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  • Brownback: 'Everything' on Table to Fix Budget GapTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas Governor Sam Brownback says he is "looking at everything" to fill a projected $279 million budget deficit for this fiscal year, including the possibility of tweaking the state's income tax policy. The Wichita Eagle reports the governor spoke briefly to reporters Tuesday while leaving a meeting of the State Finance Council. He said he wasn't aware before this month's election that the state would hit a budget shortfall this fiscal year, which ends in June. On top of this year's projected deficit, the state faces an estimated $436 million hole for the next fiscal year. The state's nonpartisan Legislative Research Department considers Brownback's income tax policies the primary cause of the state's deficit. The governor didn't say when he would unveil a plan to plug the budget hole.===============================State Postpones Vote on NBAF / Agro-Defense ProjectMANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) - Governor Sam Brownback and top legislative leaders have agreed to delay a vote on issuing bonds needed for the proposed agro-defense laboratory in Manhattan. The State Finance Council decided Monday to postpone issuing $231 million in bonds for the National Bio- and Agro-Defense Facility. Republican Senate President Susan Wagle, of Wichita, told the council final action on the bonds could occur in December. She wants the state's investment in NBAF to be legally capped at $307 million. The $1.2 billion federal laboratory at Kansas State University is planned for research on dangerous animal-borne illnesses. The state initially agreed to invest $105 million and about three-fourths of that bonding authority has been used.==============================4 Directors to Leave Kansas Insurance DepartmentTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Four directors will retire from the Kansas Insurance Department on December 5. The retirements announced Tuesday come as Insurance Commissioner Sandy Praeger prepares to leave office in January. Department spokesman Bob Hanson says the retirements were all planned. The Topeka Capital Journal reports that directors Marlyn Burch, life division; Neil Woerman, information technology; Steve O'Neil, consumer assistance; and Ted Clark, anti-fraud, will retire. The department has 11 directors. Burch has worked for the department for 53 years, beginning in 1961. O'Neil joined the department in 1987, while Woerman and Clark joined the department in 2003. The department will wait to fill the positions until Ken Selzer becomes commissioner in January.==============================Higher Prices, Plentiful Feed Buoy US RanchersWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Record high cattle prices and plentiful feed supplies are making life a lot easier for cattle producers as another winter nears. It has been a good year out in farm country as the long drought eased somewhat with summer rains. Fall crops have been good, and hay prices have come down some Market analyst Kevin Good of CattleFax tracks the industry. He says that for 15 of 17 years, the size of the nation's cattle herd has shrunk. Producers are now rebuilding. He says ranchers aren't "gouging" consumers and that people need to understand that it has been "a long haul" for the cattle producer. Calf prices are running 40 percent higher this year. Prices for fed cattle are up 23 percent, while retail beef prices are up 14 percent.===============================Suspect in 5 Kansas City Deaths Pleads Not GuiltyKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — A man suspected of killing five people in a Kansas City, Missouri neighborhood has pleaded not guilty to all charges he faces, including five counts of first-degree murder. Thirty-four-year-old Brandon Howell entered the plea in Jackson County Court on Monday. Prosecutors say Howell brutally beat George and Anna Taylor on September 2, then fatally shot Alice Hurst; her son, Darrel Hurst; and Susan Choucroun outside their homes before fleeing in the Taylors' SUV. Howell was arrested hours later when police found him walking with a loaded shotgun. Besides the murder counts, he's charged with four counts of armed criminal action, first-degree burglary, stealing a motor vehicle and unlawful possession of firearm.===============================Man Accused in 4 Killings, Rape Appears in CourtOTTAWA, Kan. (AP) — Lawyers have argued whether statements made by a Kansas man accused in the shooting deaths of four people, including an 18-month-old girl, can be used against him in an upcoming murder trial. Kyle Flack has been charged with murder and rape after two men, a woman and her daughter were found slain near Ottawa last year. The 28-year-old, who appeared in court Tuesday, has pleaded not guilty. Franklin County prosecutors are seeking to execute Flack for the deaths of 21-year-old Kaylie Bailey and her daughter, Lana-Leigh Bailey. He faces 50 years in prison without parole in the deaths of Bailey's boyfriend, 30-year-old Andrew Stout, and his 31-year-old roommate, Steven White. It wasn't clear when the judge would rule on motions argued on Tuesday. Flack's next court date is in February.