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Chiefs to trade CB Marcus Peters to Rams

KANSAS CITY, KS (AP) – The Chiefs are expected to trade cornerback Marcus Peters to the Los Angeles Rams, KCTV5 News has confirmed.

Teams are in the final stages of talks and, barring an unexpected snag, the trade is expected to be agreed to as early as Friday.

The Chiefs drafted the 25-year-old with the 18th overall pick in the 2015 National Football League Draft.

Since joining the league, Peters leads all players in interceptions with 19.

In his three seasons with Kansas City, the Oakland, CA, native has, along with his 19 picks, five forced fumbles, five fumble recoveries, 130 tackles and three touchdowns.

Peters was named the AFC Rookie of the Year in 2015 after starting all 16 regular-season games, recording eight interceptions, which led the NFL, defending 26 passes, forcing one fumble and making 53 tackles.

The move adds to the Chiefs already busy offseason, which includes a reported trade of quarterback Alex Smith to the Washington Redskins and the option to not resign the team’s all-time leading tackler Derrick Johnson.

Saturday AP Headlines

LOS ANGELES (AP) – The Kansas City Chiefs are trading Pro Bowl cornerback Marcus Peters to the Los Angeles Rams for what is expected to be a package of draft picks, according to published reports. ESPN.com first reported the trade, which will not become official until the start of the new league year on March 14.

SURPRISE, Ariz. (AP) – The Royals like what they see so far out of Burch Smith. Kansas City got the hard-throwing, 27-year-old right-hander in the Rule 5 draft from the Rays. He’ll have to stay on the roster all season or be offered back to Tampa Bay. Smith was drafted out of Oklahoma in 2011 and made it to the majors two years later, but has missed most of the past three seasons with injuries. He could start for Kansas City or serve as a power arm out of the bullpen.

JUPITER, Fla. (AP) – Cardinals manager Mike Matheny isn’t sure when first baseman Matt Carpenter will make his Grapefruit League debut. Carpenter is battling back tightness. For the time being, he is in the hands of the Cardinals’ medical staff, who will determine when Carpenter can return to the field. Carpenter also missed much of last spring with back and oblique soreness.

COLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) – Missouri basketball coach Cuonzo Martin says freshman forward Michael Porter Jr. will practice with the team on Friday. He’s returning three months after back surgery. The former top prospect in the country last season played just two minutes in the opener in November. The Tigers face Kentucky on Saturday.

NEW YORK (AP) – Texas is withholding junior guard Eric Davis Jr. from competition until further notice after his name appeared in documents part of a federal investigation into college basketball corruption. Davis was named along with former Texas players Prince Ibeh and Isaiah Taylor in documents obtained by Yahoo Sports.

UNDATED (AP) – Oklahoma took college basketball by Sooner storm over the season’s first two months, winning with a freewheeling style and Trae Young’s nightly one-man show. Once the calendar flipped to 2018, the Sooners hit a Big 12 roadblock. College basketball’s toughest conference has taken a toll on Oklahoma and its fabulous freshman, pushing the Sooners onto the NCAA Tournament bubble.

National Headlines

NEW YORK (AP) – A federal probe into college basketball has reportedly uncovered a wide range of impermissible payments from agents to at least two dozen players or their relatives.

Yahoo Sports is reporting that the documents obtained in discovery during the investigation link Michigan State’s Miles Bridges, Duke’s Wendell Carter, Alabama’s Collin Sexton and other current players to potential benefits that would be violations of NCAA rules. The report says players and family members allegedly received cash, entertainment and travel expenses from former NBA agent Andy Miller and his agency ASM Sports.

NCAA president Mark Emmert says in a statement Friday the allegations “if true, point to systematic failures that must be fixed and fixed now if we want college sports in America.”

GANGNEUNG, South Korea (AP) – The American men have won the Olympic gold medal in curling in a decisive upset of Sweden. John Shuster skipped the United States to a 10-7 victory on Saturday for only the second curling medal in U.S. history. Shuster was part of the other one, too, as the lead thrower on Pete Fenson’s bronze-medal team at the 2006 Turin Games.

PYEONGCHANG, South Korea (AP) – Kyle Mack has added to the U.S. medal count at the Pyeongchang Games by taking captured silver in the men’s Big Air. Mack had a chance to win until he sat down on his third and final jump, helping Canadian Sebastien Toutant secure the gold. It was the eighth silver medal and 22nd overall for the United States.

