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Illegal immigrant arrested for alleged Kansas rape

Antonio Ramirez-Garcia-photo Jackson County

JACKSON COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating a suspect for an alleged sex crime.

On Wednesday, deputies arrested Antonio Ramirez-Garcia, 38, of Oaxaca, Mexico  in connection to a February rape, according to Sheriff Tim Morse.

The crime is alleged to have occurred in the early morning hours on February 10, in Holton.

Detectives with the Jackson County Sheriff’s Office located Ramirez-Garcia in Topeka where he was taken into custody.

Ramirez-Garcia, in the U.S. illegally, is currently being held in the Jackson County Jail for rape with bond  set at $50,000.00.

K-State beats Texas 58-48

MANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) – Barry Brown scored 14 of his 16 points in the second half and Kansas State pulled away late to beat Texas 58-48 on Wednesday night.

In what was a cold shooting affair for both teams, the last five minutes saw Kansas State (20-8, 9-6 Big 12 Conference) close on a 16-4 run. Brown had the hot hand as he knocked down five free throws, two layups and a backbreaking 3-pointer in the final 4:49.

The Wildcats shot 42 percent but just 3 of 13 (23 percent) from long range. Texas (16-12, 6-9) shot 29 percent overall and missed 16 of 18 3-pointers.

Dean Wade added 13 points for Kansas State. Cartier Diarra had 12 points and Xavier Sneed chipped in nine with a game-high 13 rebounds for the Wildcats.

Matt Coleman scored 14 points and was a perfect 6-of-6 shooting from the free-throw line to lead Texas. Dylan Osetkowski finished with 10 points and 10 rebounds.

Coleman made six free throws and Mohamed Bamba added a dunk during a 8-2 surge to give the Longhorns a 44-42 lead with 5:12 left before Kansas State pulled away.

BIG PICTURE

Kansas State gets back-to-back 20-win seasons for the first time since the 2012-13 and 2013-14 seasons.

Texas, which beat then-No. 23 Oklahoma 77-66 on Saturday, has now lost four of their last five games.

STATS AND STREAKS

Xavier Sneed’s 13 rebounds was a single-game best for a Kansas State player this season.

UP NEXT

Texas hosts Oklahoma State on Saturday.

Kansas State travels to Oklahoma on Saturday.

Morris helps No. 13 Wichita State hold off Tulane, 93-86

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) – Shaquille Morris had 25 points and nine rebounds to help No. 13 Wichita State outlast Tulane 93-86 on Wednesday night.

Conner Frankamp scored six of his 18 points in the final four minutes, Markis McDuffie had 15 points and C.J. Keyser added 11 for the Shockers (22-5, 12-3 American Athletic Conference). Wichita State was without leading scorer Landry Shamet, who missed the game due to illness.

The Shockers led by 16 at halftime but were forced to make clutch free throws down the stretch to seal the victory.

Melvin Frazier scored 16 of his 22 points in the second half to lead the comeback for Tulane (13-14, 4-11). He also had 11 rebounds and his 3-pointer with 39 seconds remaining pulled the Green Wave to 90-86.

Samir Sehic scored 16 for Tulane, Cameron Reynolds had 14 points, Ray Ona Embo scored 12 and Caleb Daniels added 11.

Wichita State led 47-31 at halftime, making 14 of its last 22 shots in the opening half. Morris had 12 points in the first 20 minutes, making all five of his free throws.

BIG PICTURE:

Tulane: The Green Wave stayed right with a top-15 team on the road, a good sign for a rebuilding program currently tied for 10th place in the conference.

Wichita State: The Shockers survived and are two road games away from a regular-season finale against No. 11 Cincinnati.

UP NEXT

Tulane: The Green Wave visit South Florida on Saturday.

Wichita State: The Shockers visit Southern Methodist on Saturday

Thursday Sports Headlines

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) – Shaquille Morris had 25 points and nine rebounds to help No. 13 Wichita State outlast Tulane 93-86. Conner Frankamp scored six of his 18 points in the final four minutes, Markis McDuffie had 15 points and C.J. Keyser added 11 for the Shockers (22-5, 12-3 American Athletic Conference). The Shockers led by 16 at halftime but were forced to make clutch free throws down the stretch to seal the victory.