===============================KBI Surveying Law Enforcement Agencies on Rape KitsTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The state's investigation bureau is trying to determine if Kansas has a backlog of untested sexual assault kits. The Topeka Capital-Journal reports the kits include swabs and specimens gathered during exams of sexual assault victims. Officials say that across the country, hundreds of thousands of the sexual assault kits remain untested. The Kansas Bureau of Investigation recently sent surveys to all Kansas law enforcement agencies to see if there is a backlog problem. KBI Director Kirk Thompson says the state agency doesn't think there's a backlog issue in Kansas, but wants to be sure that's the case. KBI hopes to begin analyzing the survey's results starting next year. Thompson says that 66 kits are currently awaiting testing at KBI labs.===============================Kansas City Man Sentenced in Water Threat HoaxKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - A 70-year-old man who threatened to contaminate water supplies in Kansas and Missouri has been sentenced to two years in federal prison. Manuel Garcia of Kansas City received the sentence on Monday. He pleaded guilty in the case in June. Garcia admitted making three telephone calls to authorities in October 2013 about the fake plot to contaminate water supplies in Kansas City, St. Louis, Wichita and Topeka. An FBI agent recognized Garcia's voice from a 2010 case in which he was sentenced to 18 months in federal prison after pleading guilty to making a phone call threatening to bomb the U.S. courthouse in downtown Kansas City.===============================Investors Seek to Develop SE Kansas CasinoWICHITA, Kan. (AP) _ A group of Kansas investors has proposed a $130 million casino in southeast Kansas, the third project to vie for the license. The Cherokee County Commission on Monday endorsed the project from Castle Rock Casino Resort. The company wants to build a casino with 1,400 slot machines, 35 table games and a poker room with 16 tables. Also planned are a 200-room hotel, three restaurants and a health club and spa. The application deadline is Dec. 18, with the State Lottery Commission to make the selection. Castle Rock says it could open by June 2016, if it wins. Castle Rock says it decided to build in Cherokee County because the proposed resort would sit within a mile of Kansas's borders with Oklahoma and Missouri and just 50 miles from Arkansas.===============================1 Dead in Northeast Kansas Mobile Home FireDENISON, Kan. (AP) - Authorities say a person was found dead after a mobile home fire in rural northeast Kansas. Jackson County (Kansas) Sheriff Tim Morse says the fire was reported Monday night in rural Denison. The mobile home was engulfed in flames when firefighters arrived. Firefighters found the body of one person inside the mobile home. The fire is being investigated by the Jackson County Sheriff's Office and the Kansas State Fire Marshal's Office.===============================Kansas Among States Pushing to Overturn Maryland Gun-Control LawHAGERSTOWN, Md. (AP) — Twenty-one states are asking a federal appeals court to overturn provisions of Maryland's gun-control law that ban 45 assault weapons and a limit gun magazines to 10 rounds. West Virginia Attorney General Patrick Morrisey led the coalition in filing a friend-of-the-court brief in the Fourth U.S. Court of Appeals in Richmond, Virginia last week. The brief says the law violates the Second Amendment right to keep firearms in homes for self-protection. The other states are Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Florida, Idaho, Kansas, Louisiana, Michigan, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, New Mexico, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota, Texas, Utah, and Wyoming, and Kentucky. A U.S. District Court judge in Baltimore upheld the provisions in August. The state of Maryland has until December 31 to respond to the filing.===============================Pratt Man Given 2 Life Sentences for MurdersPRATT, Kan. (AP) — A 22-year-old Kansas man was given two life sentences for killing a pregnant woman and her unborn child. Kansas Attorney General Derek Schmidt says Bryant Alan Seba of Pratt was sentenced Monday for the shooting deaths of 22-year-old Alexandria Duran and her unborn child in July 2013. He also was sentenced to another 272 months for attempted premeditated murder in the shooting of 28-year-old Brandon Wright, who was paralyzed. Seba will not be eligible for parole for at least 50 years. Testimony at trial indicated people in Duran's house and Seba's house had several racially-tinged confrontations. Witnesses said Seba fired into a crowd of people after Duran and her uncle intervened in a fight that involved Seba, who is white, and Wright, who is black.