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Kansas Deputy hospitalized after crash into power pole

Wednesday crash in Shawnee County-photo courtesy WiBW-TV

SHAWNEE COUNTY – A Kansas Sheriff’s Deputy was injured in an accident just before 5p.m. on Wednesday in Shawnee County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2009 Ford Crown Victoria driven by Shawnee County Deputy Derek Warren Bledsoe, 25, was northbound on Landon Road just north of U.S. 24.

The driver lost control of the vehicle and stuck a utility pole.

Emergency crews transported Bledsoe to Stormont Vail. He was properly restrained at the time of the accident, according to the KHP.

Just after 10p.m., Free State electric reported they replaced the damaged pole and restored power in the area. They had to shut down a substation to complete the repairs.

The accident investigation delayed the start of the repairs.

Kansas man enters plea; held utility company employee at gunpoint

Miller-photo Reno County

RENO COUNTY — A Kansas man arrested in March of 2016 after he allegedly held a Westar Energy employee at gunpoint was in court Wednesday where he entered a plea.

Marc Miller, 66, rural Reno County was charged with one count of aggravated assault, but entered a plea to a lesser charge of felony criminal threat.

Miller held the victim, 61-year-old Brent Bunting, a Westar Energy employee, from leaving his home east of Hutchinson after Bunting replaced an electric meter at the residence

Bunting told deputies that when he arrived at the residence to exchange the electrical meter, he went to the front door of the residence and knocked.

No one answered the door, so Bunting put one of the fliers in the doorway and walked to the east side of the house to exchange the meter.

After exchanging the meter, Bunting said a white male appeared and told him he did not have permission to be on the property and to put the meter back.

Bunting tried to explain that he can’t do that, and began walking towards his Truck. Miller told him he needed to come sit down. Bunting ignored Miller’s request.

Bunting said that Miller stepped into the residence through a sliding glass door and came right back out with a shotgun and then told Bunting again that he wasn’t leaving.

Bunting made his way back up to the front of the residence where an outside table is located and sat in a chair at that location.

Bunting told deputies that while he was seated at the table, Miller allowed him to call his supervisor.

When Deputies arrived on scene they confronted Miller with a rifle. After some verbal commands, he gave up without incident.

Miller was arrested for Aggravated Assault and Kidnapping and was transported to the Reno County Correctional Facility without incident.

Miller is free on bond and is scheduled for sentencing in April

The case was handled by Harvey County Attorney David Yoder, who agreed to act as a special prosecutor after the local DA’s office recused itself.

Casting calls for Big Brother 19 coming to Kansas

MANHATTAN -Casting for the popular CBS reality show Big Brother is officially underway and fans of the show here in Kansas will have a chance to make an appearance! big_brother_16_u-s-_logo

Two casting events will be held next month in Manhattan and Pittsburg.

The event in Manhattan will be held on Tuesday, April 11th from 4PM-7PM at Kite’s Bar & Grill. The Pittsburg event will take place eleven days later on Saturday, April 22nd from 2PM-5PM at Pittsburg State University Plaster Center.

You may also apply online here. The deadline for the online applications will be May 5.

USGS: Sixth earthquake in March recorded in Kansas

Location of Wednesday quake -USGS image

SUMNER COUNTY – A sixth earthquake in March shook portions of Kansas on Wednesday.

The quake just before 4:30p.m. measured 2.5 and was centered approximately 21 miles east of Caldwell, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.

They reported two quakes last week and three quakes were recorded in Kansas the week of March 6, including two in Sumner County and one in Harper County. They were approximately all the same strength, according to the USGS.

In February, the agency recorded six Kansas earthquakes. They measured from 2.5-3.3 magnitude.
A 4.0 earthquake and three smaller temblors also hit Oklahoma on Wednesday according to the USGS.

There have no reports of damage or injury from Wednesday’s quake.

Former Kan. youth center worker sentenced for sex abuse of teen

LEAVENWORTH, Kan. (AP) — A former worker at a youth center on Kansas’ Fort Leavenworth has been sentenced to seven years and seven months in prison for the sexual abuse of a 13-year-old girl.

The Kansas City Star reports that 24-year-old Nicholas Clark was sentenced in Leavenworth County District Court for aggravated indecent liberties with a child and aggravated solicitation of a child.

