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  • The big question tonight in Baghdad is whether Saddam Hussein is on his way to the gallows. There were reports today that U.S. forces had turned the former dictator over to Iraqi authorities. That was not supposed to happen until just before Saddam's execution.
  • Police in Kansas City, Kansas, shot and wounded three suspects in a vehicle after one of the suspects raised a firearm at police.
  • Kansas Senators Jerry Moran and Pat Roberts are opposed to President Obama's plan to close the detention facility at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba and transfer detainees to the U.S. mainland.
  • A truck driver from St. Joseph, Missouri, will spend the next 21 years in prison for repeatedly having sex with a minor.
  • UPDATE: Kansas House Rejects Plan for 6 Percent Sales Tax TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas House has rejected a plan for cutting personal income taxes further and setting the state's sales tax at 6 percent in July to prevent budget shortfalls. The vote Tuesday was 71-42 against the measure. Republican legislative leaders said they're not sure of their next step. The measure was drafted by House and Senate negotiators to reconcile differences on legislation following individual income tax cuts enacted last year. Republican Governor Sam Brownback wants to raise new sales tax revenues to stabilize the budget. The tax is 6.3 percent but is set by law to drop law to 5.7 percent in July. GOP lawmakers' disagreements on taxes have blocked action on a proposed $14.5 billion budget for each of the next two fiscal years, starting in July.===============Appeals Court Won't Ease Way for Kansas Coal Plant ConstructionTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A federal appeals court in Washington has refused to clear a potential obstacle to construction of a coal-fired power plant in southwest Kansas. A three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia rejected a request from Hays-based Sunflower Electric Power Corporation to overturn a federal judge's ruling that put the construction plans on hold. Sunflower wants to build an 895-megawatt plant outside Holcomb. But U.S. District Judge Emmett Sullivan last year ordered the U.S. Agriculture Department's Rural Utilities Service to complete an environmental study before granting any approvals for the $2.8 billion project. The appeals panel on Tuesday rejected Sunflower's request on technical grounds. The company says it's reviewing the decision.===============Tornado Damages Marysville Homes, BusinessesMARYSVILLE, Kan. (AP) — Authorities in a northeast Kansas county say a tornado damaged two businesses and some homes but there are no early reports of fatalities or serious injuries. Marshall County emergency management director Bill Schwindamann says the tornado was reported about 9:30 pm Monday in Marysville, about 150 miles northwest of Kansas City near the Nebraska border. Schwindamann says one business was destroyed and another was seriously damaged. He says about 25 homes suffered damage ranging from minor to substantial. Some livestock also was reported missing at a farm where a barn was destroyed. Crews were out assessing the damage and working to restore power lines early Wednesday.===============State of Kansas Officials Break Ground on NBAF ProjectMANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) — State of Kansas and federal officials gathered for a ground breaking ceremony for the first phase of a new federal biodefense lab in Manhattan as funding for the project meanders through the legislative process. The first shovels of dirt were turned Tuesday morning near Kansas State University for the central utility plant for the $1.2 billion National Bio- and Agro-Defense Facility. A U.S. House budget committee has approved $404 million of the $714 million that President Barack Obama has proposed in his budget for the lab. The Senate is yet to consider the request. Officials say the lower amount is sufficient for contracts to be signed and construction on the lab to begin in 2014. Kansas legislators are considering a request to approve $202 million in bonds to complete the project.===============2 Charged in 2010 Death of Kansas Liquor Store OwnerOLATHE, Kan. (AP) — Johnson County authorities say two men have been charged in the 2010 death of a Kansas liquor store owner. One of the suspects in the May 2010 killing of 61-year-old Gerry Grovenburg of Spring Hill is still on the loose. Authorities say they are looking for 30-year-old Bruce Julius Ashley Jr., who was charged Tuesday with first-degree murder in Grovenburg's death. The second suspect, 33-year-old Larry Marshall Jr., is scheduled to appear in court Tuesday afternoon on charges of first-degree murder and attempted robbery. The Kansas City Star reports that he was arrested May 17 in Arkansas and returned to Johnson County Friday, where is being held on $1 million bond. Grovenburg was killed in a Shawnee liquor store he had operated for 35 years.