===============================Autopsy Begins on Kansas Woman Found Raped, BurnedWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — An autopsy has begun on a Kansas woman who died this weekend, days after she was sexually assaulted and set on fire in a park. Sedgwick County spokeswoman Brittany Clampitt said Monday that coroner's officials were investigating, but it wasn't clear when the examination would be complete. Relatives held a memorial for Letitia "Tish" Davis on Sunday evening in Wichita's Fairmount Park, where she was found November 14 with burns on more than half her body and cuts on her head. Cornell McNeal has been jailed and charged with attempted murder and rape. He doesn't yet have a lawyer. Wichita Police said that charges would be amended after Davis died Saturday. The district attorney's office said prosecutors would determine appropriate charges based on the new evidence. =============================== Ferguson Shooting Galvanizes Wichita Protest WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Some activists in Wichita say the police shooting of an unarmed 18-year-old in Ferguson, Missouri, shows the city's black community needs to become radical again. About 40 people gathered in Wichita Tuesday to draw attention to police shootings in the south-central Kansas community. Rueben Eckels, the deputy director of the Sunflower Community Action, told the crowd the government seems to take action only when people use violence. He says it is time to make change and it has to be radical. Elisa Allen says she wants the Wichita officer who shot her mentally ill brother, Icarus Randolph, held accountable. Police contend he threatened officers with a knife in July but the family says police did not follow proper procedure when they called for help getting him to a treatment facility.==============================Topeka Man Pleads Guilty in Girlfriend's DeathTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A Topeka man pleaded guilty in the death of the mother of his child at their home. Trevor William Adkins entered the plea Tuesday to intentional second-degree murder of 22-year-old Lacie Atchison. Atchison was originally charged with premeditated first-degree murder after Atchison's body was found at the top of a wheelchair ramp outside their home in September. Officers went to the home when neighbors reported seeing a naked man fighting with another man in the neighborhood. The Topeka Capital-Journal reports that Adkins also pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor count of battery of a neighbor. As part of the plea, a charge of endangering a child was dismissed. The couple's young daughter was inside the home but was not hurt.===============================Wichita Man Sentenced in Child Porn caseWICHITA, Kan. (AP) - A Kansas man has been sentenced to federal prison after AOL's automatic detection system caught him emailing child pornography. Fifty-six-year-old Walter Ackerman of Lebanon was sentenced Monday to 14 years and two months in prison after pleading guilty to distributing and possessing child pornography. Prosecutors say Ackerman possessed more than 750 sexually explicit images of children. AOL Inc. sent information to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, who alerted authorities. Ackerman's attorney argues the email evidence was obtained through cyber "snooping" in an illegal search and seizure. A federal judge ruled AOL and the center didn't violate the Fourth Amendment.===============================Hunter Sentenced in Kansas Bird Hunting CaseWICHITA, Kan. (AP) - A Texas man has been sentenced to one year of probation after pleading guilty to violating a federal law protecting birds while he was in Kansas. The U.S. Attorney's office says 52-year-old George Morgan of Gordonville, Texas, pleaded guilty Monday to violating the Migratory Bird Treaty Act. He was also ordered to pay a $2,000 fine and $3,000 in restitution to the state of Kansas. Morgan is the last of eight hunters to plead guilty after a meetup in Graham County for a dove hunt in September 2013. They also were sentenced to probation and ordered to pay fines. The federal law classifies mourning doves as migratory game birds.===============================Police: Wichita Paramedic Found with Child PornWICHITA, Kan. (AP) - Wichita police have arrested a county paramedic who they say possessed pornographic pictures of girls he met through a program for teens interested in becoming EMTs. A police spokesman said Monday the 23-year-old Sedgwick County Emergency Medical Service employee was arrested over the weekend. He faces charges of indecent solicitation of a child, sexual exploitation of a child and electronic solicitation. Investigators say the illegal activity took place in 2011 and the suspect had photos of the teenage victims on his phone. Police say the suspect has worked for the county since 2010. The county says he has been suspended.===============================Deputy Escapes Serious Injury When Semi Hits CarLEON, Kan. (AP) — A Butler County sheriff's deputy escaped serious injury when a semi-trailer truck hit his patrol car in south-central Kansas. The Kansas Highway Patrol says the accident happened Monday morning near Leon on westbound U.S. 400. The westbound truck hit the patrol car while the deputy was helping a stalled motorist. The truck driver was taken to Wesley Medical Center with non-critical injuries. The deputy was treated for minor injuries at the scene. Traffic on westbound U.S. 400 was reduced to one lane while the accident was investigated.