AMES, Iowa (AP) – A grieving Donovan Jackson played his heart out for an Iowa State team that needed all the help it could get. In the end it wasn’t enough, as TCU eventually overwhelmed the undermanned Cyclones to avoid an untimely bad loss.

MANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) – Barry Brown scored 14 of his 16 points in the second half and Kansas State pulled away late to beat Texas 58-48. In what was a cold shooting affair for both teams, the last five minutes saw Kansas State close on a 16-4 run.

STILLWATER, Okla. (AP) – Kendall Smith scored 21 points to help Oklahoma State stun No. 6 Texas Tech 79-71. Lindy Waters scored a career-high 18 points and Jeffrey Carroll added 14 points for the Cowboys. Oklahoma State got a huge boost its hopes of gaining an NCAA Tournament bid. Zhaire Smith scored 18 points and Jarrett Culver added 15 for Tech. The Red Raiders lost their second straight after reeling off seven straight wins.

SURPRISE, Ariz. (AP) – Nobody saw this coming, not even the Kansas City Royals. Whit Merrifield has gone from an afterthought to the American League stolen base champion. He has gone from more than 2,500 at-bats in the minors to the Kansas City starting second baseman. He began last year with Triple-A Omaha, his eighth straight season to open in the minors. He finished it hitting .288 with 19 home runs, 32 doubles, 78 RBIs and a league-leading 34 stolen bases.

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) – Kylee Kopatich scored 19 points with five 3-pointers, Tyler Johnson scored 11 points before fouling out with 1:53 remaining and Kansas won just its third Big 12 game of the season with a 66-59 upset of No. 25 Oklahoma State. Kaylee Jensen made two free throws for Oklahoma State at 2:38 to tie it at 59 and both teams went scoreless until Kopatich hit an open 3-pointer from the top of the key with 42 seconds remaining.

National Headlines

PYEONGCHANG, South Korea (AP) – The United States women’s hockey team has claimed its first Olympic gold medal in 20 years by downing Canada, 3-2 in a shootout. Jocelyne Lamoureux-Davidson scored in the first extra round after her twin sister, Monique Lamoureux-Morando, tied it with six minutes left in regulation. Canada had won the previous four gold medals since the Americans captured the inaugural women’s Olympic hockey tournament at Nagano.

PYEONGCHANG, South Korea (AP) – U.S. freestyle David Wise has won the gold medal in the men’s halfpipe for the second straight Olympics, Wise wiped out on his first two runs before sneaking past countryman and silver medalist Alex Ferreira on his third with a score of 97.20. It’s the seventh gold medal for the U.S. in Pyeongchang, five of which have come at Phoenix Snow Park.

PYEONGCHANG, South Korea (AP) – Mikaela Shiffrin came away with a silver medal in the women’s combined, which was won by Michelle Gisen of Switzerland. Lindsey Vonn led after the downhill portion, but she skied out in the slalom. Gisin turned in a nearly flawless performance as she finished in a combined time of 2 minutes, 20.90 seconds to eclipse the silver-medalist Shiffrin by 0.97 seconds.

DALLAS (AP) – Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban has been fined $600,000 by the NBA for comments about tanking during a podcast with Hall of Famer Julius Erving. Cuban said during the 30-minute interview that he met recently with some of his players and told them “losing is our best option.” Commissioner Adam Silver said the fine was for “public statements detrimental to the NBA.”

UNDATED (AP) – The Carolina Panthers have re-hired Marty Hurney as their general manager, marking his second full-time stint in that capacity. Hurney previously worked for the Panthers from 1998-2012, beginning as GM in 2002. He rejoined the Panthers last July as on an interim basis and was reinstated last week after an NFL investigation found no wrongdoing into charges of harassment by his ex-wife.

CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. (AP) – Top-ranked Virginia has wrapped up the ACC regular-season title and the No. 1 seed in the ACC tournament by getting past Georgia Tech, 65-54. Ty Jerome scored 18 points for the Cavaliers, who led just 31-30 at halftime and didn’t build a double-digit lead until the final minutes. Mamadi Diakite had nine points, including a dunk that put Virginia up by 60-49 with 5:14 left.