===============Scuba Diver Drowns in Eastern Kansas LakeMELVERN, Kan. (AP) — Authorities in eastern Kansas say a man who drowned at Melvern Lake over the weekend had been scuba diving. The victim was identified Tuesday as 37-year-old Vincent Rice, of Melvern. The Osage County sheriff's office is calling the death an accidental drowning, but more details are expected after an autopsy. Rescue crews were called around 4 pm Sunday to the Coeur D'Alene swimming beach at the eastern end of the sprawling lake after Rice failed to surface. His body was recovered about five hours later following a search by several agencies.===============Kansas Teen Apparently Drowns at Wellington LakeWELLINGTON, Kan. (AP) — The body of a 14-year-old boy from the Haysville area was recovered from Wellington Lake after he apparently drowned on Memorial Day. Wellington Police Chief Tracy Heath says the teen was with friends at the lake Monday afternoon when he went under the water and did not come back up. His body was recovered Tuesday morning. Winds that were gusting up to 37 mph might have contributed to the boy's disappearance.===============4 People Die in Central Kansas Traffic AccidentELLSWORTH, Kan. (AP) — Four people are dead and a young child seriously injured after their sports utility vehicle hit a parked semi-trailer truck in central Kansas. Kansas Highway Patrol trooper Ben Gardner says the accident happened about 9:30 am Tuesday on the western edge of Ellsworth County. Gardner says the truck was parked on the shoulder of Interstate 70 with its traffic hazard triangles displayed when the SUV hit it from behind. He says the child was scheduled to be flown to a Wichita hospital Tuesday afternoon. The truck driver was not hurt. Interstate 70 was closed while the patrol's Critical Accident Response Team investigated the accident. No further information was immediately available.===============Music Festival at Kansas Speedway CancelledKANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — A two-day festival of alternative, pop and rap music at Kansas Speedway scheduled for late June has been called off. Organizers of Kanrocksas announced the cancellation Tuesday, citing low ticket sales. The festival was scheduled to open June 28 with a lineup that included Fun., Passion Pit, She and Him, Kendrick Lamar and Imagine Dragons. The cancellation was announced jointly by Midwest Music Festivals and Kansas Speedway. A message on the Kanrocksas website says there are no plans to reschedule the event. This year's festival would have been the second Kanrocksas. The first was held in August 2011, also at the NASCAR track in Kansas City, Kansas, and attracted more than 30,000 fans with such acts as Eminem, Kid Cudi and the Flaming Lips.===============Cowley College Continues Concealed Weapons BanWINFIELD, Kan. (AP) — Cowley College in Winfield will continue banning concealed weapons inside its buildings and residence halls as officials study how to implement a new Kansas law. The law taking effect July 1 prohibits most public entities from banning concealed firearms in their buildings unless the buildings have adequate security. But it also lets public universities and junior colleges such as Cowley exempt themselves for four years. The Winfield Daily Courier reports that trustees of Cowley College approved such an exemption last week. Interim college president Tony Crouch said the board might not use the entire exemption but wants to study whether to arm security guards and even create a fully commissioned police force. Crouch said those moves would have policy and budget implications that need to be examined.===============Officials Hope to Limit Missouri River FloodingOMAHA, Neb. (AP) — After several days of heavy rain across the lower Missouri River basin, the amount of water released into the river is being reduced to help minimize flooding. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers says it began reducing the amount of water flowing into the river on Sunday because of concerns about flooding downstream. Last week, 24,000 cubic feet of water per day was being released from the Gavins Point dam on the South Dakota-Nebraska border. By Wednesday morning, half as much water will be released. The corps is also reducing the amount of water released from Fort Randall dam in South Dakota. The corps' Jody Farhat says the reductions should alleviate some downstream flooding along the Missouri River.=============== Wal-Mart Pleads Guilty to Violating Federal RulesKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Wal-Mart Stores Incorporated has pleaded guilty in Missouri to violating the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide and Rodenticide Act by failing to properly handle pesticides that had been returned by customers at its stores across the country. In a plea deal filed Tuesday in federal court in Kansas City, Wal-Mart admitted trucking more than 2 million pounds of regulated pesticides and other products from its return centers to Greenleaf, a recycling facility in Neosho, Missouri, between July 2006 and February 2008. Federal prosecutors say the products were processed for reuse and resale, but lax oversight caused regulated pesticides to be mixed together and offered for sale in violation of FIFRA. The Missouri deal calls for Wal-Mart to pay an $11 million fine, plus $3 million to the Missouri Department of Natural Resources.