===============================Man Sentenced for Role in Heroin Trafficking RingKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — A Kansas City man was sentenced to 30 years in prison without parole for participating in a drug trafficking ring that led to a man's death. Federal prosecutors say 48-year-old Matthew Davis was sentenced Monday for distributing heroin, cocaine and other drugs in the Kansas City region for more than 10 years. Joshua Webb died in 2002 from heroin given to him by the drug ring. Davis and a co-defendant, 34-year-old Timothy Kirlin were convicted of conspiracy in April. Kirlin was sentenced last week to life in prison. Prosecutors say Kirlin obtained heroin and cocaine in Dallas and Davis distributed the drugs. The Kansas City Star reports that Davis previously pleaded guilty to abandoning the corpse of his girlfriend, Amber McGathey, when she died of a drug overdose in 2004.===============================Woman Pleads for Not Reporting Teen ProstituteKANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas woman has pleaded guilty to not reporting that a 17-year-old girl was working as a prostitute. U.S. Attorney Barry Grissom said in a news release that 25-year-old Brittany Morris of Winfield pleaded guilty Monday to misprision of a felony. Prosecutors say Morris and the girl were arrested after meeting two undercover officers at a hotel near DeSoto for prostitution. Officers learned the girl was only 17 and had worked with Morris as a prostitute in New Orleans, Wichita and Kansas City. Morris and the girl advertised sexual services on the internet. Sentencing is set for February 18, 2015. Attorneys recommended a sentence of between eight and 14 months in federal prison.===============================Capital Murder Suspect Seeking to Change His NameTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas man whose capital murder conviction was overturned because of ineffective counsel is seeking to change his name, which prosecutors said will have no impact on his upcoming retrial. The Topeka Capital-Journal reports Phillip Delbert Cheatham Jr. has filed court documents seeking to change his name to "King Phillip Amman Reu-El," and is scheduled for a hearing next month before a judge who will decide whether to grant the change. Cheatham was convicted in 2005 of killing 38-year-old Annette Roberson and 42-year-old Gloria Jones in 2003. The 41-year-old is charged with capital murder, with two alternative counts of premeditated first-degree murder in the deaths of Roberson and Jones and attempted first-degree murder of Annetta Thomas. His trial is scheduled for early next year.===============================Kansas Sorghum and Soybean Harvest Nearly FinishedWICHITA, Kan. (AP) - The latest government farm snapshot shows the fall harvest is wrapping up in Kansas. The National Agricultural Statistics Service reported Monday that 90 percent of the sorghum and 96 percent of the soybeans have now been cut in the state. The sunflower harvest is 86 percent finished. Winter wheat is faring well so far despite the recent cold temperatures. The agency rated the state's wheat condition as 6 percent excellent, 55 percent good, 35 percent fair and 4 percent poor About 95 percent of the winter wheat has emerged.===============================KC Prepares for Holiday Lighting TraditionKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) _ Kansas City Royals left-fielder Alex Gordon will flip the switch that lights up Kansas City's Country Club Plaza on Thanksgiving night. Gordon will be accompanied by Kansas City GM Dayton Moore. The annual event attracts tens of thousands of people to the upscale shopping and dining district, where several blocks of buildings will be outlined in holiday lights through January 18. A local celebrity gets the honor each year of flipping the switch. Musical performances also will be part of Thursday night's festivities.===============================Kansas Jumps to 87-60 Win Over RiderLAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — No. 11 Kansas rebounded from an embarrassing loss to Kentucky with an 87-60 victory over Rider on Monday night. Svi Mykhailiuk, the 17-year-old Freshman from the Ukraine, made his first start for Kansas, finishing with 10 points and five rebounds. Wayne Selden Jr. led the Jayhawks (2-1) with nine asists. Xavier Lundy led the effort by Rider (3-2) scoring 13 points.===============================K-State Beats Purdue 88-79 in MauiLAHAINA, Hawaii (AP) — Marcus Foster scored 24 points and Kansas State held on to beat Purdue 88-79 after blowing most of a big early lead Monday in the opening game of the Maui Invitational. Coming off a disappointing loss to Long Beach State, Kansas State (3-1) attacked Purdue (3-1) early, hounding the Boilermakers into one mistake after another while building a 15-point halftime lead.
