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  • The authors of a new book argue that efforts to raise achievement for students at the bottom have come at the expense of the most gifted and talented.
  • A weekend standoff in Overland Park ends with the death of a suspect... a Union Pacific train derails in Kansas... KU basketball coach Bill Self now recovering from a heart procedure... and more mountain lion sighting are reported across the state. Those stories and more... here.
  • Kansas Board Rejects Voter Registration Temporary FixTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A state board has rejected proposed temporary changes to the Kansas law requiring proof of citizenship for newly registered voters. The change proposed Tuesday by Secretary of State Kris Kobach was in response to a glitch that caused delays to nearly 12,000 voter registration applications. Kansas now requires that new applications to register to vote also include proof of citizenship. A new state computer system that was supposed to provide that verification to the secretary of state's office hasn't started sending the information to election officials. The rule change would have allowed those individuals to cast a provisional vote in the next election and then bring proof of citizenship to election officials before the votes are certified.============ Silver Alert Issued for Missing Lyndon ManTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The Osage County Sheriff's Office is asking for the public's help in finding a 67-year-old man. The sheriff's office said in a release Monday that Raleigh D. Heskett of Lyndon, was last seen late Sunday in Coffey County driving a 2002 GMC full size brown van, bearing Kansas license plate 417DCF. The sheriff's office says Heskett has a severe laceration to his right forearm that occurred Saturday. If Heskett is located, he may need immediate medical attention. Heskett is 6 feet tall, 200 pounds, and has a grey beard and mustache. He also has a panther and cobra tattoo on his left arm and was last seen wearing blue jeans and a black ball cap.============ U.S. Senate Subcommittee OKs $404M in Funds for NBAFWASHINGTON (AP) — A U.S. Senate subcommittee has approved $404 million in federal spending for the construction of a new federal research laboratory at Kansas State University. The vote Tuesday sends the funding for the National Bio- and Agro-Defense Facility to the full Senate Appropriations Committee for consideration. The money is part of the Department of Homeland Security budget for 2014. Federal officials want to build the $1.25 billion lab to replace an aging facility at Plum Island, New York, to conduct research on animal diseases. State officials have approved spending up to $305 million in bond proceeds as part of its cost to construct the lab. Ground has been broken on a central utility plant that will service the lab. Tuesday's development was announced by Kansas Senators Pat Roberts and Jerry Moran.============State Agencies Moving from Wichita BuildingWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — State officials have notified the city of Wichita that nine agencies will be leaving a city-owned building, meaning more than 700 people will be moving. Most of the employees in the Finney State Office Building work for the Department for Children and Families. Department regional director Diana Bidwell says the agency's work space is spread over seven floors in the building, making it difficult to efficiently serve clients. The Wichita Eagle reports that the department is handling about 45,000 cases and that number is expected to increase. The state agencies have been in the building for nearly 20 years. Though the city owns the building, the state has managed it for several years. The state currently is looking for new space in Wichita.============ Junction City Says Someone is Stealing WaterJUNCTION CITY, Kan. (AP) — Junction City officials and police are on the hunt for people who are stealing some of the city's water. The city can't account for about 30 percent of its water usage and has been told by the state that it is exceeding its allotted use. The city was told to control its water use or it will be sanctioned. The police department issued a news release last week asking the public for help finding anyone who is stealing water. It says much of the missing water can be attributed to old, inaccurate meters and leakage. But police say some people apparently are taking water from public hydrants for construction or agricultural use. The city has procedures to work with people to acquire bulk city water legally.============Colonoscopy Patients at Kansas Hospital Urged to Get Blood TestsCHANUTE, Kan. (AP) — A southeast Kansas hospital is asking 244 patients who received colonoscopies since early January to get tested for communicable diseases because its equipment wasn't properly cleaned and disinfected. Neosho Memorial Regional Medical Center in Chanute says the risk that anyone was infected with hepatitis B, hepatitis C or HIV is extremely low — but not zero — so it is encouraging its colonoscopy patients to get tested for those diseases. The hospital says the endoscope used for colonoscopies wasn't properly flushed according to the manufacturer's cleaning instructions because a water channel in the device was not being used. It says the scopes were immersed in a sterilizing agent before being used on each new patient, so the chance that any diseases will be transmitted through the equipment is very low.