HOUSTON (AP) – Minnesota Timberwolves All-Star forward Jimmy Butler is scheduled to undergo an MRI today after suffering a right knee injury during last night’s 120-102 loss at Houston. Butler had just grabbed a rebound late in the third quarter when he planted his right foot hard before collapsing onto the court in pain. Minnesota coach Tom Thibodeau said early evaluations by the team’s medical staff were inconclusive.

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) – The Jacksonville Jaguars have given two-year extensions to head coach Doug Marrone, executive vice president of football operations Tom Coughlin and general manager Dave Caldwell. All three had two years remaining on their deals, which now will run through the 2021 season. The Jaguars won the AFC South for the first time, ended a 10-year playoff drought and advanced to the AFC title game for the first time since 2000.

PALM BEACH GARDENS, Fla. (AP) – Tiger Woods will be four shots back when the third round of the PGA’s Honda Classic begins this morning. Woods shot a 71 yesterday and was two shots off the lead until putting his tee shot into the water on the par-3 15th for double bogey. Luke List and Jamie Lovemark share the lead at 3 under, the highest score to lead the Honda Classic through 36 holes since it moved to PGA National in 2007.

TOP-25 COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Final 2OT (16) Ohio St. 80 Indiana 78
Final (18) Rhode Island 81 Dayton 56

Friday Statewide Scores

BOYS’ BASKETBALL
Andale 68, Rose Hill 35
Andover 71, Goddard 60
Andover Central 70, Derby 61
Arkansas City 71, Goddard-Eisenhower 64
Berean Academy 53, Marion 38
Bishop Miege 65, BV West 36
Blue Valley 61, Mill Valley 47
Bonner Springs 75, Lansing 57
Buhler 51, El Dorado 46
Burlingame 70, Heritage Christian 47
Burlington 90, Anderson County 73
BV North 64, St. Thomas Aquinas 59
BV Northwest 56, St. James Academy 23
Cair Paravel 56, Cornerstone Family 42
Chanute 72, Columbus 54
Chase 52, Burrton 49
Cheney 72, Nickerson 67
Cherryvale 56, Humboldt 48
Clearwater 73, Mulvane 63
Colby 75, Ulysses 72
DeSoto 61, Baldwin 52
Hartford 60, Flinthills 46
Hays 60 Great Bend 36
Highland Park 66, Emporia 64
Holcomb 62, Hugoton 35
Independence 59, Labette County 51
Jayhawk Linn 69, Marmaton Valley 40
Jefferson North 52, Oskaloosa 41
KC Piper 71, KC Turner 54
KC Schlagle 77, KC Sumner 43
Lakeside 54, Sylvan-Lucas 41
Little River 63, Canton-Galva 34
Maize 64, Salina South 47
Manhattan 68, Shawnee Heights 63
McPherson 80, Circle 46
Olathe East 70, SM North 51
Olathe South 59, Lawrence 49
Olathe West 56, Olathe Northwest 54
Osawatomie 53, Prairie View 44, OT
Ottawa 48, Spring Hill 44
Oxford 64, Burden Central 38
Paola 45, Louisburg 43
Parsons 67, Fort Scott 64
Perry-Lecompton 47, Jefferson West 39
Pittsburg 84, Coffeyville 50
Rock Creek 61, Rossville 29
Royal Valley 47, Sabetha 34
Salina Central 63, Newton 42
Santa Fe Trail 53, Iola 49
Sedgwick 75, Argonia 31
Silver Lake 53, Wabaunsee 42
SM Northwest 56, Gardner-Edgerton 40
SM South 60, Leavenworth 49
SM West 60, Lawrence Free State 57
Southern Coffey 73, Uniontown 44
St. Mary’s 54, Riley County 45
Tonganoxie 65, Atchison 45
Topeka 72, Topeka Hayden 69, 2OT
Topeka Seaman 45, Topeka West 39
Washburn Rural 47, Junction City 43
Wichita Campus 42, Hutchinson 38
Wichita Collegiate 64, Wellington 46
Wichita County 65, Southwestern Hts. 45
Wichita Trinity 62, Wichita Independent 22
Wilson 62, Thunder Ridge 38