===============Petro America Chief Seeks New Trial in Fraud CaseKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The lead defendant in a federal securities fraud case in Kansas City is asking for a new trial because of juror misconduct. Isreal Owen Hawkins filed a motion last week claiming that one of the jurors in his 17-day trial failed to disclose during jury selection that she had performed alterations on several of his suits. Hawkins was convicted May 15 of conspiracy, securities fraud, aggravated currency structuring, money laundering and two counts of wire fraud related to his company, Petro America Corp. Prosecutors said Hawkins and several others defrauded investors out of more than $10 million by illegally selling them stock in a company that had no assets, despite claiming to be worth $284 billion. Four others were convicted of conspiracy and other charges in the same trial.=============== Atchison County Town Working on Baseball MuseumMUSCOTAH, Kan. (AP) — Residents of a small northeast Kansas town are planning to build a baseball museum inside an old water tower tank. The project is planned in Muscotah, an Atchison County town of about 200 people that is looking for attention. About 50 Muscotah residents and volunteers are working with the help of the Kansas Sampler Foundation to convert the water tower tank into a baseball and museum. The museum also would honor native son Joe Tinker, a shortstop for the Chicago Cubs when the team last won the World Series in 1908. He's the Tinker of the famous baseball poem "Tinker-to-Evers-to-Chance." The Lawrence Journal-World reports that the city's old water tank will be made to look like a large baseball and will house the museum.=============== 2 Killed in Wrong-Way Crash Near WichitaWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas Highway Patrol says two people are dead after a wrong-way collision on Interstate 235 in southwest Wichita. The patrol says a car driving south on the interstate crossed a grass median and drove into the northbound lanes on Tuesday morning. The car hit an oncoming pickup and both drivers were killed. The crash happened around 7:35 a.m. Tuesday when a southbound car crossed the grass median and collided head-on with a northbound pickup truck. The patrol identified the driver of the southbound car as 27-year-old Nicholas Richard Oswald and the pickup driver as 32-year-old Adam Charles Hutchinson, both of Wichita. No passengers were in either vehicle.===============Empty Mill, Railcars Burn in SW KansasLIBERAL, Kan. (AP) — Investigators are seeking the cause of a fire that destroyed a vacant flour mill and several rail cars in southwestern Kansas. KSNW-TV reports that 75 firefighters and 15 trucks responded after the fire broke out in Liberal around 7:30 p.m. Sunday. Some crews were still at the scene Monday putting out hot spots. The fire began in an old flour mill next to the Equity Grain Elevator. The elevator was spared, but the flames spread to a fertilizer warehouse. No injuries were reported.=============== Teens Held in Junction City School VandalismJUNCTION CITY, Kan. (AP) — Officials in Junction City are estimating the damage done by vandals at an elementary school at more than $250,000. Police said the damage at Westwood Elementary was discovered after three teens were taken into custody around 8 a.m. Monday on suspicion of shoplifting at a Dollar General store. Officers reported finding items from Westwood Elementary on one or more of the teens. Police then went to the school and found extensive damage throughout the building. Details of the damage weren't immediately released Monday. Two 15-year-olds and a 16-year-old were in custody on suspicion of burglary, theft, conspiracy and felony property damage. Police were seeking a fourth person they believe was also involved.=============== Window Cleaner Injured in Fall at Kansas HospitalJUNCTION CITY, Kan. (AP) — A man cleaning the outside of windows at a northeast Kansas hospital became a patient there after falling three to four stories. Geary County Sheriff Tony Wolf says the accident happened Monday morning at Geary Community Hospital in Junction City. The window cleaner suffered what Wolf called very serious injuries. The sheriff says the man was wearing a rope harness at the time, and it wasn't immediately clear how or why he fell.===============Dodge City Might Revive 1914 Motorcycle RaceDODGE CITY, Kan. (AP) — Motorcycle enthusiasts in Dodge City are hoping to rev up a 100-year-old tradition next year. The Dodge City 300 motorcycle race drew 17,000 people to Dodge City in 1914 and more than 20,000 in 1921. Dodge City historian Roger Burnett says the race was the premier event of motorcycle racing at the time. The Hutchinson News reports that the Dodge City motorcycle community is organizing a weeklong event next July to mark the race's 100th anniversary. It will include motorcycle displays music, fireworks and — of course — motorcycle races. The organizers are working to raise funds, with plans to bring in businesses like Harley-Davidson and Indian Motorcycle, both of which were involved in the original races. Main Street Dodge City and area businesses are also supporting the event.