============40 Railway Cars Derail in Hays; No Injuries ReportedHAYS, Kan. (AP) — Railroad officials say a train derailment in Hays occurred when a freight train hit a standing train, causing a fire but no serious injuries. Union Pacific Railroad spokesman Mark Davis said all three crew members of the Salina-to-Denver freight train escaped injuries. The second train was unoccupied when it was hit about 1:25 am Tuesday. The Hays Daily News reports that three locomotives and 79 cars were part of the westbound train, which was carrying low-grade ethanol and general freight such as steel, wheat, beer and particle board. The 20 tankers carrying low-grade ethanol did not derail. Officials say fuel from two of the three locomotives was on fire. About 15 to 20 people who lived near the accident site were evacuated as a precaution.============ Tree-Killing Beetle Found in Johnson CountyKANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — A beetle that has killed millions of ash trees in the eastern U.S. and parts of the South has been detected in Johnson County. The Kansas Department of Agriculture said Monday that the emerald ash borer was found in a tree near the Johnson County landfill. Trees there were being inspected after the presence of emerald ash borers was found last summer in Wyandotte County. The U.S. Department of Agriculture confirmed the beetle's presence in Johnson County on July 11th. Ash trees become infested when adult beetles lay eggs on the bark, leading to larvae that bore into the tree. Kansas has enacted an emergency quarantine for Johnson County, similar to a quarantine in place in Wyandotte County, designed to prevent further spread of the pests in Kansas.============Missouri Appeals Court Says Kansas Gun Store Not Liable in Fatal ShootingKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — A Missouri appeals panel says it agrees with a lower court ruling that said a Kansas gun store is protected from lawsuits in a 2007 fatal shooting at a Kansas City mall. The Kansas City Star reports that the appeals court on Tuesday upheld rulings by a Jackson County (Missouri) judge who threw out lawsuits filed by the families of Luke Nilges and Leslie Noble Ballew, who died in April 2007 when David W. Logsdon went on a shooting spree at the Ward Parkway Shopping Center. The families argued that Shawnee Gun Shop in nearby Shawnee, Kansas, negligently sold the material to Logsdon, who paid with a stolen credit card. The court ruled that products could be used away from the store with no oversight by the gun shop.============State Rejects Proposal to Limit Coyote HuntingPRATT, Kan. (AP) — The state has rejected a request that it change the way coyotes can be hunted during deer firearms season. The law enforcement arm of the Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism had asked the agency's Board of Tourism to ban coyote hunters from using two-way radios and hunting from vehicles during regular deer firearm season. It is legal to use the radios and hunt coyotes from vehicles but those practices are illegal for hunting deer during the 12-day firearm season. The Pratt Tribune reports that officers said they had encountered several deer hunters who claimed to be hunting coyotes when they were caught using two-way radios or hunting from vehicles. Spokesman Mike Miller says the commission will review the issue again in January.============1 of 2 Baby Golden Tamarins at Topeka Zoo DiesTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Topeka Zoo officials say one of two golden lion tamarins born last week at the zoo has died after it was rejected by its parents. The zoo said in a news release Tuesday that the mother rejected one of the babies two days after it was born July 10. Zoo Director Brendan Wiley said zoo staff tried to care for the baby and persuade either parent to care for it. Both babies were nursing Saturday but on Sunday zoo staff found the baby that had been rejected dead. Wiley said tests are being conducted and zoo officials don't know why the mother rejected the newborn. Wiley said the other baby tamarin appears to be doing well and has been well cared for since its birth.============SE Kansas Woman Pleads Guilty to FraudKANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — A southeast Kansas woman has pleaded guilty to receiving more than $45,000 in federal aid she wasn't entitled to. U.S. Attorney Barry Grissom said in a release Tuesday that 48-year-old Jody Gayle Simmons of Arma has pleaded guilty to one count of theft of government funds. In her plea, she admitted to fraudulently receiving about $45,000 in aid from various federal programs. She also admitted that she falsely reported that her husband moved out of their home so his income would not disqualify her from receiving federal assistance. Simmons faces up to 10 years in prison and a $250,000 fine when she's sentenced November 6.