Authorities said Clark solicited the child at the center in August 2014, and that the girl’s mother went to police after finding conversations between Clark and the girl on the girl’s cell phone.

Budget woes: Kansas lawmakers struggle with your pensions

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas legislators are trying to avoid the kind funding moves with public employee pensions that previously clouded the retirement system’s long-term financial health.

But lawmakers are wrestling with the state’s serious budget problems and were not sure Wednesday whether the state could afford its full, annual commitments.

Republican Gov. Sam Brownback has proposed freezing annual pension contributions at 2016 levels to help erase projected budget shortfalls totaling more than $1 billion through June 2019.

The Senate budget committee has added a total of $330 million to its proposed budgets for the two fiscal years beginning in July 1 to keep contributions where they’re supposed to be. Its House counterpart voted Wednesday to put off a decision.

The annual contributions were set to increase to bolster the pension system’s health.

Man acquitted in fatal Kansas home invasion shooting

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A man has been acquitted in a fatal home invasion shooting near Topeka.

The Topeka Capital-Journal reports that 26-year-old Angel Gabriel Olavarria-Velez was cleared Friday of premeditated first-degree murder in the 2014 death of 29-year-old Dustin McKinney and several other felonies.

Defense attorney Gary Conwell said Tuesday that Olavarria-Velez told him from the beginning that he wasn’t involved in the slaying. After the final prosecution witness testified, Conwell sought a directed verdict from the judge for acquittal. Court records show that prosecutors didn’t oppose it.

Olavarria-Velez did plead guilty to a misdemeanor charge of intimidation of a witness and felony interference with law enforcement. Sentencing is set for May 11.

Another man pleaded no contest previously to voluntary manslaughter in McKinney’s death, and two others were arrested last week.

3 Kansas men hospitalized after trash truck rolls

3 men hospitalized after trash truck rolls on Wednesday-photo courtesy WIBW-TV

SHAWNEE COUNTY – Three people were injured in an accident just before 12:30p.m. on Wednesday in Shawnee County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2017 Kenworth Trash Truck driven by Timmy C. McMahon, 57, Topeka, was southbound on U.S. 75 and exited on the ramp to eastbound U.S. 24.

The truck traveled to the left side of the ramp then into the median where it rolled.

McMahon and passengers Eric Michael Tyszko, 49, and Larry D. Housworth, 46, both of Topeka, were transported to Stormont Vail.

They were not wearing seat belts, according to the KHP.

Kansas employment firm hacked; job-seekers’ info at risk

TOPEKA -A Kansas company that electronically connects job seekers with employers announced that it was the victim of a hacking, putting at risk the personal information from job applicants in up to ten states, according to a media release.

Officials with America’s JobLink, a multi-state web-based system, confirmed that a malicious third party “hacker” exploited a vulnerability in the AJL application code to view job-seeker’s names, Social Security Numbers, and dates of birth.

The job seekers are from Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Delaware, Idaho, Illinois, Kansas, Maine, Oklahoma, and Vermont. The company has been in business for almost 50 years and says this is the first known hacking intrusion.

The company says it discovered the activity on March 21st, and immediately intervened and deployed its technical team to assess and stop the incursion, disabling the hacker’s access to the data. Officials are working with law enforcement officials to identify and apprehend the perpetrator.

An independent forensic firm is completing work to determine how many job seeker accounts may have been viewed and where those individuals are located. The firm has verified that the method of the hacker’s attack has been remediated and is no longer a threat.

America’s JobLink Alliance Technical Support maintains other workforce systems, but they say the forensic firm has concluded that the code vulnerability did not affect them.

Trump condemns UK Parliament terror attack; 5 reported dead

LONDON (AP) — The Latest on reports of an incident outside Britain’s parliament (all times local):
10:30 p.m.

British police say five people died in the terror attack outside Parliament.

Counter-terrorism chief Mark Rowley said one policeman, three civilians and the attacker died.

He said a further 40 people were wounded.

The assailant has not been identified. Rowley said police think they know the identity of the man but would not reveal details. He said Islamic extremism is suspected in the attack.

He said extra armed police would be on the streets in the coming days to reassure the public, and hundreds of police officers are working on the case.

