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Preschool parents say they complained about Kan. rape suspect

Gaston-photo Sedgwick Co.

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A Wichita church preschool director has resigned as more concerns surface about a fired employee who’s accused of sexually assaulting two children at a YMCA child care.

Caleb Gaston, 21, was fired in October from his job at Plymouth Learning Center after an inappropriate touching complaint. The Kansas Department of Health and Environment couldn’t substantiate the allegation.

The Greater Wichita YMCA says it wasn’t notified about what happened before Gaston was charged with raping a 4-year-old. He’s also been arrested on suspicion of sexually assaulting another child at the YMCA.

Plymouth Congregational Church senior minister Don Olsen says he’s reported to the state that a couple other parents say their children may have been touched inappropriately. He provided no details on the director’s resignation.

Reward for information in death of KC boy grows to $10K

KANSAS CITY (AP) – The reward for information in the death of a 9-year-old boy fatally shot in an exchange of gunfire in Kansas City has increased to $10,000.

Dominic Young, Jr-courtesy-Serenety Memorial Chapel

Greater Kansas City Crime Stoppers says those with tips that lead to an arrest or the filing of charges in the death of Dominic Young Jr. could be eligible. Dominic’s father told police he was driving with his son last month when people in two other vehicles began shooting at each other.

The father didn’t initially realize that his child had been caught in the crossfire and continued driving to suburban Grandview. When his wounds were discovered, the boy was rushed to a hospital where he was pronounced dead.

Crime Stoppers says elected officials and a pastor are among those contributing to the reward.

 

Panther Bowling Results from Liberal

Pictured left to right : Lexy Fox 3rd place Varsity girls 483 series, Jordan Black 1st place Varsity Boys 717 series, Abby Miller 3rd place jv girls 393 series, Jordan Vsetescka 1st place Varsity Girls 534 series

Great Bend Girls gm1 gm2 gm3 Tot.

Vsetescka, Jordan 161 180 193 534

Mehlhaff, Sarah 154 149 179 482

Fox, Lexy 162 154 167 483

Hillman, Maggie 115 122 104 341

Garcia, Zujeiry 88 113 120 321

Boxberger, Brynn 122 91 110 323

Team Total: 599 605 659 1863

Great Bend Boys gm1 gm2 gm3 Tot

Black, Jordan 237 244 236 717

Moore, Bryce 159 216 192 567

Keener, Kameron 175 170 219 564

Stanley, Corbin 191 170 129 490

Roberts, Aj 185 127 166 478

Stanley, Cordell 127 179 132 438

Team Total: 788 809 813 2410

Ruling From Kan. Court Could Spur Anti-Abortion Amendment Push

BY STEPHEN KORANDA

The Kansas Supreme Court could soon decide whether there’s a right to abortion in the state constitution.

Kansas Gov. Jeff Colyer and some lawmakers say if the Kansas Supreme Court finds a right to abortion in the state constitution, they’ll try to amend the document.
FILE PHOTO / KANSAS NEWS SERVICE

Gov. Jeff Colyer wants lawmakers to consider amending the constitution to establish that such a right doesn’t exist.

In his first address to lawmakers this week, the Republican governor called for amending the state constitution to help protect Kansas abortion restrictions.

That came in response to a case pending before the Kansas high court. Justices are considering a lower court ruling that recognized a right to abortion in the state constitution.It’s an outgrowth from a legal fight over the state’s so-called “dismemberment abortion” ban, which bars dilation and evacuation procedures.

If the court rules the Kansas Constitution includes a right to abortion, that could put many state abortion restrictions on the books in jeopardy.

Colyer, speaking to a joint session of the legislature, said the lower court ruling “cannot stand.”

“This is violence against basic facts,” Colyer said. “The stakes are so high, the issue is so foundational, the people of Kansas must have the final say.”

Republican Rep. Chuck Weber of Wichita said he’s been talking with other legislators about an amendment if the court finds a right to abortion in the constitution.

