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Kansas man died after pickup rollover crash

WICHITA COUNTY — One person died in an accident just after 6:30a.m. Monday in Wichita County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2008 Ford F250 driven by James Lee Wessel, 49, Scott City, was westbound on Kansas 96 seven miles west of the Kansas 25 Junction.

The pickup had rear driver side tire failure. It left the roadway to the right, rotated clock wise and rolled unknown amount of times.

Wessel was pronounced dead at the scene and was transported to Price and Sons Funeral Home. He was not wearing a seat belt, according to the KHP.

Police: Kan. woman in critical condition after shooting, suspect jailed

SEDGWICK COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating a shooting and have a suspect in custody.

Solomon photo Sedgwick County

Just after 8a.m. Sunday, police responded to a shooting near Broadway and Lewis in Wichita, according to Captain Brett Allred.

At the scene, police located a 50-year-old man and a 33-year-old woman who had been shot multiple times.

EMS transported the woman to a local hospital where she remains for treatment of critical injuries.
The man was transported to a hospital for treatment of non-life-threatening injuries, according to Allred.

Investigators have learned that a 42-year-old man was riding his bicycle near Broadway and Lewis and observed the two victims on the sidewalk with gunshot wounds. As officers began their investigation, the suspect later identified as Dexter Solomon, 45, Wichita, began calling 911, family and Wichita media indicating his involvement in a shooting and that the victims were working for “the cartel,” according to Allred.

Officers located Solomon in the 900 Block of South Market and arrested him incident. They also recovered a handgun. Investigators believe Solomon was experiencing a mental health crisis possibly induced by meth at the time of the shooting, according to Allred. Police based their assessment on conversations Solomon had with 911 dispatchers and with his daughter earlier in the day, according to Allred.

Solomon is being held on requested charges that include two counts of attempted first degree murder and possession of a firearm by a felon. Police are working to determine how Solomon was able to obtain the gun.

Police: Alcohol, speed a factor in fatal Kan. crash, victim identified

SEDGWICK COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating a fatal crash and have identified the victim.

Just before 4 a.m. Sunday, A Mazda 6 driven by a 22-year-old man was northbound on Market at 26th Street North in Wichita, according to officer Charley Davidson.

The vehicle left the road, struck a utility pole, overturned and a passenger identified as Natalie Ibarra, 21, Wichita, was ejected.

She was pronounced dead at the scene. EMS transported the driver to a local hospital where he was treated and released.

Alcohol and speed are possible factors in the crash, according to Davidson.

Suspect in Kan. Islamic Center theft scheduled for plea hearing

Amadou Oury Bah -photo Omaha police
Surveillance images courtesy Lawrence Police

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Court records say a man charged with breaking into the Islamic Center of Lawrence and stealing donations boxes was in possession of almost $1,200 in cash when he was arrested in a Kansas City suburb several days later.

Affidavit in the case against 32-year-old Amadou Oury Bah says the Aug. 13 burglary happened shortly after the holiday Eid al-Adha. One leader estimated that between $1,000 and $2,000 was stolen.

Police in Overland Park, Kansas, arrested Oury Bah on an unrelated incident on Aug. 25. He was released from jail the next day and then arrested again Aug. 27 in Omaha, Nebraska.

Bah is scheduled Wednesday for a plea hearing in the Lawrence case. He is charged with burglary, theft and criminal damage to property.

KC-area homicide suspect arrested after hours-long standoff

Police on the scene of Sunday’s standoff photo courtesy KMBC TV

KANSAS CITY (AP) — Authorities have arrested a Kansas City area homicide suspect after an hours-long standoff.

The shooting was reported around 1:15 p.m. Sunday at a home in Raytown. Police say the victim was found dead outside the home near a truck.

Police say the suspect ran to his nearby home and barricaded himself inside. He was taken into custody around 7 p.m. The victim hasn’t been identified, and the shooter wasn’t immediately charged.

No details were released about what led up to the shooting.