UNDATED (AP) – Mikal Bridges provided 27 points and third-ranked Villanova improved to 25-3 with its 16th straight win over De Paul, 93-62. Naji Marshall’s career-high 21 points carried No. 4 Xavier past Georgetown, 89-77. Fifth-ranked Duke had no trouble with Louisville as Grayson Allen contributed 28 points to an 82-56 rout of the Cardinals.

TOP-25 COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Final (1) Virginia 65 Georgia Tech 54
Final (3) Villanova 93 DePaul 62
Final (4) Xavier 89 Georgetown 77
Final (5) Duke 82 Louisville 56
Final Oklahoma St. 79 (7) Texas Tech 71
Final (10) North Carolina 78 Syracuse 74
Final (12) Auburn 90 Alabama 71
Final (13) Wichita St. 93 Tulane 86
Final Virginia Tech 65 (15) Clemson 58
Final (17) Michigan 72 Penn St. 63
Final (19) Tennessee 62 Florida 57
Final (20) Nevada 80 San Jose St. 67

Governor closes state offices due to winter storm

TOPEKA —Due to safety concerns regarding the winter storm forecast for the state Wednesday evening and continuing through late Thursday afternoon Feb. 22, Gov. Jeff Colyer has ordered the closing of state government for all state agencies.

 

 

The closing is effect from midnight Thursday morning until 5 p.m. State employees are advised to tune to local television and radio stations or visit their websites for further information as the storm progresses.

Court: Kansas can’t cut Medicaid funds to Planned Parenthood

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas can’t cut Medicaid funds to a Planned Parenthood affiliate over videos anti-abortion activists secretly recorded in 2015, a federal appeals court ruled Wednesday.

The 10th Circuit Court of Appeals’ decision leaves in place a lower court’s preliminary injunction that blocked Kansas from ending the contract. It is the fifth of six circuits to uphold the right of patients to receive health care from their preferred qualified provider.

The decision applies to Kansas’ Medicaid contract with Planned Parenthood Great Plains, which has two health centers in Kansas and three in Missouri. However, the appeals panel sent back to the lower court a related injunction involving the state’s effort to terminate its contract with Planned Parenthood of the St. Louis Region, which serves some Kansas patients at its clinic in Joplin, Missouri.

Planned Parenthood Great Plains in an emailed statement called the appeals court’s decision a “huge win” for Kansas Medicaid patients who know and trust it as their health care provider, saying the state’s termination of its contract was “baseless and politically motivated.”

“The 10th Circuit’s decision sends a strong message that state officials should not play politics with Medicaid — or the health care and wellbeing of Kansans,” said Dr. Brandon Hill, the group’s president and CEO.

Gov. Jeff Colyer’s spokesman, Kendall Marr, said in an email that the state is studying the 10th Circuit decision and considering further legal options.

“We will continue the fight for life,” Marr said.

Planned Parenthood provides health exams, contraception services, cancer screenings, and testing for sexually transmitted diseases, the court said, adding that while some of its clinics offer abortions, Medicaid seldom pays for those.

U.S. District Judge Julie Robinson in Kansas City, Kansas, issued the temporary ruling in July 2016 in a lawsuit filed by what was then called Planned Parenthood of Kansas and Mid-Missouri and the organization’s St. Louis regional affiliate. Robinson wrote that Medicaid patients have “the explicit right to seek family planning services from the qualified provider of their choice.”

In July 2015, the anti-abortion group Center for Medical Progress released a series of edited videos purportedly depicting Planned Parenthood of America executives talking about the sale of fetal tissue.

Based on that, Kansas began investigating the affiliates in Kansas. The Kansas Board of Healing Arts determined in 2016 that after review of the investigative materials no further action would be taken. The Missouri attorney general investigated the affiliate in his state and also announced it found no evidence of wrongdoing.

Kansas already has blocked Planned Parenthood from receiving federal family planning dollars for non-abortion services in the state. The affiliate provides both surgical and medication abortions at its clinic in Overland Park, in far eastern Kansas near Kansas City, Missouri. It provides medication abortions at its Wichita clinic.

Federal courts have blocked attempts by other states to cut off Medicaid funding for Planned Parenthood, including Arkansas, Arizona, Indiana, Louisiana and Utah.

Kan. bank sues after ATM gave out $100s instead of $5s

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A Wichita bank is trying to get money back from a woman it accuses of making more than 50 withdrawals from an ATM that was spitting out $100 bills in place of $5s.