GIRLS’ BASKETBALL
Andale 60, Rose Hill 41
Andover 57, Goddard 53
Baldwin 58, DeSoto 39
Bishop Miege 55, BV West 45
Buhler 51, El Dorado 46
Burlington 69, Anderson County 43
Chase 52, Burrton 49
Cheney 55, Nickerson 46
Cheylin 35, Logan 33
Clearwater 36, Mulvane 27
Colby 40, Ulysses 37
Columbus 66, Chanute 54
Derby 63, Andover Central 20
Fort Scott 46, Parsons 36
Goddard-Eisenhower 52, Arkansas City 49
Hays 50, Great Bend 47
Heritage Christian 36, Burlingame 35
Highland Park 57, Emporia 44
Hugoton 43, Holcomb 33
Humboldt 56, Cherryvale 38
Hutchinson 48, Wichita Campus 15
Jayhawk Linn 56, Marmaton Valley 19
Jefferson North 50, Oskaloosa 40
Jefferson West 50, Perry-Lecompton 29
KC Piper 70, KC Turner 11
Labette County 52, Independence 41
Lakeside 55, Sylvan-Lucas 36
Lansing 49, Bonner Springs 31
Lawrence Free State 47, SM West 38
Leavenworth 64, SM South 55
Little River 44, Canton-Galva 42
Louisburg 47, Paola 40
Madison/Hamilton 44, Pleasanton 27
Maize 46, Salina South 33
Manhattan 61, Shawnee Heights 31
Marion 36, Berean Academy 35
McPherson 61, Circle 31
Mill Valley 49, Blue Valley 41
Moundridge 57, Solomon 16
Newton 50, Salina Central 39
Northern Valley 67, Western Plains-Healy 17
Olathe East 53, SM North 21
Olathe South 59, Lawrence 49
Oxford 54, Burden Central 41
Prairie View 44, Osawatomie 42
Rolla 51, Deerfield 38
Rossville 46, Rock Creek 36
Royal Valley 58, Atchison County 31
Sedgwick 53, Argonia 47
SM East 53, Olathe North 21
SM Northwest 40, Gardner-Edgerton 29
Southern Coffey 44, Uniontown 32
Spring Hill 66, Ottawa 26
St. James Academy 37, BV Northwest 33
St. John’s Beloit-Tipton 33, Lincoln 24
St. Mary’s 54, Riley County 45
St. Thomas Aquinas 52, BV North 32
Thunder Ridge 66, Wilson 44
Tonganoxie 41, Atchison 28
Topeka Hayden 55, Topeka 54
Topeka Seaman 45, Topeka West 39
Wabaunsee 73, Silver Lake 37
Washburn Rural 66, Junction City 33
Waverly 55, Maranatha Academy 29
Wheatland-Grinnell 51, Triplains-Brewster 31

Kan. Students Plan To Walk Out In Reaction To Recent Shootings

Alayna Nelson, a sophomore at Wichita Northwest High School, grew up hearing stories of repeated mass shootings on the news.

Students evacuate the shooting at the school in Florida- image courtesy WPLG-TV

“Every single time this happened I always wanted to do something about it,” Nelson said.

Now, Nelson and other students in her generation are taking action against gun violence.

“I feel like I’m finally getting to the age where people will start listening to me,” she said.

The outpouring of students calling for gun control was set off by the recent mass shooting at a high school in Parkland, Florida, which killed 17 students and educators. Students from Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, where the shooting occurred, have become activists, telling their stories on national news shows and pleading the case for tougher gun laws.

Students said one of their biggest fears is that this issue will fade into the background in the coming weeks or months without any action being taken. That’s what happened after other shootings, including the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting in 2012 that left 26 dead.

Nelson said the idea of another school shooting occurring without any legislative action “absolutely petrifies me.”

That’s one of the reasons why students across Kansas and the country are planning multiple school walkouts over the next few months. Nelson and other students at Wichita Northwest plan on participating in the April 20 walkout, the 19th anniversary of the Columbine High School shooting.

And if that date passes without action, Nelson says she’ll keep fighting.

“If something doesn’t change I’m going to stay angry,” Nelson said. “I know personally that me and my friends aren’t going to let it go.”

Wichita Public Schools officials are aware of the planned walkouts, but have yet to decide how they will be treated. The district has a policy that says walkouts and boycotts are not recognized or permitted.

Some have dismissed the student protests as pushing a left-wing agenda, but Nelson said there is no more unifying issue in the country.

“Because I think everyone in this nation can agree that it should be harder for kids to die in school,” she said.