Kansas man dies after ejected in 2-vehicle crash

RENO COUNTY —One person died in an accident just after 8:30p.m. Sunday in Reno County.

The Sheriff’s department reported a truck driven by Van Dean, 61, Buhler, was eastbound on 4th Avenue at Buhler Road. When he entered the intersection, a northbound SUV driven by Tyler Obrecht, 26, Buhler, collided with the truck.

Dean was ejected from the truck when it rolled into the ditch northeast of the intersection, according to the sheriff’s department.

EMS transported Dean, Obrecht and a passenger in the SUV Jaxson Obrect, 2, to Hutchison Regional Medical Center where Dean was pronounced dead.

Dean was not wearing a seat belt, according to the Reno County Sheriff’s Department. Obrecht and the toddler were properly restrained. The child was not injured.
The accident remains under investigation.

High court to consider state role in prosecuting immigrants

A state appellate court overturned the conviction, but Kansas appealed. On Wednesday, the U.S. Supreme Court will hear arguments about whether states can prosecute immigrants like Morales who use other people’s Social Security numbers to get a job.

Morales, who plans to attend the arguments with his wife and a son, said he has been having nightmares about being deported. His greatest fear is leaving behind his wife and children if the Supreme Court reinstates his state convictions — felonies that could trigger deportation proceedings.

“What I did was to earn money honestly in a job to support my family,” the 51-year-old Guatemalan immigrant told The Associated Press in Spanish.

The case before the nation’s highest court arises from three prosecutions in Johnson County, a largely suburban area outside Kansas City, Missouri, where the district attorney has aggressively pursued immigrants under the Kansas identity theft and false-information statutes.

The Kansas Supreme Court overturned the convictions of Morales as well as Mexican immigrants Ramiro Garcia and Guadalupe Ochoa-Lara after concluding the state was seeking to punish immigrants who used fake IDs to obtain jobs. It ruled that the federal government has exclusive authority to determine whether an immigrant is authorized to work in the United States. Kansas then appealed.

The Trump administration has filed a brief supporting Kansas, arguing that federal law does not prohibit the prosecution of immigrants for violating identity theft laws and contending that protection against fraud is among the oldest state powers.

“In the modern era, those crimes increasingly involve identity theft — a serious and ‘growing problem’ throughout the United States,” Solicitor General Noel J. Francisco said in a brief.

That approach marks a shift from that of the Obama administration. When Arizona tried to use identity theft laws to prosecute noncitizens for working illegally, the Justice Department under President Barack Obama argued that only the federal government has such authority.

Rekha Sharma-Crawford, an attorney representing the immigrants, said in an email that immigration officials are having the state to do its bidding by using routine encounters with noncitizens to “strong arm businesses” to turn over personnel files.

“This has a chilling effect for local businesses, spreads deep mistrust for law enforcement in immigrant communities and also destroys families who are an integral part of the societal fabric,” Sharma-Crawford said.

Morales, who has been living in the United States since 1989, was found guilty of state charges for identity theft and putting false information on employment forms related to his work at a Jose Pepper’s restaurant.

The other two prosecutions in the appeal also involve immigrants who unlawfully worked in the United States.

After Garcia got a speeding ticket on his way to his restaurant job, a local detective and a federal agent checked his employment paperwork at the Bonefish Grill. His attorneys told the court the federal government didn’t charge Garcia because he was cooperating with an investigation into a previous employer suspected of directing employees to change Social Security numbers. The local district attorney nonetheless charged him with identity theft, and pursued the state case even after Garcia obtained lawful immigration status.

Ochoa-Lara came to the attention of authorities after using a false Social Security number to lease an apartment and was later prosecuted in state court for using someone else’s number on a tax withholding employment form.

The case wound up before the nation’s highest court after the Kansas Supreme Court held that the Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986 preempts those state prosecutions for working unlawfully in the country.