Central National Bank sued last month in Sedgwick County District. It’s demanding that Christina Ochoa return about $11,600 plus interest.

The bank contends the withdrawals stretched over a five-day period from Jan. 13 to Jan. 17. Most were made in the middle of the night.

Ochoa’s mother, Christy Ochoa, is also named because she drove her daughter to the ATM. The Ochoas have denied any wrongdoing. Christy Ochoa said her daughter wanted $5 bills to craft a “money cake” as a gift for an acquaintance who’d just had a baby.

Kan. businessman ends governor campaign, endorses Kobach

Photo courtesy Wink Hartman

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Wichita businessman Wink Hartman is ending his campaign for governor and endorsing Kris Kobach.

Hartman said Wednesday he decided during the Kansas GOP convention last weekend. He said his main goal is making the party’s conservative platform into policy to improve Kansas.

Hartman, head of Hartman Oil Co., says he is endorsing Kobach because the secretary of state is a fighter who will not back down from a fight for conservative principles.

Kobach is running against Gov. Jeff Colyer and several others for the GOP nomination in the gubernatorial race.

When asked whether he is interested in being lieutenant governor, Hartman said he would serve in any way Kobach asks him to.

Kobach said Wednesday that he is honored to have Hartman’s support.

Kansas Foster Care System Overwhelmed; More Kids Flood In

BY MADELINE FOX

A call sets it off.

One of Kansas’ two foster care contractors learns another child has landed in state custody. It has four hours to pick the kid up.

A kid-friendly room in KVC’s Topeka office is decorated with a space theme. The contractor is used to having kids hanging out in kid-friendly spaces of its offices, but is still adjusting to a growing number of children spending nights there.
MADELINE FOX / KANSAS NEWS SERVICE

Workers phone other child placement agencies listing the specific needs for a particular child. Family members are found and called.

If the contractor is picking up a school-aged kid, workers will call the school to get information about teachers, coaches or parents of friends who might take them. Older kids can offer their own suggestions about nearby family members. If those options don’t pan out, contractors look for shelters and group homes.

But almost a year and a half ago, placement workers started coming up empty. That’s how children ended up on couches, futons and cots in contractor offices across the state.

“I’ve been doing this for 17 years. … I had not spent the night in the office with a child — ever,” said Danielle Bartelli, president of eastern Kansas contractor KVC Kansas and a former social worker with the company.

Of all the headlines about foster care in the past year — missing kids, children harmed while in state custody, shredded documents in the state child welfare agency — it’s news about children sleeping in offices that foster care administrators say showed just how overwhelmed the state system had become.

The basic problem is just too few beds, and far too many kids who need them.

Kansas isn’t alone. Foster care systems across the country are seeing a spike in children entering care, which many states attribute to families ripped apart by the opioid crisis.

Drugs may also be a factor in the Kansas bump, though policymakers say Kansas hasn’t seen the worst of the opioid crisis. That could mean the Kansas foster care crisis gets worse before it gets better.

At the same time, some of the services intended to wrap around struggling families or kids within their own communities have taken a hit.

Kansas has 222 fewer psychiatric beds than it did in 2013, and other mental health services have struggled to find funding.

Changes to state welfare policies have dramatically cut the number of people receiving assistance, which some suggest is a factor in increasing foster care numbers. The Department for Children and Families disputes that connection.

Even in a system such as the one in Kansas — where the raw number of beds across foster homes, psychiatric facilities, shelters and group homes is close to the number of kids entering foster care — not all kids can be placed right away.

A 10-year-old boy might need care in a psychiatric residential treatment facility, but perhaps the only open beds are for girls.  There might be a foster bed right in a teenage girl’s school district, but a teenage boy is sleeping in the room’s other bed — teenagers of the opposite gender can’t share a room.

With the sheer number of kids coming in, that’s likely to happen more often. So contractors are left with no better option other than an office couch, and kids feeling unwanted.

“It sends a message when kids are sleeping in offices that there isn’t a place for them.”

“Kids who are in the child welfare system are already struggling with not feeling like they belong,” said Christie Appelhanz, president of the nonprofit Children’s Alliance.  “It sends a message when kids are sleeping in offices that there isn’t a place for them.”

The trend in overnight stays began for KVC Kansas in September of 2016. St. Francis Community Services, the western contractor, saw its first child sleep overnight in an office in February 2017.