He identified the police officer who died as Keith Palmer, 48.

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10:20 p.m.

Buckingham Palace officials say Queen Elizabeth II will postpone plans to open the new Scotland Yard headquarters.

The palace said Wednesday night that the queen’s visit, which had been set for Thursday, will be postponed.

The change is due to security concerns raised by the terror attack on Parliament.

It is also expected that police will be involved with a major investigation that will occupy many officers.

The queen was to have been joined by her husband Prince Philip at the official opening of the new building.

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President Donald Trump has offered his condolences to British Prime Minister Theresa May following the deadly attack in London.

The White House says the president praised the response of security forces and first responders and pledged “the full cooperation and support” of the U.S. government “in responding to the attack and bringing those responsible to justice.”

The White House says the two spoke by phone after a vehicle mowed down pedestrians on London’s Westminster Bridge. Around the same time, a knife-wielding attacker stabbed a police officer and was shot on the grounds outside Britain’s Parliament. The compound is in lockdown.

The head of counterterrorism at London’s Metropolitan Police has said that four people have died in what has been labeled a terror incident, including an attacker and a police officer.

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6:20 p.m.

The White House is condemning the attacks in London involving a car rampage and knife attack. President Donald Trump is said to be monitoring developments.

Spokesman Sean Spicer said Wednesday Trump spoke with British Prime Minister Theresa May and said that the White House applauds “the quick response of British police and first responders” and condemns the attacks.

A vehicle mowed down pedestrians on a bridge and the attacker then stabbed a police officer outside the British Parliament. At least four people died, including the attacker and a police officer.

Spicer says that the city of London and the British government have the “full support” of the U.S. as they investigate the attack.

The U.S. Homeland Security Department says the security posture in the United States has not changed in the wake of the attack.

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6:15 p.m.

The Italian interior ministry says the nation’s top security and intelligence officials will huddle in Rome on Thursday for “an evaluation of the terrorist threat” after the attacks in London.

The ministry said minister Marco Minniti convened the Committee of Strategic Anti-terrorism Analyses following “the tragic facts in London,” in which a vehicle mowed down pedestrians on a bridge and the attacker then stabbed a police officer outside the British Parliament. At least four people died, including the attacker and a police officer.

Italian security was already on high alert for a European Union summit bringing EU nation leaders to Rome Friday for a meeting with Pope Francis at the Vatican, and a ceremony in the Italian capital Saturday.

Authorities are bracing for possible violence during several marches Saturday, drawing thousands of both pro-and anti-EU participants.

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6:05 p.m.

The head of counterterrorism at London’s Metropolitan Police, says four people have died in the terror incident in London, including an attacker and a police officer.

Mark Rowley says some 20 people have been wounded and Parliament was locked down. A search is underway to make certain no other attackers are in the area — though police believe there was only one attacker.

Rowley said the dead policeman was one of the armed officers who guard Parliament. The other victims were on Westminster Bridge.

Rowley says “We are satisfied at this stage that it looks like there was only one attacker. But it would be foolish to be overconfident early on.”

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5:50 p.m.

French President Francois Hollande and German Chancellor Angela Merkel have both expressed their support and solidarity with Britain after the attacks at the British Parliament in London.

“We are all concerned with terrorism,” Hollande told reporters Wednesday during a visit in Villepinte, outside Paris. “France, which has been struck so hard lately, knows what the British people are suffering today.”

Hollande added that countries “must bring all the conditions to answer these attacks” and that “it is clear that it is at the European level, and even beyond that, that we must organize ourselves.”

French Interior Minister Matthias Fekl said “it is a high place of democracy that has been attacked” and that France is “obviously ready to help.”

Merkel said in a statement Wednesday that she learned “with sorrow” of Wednesday’s incident and her thoughts were “with our British friends and all of the people of London,” in particular those who were injured.

While the circumstances of the attack were still unclear, “I want to say for Germany and its citizens: we stand firmly and resolutely by Great Britain’s side in the fight against all forms of terrorism,” she said.

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5:15 p.m.

British port officials say they pulled a woman from the Thames River following the incident on Westminster Bridge.

The Port of London Authority says a female member of the public was recovered from the river, injured but alive.