============2 Wichita Children Placed in Protective CustodyWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Wichita police say two toddlers are in protective custody after one of the children drank a small amount of bleach at a squalid home. Lieutenant Doug Nolte told The Wichita Eagle that emergency responders were called to the home Monday evening after a 2-year-old girl drank bleach from a cup that was next to a cup of water. Nolte says the child suffered no serious injury from the bleach. The responders called police after finding human feces, trash, a bug infestation and no running water in the house. The 2-year-old girl and her 1-year-old brother were taken into protective custody. Nolte says seven adults live at the residence, but it was unclear if the parents of the children are among that group.============Woman Pleads Not Guilty in Husband's DeathPITTSBURG, Kan. (AP) — A Pittsburg woman has pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder in the shooting death of her husband. Carla Moutz entered the plea Monday to one count of first-degree murder in the May death of 49-year-old John Moutz. The trial was scheduled to begin October 7. The Pittsburg Morning Sun reports that the trial is scheduled for Girard but potential construction at the Crawford County Courthouse may relocate the trial to Pittsburg. John Moutz died at Pittsburg hospital after being shot at a home where his wife was staying. The home was owned by Carla Moutz's father.============ Plea Agreement Reached in Accomplice Shooting DeathWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A Wichita man avoided a second trial by reaching a plea agreement in the shooting death of his accomplice during a home robbery. Thirty-two-year-old Terrell Cole pleaded guilty last week to involuntary manslaughter in the January 2011 death of Andre Lovett. He had been scheduled to go on trial July 29 for first-degree murder. Wichita police say Cole and Lovett were trying to rob a home when Cole fired a shot at one of the victims as he ran from the scene. The bullet hit Lovett, who died the next day. The Wichita Eagle reports that the jury in Cole's first trial split in favor of acquitting Cole on several charges, including murder, but convicted him of tampering with electronic monitoring equipment.============UPDATE: Prosecutor Says Kansas Man Amplified Power of Explosives WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A prosecutor told jurors in his opening statement that a Kansas man added chemicals to gunpowder to increase the explosive power of grenades he was making. The government outlined its case against Alfred Dutton, of Eureka, in federal court Tuesday in Wichita. The 67-year-old veteran of both the U.S. Army and U.S. Marines is charged with possession of unregistered destructive devices. His attorney in his opening remarks said his client was working on creating of a mock grenade that he was planning to sell on eBay. He portrayed his client as a tinkerer who was experimenting with also making fireworks. An explosives expert for the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms testified about all the explosive materials and ammunition found during a 2011 search of Dutton's apartment in Eureka.============Some Lawmakers Seek to Halt Sale of NY's Plum Island and LabMINEOLA, N.Y. (AP) — Some federal lawmakers are trying to stop the sale of New York's Plum Island, home to the only national government laboratory studying diseases harmful to livestock. The New York and Connecticut lawmakers announced the legislation on Tuesday. Congress voted in 2009 to close the aging lab and move operations to Kansas State University. President Barack Obama's latest budget includes $714 million for the project. Kansas officials are selling bonds to pay for it. Democratic Senator Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut says it's important to ensure that future generations can enjoy the island's environmental and recreational benefits. Democratic Representative Timothy Bishop of Long Island calls it one of the natural treasures of the Northeast. ============Judge Limits Evidence in Kansas Explosives CaseWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A federal judge has limited the government from presenting evidence of the survivalist beliefs of a Kansas veteran accused of possessing unregistered destructive devices. The ruling came before the start of jury selection Tuesday in the trial of Alfred Dutton, a 67-year-old veteran of the U.S. Army and U.S. Marines. Authorities found hand grenades during a 2011 search of his Eureka apartment prompted by a tip from his ex-wife's boyfriend. Dutton was preparing for the collapse of the world economy by stockpiling supplies, nonperishable foods, firearms and other items. U.S. District Judge J. Thomas Marten told attorneys that he is not going to let them try the case on Dutton's beliefs. He said the government may present evidence only directly related to the manufacture of destructive devices.**this story has been updated. Please see above.