===============Ex-Jayhawks RB Miller Gets Second Chance at KULAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Sophomore running back Darrian Miller, who was dismissed from the University of Kansas following his freshman season, is getting another chance with the Jayhawks. KU coach Charlie Weis said Tuesday that Miller signed a grant-in-aid to rejoin the program. He spent last season at Butler Community College but did not play football. Miller, who set a record as the high school career rushing leader in Missouri class 5 and 6 football in 2010, ran for 559 yards and four touchdowns as a freshman for former KU coach Turner Gill. He was dismissed after the season for unspecified off-the-field issues. Miller said that "Coach Weis has given me a rare opportunity ... to make this right. I am truly thankful for this opportunity and I intend to make it right." He joins a crowded Jayhawk backfield that includes James Sims and Tony Pierson.=============== Chiefs' Voluntary Workouts Paying DividendsKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The Kansas City Chiefs have begun their final week of voluntary workouts, though you wouldn't know they've been voluntary by the attendance. Just about everyone has been at practice every day for the past couple of weeks. There have been no contract holdouts, and no drama. Instead, the Chiefs under new coach Andy Reid have been busily installing their offense and defense, getting acclimated with each other and preparing for next week's mandatory minicamp...which probably won't be a whole lot different than organized team activities. The Chiefs have already started to nail down potential starters at several positions, including on special teams. They've also uncovered a couple of projects, such as college hoops player-turned-tight end Demetrius Harris, who has a legitimate shot at making the team.===============Kansas Lawmakers Resuming Work on Tax Plan, BudgetTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas House members are preparing to vote on cutting personal income taxes further and setting the state's sales tax at 6 percent in July to prevent budget shortfalls. The measure facing a vote Tuesday afternoon in the House was drafted by House and Senate negotiators to reconcile differences on legislation following individual income tax cuts enacted last year. Republican Governor Sam Brownback wants to raise fresh sales tax revenues to stabilize the budget. The tax is 6.3 percent but is set by law to drop law to 5.7 percent in July. Meanwhile, legislative negotiators have agreed on a proposed $14.5 billion budget for each of the next two fiscal years, starting in July. But votes weren't scheduled. Tuesday was the 95th day of the Legislature's annual session.**this story has been updated. Please see above.
  • HHS: 371 Kansans Picked Insurance Plans in First Month of Federal Online ExchangeTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services reports that only 371 Kansas residents selected a health insurance plan through a federally run online marketplace during its first, glitch-plagued month in operation. HHS released the figures Wednesday. The department said the insurance exchange had about 6,100 completed applications from Kansas from October 1 to November 2. Those applications sought coverage for about 12,000 people. The U.S. Census Bureau estimated earlier this year that 363,000 of the state's 2.8 million residents had no health insurance. The federal health care overhaul set up online marketplaces to help people find affordable insurance, but the rollout of the HHS website has been rocky from the start. The federal government did not say how many of the people selecting a health plan started paying premiums.==============KS Board of Ed to Review Test Development PlanTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas State Board of Education members are weighing the options and cost of changing how students are tested each year. Brad Neuenswander, deputy commissioner for education, recommended to the board on Wednesday that Kansas use a blended testing system, including tests developed by the Smarter Balanced Assessment Consortium. Kansas is part of that group, which is developing tests for math, reading and language arts to be given first in spring 2015. Kansas is among 21 states involved in the consortium. The University of Kansas would still administer the tests developed by the consortium. The university has developed tests in the past, and some board members wondered if Kansas could continue with that practice and at what cost.==============Construction Begins on South Lawrence TrafficwayLAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — After years of debate and legal action, construction work has officially begun on the South Lawrence Trafficway. Kansas transportation department spokeswoman Kim Qualls says crews began removing vegetation Tuesday to create a new route for Haskell Avenue. The Lawrence Journal-World reports construction has not begun in the Baker Wetlands, which was the center of the controversy that delayed construction since the mid-1990s. Qualls could not estimate when construction would begin in the wetlands. When completed, the trafficway will connect Interstate 70 northwest of Lawrence with Kansas Highway 10 to the east. Construction on the nearly $130 million project is expected to take three years.