From there, it grew — and it’s still growing. Last fiscal year, 108 kids slept in contractor offices. This fiscal year, with four months left to go, that number is already up to 167.

Most stayed one night, though a handful stayed two or three, or, this month, five. So far, 20 children have stayed in an office overnight in February.

Kansas repeatedly set records for the number of children in foster care over the last five years. More than 7,200 kids landed in out-of-home placements as of December 2017, up 43 percent from the same time in 2012.

Many of Kansas’ foster kids come into the system because of trauma. Some respond by acting out in ways that make it unsafe to put them with other children. They need the more intensive supervision of a residential treatment center or other psychiatric facility.

Many of the kids crashing on couches fall into that high-needs category.

Some had been physically or sexually aggressive. Some had landed in the juvenile justice system.

From January through June last year, KVC Kansas had at least two kids stay in its office who needed psychiatric care, but no residential treatment facility had room. St. Francis saw much the same pattern.

Some were older kids or sibling groups, which contractors can have a tougher time placing.

“We never want a kid to be in the office,” said Lindsey Stephenson, KVC Kansas’ vice president. “That’s always our very last option.”

The fact that it was the only option 230 times in 2017  put the contractors in a tough spot. They want to make kids as comfortable as possible when they stay in offices overnight — but putting in beds or setting up the offices as full shelters would mean surrendering to the idea that it’s become the new normal.

Though the places these kids are staying are standard offices — desks, computers, ringing phones, filing cabinets — they’re also set up with kids in mind. Both KVC Kansas and St. Francis are accustomed to having kids in their offices for supervised family visits, or for meetings with social workers, or even while they’re waiting for placement during the day.

Kids staying overnight at a St. Francis office get a toothbrush, new pajamas, their own blankets and pillows, said St. Francis vice president Diane Carver. The idea is to stick with normal bedtime routines while placement workers elsewhere in the office call around to find actual homes.

At the KVC Kansas Topeka office, volunteers painted Disney-, space- and sports-themed murals around the office. A freezer in their Olathe office’s kitchen is packed with donated meals that social workers can heat up for overnight kids. Crayon marks along an office wall show that kids have been taking some artistic license with the building, and bookshelves in a kid-friendly room are packed with movies for the nearby TV.

But when kids are sleeping there, said DCF secretary Gina Meier-Hummel, contractors and the state must do better.

“It’s not an acceptable practice,” she said. “It’s not a practice that we endorse — nor should we plan for it in the future.”

Her agency and the foster care agencies that find homes are scrambling to increase the beds available for kids — hoping contractors find something better than a couch at midnight. They’re redoubling efforts to place kids with relatives or other trusted adults, recruiting more foster parents, and pushing for more beds in shelters and psychiatric treatment facilities.

A fix won’t come quickly. Training foster parents takes time. So does opening and licensing beds in residential facilities. The number of kids entering foster care, in the meantime, is still trending up.

So KVC Hospitals, which runs the psychiatric residential treatment facilities KVC oversees, has been setting up crisis centers. Those collections of short-term beds offer a more home-like emergency placement than a couch or futon in an office.

The company opened one in Hays in September, and was scheduled to open a second in Kansas City, Kansas, in January, though that’s now been pushed back until spring.

Those crisis centers aren’t funded by KVC Kansas’ contract with the Department for Children and Families. Once they’re up and running, KVC can get the same kind of reimbursement for kids sleeping in them that it would get for other foster placements, but KVC Hospitals is picking up the tab to get them set up.

The state, too, is looking to increase emergency beds. Enhancements to DCF’s budget proposed last month would put nearly $1 million toward emergency foster care placements over the next two years. That money could pay for beds held open for kids who come in unexpectedly and can’t be placed immediately.

DCF and its contractors are also recruiting more foster families to take kids with a variety of needs, Meier-Hummel said. The state launched a $500,000 campaign to recruit more foster parents last year.

Increasing the capacity of an overloaded system, though, won’t fix the problem.

“It’s going to take a government-wide response,” said Christie Appelhanz. “That means the executive branch, the legislative branch, the judicial branch, and, quite frankly, it’s going to take increased funding.”

Madeline Fox is a reporter for the Kansas News Service. You can reach her on Twitter @maddycfox

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