“(That) would definitely stoke the conversation,” Weber said. “I haven’t heard a lot at this point to push it without that.”

The legislature has approved additional abortion restrictions in recent years and Weber said he believes a constitutional amendment would have broad support.

“A constitutional amendment … would just take this question out of the hands of unelected judges in the future,” Weber said. “It would really reflect the will of the people.”

Democratic Rep. Valdenia Winn of Kansas City, Kansas, said a constitutional amendment would draw the state back into fierce abortion debates.

“Here we’re going to have a fight over, as far as I’m concerned, current law,” Winn said. “Forces that think like me are not going to be intimidated.”

It takes a two-thirds majority of lawmakers and a vote from the public to approve constitutional amendments. House Majority Leader Don Hineman, a Republican from Dighton, agrees there could be wide support for a constitutional amendment on abortion.

“Whether it’s enough remains to be seen,” Hineman said. “It’s a high bar. It’s a high bar for a reason.”

Stephen Koranda is Statehouse reporter for KPR a partner in the Kansas News Service. Follow him on Twitter @kprkoranda

USDA Farm Service Agency has moved

The USDA Farm Service Agency has moved to the new USDA Building at 926 Patton Rd. in Great Bend.

USDA staff appreciates your patience over the last few weeks while they packed and unpacked hundreds of boxes.

As of Friday, (2/9) the office is still without phone service although they are trying to resolve the issue as quickly as possible.

926 Patton Rd. is located on the East side of Patton, just south of the 4way stop and just west of Home Lumber.

2 Kansas officers involved in fatal shooting return at work

Police on the scene of the shooting-photo courtesy WIBW TV

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Two Topeka police officers who fatally shot a man have returned to work with the police department.

City spokeswoman Molly Hadfield said Thursday that officers Michael Cruse and Justin Mackey returned from administrative leave on Wednesday. She would not reveal their duty assignments.

The Topeka Capital-Journal reports officers were placed on leave Sept. 28 after Dominique White was shot and killed near a park in Topeka.

Shawnee County District Attorney Mike Kagay ruled in December that the shooting was justified. He said while White was fleeing from the officers, he moved his hand over a pocket that contained a gun.

In January, city officials said an internal police investigation found the officers followed department policies during the confrontation.

White’s family has consistently questioned whether the shooting was justified.

Gleason Landscaping celebrates ribbon cutting in Great Bend

BUSINESS NEWS

The Great Bend Chamber of Commerce held a ribbon cutting on Thursday, February 1, 2018, welcoming Gleason Landscaping LLC as a new chamber member. Owner Sean Gleason and wife Haley were greeted by chamber members and had a chance to talk about moving to Great Bend from Hays, KS.

“After previously owning a landscaping business in Hays, we wanted to settle into the Great Bend community before starting our business again,” said Gleason. “We’ve been in Great Bend now for close to a year and a half, and have enjoyed making the area our new home.”

Established in September of 2017, Gleason Landscaping offers basic services such as mowing, shrub trimming, planting shrubs and trees, and Spring and Fall cleanups. And with twelve years of experience in both residential and commercial landscape design and installation, Sean is also able to offer more advanced landscaping services such as installing underground sprinkler systems, patios, ponds and waterfalls, retaining walls, and pergolas.

One unique service they provide is holiday decorating.

“We do hang Christmas lights in the winter, it keeps us busy during the typically slower landscaping months,” explained Gleason. “We’ll hang a customer’s own lights, or sell them lights that are custom-fit to their home. That way they don’t end up with too many or too few lights.”

Gleason Landscaping offers free estimates, and has already begun booking jobs for the 2018 season. Gleason can be contacted via phone at (620)282-4597, through email at
gleasonlandscapingks@gmail.com, or on Facebook at www.facebook.com/GleasonLandscaping.

“We have hundreds of photos on our Facebook page, showing the type of work that we do,” said Gleason. “We’re looking forward to warmer weather, and to all of the new faces we’re going to meet in 2018!”