==============Arizona Groups Hope to Join Opposition in KS Voter Citizenship CaseWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Several Arizona groups want to join a lawsuit opposing efforts by Kansas and Arizona to force a federal agency to help the states' enforce their proof-of-citizenship rules for new voters. A motion to intervene was filed Wednesday in federal court in Wichita by the Inter Tribal Council of Arizona, the Arizona Advocacy Network, League of United Latin American Citizens of Arizona and Arizona state Senator Steve Gallardo. Kansas and Arizona are seeking a preliminary injunction at a December 13 hearing to force the U.S. Election Assistance Commission to modify a national voter registration form. The groups contend the states want to undo a victory they won before the U.S. Supreme Court this year. The court ruled states can't demand proof of citizenship from people registering to vote in federal elections.==============KS Governor Hosting 4-Day Hunting EventNORTON, Kan. (AP) — Kansas Governor Sam Brownback is sponsoring his third annual, four-day Ringneck Classic this week in Norton and Graham counties to spotlight pheasant hunting in northwest Kansas. The event begins Thursday with an evening reception in Norton. A five-hour sporting clays tournament is set to begin Friday morning, with Brownback holding an evening reception at the National Guard Armory. The governor's all-day hunt begins Saturday morning, and it's followed by an awards banquet in the evening. There will be further hunting Sunday. Also participating with Brownback are Wildlife Secretary Robin Jennison, state Senator Ralph Ostmeyer, state Representative Travis Couture-Lovelady, and Miss Kansas 2013 Theresa Vail. Pheasant hunting season opened in Kansas last week.============== Report: Nearly All Kansas Winter Wheat Now EmergedWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — The latest government snapshot of Kansas crops shows 92 percent of the winter wheat has now emerged. The National Agricultural Statistics Service reported Tuesday that about 64 percent of the wheat is in excellent to good condition. About 33 percent is rated as fair, with just 3 percent rated in poor condition. The agency says the harvest of other crops last week was hampered by precipitation in much of Kansas, with heaviest amounts in north-central and southeast portions. Corn harvest is 91 percent complete, and roughly 78 percent of the sorghum crop has been cut. Eighty-six percent of soybeans and 70 percent of sunflowers have also been harvested.==============KS Soldier Sentenced for Deadly ChaseJUNCTION CITY, Kan. (AP) — A Fort Riley soldier has been sentenced to nearly 10 years in prison for a deadly wrong-way chase on Interstate 70. KMAN-AM reports that 22-year-old Specialist Gary Nelson was sentenced Tuesday in Geary County District Court. He pleaded no contest in August to second-degree murder and reckless driving. Authorities said Nelson intentionally drove the wrong way on I-70 the night of April 3. A vehicle that tried to avoid a head-on collision went off the highway and rolled over, killing 53-year-old passenger Jake Black of Manhattan. A Highway Patrol trooper continued chasing Nelson at speeds of up to 100 mph before the soldier surrendered after several miles. Investigators said Nelson told them and others he had planned to commit suicide by hitting a tractor-trailer but lost his nerve.==============Woman Pleads Guilty in Kansas Sex Trafficking CaseWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A Massachusetts woman has admitted harboring workers who were in the country illegally as part of a human trafficking operation in Asian massage parlors in Kansas. The U.S. Attorney's office says 44-year-old Xiuqing Tian of Framingham, Massachusetts acknowledged in her plea deal Wednesday that she entered the United States illegally in 2009. Tian said she came to Wichita work for her former employers and co-defendants, Gary Kidgell and his wife, Yan Zhang. She admitted the couple encouraged her to perform sexual acts for patrons of two massage parlors where she worked. Prosecutors say Tian helped recruit other Chinese women to work at the massage parlors and provided translation services. Tian agreed to testify against her former employers at their December 3 trial.==============Businessman Pleads Guilty to Fraud, Embezzlement ChargesKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — A Missouri business owner from northeast Kansas has admitted embezzling more than $1.3 million from the Missouri Petroleum Storage Tank Insurance Fund. The U.S. Attorney's office says 52-year-old Robert Fine II of Lenexa pleaded guilty Tuesday to mail fraud and money laundering. His plea agreement requires him to pay restitution of $1.5 million. Fine was the owner and sole employee of FINEnvironmental Inc., a home-based company that used subcontractors to perform environmental services for property owners with underground petroleum storage tanks. Prosecutors say Fine created false, inflated invoices for the services and submitted them to the insurance fund. He could be sentenced to up to 30 years in federal prison.