  • Taylor Will Fight to Quit Kansas US Senate RaceTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The Democratic nominee for U.S. Senate in Kansas says he'll challenge a decision to keep his name on the November ballot even though he wants to withdraw from the race against incumbent Republican Pat Roberts. Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach said Thursday that Democrat Chad Taylor did not comply with state law. He said Taylor didn't formally declare that he would be unable to serve if elected. Taylor withdrew from the race Wednesday without explanation, potentially giving independent candidate Greg Orman a better shot at defeating three-term conservative Roberts. Chad Taylor said in a statement Thursday that he was assured by a top Kobach aide that a letter he sent to the secretary of state's office was sufficient for withdrawing. Taylor says he will fight to have his name removed from the ballot but Kobach said Taylor's only recourse would be to file a lawsuit.===============================Roberts Re-Election Team OverhauledTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Republican U.S. Senator Pat Roberts's re-election campaign in Kansas is being overhauled as his race becomes an unexpected battleground in the fight for control of the Senate. Roberts confirmed Friday that longtime aide Leroy Towns stepped down as his executive campaign manager but said he will remain a consultant to the campaign. Towns was Roberts's chief of staff for more than 20 years and remained a political adviser after leaving Roberts's congressional office in 2002. Roberts also said the National Republican Senatorial Committee is sending in a seasoned consultant. The consultant is Chris LaCivita. Kansas was seen as a safe GOP state, but the three-term incumbent looked vulnerable after a tough primary fight. Before an event in Wichita, Roberts said his campaign is preparing to become more aggressive.==============================Moran: Kansas Can't Fail GOP in Senate Majority BidWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — The chairman of the National Republican Senatorial Committee says as hard as the GOP is working to win Republican control of the U.S. Senate, Kansas can't be the place that fails the party. Senator Jerry Moran of Kansas told business leaders Friday in Wichita that as hard as Republicans are working to win seats across the country, it would be a "terrible mistake" for Kansas to fail to keep Pat Roberts in the Senate. Moran also urged his audience to imagine the circumstance where the GOP puts in so much effort and Republican Governor Sam Brownback is not re-elected. Both Brownback and Roberts are facing tough re-election battles.==============================Johnson County Community College Reopened Following LockdownOVERLAND PARK, Kan. (AP) - Police lifted a lockdown at a northeast Kansas community college after checking a report of a suspicious woman carrying a long gun. Johnson County Community College police and officers from the city of Overland Park began a room-to-room search of several buildings after the report around 4 pm Thursday. Campus police Officer Dan Robles said students were released from buildings as the searches ended. Robles said police had not found anyone fitting the description of suspicious, pony-tailed woman carrying a camouflage-print bag and a long gun, possibly a shotgun. The college tweeted shortly after 7 pm that there was no longer a "viable threat" and said classes would resume Friday.==============================DA Reviews KU Campus Rape AllegationLAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Prosecutors are taking another look at a woman's claims she was raped at a University of Kansas residence hall last year. District Attorney Charles Branson said Wednesday that he received new information last week about another encounter between the accuser and the same man. The Lawrence Journal-World reports that Branson says he will consider that information and determine whether it would make a difference in a charging decision. He declined to publicly discuss details of the alleged incident — and how those would affect the strengths and weaknesses of the case — because the alleged victim's family asked him not to. Branson's comments came the same day the university's Student Rights Committee passed a resolution condemning the school's handling of student complaints of sexual assault.===============================Elderly Kansas Woman Killed in CollisionHILLSBORO, Kan. (AP) - Kansas troopers say an 82-year-old woman has died in a head-on collision with a semitrailer. The Kansas Highway Patrol says Joyce Smith was driving on a highway near Hillsboro when the accident occurred Thursday. An 85-year-old passenger was flown to Wesley Medical Center in critical condition. Troopers say Smith failed to yield when turning into oncoming traffic and was hit by the semitrailer. The 29-year-old truck driver wasn't injured.