Still, Nelson said not every student at Wichita Northwest agrees that gun control is the answer. While she estimates about half favor tighter gun laws, she says another 20 percent oppose it.

Other schools see a split in the opposite direction. Connor Moore attends a rural high school where he said “build a wall” chants are common. Moore said the more right-leaning student body makes gun control less of an open subject than it is at Wichita Northwest.

“A lot of time when you want to talk about these kind of things you have to be very quiet,” Moore said.

But Moore said he, alongside other students, still plans on walking out on April 20. He also wants to make sure the gun debate receives national attention until lawmakers approve some form of gun control.

“They’ll say don’t worry, this is all going to fade away really soon, and I don’t want it to happen,” Moore said. “Who is going to stand up?”

Sage Goering, another sophomore at Wichita Northwest, said she is recruiting more students to join her for the April 20 walkout. She said that students have an important voice in the discussion of school shootings.

“We are the victims,” Goering said. “If we understand that there’s a problem then the adults should, too.”

Stephan Bisaha is an education reporter for the Kansas News Service. Follow him on Twitter @SteveBisaha.

KHP: 1 person hospitalized after I-70 chase, crash

GEARY COUNTY — One person was injured in an accident during a chase just before noon Friday in Geary County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2010 Subaru Imperza driven by Jeffery. Ritchie, 32, Denver, was westbound on Interstate 70 at Humboldt Creek Road a high rate of speed being pursued by law enforcement.

The driver attempted to maneuver the exit and was unsuccessful. The vehicle struck a road sign, went down an embankment and became disabled.

Ritchie was transported to Geary Community Hospital. He was properly restrained at the time of the accident. The KHP did not release details on what prompted the chase.

 

Kan. man sentenced for gas station stabbing death

Kanatzar -photo Shawnee Co.

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A 37-year-old Topeka man was sentenced to more than 19 years in prison for the stabbing death of another man during a confrontation at a gas station.

Caleb John Kanatzar was sentenced Friday for voluntary manslaughter in the December 2015 death of 24-year-old Terrin Holloway.

Holloway was stabbed in the parking lot of a Kwik Shop. His body was found in a car stopped in the middle of a Topeka street.

The Topeka Capital-Journal reports Kanatzar’s attorney argued that he acted in self-defense, saying he saw that Holloway had a gun.

Kanatzar testified earlier that before the stabbing, he was told Holloway fired shots during a drive-by shooting that wounded Kanatzar’s cousin. The shooting apparently was over the theft of Holloway’s lawn mower.

Some Things Kan. Lawmakers Have Done While Avoiding School Spending Drama

By JIM MCLEAN

Kansas lawmakers head into the next stretch of this year’s legislative session after advancing bills offering tax breaks to some smaller businesses, compensation to people thrown in prison unjustly and a welcome mat to industrial chicken growers.

The bigger, harder questions before them remain unanswered. After gaveling out on Thursday, they take off a few days.

When legislators return, they’ll still need to find a way to comply with a court order to up the state’s education game. That could cost the state another $600 million a year in aid to local school districts.

They’ll need to do that while struggling to balance overall state government spending, a task that’s proven particularly difficult in recent years.

And the lawmakers will revisit whether to expand Medicaid coverage to more of the working poor, an Obamacare flashpoint that’s divided the Republican-dominated legislature from its GOP governors.

“It’s always amazing how fast session moves,” Rep. Don Schroeder, a Republican from Hesston, wrote in his most recent newsletter to constituents. Now, he wrote, “the pace picks up. … Despite the fast pace, education and the budget still remain the major issues for us to address.”

This week, the committees that study and refine bills shut down so that legislators could spend time on the floors of the House and Senate moving bills hatched one chamber across the Capitol rotunda to the other.

A tax-cut bill that passed the Senate easily may get more intense scrutiny in the House, given the need to free up potentially hundreds of millions of additional dollars to satisfy a Kansas Supreme Court order to increase public school funding.

The bill restores a small business tax deduction that lawmakers repealed last year when they rolled back then-Gov. Sam Brownback’s income tax cuts. Several senators said they voted for the measure with reservations because of its estimated $21 million cost to next year’s budget.

“We are going to be removing money from our budget today … that we might need, either for schools or, for example, Medicaid expansion,” said Republican Sen. Barbara Bollier, of Mission Hills.

That concern prompted eight of the Senate’s 40 members to vote against the bill, including Senate Minority Leader Anthony Hensley, of Topeka.