==============KS Woman Accused of Selling Phony ID DocumentsKANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — A northeast Kansas woman is accused of making and selling hundreds of counterfeit driver's licenses, resident alien cards and other identity documents over a three-year period. The U.S. Attorney's office says 29-year-old Lluvia Fernanda Salinas-Rodriguez was indicted Wednesday on charges of trafficking in identity documents and fraud. The indictment replaces a criminal complaint filed last week against the Kansas City, Kansas resident. Investigators allege Salinas-Rodriguez used a computer and printer to scan photos and produce counterfeit identity documents, which also included Social Security cards. The charges allege she sold two sets of documents a week for roughly three years, at $80 to $100 apiece. Salinas-Rodriguez did not have a lawyer Wednesday, and a phone number for her could not be found.==============Caldwell Restaurant Fire Caused $200,000 in DamageCALDWELL, Kan. (AP) — A fire at a downtown Caldwell restaurant last week caused an estimated $200,000 in damage. The Wichita Eagle reports that Caldwell fire chief Pat York says the fire at Richard's Last Chance Bar and Grill is still under investigation but he says there is "nothing suspicious" about the blaze. York said last week that the fire originated in the kitchen of the historic two-story stone building that houses it.==============Elderly MO Man with Dementia Found UninjuredRAYMORE, Mo. (AP) — Police in suburban Kansas City say an 87-year-old man reported missing Tuesday night has been found alive and uninjured. The Raymore Police Department had issued an alert asking the public's help in finding Kenneth E. Hunt, who has dementia. The alert was canceled Wednesday afternoon. Hunt called his son Tuesday evening to say he was putting gas in his car at a convenience store in Odessa, about 30 miles from Raymore. The cellphone was then turned off. Police did not say where Hunt was found.==============Man Admits Secretly Taping Roommates in ShowerWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A former Wichita State student admits that he secretly videotaped his roommates while they were in the shower in their dorm. Twenty-one-year-old Keanan Daniel Smith pleaded guilty Tuesday to three counts of breach of privacy. As part of the plea bargain, two counts of sexual exploitation of a child were dismissed. The Wichita Eagle reports that Smith was accused of taping the roommates in February 2012. Smith will have to register as a sex offender after he admitted his actions were sexually motivated. Prosecutors agreed to recommend that Smith be placed on probation. In court documents, Smith listed an address in the southeast Kansas town of Edna. He was a student at Wichita State from the fall of 2010 through the spring of 2012.==============Death Penalty Appeal Before Mississippi High CourtJACKSON, Miss. (AP) — Attorneys for a death row inmate have asked the Mississippi Supreme Court Wednesday to order a new sentencing hearing for Roger Gillett because a jury considered inadmissible evidence that otherwise would not have been before it. Gillett was convicted in 2007 in Forrest County (MS) on two counts of capital murder for his role in the deaths of a Hattiesburg couple and transporting their bodies to Kansas in a freezer. While in custody in Kansas, he attempted to escape. That crime was one of the aggravating factors prosecutors presented Mississippi jurors to support the death penalty. The attorney general's office argued the Supreme Court can uphold murderers' death sentences, even if a sentencing jury wrongly considered some adverse evidence. Prosecutors say the evidence against Gillett was overwhelming and supported conviction.==================Crews Begin to Lay Streetcar Rail in Kansas CityKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Crews are beginning to lay rail for a two-mile streetcar route through downtown Kansas City. The contractor is giving the media a chance to view the work Thursday afternoon. Mayor Sly James, city council members and streetcar advocates will be on hand. Streetcars are expected to begin running in 2015 from near Union Station to the River Market area. The project has an estimated cost of about $100 million. Supporters hope it will be the first leg of a more extensive public rail system.==============Court Rules KC Diocese Not Liable in Priest Abuse Civil CaseKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — A Missouri appeals court has ruled that the Catholic Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph cannot be liable for actions of a priest accused of abusing a boy away from church property. A three-judge panel of the Missouri Western District Court of Appeals on Tuesday upheld a ruling last year by a Jackson County judge that dismissed civil allegations against the diocese filed by a plaintiff identified as "D.T." The Kansas City Star reports that D.T. alleged in his lawsuit the Reverend Michael Tierney abused him in the 1970s, once in a hotel room and another time in the basement of Tierney's mother's home. Tierney denied wrongdoing. The plaintiff dismissed his claims against Tierney while his appeal of rulings in favor of the diocese was pending.