==============================Sedgwick County Approves Money for WSU ProjectWICHITA, Kan. (AP) - The proposed Innovation Campus at Wichita State University has jumped a major financial hurdle. The Sedgwick County Commission on Wednesday approved a funding mechanism to allow the university to start construction on a $43 million building. The "experiential engineering" building would provide labs, offices and high-tech equipment for entrepreneurs, students and researchers. It would be followed by a new business school and innovation building. The Wichita Eagle reports the commission gave the university permission to use some money from property taxes to obtain bonds to erect buildings. A 1.5 mill levy raises about $6.2 million annually from property taxes, which has been used for scholarships. Wichita State needed the county's permission to use some of that money to construct the new building.==============================Kansas State Professor Gets $2.52M NIH GrantMANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) - A Kansas State University researcher is receiving a $2.52 million grant from the National Institutes of Health to compare typical Army physical training with a newer type of workout. Assistant kinesiology professor Katie Heinrich says so-called "high-intensity functional training" is promising. As its name suggests, the workout method involves using high intensity and constantly varied exercises. The training approach has gained popularity among military populations because of its potential for improving performance with substantially lower training volumes. Heinrich says the technique also has the potential to promote fat loss. Heinrich and her team will work closely with the Command and General Staff College and Combined Arms Center at Fort Leavenworth.===============================9,800 Marijuana Plants Found on Corps PropertyOSKALOOSA, Kan. (AP) — Authorities in northeast Kansas say a drug raid led to the seizure of 9,800 marijuana plants from Corps of Engineers property. KAIR Radio reports that the FBI and a Missouri National Guard helicopter took part in Thursday's raid at a rural Jefferson County home east of the Corps-operated Perry Lake. The Jefferson County sheriff's office says the marijuana plants were being grown on Corps land and were being watered from the residential property. Authorities also seized several items of drug paraphernalia from the home. One man was arrested at the scene on five drug-related counts. He was booked into the Jefferson County jail but posted a $10,000 cash surety bond a short time later.==============================Wichita Man Sentenced for Deadly CrashWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A Wichita man has been sentenced to life in prison for a deadly crash that occurred while he was speeding away from police. KAKE-TV reports that 23-year-old Javier Rizo Jr. will be eligible for parole after 20 years under the sentence he received Friday in Sedgwick County District Court. A judge convicted Rizo earlier this year of seven counts including unintentional but reckless murder for the crash that killed 34-year-old Maria Martinez in October 2013. Rizo was fleeing from police in a van when he ran a stop sign and collided with a car driven by Martinez. Her husband was injured in the crash. A police supervisor had called off the chase two minutes before the fatal crash. ==============================Man Accused in Triple Homicide Appears in CourtKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — A 34-year-old man accused of killing three people and critically injuring two others in a quiet south Kansas City neighborhood appears in court to hear a judge read the dozen felony counts against him. Brandon Howell stood before Associate Judge Mary Weir on Thursday wearing a blue jail outfit and handcuffed to another inmate as she read the three first-degree murder charges and several other counts related to the shootings. Prosecutors say Howell used a shotgun to kill 88-year-old Alice Hurst, her son, 63-year-old Darrel Hurst, and 69-year-old Susan Choucroun shortly before 1 pm Tuesday in a middle-class cul-de-sac occupied primarily by older residents. Howell was captured later that night as he walked along Interstate 29 on the city's north side after someone called police to report a suspicious person.