 


The authority says it has closed the river between Vauxhall Bridge and Embankment while a major security operation is under way after a suspected terror attack at the Houses of Parliament in London.

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5:10 p.m.

Britain’s Prime Minister Theresa May will chair a meeting of the government emergency committee to discuss the response to the terror incident in London.

The emergency committee known as Cobra coordinates the high-level response to serious incidents. It brings together government ministers with senior officials of the emergency services and security and intelligence agencies.

Such meetings are held after serious incidents such at the July 7, 2005, attack on London transport services.

The Wednesday meeting is held in the briefing room of the Cabinet Office on Whitehall.

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5 p.m.

The London Ambulance Service says it has treated at least 10 injured people on Westminster Bridge after a vehicle hit pedestrians.

It says the first ambulance arrived within six minutes of the first call at 2:40 p.m. (1440GMT).

Ambulances, an air ambulance and a Hazardous Area Response Team were all sent to the scene.

One woman has been confirmed dead, and a body was seen lying in the yard of Parliament, where a knifeman stabbed a police officer and was shot by police.

People began leaving the Houses of Parliament about two hours after the incident.

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4:50 p.m.

A senior police commander says the attack at London’s Parliament has been declared a terrorist incident and “a full counterterrorism investigation is underway.”

Commander B.J. Harrington says “a number” of people have been injured, including police officers.

He says additional police officers, armed and unarmed, will be deployed across London during the evening rush hour as part of efforts to keep people safe.

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4:35 p.m.

The Scottish Parliament in Edinburgh suspended its debate on a second independence referendum after the incident outside the British Parliament in London.

Scottish lawmakers had been planning to vote after two days of debate on First Minister Nicola Sturgeon’s call for another referendum on leaving the United Kingdom.

The debate was suspended after some members said it should be halted out of respect after a policeman was stabbed and his attacker shot in London.

Sturgeon tweeted that her thoughts were with everyone in Westminster “caught up in this dreadful incident.”

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4:30 p.m.

A doctor says a woman has died and about a dozen people are hurt, some with “catastrophic” injuries, after a vehicle apparently hit pedestrians on Westminster Bridge, near Parliament.

Colleen Anderson of St Thomas’ Hospital says a female pedestrian has died.

Anderson said: “There were people across the bridge. There were some with minor injuries, some catastrophic. Some had injuries they could walk away from or who have life-changing injuries.”

She said there might be a dozen injured in all.

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4:05 p.m.

The U.S. State Department says it is closely monitoring the incident outside London’s Parliament and urged Americans in London to avoid the area.

Spokesman Mark Toner said Wednesday: “We stand ready to assist in any way the U.K. authorities would find helpful.”

He added that the U.S. Embassy in London is closely following the news and stands ready to help any affected Americans.

He said: “Our hearts go out to those affected.”

He says there are reports of further violent incidents neaby, and police say they have been called to a firearms incident on nearby Westminster Bridge.

Witnesses said a vehicle struck several people on the bridge, and photos showed a car plowed into railings.
Britain’s MI5 says it is too early to say if the incident is terror-related.

3:50 p.m.

The White House says U.S. President Donald Trump has been briefed on a gun and knife incident at Britain’s Parliament in London.

Trump himself said during a brief appearance Wednesday before reporters at the White House that he was just getting the news. He called it “big news.”

Trump’s spokesman, Sean Spicer, says the U.S. will continue to monitor the situation and update the president.

Britain’s Parliament was on lockdown after — according to officials — an assailant stabbed an officer then was shot by police.

London Police also said officers were called to an incident on nearby Westminster Bridge

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3:40 p.m.

British lawmaker Grant Shapps said on Twitter that he was walking through the cloisters of the House of Commons to vote when he heard four gunshots. Police told lawmakers to get down on the ground and crawl to cover.

“Police response instant. Heard commotion, looked round. Police weapons drawn, 4 shots, police ordered us to hit ground & get back, get back,” he said.

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2:55 p.m.

A session of Britain’s House of Commons has been suspended as witnesses reported hearing sounds like gunfire nearby.

The Commons’ speaker suspended the session as police responded to an incident.

Journalists at the Parliament building said they were told to stay in their offices.

The Press Association news agency reported that two people were seen lying within the grounds of Parliament.

Police had no immediate confirmation.

 

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