  • Governor Brownback Raises $1.6M in 2013 for Re-Election BidTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A close ally of Kansas Governor Sam Brownback says the Republican raised more than $1.6 million in cash contributions last year for his re-election campaign. David Kensinger also said Tuesday that Brownback ended 2013 with nearly $2 million in his campaign treasury. Kensinger managed Brownback's successful 2010 campaign. Kensinger said Brownback has had 10,000 donors and that last year's fundraising figures show enthusiasm for Brownback and the policies he's pursued as governor. Candidates for governor have a Friday deadline to file finance reports on their 2013 campaign activities with the secretary of state's office. But Kensinger confirmed Brownback's totals early. Kansas House Minority Leader Paul Davis is seeking the Democratic nomination for governor. His campaign said it would respond later Tuesday to Brownback's totals.===============Former Northeast KS Mayor Ponders Congressional CandidacyMANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) — A former northeast Kansas mayor is considering running as a Democrat for the 1st Congressional District seat held by Republican Tim Huelskamp. Former Manhattan Mayor Jim Sherow announced Monday that he's formed an exploratory committee. Sherow served six years on Manhattan City Commission, deciding not to see re-election last year. He is a history professor at Kansas State University. Huelskamp won the seat in the strongly Republican U.S. House district in 2010 and faced no opposition in seeking re-election in 2012. One Democrat already has filed for the seat. He is Bryan Whitney, a political science student at Wichita State University. On the Republican side, Ellinwood attorney Kent Roth has formed an exploratory committee for a possible challenge to Huelskamp in the GOP primary.===============Kansas Chamber of Commerce to Outline AgendaTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Leaders of the Kansas Chamber of Commerce say they plan to work to be sure tax cuts enacted in the past two years are not rolled back during the 2014 legislative session. Chamber president and CEO Mike O'Neal said Tuesday the organization would defend the reduction in rates for thousands of businesses and individual income tax payers. He says some business owners believe the rates are still too high. In recent years, the chamber has been influential in helping Republican Governor Sam Brownback and the GOP-controlled Legislature push through cuts in the state's income tax rates. O'Neal, from Hutchinson, was Republican House speaker in 2012 when the first reductions were approved. Critics of the cuts say they are too deep and will lead to reduced state services.===============KS Utility Commission Launches Electronic FilingTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas Corporation Commission is now allowing consumers, attorneys and the utilities it regulates to file documents electronically. The agency launched its e-Filing Express system Monday, making it available through its website. Commission executive director Kim Christiansen said the new system will be more convenient for parties in regulatory cases and reduce costs. The commission receives about 8,500 paper documents a year. Companies and individuals using the system won't be required to file paper copies. But parties in regulatory cases also won't be required to use electronic filing. Users will be required to create accounts to access the commission's secure portal.===============KU Medical School Names New Executive DeanKANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — The University of Kansas School of Medicine has named a professor of medicine at Minnesota's Mayo Clinic as its new executive dean. Dr. Robert Simari will be the permanent successor to Barbara Atkinson, who retired in 2012. The appointment was announced Tuesday by Douglas Girod, executive vice chancellor of the University of Kansas Medical Center. Simari earned his medical degree from the University of Kansas in 1986. At the Mayo Clinic, he is vice chairman of the Division of Cardiovascular Diseases and co-director of the Mayo Center for Clinical and Translational Sciences. Simari is also the co-founder of Anexon, a company licensed to develop a method of protecting kidney function during heart failure.