============== MO Man Sentenced for Selling Counterfeit Merchandise in KansasKANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — A Missouri man who sold counterfeit goods at a store in Kansas has been sentenced to 18 months in prison. U.S. Attorney Barry Grissom said in a news release Wednesday that 45-year-old Jehad Shalabi, of Blue Springs, Missouri pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to traffic in counterfeit trademark goods. He sold the merchandise at the Joe Black store in Kansas City, Kansas. Prosecutors say FBI agents working undercover bought counterfeit items at the store and agents searching the store in June 2011 seized 588 counterfeit items with trademarks including Polo Ralph Lauren, Nike and Major League Baseball. Investigators say the counterfeit goods accounted for up 20 percent of the store's weekly sales of $4,000 to $6,000. ============== MO Man Gets Long Sentence for Failed Robbery RAYTOWN, Mo. (AP) — A man with a long criminal history was sentenced to almost 32 years in prison for a failed bank robbery and shootout in a Kansas City suburb. Thirty-four-year-old Eric L. Smith was sentenced Wednesday to 31 years and 10 months for the June 2012 attempted robbery at the Blue Ridge Bank and Trust in Raytown. Prosecutors say when Smith demanded a security guard's gun, the guard responded by firing three shots and Smith fled. The guard and an off-duty Drug Enforcement Administration special agent ran after Smith, who fired back and escaped. The Kansas City Star reports that Smith had been out of prison only a month when the robbery occurred. His criminal history included assault and two aggravated robberies. ============== Source: Chiefs' Bowe to Play Sunday Night KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Chiefs wide receiver Dwayne Bowe will start Sunday night's AFC West showdown against the Denver Broncos after his arrest for speeding and possession of marijuana over the weekend. Chiefs coach Andy Reid says he is bound by terms of the collective-bargaining agreement from disciplining Bowe, who was pulled over for speeding in the Kansas City suburb of Riverside on Sunday. A search of his vehicle revealed what officers believe was marijuana. Reid said that he intends to let the legal situation run its course, but Bowe will be in the starting lineup when the Chiefs (9-0) take on the Broncos (8-1) with first place on the line. Bowe, who signed a five-year, $56 million deal in the offseason, has struggled to live up to the expectations that come with being one of the game's best-paid wide receivers. He's second on the team with 33 catches for 369 yards and two touchdowns. This isn't the first time that Bowe has made questionable decisions. He was suspended four games in 2009 for violating the NFL's policy on performance-enhancing drugs after taking what his agent called an unapproved weight-loss supplement. He also made questionable comments to a magazine a few years ago about womanizing that allegedly occurred at team hotels, and then misstated the name of Chiefs ownership family in his apology. Now in his seventh season, Bowe is second in franchise history with 448 catches, trailing only former tight end Tony Gonzalez. He has 6,078 yards receiving, sixth-most in team history, and 41 touchdown catches, fifth-most in Chiefs history. ============== Kosher Hotdogs Come to Midwestern Hoops Games CHAMPAIGN, Ill. (AP) — There isn't much at your typical college basketball arena that qualifies as kosher food, aside from the soft drinks. That's changing at the flagship campus of the University of Illinois. The Chabad Jewish Center has opened a kosher hot dog stand at the State Farm Center. There's also one at the University of Kansas, but otherwise it's a fairly rare treat. Rabbi Dovid Tiechtel runs the center and helps staff the stand. He says it's an expression of Jewish life on campus. Customers complimented the hot dogs on the stand's first night. Security guard Cory Coker said the kosher dogs taste good and have what he called a good "crispiness." Tiechtel said he's already heard from a few other schools that are curious about it.
  • At issue is whether to reverse the court's nearly half-century-old decision, Roe v. Wade, and subsequent decisions declaring that women have a constitutional right to terminate a pregnancy.
  • John McCain and Barack Obama met in their first debate Friday night and clashed over the financial crisis, taxes, spending and the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. The theme of the night was supposed to have been foreign policy, but the Wall Street meltdown and continuing negotiations over a federal bailout forced their way onto the agenda.
  • Here's a look at area headlines from the Associated Press, as compiled by KPR news staffers.
  • Here's what's happening in Kansas.
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