===============================Missouri Trooper Faults Training in Drowning DeathKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — A trooper who was at the helm of a Missouri State Highway Patrol boat when a handcuffed Iowa man fell overboard and drowned says he lacked training to handle the situation. The Kansas City Star reports that Trooper Anthony Piercy cried Thursday during a Morgan County coroner's inquest as he recalled what happened. Witnesses have said previously that Piercy placed Brandon Ellingson in a poorly fitting Type III, ski vest style of life jacket while transporting him from the Lake of the Ozarks on suspicion of boating while intoxicated. When Eillingson went into the water, the life jacket came off. Piercy says he thinks about what happened all the time. Ellingson grew up around West Des Moines, Iowa, and had just finished his sophomore year at Arizona State University.===============================Georgia Man Pleads Guilty to Tax Fraud SchemeJEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) — A Georgia man has pleaded guilty in Missouri to receiving more than $2.3 million in tax refunds from several states by using identities he stole from dead people. The U.S. Attorney's office says 40-year-old Sirhon Rivers pleaded guilty Thursday to wire fraud, identity theft and conspiracy. Rivers admitted receiving $547,000 in Missouri refunds using fraudulent tax returns. He used the same scheme to collect refunds from Alabama, Arizona, Connecticut, Delaware, Georgia, Idaho, Kansas, Louisiana, Michigan, Minnesota, New York, North Carolina, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Rhode Island and Virginia. Rivers obtained personal information of people who had died, then used it on state tax returns to which he added false information about employment and wages earned. Rivers faces up to 60 years in prison. His hometown in Georgia was not clear.===============================Weapon Sales by Ex-Officers Being InvestigatedBEL AIRE, Kan. (AP) — Law enforcement officials say former officers in the Bel Aire police department are being investigated for possible illegal weapons sales. Sedgwick County Sheriff Jeff Easter confirmed a joint local-federal investigation has been ongoing since December but he declined to offer further details. Bel Aire Police Chief Darrell Atteberry said the U.S. Attorney's Office and Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives are leading the investigation. Atteberry, who became chief in May, stressed that no current officers are being investigated. Sheriff Easter says his office is also part of the investigation. The Wichita Eagle reports ( http://bit.ly/YhRoZj ) police agencies can buy discounted firearms from manufacturers. The guns are supposed to be used only as service weapons and are not be resold.===============================Corps Increasing Releases into Missouri RiverKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The amount of water released into the Missouri River is increasing after August runoff was the third highest in more than a century. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers says boosting releases from four lower dams will prepare the reservoir system for next year's anticipated runoff and reduce flood risks. Water management chief Jody Farhat says that while the releases are higher than normal for this time of year, the water is expected to remain in the channel unless there is significant additional rain. The corps says the excess water will allow the corps to extend the navigation season by 10 days, ending December 10. The higher releases also will benefit winter hydropower generation and reduce the risks to water intakes when ice forms.
  • The Kansas Supreme Court has unanimously ruled that Chad Taylor can withdraw from the U.S Senate race and remove his name from the ballot. But as Jim McLean of the KHI News Service reports, Republican Secretary of State Kris Kobach is insisting that Democrats quickly name a replacement candidate.
  • Instead, the special, previously unannounced guest was … nobody. The night’s headliner, Vice President Harris, had the spotlight to herself — which may have been the point all along.
  • Here are the headlines for our area, as compiled by KPR news staffers. Our weekday headlines are generally posted by 10 am and updated throughout the day. Our weekend summary is typically posted by 1 pm. Feel 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.
  • Here's what we know about the victims of the American Airlines and a Black Hawk helicopter crash last week.
  • The Chiefs will make their fourth Super Bowl appearance in five years — and this time as the reigning champions. Kansas City upset the Ravens in Baltimore, 17-10, to win the AFC Championship.
  • At Sunday night's Grammys, will Beyoncé finally win album of the year? Will Taylor Swift take that prize for the fifth time? Or will a new generation of pop stars claim the moment?
  • How do we understand Blue in the 21st century? Can we think of Mitchell's 1971 album, long considered the apex of confessional songwriting, as a paradigm not of raw emotion, but of care and craft?
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