===============Delivery Driver Credited with Saving Former MayorSHAWNEE, Kan. (AP) — An alert newspaper delivery driver is credited with saving a former suburban Kansas City mayor after hearing the man's cries for help in the pre-dawn darkness of one of the coldest mornings in decades. The Kansas City Star reports Jeff Stockwell was delivering papers in Shawnee at 3:30 am Monday when he heard what sounded like the wail of a cat trying to get indoors. He says the sound registered as strange the next time he heard it, so he got out of his vehicle and found 77-year-old former Shawnee Mayor Tony Soetaert leaning against a vehicle in his open garage. Stockwell says Soetaert thought he had been there about an hour. He was taken to a hospital in stable condition and kept overnight Monday as a precaution.=============== KC Shelter Filled by Animals Left Outside in ColdKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The Kansas City Animal Shelter says it is bulging at the seams with animals brought in as bitter cold settled over the region. The shelter says about 90 animals have been brought in to the shelter in recent days, either by the public or animal control officers. The Kansas City Star reports that some were taken from yards with little or no shelter and frozen water bowls. City officials on Monday reminded citizens that animal control officers will impound pets found outside in freezing conditions and issue citations to their owners. Shelter spokeswoman Tori Fugate says the shelter is getting "close to desperate" and need the public's help finding homes for the animals. Beginning Friday, the shelter will offer special rates for some pet adoptions.=============== Children's Mercy, KU Med Working to Combine Pediatric ProgramsKANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — The University of Kansas Medical Center and Children's Mercy Hospital in Kansas City, Missouri are moving closer to combining their pediatric program. The hospitals announced in a joint news release that Children's Mercy has been named the primary teaching hospital for University of Kansas Medical Center students. Pediatrics programs at both institutions will be overseen by Dr. Michael Artman. Plans to develop a single, integrated pediatric program were first announced in December 2012. Artman says the partnership will give patients and families greater access to high-quality clinical care. Artman also says medical students and residents will learn from the best in the field, and physicians and researchers will be able to consult and collaborate more easily. The two institutions already collaborate on training, clinical trials and pediatric research.===============Body Found in Burned-Out KS HomeSOLOMON, Kan. (AP) — Firefighters have recovered a body from the ruins of a north-central Kansas home destroyed by flames overnight. The Salina Journal reports that the volunteer fire department in Solomon was called to the scene around 4 am Tuesday. Neighbors said the house was fully engulfed as fire trucks approached. The home's occupant was not immediately accounted for. The body was recovered several hours later, but Fire Chief Randy Paden declined to release an identity until relatives were notified. Neighbors said a man in his late 80's lived in the home. Solomon is located about 15 miles northeast of Salina.===============Man Pleads Not Guilty in Lincoln County HomicideLINCOLN, Kan. (AP) — The son of a Kansas sheriff pleaded not guilty to second-degree murder in the shooting death of a central Kansas man. Scott Weigel entered the plea Monday in the September death of 21-year-old Keith Ancell of Lincoln. His trial is scheduled to begin February 24. The Salina Journal reports that Weigel is being held in a jail outside of Lincoln County. He is the son of Lincoln County Sheriff Mike Weigel. He is accused of shooting Ancell on September 9 near downtown Lincoln.=============== $50,000 Reward Yields No Clues in Missing Boy CaseWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A $50,000 reward has yielded no new information about a southeast Kansas boy who has been missing since 1999. An anonymous donor put up the reward in late December in an effort to solve the disappearance of 11-year-old Adam Herrman, who was last seen at his family's home in Towanda. The Wichita Eagle reports that Butler County Sheriff Kelly Herzet says by late Monday, only about a half-dozen people had called and none of those calls brought in any new clues in the case. Adam's parents say he ran away from home. His disappearance was not reported until 2008, when Adam's sister contacted law enforcement. The parents claimed they didn't report him missing because they were afraid their other children would be taken away.