“While there are those who complain how more money for schools will damage other parts of the budget, the first bill of significant cost to the budget is a tax cut,” Hensley said.

That could be a costly misstep in the eyes of the court, Hensely said, if lawmakers struggle to come up with the money needed for schools.

The Senate also passed bill aimed at enticing more large poultry producers to the state after a lengthy debate about potential consequences to communities and the environment.

Sen. Tom Holland, a Baldwin City Democrat, was one of several northeast Kansas lawmakers drawn into a controversy after public opposition to plans by chicken processing giant Tyson to build a plant near Tonganoxie. Tyson ultimately scrapped its plans for that plant.

“People get really frustrated when they get jerked around by state government and large industrial ag concerns who come in literally overnight and say ‘this is a done deal,’” Holland said.

Holland attempted to add language to the bill to allow residents in a county where such a facility is proposed to petition for a public vote. But his amendment was defeated by senators who argued against doing anything that might discourage poultry processors from expanding in Kansas.

“Part of the state, I grant you, does not want this type of operation and that’s understandable,” said Sen. Bud Estes, a Dodge City Republican. “But there’s other parts of the state that this would fit in quite nicely.”

Estes and others said the millions of pounds of “dry manure” — achieved with industrial methods that lessen the stench — produced by mega chicken-breeding facilities would be used as fertilizer.

Legislation authorizing a system for compensating people who spend time in Kansas prisons for crimes they didn’t commit proved less controversial. On Thursday, both the House and Senate passed compensation bills by wide margins.

In urging passage of the Senate bill, Republican Sen. Molly Baumgardner called it an opportunity “to right a wrong for Kansas.”

Currently, Kansas is one of 18 states that offers no compensation for individuals who have been wrongfully imprisoned.

The bill passed by the Senate would provide exonerated individuals $50,000 for each year spent in prison and an additional $25,000 for each year on probation or parole.

The House-passed bill is more generous. It authorizes $80,000 for each year of wrongful imprisonment.

A conference committee of House and Senate members will start working to reconcile the bills next week when lawmakers return.

And lawmakers have advanced legislation that would make “swatting” illegal. That push came after the death of a man in Wichita last year. What started with a rivalry between online gamers ended with police crashing into what they’d been tricked into thinking was a hostage situation and shooting Andrew Finch.

Swatting, as in summoning a police SWAT team with a phony 9-1-1 call, is a prank associated largely with gamers. Partly because they battle long distance, swatting is a way to pursue revenge in the real world.

The legislation would set stiff penalties for reporting a bogus situation with the intent of sending police out to attack a person’s home.

Jim McLean is managing director of the Kansas News Service. You can reach him on Twitter @jmcleanks

Spirit to pay millions in bonuses to Kan. employees

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — About 11,500 Spirit AeroSystems workers in Wichita have all received bonuses.

The employees received bonuses Thursday after the aircraft supplier reported a 13 percent year-over-year increase in profit on revenue of $7 billion last year.

Spirit spokeswoman Debbie Gann wouldn’t say exactly how much employees received in bonuses, but says “there will be millions of dollars infused into the Wichita economy through these payouts.”

The bonuses are awarded through the company’s short-term incentive plan. Gann says the payouts are given annually only if Spirit meets or exceeds financial and operational goals set by its board.

Friends University professor Malcom Harris says the fact that the city’s largest employer is paying bonuses to its workers means Spirit executives feel good about the health of the company.

Kia the drug dog included in trade talks

The City of Great Bend and the Barton County Sheriff’s Office are investigating a trade that would include one of the city’s two canine units. According to Barton County Sheriff Brian Bellendir, the deal would include Kia the drug dog and a vehicle along with dog handling equipment.

Brian Bellendir Audio

Kia will be reunited with his former handler Adam Hales who used to work for the Great Bend Police Department but is now employed as a Detective in the Sheriff’s Office. Bellendir says having a canine officer back in the department will be big.

Brian Bellendir Audio

The city of Great Bend recently lost one of their dog handlers which means they have only one handler and two dogs, Kia and Lazer. Bellendir says the trade includes the County sending over a new 2018 Police Interceptor in return for a 2016 model that is already equipped to transport a canine. He feels it is a good deal for both entities with GBPD getting a newer vehicle while the County gets a trained dog and the equipment to go with it despite getting a vehicle that is two years older.

Final details have yet to be worked out but Bellendir hopes the transaction will be completed soon.

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