2 men appear in court for Ellis Co. pellet-gun shooting, robbery

By JONATHAN ZWEYGARDT

ELLIS COUNTY —A 26-year-old Hays man has agreed to serve more than two years in prison after shooting another man in the face with a pellet gun during a robbery in December.

Dean Joseph Manning, 26, Hays, waived his preliminary hearing Friday and pleaded no contest in Ellis County District Court to robbery and aggravated battery.

Guzman-photo KDOC

Under the plea agreement, Manning will served a presumed sentence of 32 months in prison for robbery and 12 months for aggravated battery. The sentences will run concurrently for a total of 32 months.

Court services must go over Manning’s criminal history to determine his exact sentence. He also agreed not to seek probation in lieu of jail time.

Manning was originally charged with two counts of aggravated robbery, intimidation of a victim and drug possession.

According to the Hays Police Department, Manning and Pascual Guzman were arrested Dec. 9 after a male victim said the two men forced their way into his hotel room at gun point in the 3,400 block of Vine Street.

The two men were allegedly looking for a gun and money that was stolen from them. During the incident, police said Manning shot the victim in the face causing him to seek medical treat at the emergency room.

Manning was remanded to the Ellis County jail pending sentencing.

Guzman also waived his preliminary hearing on Thursday in Ellis County District Court.

US flu season still worsening; now as bad as 2009 swine flu

NEW YORK (AP) — The flu has further tightened its grip on the U.S. This season is now as bad as the swine flu epidemic nine years ago.

CDC image-click to Expand

A government report out Friday shows 1 of every 13 visits to the doctor last week was for fever, cough and other symptoms of the flu. That ties the highest level seen in the U.S. during swine flu in 2009.

And it surpasses every winter flu season since 2003, when the government changed the way it measures flu.

This season started early and has been driven by a nasty type of flu that tends to put more people in the hospital and cause more deaths than other more common flu bugs.

But its long-lasting intensity has surprised experts, who are still sorting out why it’s been so bad. Flu usually peaks in February.

Some doctors say this is the worst flu season they’ve seen in decades. Some people are saying that, too.

Veda Albertson, a 70-year-old retiree in Tampa, was sick for three weeks with high fever and fluid in her lungs. She said she hadn’t been this sick from the flu since the 1960s, when she was a young mother who couldn’t get out of bed to go to the crib of her crying baby.

“It was like ‘Wham!’ It was bad. It was awful,” she said of the illness that hit her on Christmas Day.

Heather Jossi, a 40-year-old Denver police officer and avid runner, said her illness last month was the worst flu she’s experienced.

“I don’t remember aches this bad. Not for four days,” said Jossi. “It took me out.”

Last week, 43 states had high patient traffic for the flu, up from 42, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported. Flu remained widespread in every state except Hawaii and Oregon and hospitalizations continued to climb.

So far, however, deaths this season from the flu and flu-related pneumonia have lagged a little behind some recent bad seasons. There are as many as 56,000 deaths connected to the flu during a bad year.

The CDC said the amount of suspected flu cases at doctor office and hospitals last week matched that seen in 2009, when a new swine flu epidemic swept the country and panicked many people. Swine flu, also called pandemic H1N1, was a new strain that hadn’t been seen before. It first hit that spring, at the tail end of the winter season, but doctor visits hit their height in late October.

This flu season, hospitalization rates have surpassed the nasty season of the winter of 2014-2015, when the vaccine was a poor match to the main bug.

Health officials have said this year’s vaccine targets the flu viruses that are currently making people sick. However, preliminary studies out of Australia and Canada have found the shot was only 10 to 20 percent effective in those countries. How well it is working the U.S. won’t be known until next week.

This year, illnesses are commonly being reported in people who got a flu shot. Albertson said she did in late October. Jossi didn’t.

FEBRUARY 9, 2018

SPORTS DAY COLEDownload Trading Post Classified Form CLICK HERE

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THANK YOU FOR LISTENING & HAVE A GOOD WEEK-END.

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