===============KS Man Accused of Fatally Stabbing GirlfriendINDEPENDENCE, Kan. (AP) — A 41-year-old Independence man has been charged with first-degree murder in connection with the fatal stabbing of his 35-year-old girlfriend. The Independence Daily Reporter says Russell McQueen Arndt was arrested early Monday in the death of Rebecca Ann Whittley. Montgomery County prosecutor Larry Markle says the stabbing death occurred sometime over the weekend, but Whittley's body wasn't found until 2:30 am Monday when officers went to the couple's home to check on her. Earlier that night Arndt was picked up in the northern part of the county and told deputies his girlfriend may have been injured at their residence. Arndt was being held on $1 million bond. The Southeast Kansas Public Defender's office has been appointed to represent him, but nobody was available Tuesday to discuss his case.===============KC Mom Pleads Guilty to Keeping Girl in ClosetKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — A Kansas City woman has pleaded guilty to abusing her 10-year-old daughter who was found in a locked closet in 2012. The woman entered the plea Tuesday to felony child abuse, child endangerment and assault charges. The Associated Press is not naming her to protect the child's identity. The woman will be sentenced April 25 and prosecutors have agreed to seek a prison sentence of no more than 20 years. The girl weighed just 32 pounds when she was found in a urine-soaked closet. She told authorities that she hadn't been allowed to eat for days and hadn't attended school since kindergarten. The Kansas City Star reports that the woman told a judge Monday she was pleading guilty because she believes the state's case is strong enough to convict her.===============3rd Suspect Arrested in Theft from Dying WomanWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Wichita police say they have arrested a third suspect in a robbery from of a dying woman at a fast-food restaurant. Police say the suspect was arrested after he turned himself in Monday night on a probation violation. Two other 19-year-old men were arrested earlier Monday in the case. On December 29, 43-year-old Danielle Zimmerman suffered a brain aneurysm after she pulled into a Taco Bell. While she was unconscious in her car, someone stole her purse, phone and wedding ring. Zimmerman died the next day. Some of her items were found but her wedding ring is still missing.===============Topeka Firms Donate Services to Housing ProgramTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Four engineering and surveying businesses have donated a combined $20,000 worth of services to Topeka Habitat for Humanity. The Topeka Capital-Journal reports that officials of the nonprofit organization announced the contribution Tuesday. Firms making the donation are Schmidt, Beck and Boyd Engineering; Professional Engineering Consultants; CFS Engineers; and Bartlett and West. Topeka Habitat for Humanity provides financial education to low-income families and the opportunity to become homeowners through interest-free loans. Students from three Topeka area high schools build the homes for academic credit.===============Report: Video Describes Wrong-Airport 747 LandingWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — The company that landed a Boeing 747 at the wrong airport in Kansas in November says one of the pilots was not sure they were landing at the right place, but kept silent. The description is in a training video produced by Atlas Air Worldwide Holdings and obtained by Aviation International News. Atlas confirmed the accuracy of the AIN report on Tuesday but declined to provide the video to The Associated Press. The Atlas pilots landed near Wichita, 9 miles from their intended destination. AIN reported that one of the pilots abandoned the plane's instrument-guided approach after spotting a runway to the left and began heading there. It turned out to be the wrong airport. AIN reported that the other pilot was uncertain about the runway but didn't say anything.===============Woman Sentenced to Probation and Rehab in Thefts CaseLAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — A Lawrence woman was sentenced to a year of probation and inpatient drug treatment for her role in storage unit burglaries that netted the thieves tens of thousands of dollars in loot. Thirty-four-year-old Cori Nehrbass, who pleaded no contest to felony theft and misdemeanor theft, also will be required to pay restitution. Nehrbass told the court Monday she participated in the robberies because she is addicted to methamphetamine. Her attorney says she will be admitted to rehab in Topeka on Thursday for 30 days. Investigators say the suspects drove trucks into several storage units in the spring of 2013 and emptied them. Co-defendant Jacob P. Paine was sentenced in October to two years' probation. Cases against Travis M. Darrow and Cheri L. Sponholtz are still being decided.