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Headlines for Sunday, August 2, 2020

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19-year-old Man is Shot to Death in Wichita

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Wichita police are investigating the shooting death of a 19-year-old man. Officers responding to a call early Saturday found Andreas Carlyle of Wichita dead in the street. Police spokesman Charley Davidson says the shooting is not considered a random incident and officers are investigating all the circumstances. Details about a possible suspect in the shooting have not been released.

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Settlement Reached in Death of Community College Football Player

GARDEN CITY, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas community college has reached a settlement with the New Jersey family of a football player who died of heatstroke after team conditioning drills in 2018. Garden City Community College announced the settlement late Friday with the family of Braeden Bradforth. Details of the settlement were not announced. Bradforth, a 19-year-old from Newton, New Jersey, died after being found unconscious after the first day of football conditioning on August 1st, 2018. College President Ryan Ruda said in a news release the settlement was recently approved by a court. He said the school has made several improvements to athletic protocols since Bradforth's death.

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Federal Audit Finds Unsafe Conditions at Kansas Foster Homes

KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — Federal inspectors have released an audit revealing Kansas’ foster care homes have not been meeting health and safety requirements, even though state inspectors visited regularly. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services' inspector general found that foster care children have been living at risk in group homes with broken windows, mold, exposed electrical wiring, trashed porches and rodent droppings. KCUR-FM reported that in 2018 and 2019, inspectors came to Kansas and visited all 31 group homes licensed at the time. 24 of them violated physical health and safety rules, and 29 broke background check or fingerprint requirements.

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GOP Leaders Can't Count on Trump's Help in Kansas Senate Primary

HOLTON, Kan. (AP) — Establishment Republicans might have to try to hang on to what should be a safe Senate seat in Kansas without hoped-for help from President Donald Trump. The fight between establishment-backed Representative Roger Marshall and lightning-rod conservative Kris Kobach grew increasingly ugly as Tuesday’s primary neared because GOP leaders who want Marshall see the party’s Senate majority potentially at stake if he loses. Trump has refused to step in, leaving Marshall and Kobach to a close finish un der a barrage of attack ads from political action committees. Kobach has a cadre of loyal conservative GOP voter, while Marshall has the backing of key business, agriculture and anti-abortion groups.

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Agency Probed Abuse Reports Months Before KCK Girl Slain

BELLE PLAINE, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas child welfare agency has determined that a 3-year-old girl whose battered body was found earlier this month died as the result of child abuse. The belated finding that comes months after the agency first received reports of abuse. The Kansas Department for Children and Families released a summary pertaining to Olivia Ann Jansen in response to an open records request from The Associated Press. Her remains were found in a shallow grave on July 10th, after her father reported the Kansas City, Kansas, girl missing. The newly released summary shows the agency received reports of alleged abuse in February and June.

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Hays Requiring Masks to Guard 'Safe' Reputation

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Officials in a college town in conservative western Kansas are embracing a mask ordinance in hopes of making residents and incoming students feel safe, even as surrounding communities have balked at such efforts to slow the spread of the coronavirus. City officials in Hays voted last week to require people to wear masks in public. The response in the community has been mixed since the ordinance took effect Monday, with some businesses offering masks and refusing to serve customers who won’t wear them and others letting customers come in without them. Hays is home to Fort Hays State University.

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Alaska Midair Collision Kills Kansas Guide, State Legislator, 4 Others

ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) — Seven people, including an Alaska state lawmaker, died Friday when two small airplanes collided in midair near the airport in Soldotna, on Alaska’s Kenai Peninsula. Alaska State Troopers say state Rep. Gary Knopp was the sole occupant of one plane. The other plane was flown by a local pilot, and carried a guide from Kansas and four people from South Carolina. The National Transportation Safety Board is investigating the fatal accident, which occurred just before 8:30 a.m. near the airport in Soldotna. Some debris fell onto the Sterling Highway, causing a temporary closure.

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