Kansas contends the state’s Supreme Court ruling would frustrate its own efforts to combat identity theft. The state law generally criminalizes the use of any personal identifying information belonging to another person to obtain any “benefit” fraudulently, regardless of immigration status or work authorization.

Twelve states — Indiana, Alabama, Alaska, Georgia, Maine, Mississippi, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas and West Virginia — have filed a brief backing Kansas, arguing a ruling against the state would hamper their interest in protecting their citizens.

Brent Anderson, a former federal prosecutor who handled immigration-related criminal cases in Kansas, said it takes local, state and federal law enforcement working together to address identity theft.

“There is no point in prosecuting people who are misusing Social Security numbers to be employed if you can’t remove them from the United States because they will keep doing it because they have to, otherwise they can’t work,” said Anderson, who teaches homeland security law at Wichita State University.

Judge Kevin Moriarty, who presided over Morales’ and Garcia’s trials, had expressed concerns about both cases, according to transcripts in the Supreme Court record.

“I’m just saying we’re destroying families,” he said in a pre-trial hearing for Garcia.

In Morales’ trial, Moriarty found the defendant guilty, but noted he wasn’t stealing from the government. “He’s putting money into Social Security that he’ll never be able to draw out,” said the judge, who has since retired.

The judge also noted that three of Morales’ four children were born in this country.

Morales, an Overland Park resident who has since gotten legal work authorization, is now employed by a landscaping company. He has also started his own landscaping firm as a side business.

His U.S.-born wife, Isleen Gimenez Morales, is a lawyer who works as a disability rights advocate. She said being part of a Supreme Court case like this is not the kind of excitement anybody wants.

“Knowing that the outcome of this case will shape the immigration and criminal law in this country, I think it compounds the stress and distraction that our family has because we know the weight that it carries,” she said.

4 hospitalized after rear-end crash of disabled vehicle on Kan. highway

HODGEMAN COUNTY — Four people were injured in an accident just before 9p.m. Sunday in Hodgeman County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2008 Chevy Impala driven by Samantha Lobmeyer, 28, Garden City, was eastbound on Kansas 156 fifteen miles east of Jetmore.

The Chevy rear-ended a 2009 Pontiac G5 driven by Makentzee R. Chappel, 20, Garden City, that was disabled and partially in the lane of travel after hitting a deer.

EMS transported Benjamin R. McCaffery, 19, Calahan, Colorado to a Wichita Hospital.
EMS transported Lobmeyer, Chappel and Hunter E. Coronel, 21, Brighton, Colorado, to the Hodgeman County Health Center.

McCaffery and Coronel had been in the Pontiac but were standing outside the vehicle at the time of the accident

Argument over french fries before fatal shooting in Kansas City

Hunter-photo courtesy Jackson Co.

KANSAS CITY (AP) — A 21-year-old Kansas City man has been sentenced to 25 years in prison for the 2017 fatal shooting of a woman stopped at a traffic signal.

Anton Hunter received the sentence Friday after pleading guilty in August to second-degree murder and weapons counts in the April 30, 2017, shooting of 18-year-old Isabell Addison.

Prosecutors say Addison was driving a car and stopped at a red light when a passenger in a black car next to hers began shooting at Addison’s car. Police say the driver of the black car told investigators that she was Hunter’s girlfriend and didn’t know why he shot at the car next to hers. She said that shortly before the shooting, she and Hunter had an argument over french fries.

8-year-old Kansas boy hospitalized after struck riding a bicycle

BARTON COUNTY — One person was injured in an accident just after 6:30p.m. Sunday in Barton County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2017 Chrysler Pacifica driven by Meredith Anna Joiner, 39, Ellinwood, was westbound in the 400 Block East Santa Fe Boulevard in Ellinwood.

The vehicle struck Andrew Mark McGlynn, 8, Ellinwood, who was crossing the roadway northwest on a bicycle outside of the crosswalk.

EMS transported McGlynn to the hospital in Ellinwood. Joiner was not injured and was properly restrained at the time of the accident, according to the KHP.

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