=============== KS Woman Gets Probation in Omaha Prostitution CaseOMAHA, Neb. (AP) — A Kansas woman has been given five years of probation in an Omaha prostitution case. Omaha television station KETV says Tabatha Ashburn, of Junction City, Kansas had made a plea deal with prosecutors who had indicted Ashburn and four other people. Christopher Tierney also was given probation. The station says Ashburn's mother, Tammy Schuck, of Omaha, is serving prison time, as are William Knox and Kim Bivens. Authorities say Schuck operated three "spas" in Omaha from April 2008 to January 2012 where customers paid for sex acts from workers, rather than receiving legitimate spa services.===============Charges Amended in Kansas Sex Trafficking CaseWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A federal grand jury has amended the charges against a massage parlor owner and his wife accused of sex trafficking in Wichita. The four-count indictment returned Tuesday charges Gary Kidgell and Yan Zhang with sex trafficking by force, fraud or coercion. One count also charges Kidgell with harboring for financial gain an immigrant who was in the country unlawfully. The couple is charged with recruiting women to come to Wichita to work at massage parlors, then coercing them into prostitution. A woman who worked for them has pleaded guilty to a harboring count. The amended indictment makes moot a defense request to dismiss two of the counts over the government's earlier failure to specify that the alleged conduct was related to interstate commerce. Trial remains set for January 14.===============KS Officials Confirm Cause of Illness OutbreakGARDEN CITY, Kan. (AP) — State health officials have confirmed the cause of an illness that struck patrons of a southwest Kansas restaurant last month. The Kansas Department of Health and Environment said Monday the gastrointestinal upset among people who ate food from a Jimmy John's Gourmet Sandwiches in Garden City was caused by norovirus. County and state agencies began investigating the outbreak December 18. KDHE says it found that 209 people came down with norovirus symptoms such as vomiting and diarrhea within three days of eating the restaurant's food between Dec. 10 and Christmas Eve. The Jimmy John's closed for three days in late December for a special cleaning and disinfection. State officials say no new cases of the illness have been reported since the restaurant reopened on December 27th.=============== Ex-KS Bank Worker Admits StealingWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A fourth defendant in the embezzlement of up to $84,000 from a southwest Kansas bank has pleaded guilty. The U.S. Attorney's office says 33-year-old Hattie Wiginton pleaded guilty Monday to one count of theft from Western State Bank in Ulysses. She faces up to 10 years in federal prison at her sentencing March 24th. Three of Wiginton's former co-workers at the bank pleaded guilty earlier. Ashley Cravens, Linda Wise and Amber Gutierrez, all of Ulysses, will be sentenced in February. Prosecutors said the defendants began stealing in 2008 by making deposits into each other's accounts, hiding the shortage by lying about the balance in the bank's vault. In July 2010, three of the women staged a holdup of the bank to cover up the shortage of cash in the bank.
  • Andrew Leland started losing his sight 20 years ago. He's now legally blind, although he still has a narrow field of vision, which allows him to see about 6% of what a fully-sighted person sees.
  • Chef Amanda Cohen's Dirt Candy is a turducken of a book: graphic novel, cookbook and memoir in one. Cohen's East Village restaurant in New York City is focused entirely on vegetables — and with just nine tables, it's become a foodie destination.
  • As the country faces slowing economic growth and a trade war with the U.S., China has taken pains to reassure entrepreneurs by telling them they can start businesses, create jobs and benefit society.
  • Here are the headlines for our area, as compiled by KPR news staffers. Our weekday headlines are generally posted by 10 a.m. and updated throughout the day. Feel free to browse our ad-free news summary. And when you're done, feel free to make a pledge to KPR. Thanks for your support.
  • Stephanie Williams discovered comics young, drawn early to X-Men, which she saw as an allegory for the persecution of black Americans. An adult now, she co-hosts a podcast about black superheroines.
  • Late night TV has seen a recent exodus of non-white stars — from Desus and Mero and Ziwe to Trevor Noah himself.
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