summer 2016 she moved to a board and care in Carlsbad (Carlsbad Elder Care) aided by Hospice of the North Coast, and there she remained until she passed away on August 4.  She was a member of St. Elizabeth Seton Parish in Carlsbad, California.

Viola is survived by her daughter, Patricia Walker (William) of San Marcos, Calif.; her granddaughter, Alicia Froke (Casey) of Temecula, Calif.; two great-grandchildren, Jackson and Avalyn, one sister, Alice Dolechek (Vince) of Barton County, Kansas,  and two brothers, Lee Beran (Judy) of Emporia, Kansas,  and Tony Beran of Aurora, Colorado,  and 13 nieces and nephews.   She is preceded in death by her brothers, Gene, Jerry, Joseph, and Bob, as well as one niece, Michele Popp and a nephew, Eric Beran.

Mass of Christian Burial will be 10 a.m., Wednesday, September 27, 2017, at Holy Family Catholic Church, Odin, Kansas, celebrated by Father Ted Stoecklein.  Inurnment will follow in Holy Family Cemetery.  Friends may sign the book 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday, at the funeral home.  In lieu of flowers memorials may be made to the Holy Family Cemetery Fund, in care of Nicholson-Ricke Funeral Home, PO Box 146, Hoisington, KS 67544.

After Kansas Database Hack, Millions Of Victims Not Directly Notified

 CELIA LLOPIS-JEPSEN

Millions of victims of a data hack that targeted a Kansas state agency in possession of Social Security numbers were not informed of the breach directly, according to information obtained through an open records request.

The Kansas Department of Commerce says it only had valid email addresses for about 2.5 million of the more than 6 million job seeker accounts that were exposed when Kansasworks.com was hacked earlier this year.
FILE PHOTO / KANSAS NEWS SERVICE

The Kansas Department of Commerce says it only had valid email addresses for about 2.5 million of the more than 6 million job seeker accounts that were exposed. It sent notices to those addresses and further spread word of the hack through news releases and other public messages.

“We are confident our agency fulfilled all legal requirements of Kansas and the other member states on how to ensure those affected were lawfully and properly contacted,” spokesman Kevin Doel said.

Information technology staff discovered the hack in March. It affected job seekers across 10 states, including nearly 600,000 in Kansas. More than 5.5 million of the accounts contained Social Security numbers.

Related story: Hackers of Kansas system accessed Social Security numbers of millions in 10 states

A unit within the Kansas Department of Commerce called America’s Job Link Alliance-Technical Support had been managing the data for the Kansasworks.com website, which connects job seekers with opportunities, and for similar sites in the other states. The other websites are for Arkansas, Arizona, Delaware, Idaho, Maine, Oklahoma, Vermont, Alabama and Illinois.

The hack came just months after Kansas legislative auditors released the conclusions of a three-year check into IT security at 20 state agencies, excluding the Department of Commerce. The auditors flagged concerns at most of the agencies, including IT weaknesses that posed a risk for data breaches.

Download the audit report on Kansas IT security.

Kansas offered victims of the AJLA-TS attack credit monitoring through Equifax, which itself recently became the victim of a hack.

Cost to taxpayers

It remains unclear what the data breach will cost Kansas taxpayers in total.

Records indicate the state contracted with a law firm for $175,000 and an IT firm for $60,000 to help deal with the aftermath.

But the Department of Commerce redacted pricing information from its contract with Epiq, the company it hired to email victims, operate a call center for them and supply Equifax services. The arrangement is ongoing. The Commerce Department said Thursday it had paid about $800,000 to Epiq as of the end of last month.

In an email, Epiq instructed the Commerce Department to redact the pricing information from its contract.

The Kansas News Service obtained records related to the hack through open records requests. The Commerce Department took eight weeks to provide records fulfilling parts of one request and five weeks to provide any records related to the second request. It took 13 weeks from the original Kansas News Service request for the Epiq contract for the agency to cite any provisions of statute for redacting pricing.

Mike Kautsch, a University of Kansas law professor and former dean of the KU School of Journalism, said Kansas’ open records act requires public agencies to provide documents within three business days or give a “detailed explanation” for the delay and specify the earliest date the records will be available, which the agency didn’t do. The statute also requires agencies to cite specific legal provisions for any redactions within three days of a request for that information.

“In my opinion, they’re already in violation of the law,” he said. “The burden is really on them to comply.”

Legislative meeting

On Friday, officials from the Commerce Department and AJLA-TS will update Kansas lawmakers on security steps taken since the hack. The conversation with a joint panel of senators and representatives will be partly or wholly closed to the public.

Doel of the Commerce Department said Thursday the agency is confident in the measures it has taken to prevent future breaches.

“Although no system is invulnerable,” Doel said, “yes, areas of potential risk were determined during the assessment process and those areas have been properly remediated.”

Derby Republican Rep. Blake Carpenter chairs the legislative panel, which has been examining IT security at the Commerce Department and other Kansas agencies.

“I want to make sure that the information of Kansas citizens is protected,” Carpenter said. “Especially if the government has that information and people are trusting us.”

Rep. Brandon Whipple, a Wichita Democrat, said the panel needs to go beyond pointing fingers and work on ensuring sensitive information is adequately guarded.

“The conversation has to be about what went wrong and shifting right into how we make sure this never happens again,” he said.

Whipple said the goal is to pinpoint and address why some agencies have better security than others.

“We need to figure out — how do we make all of them good at this?” he said.

Sen. Dinah Sykes, a Lenexa Republican, said the state needs a proactive approach to protecting its data.

“It seems like it’s been an afterthought in Kansas,” she said.

Celia Llopis-Jepsen is a reporter for the Kansas News Service You can reach her on Twitter @Celia_LJ.

Aleen Elizabeth Eichman

Dateline: Hoisington, Kansas

Aleen Elizabeth Eichman, 95, died September 13, 2017, at her home in El Dorado, Kansas.  She was born May 2, 1922, on the farm near Hoisington, Kansas, the daughter of Ray and Louise (Deutsch) Ochs.

On August 3, 1942, she married Henry “Ed” Eichman in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Once they were married, Aleen lived in Texas where Ed was stationed while serving in the Army during WWII.  After his honorable discharge in 1945 they moved back to Hoisington and lived in town until 1968 when they moved to the family farm north of town on the Russell/Barton County line. In 2010 they moved to El Dorado to be closer to their daughter.

Ed and Aleen were members of Emmanuel Lutheran Church of Hoisington. They were lifetime members of the American Legion and the Auxiliary.

Aleen was a member of the Susan B. Allen Hospital Auxiliary and the Sewing Saints where they would make stuffed animals to give to the kids that visited the hospital.

Ed preceded her in death on January 30, 2012.

Survivors include; daughter, Nancy Jean Hamel and husband Tom of El Dorado; brother, Harlin R. Ochs and wife Barbara of Kerrville, Texas; sister, Melva Gean Reisbig of Great Bend; two grandchildren, Daniel P. Hamel of El Dorado, Paul R. Hamel and wife Cheryl of Albuquerque, New Mexico; and three great grandchildren, Alex, Sarah, and Will Hamel.

A graveside service for the inurnment of Ed and Aleen’s cremains  will be at 11 a.m., Saturday, September 30th, at Hoisington Cemetery, with Pastor Wayne Baldyga presiding.  Military honors will be conducted by Fort Riley Honor Guard.  Friends may sign the book from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday at the funeral home.

In lieu of flowers memorials may be made to Susan B. Allen Auxiliary in care of Nicholson-Ricke Funeral Home, PO Box 146, Hoisington, KS 67544.

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