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K-State’s Anctil named to Ray Guy Award watch list

MANHATTAN, Kan. – Kansas State senior punter Devin Anctil was one of 26 punters in the nation to be named to the watch list for the 2019 Ray Guy Award as the college punter of the year, the Augusta Sports Council announced Wednesday.

Anctil’s inclusion on the list marks the seventh time a Wildcat has been a candidate for the award, following Tim Reyer (2016 and 2017 semifinalist), Ryan Doerr (2011), Mark Krause (2013) and Nick Walsh (2015 and 2016).

A 2018 Honorable Mention All-Big 12 selection, Anctil punted 27 times last year for a 43.6-yard average with six punts of 50 or more yards and 10 landing inside the opponent’s 20-yard line. His season averaged ranked sixth in school history and would have ranked first in the Big 12 and 25th nationally if he played in the required minimum amount of games.

Joseph D. Collie

Joseph D. Collie, 76 of Abilene passed away Thursday, June 14, 2019. He was born September 2, 1942 in Rochester, New York the son of Dominic and Theresa Collie. After graduating high school he went on and served for the United States Army. On January 11, 1967 he was united in marriage to Candice Louise in Miami, Oklahoma. They made their home in California for four years before moving back to Abilene. She preceded him in death May 12, 2004. Joseph worked civil services for the Army National Guard at Ft. Riley.

He is survived by one daughter, Tina Tanner and husband Todd. Two sons, Jeff Collie and wife Lori and Tony Collie. Seven grandchildren and seventeen great-grandchildren. One brother, John Collie and a sister, Jackie Brinkerhoff. He was preceded in death by his parents and wife.

Graveside services will be 10:00 A.M., Thursday June 20, 2019 at Prairie Mound Cemetery in Solomon. Family will receive friends Wednesday evening from 6-8 P.M. at Martin-Becker-Carlson Funeral Home in Abilene. Family suggests memorials be given to the Lupus Foundation. Memorials may be dropped off or mailed to Martin-Becker-Carlson Funeral Home, 414 NW Thirds St., Abilene, Kansas 67410.

Kansas man dies in SUV rollover accident

TREGO COUNTY — One person died in an accident just before 11p.m. Saturday in Trego County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 1997 GMC Jimmy driven by Kyle A. Urban, 31, Ellis, was westbound on S Road three mile east of Kansas 147 Highway.

The SUV traveled off road to the left and rolled landing on its wheel and the driver was ejected.

Urban was pronounced dead at the scene and transported to Brock’s-Keithley Funeral Chapel. He was not wearing a seat belt, according to the KHP.

Dramatic video captured fugitive crash on I-70

By James Bell
Hays Post

Robert Mollet Jr., Clinton, Ill., caught on camera the dramatic crash that ended a high-speed Kansas Highway Patrol chase on Interstate 70 last week that lead to the arrest of Starsky Dresch, 41, Colorado Springs, Colo.

 Zack Stephenson, Decatur, Ill., was in the vehicle with Mollet and submitted the video to Hays Post Wednesday.
“We were coming from Colorado at the time, and there were two semis that were behind us trying to block the pass of the suspect vehicle,” Stephenson said.
“It was trying to get around the semi and ended up going down into the median right next to us.”
“It ended up hitting the culvert and went probably seven or eight feet into the air,” Stephenson said.

ORIGINAL STORY

A high-speed chase and crash on Interstate 70 led to the arrest of a fugitive from justice Monday morning after a warrant was found from Colorado Springs, Colo.

At 7:41 a.m. Monday, a Kansas Highway Patrol trooper in Sherman County clocked the speed of a 2009 Chevy pickup at milepost 20 at 102 mph, according to Kansas Highway Patrol Trooper Tod Hileman.

The trooper attempted to stop the truck and the driver fled eastbound on I-70 reaching a top speed of 112 mph.

The trooper continued pursuit of the vehicle on I-70 approaching Oakley.

“At that point, at 8:14 in the morning, a little more than 30 minutes later, the driver entered the median and drove in the median for a while until he hit a culvert,” Hileman said. “That ended up crashing the vehicle out, and the vehicle rolled several times.”

The driver — Starsky Dresch, 41, Colorado Springs — was placed under arrest, and an ambulance was called.

He was taken to the Logan County Hospital and later flown to St. Anthony’s Hospital in Denver.

A female passenger in the vehicle was not charged. She was taken to the hospital, but no other information on her condition was made available.

While investigating the incident, it was discovered the vehicle had been stolen in Colorado Springs and Dresch had an outstanding warrant from Colorado for being a fugitive from justice.

His condition is unknown at this time.

Officials investigating altercation at Kan. sexual predator treatment program

LARNED – Officials from Larned State Hospital (LSH) have opened a criminal investigation into a resident-on-resident altercation.

According to a media release from the Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services, the altercation, which took place Sunday on the resident unit of LSH’s Sexual Predator Treatment Program, resulted in injuries to one of the program’s residents. The extent of those injuries, as well as how the altercation started, is part of the ongoing investigation.

“I take this matter very seriously and am committed to providing a safe environment for every resident,” said Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services (KDADS) Secretary Laura Howard. “I have every confidence our dedicated officials at Larned will conduct a thorough examination of this event and move forward with recommendations to prevent this in the future.”

Results of the criminal investigation will be shared with the Pawnee County attorney.

KDADS is responsible for the administration of Larned State Hospital and Osawatomie State Hospital for Kansans suffering from mental illness and for the Kansas Neurological Institute and Parsons State Hospital and Training Center for individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities.

Man enters plea deal on charges of defrauding Kansas medical clinic

WICHITA, KAN. – A man who defrauded a Kansas non-profit medical clinic through an internet marketing scheme has pleaded guilty to multiple counts of deceptive commercial practice in Sedgwick County District Court, according to a media release from district attorney.

Daniel Fielding Glickman -photo Sedgwick Co.

Daniel Fielding Glickman, 37 of Tigard, Oregon, created an online company called FQHC Healthcare LLC that purportedly specialized in finding medical professionals for non-profit medical clinics nationwide.

In January of 2018, Wichita-based GraceMed Health Clinic hired Glickman to find two candidates for medical positions for their multiple locations in Sedgwick County and around the state. GraceMed, 1122 N. Topeka in Wichita, paid Glickman a $10,000 fee –$5,000 for each position that it was seeking to fill.

The investigation showed that the job candidates produced by the Oregon company either did not exist or were real medical professionals who had no idea that their names were being submitted as job candidates in Wichita.

As part of his plea agreement, Glickman pleaded guilty to two counts of Deceptive Commercial Practice and refunded the $10,000 in fees that he had collected from GraceMed. Glickman also was ordered to serve a 30-day jail sentence, which had been completed as of Friday.

Glickman admitted in court documents that he used his business to “knowingly and falsely” promise to produce job candidates for GraceMed in return for the payment of the fee. A website for Glickman’s company was no longer available on the internet as of Friday.

Glickman was arrested on the Kansas charges earlier this year by Oregon authorities. He was booked into the Sedgwick County Jail on April 10, 2019.

The District Attorney encourages businesses and non-profit agencies to fully investigate out-of-state companies before doing business with them. Online and telephone financialscams are one of the top reasons that consumers contact the District Attorney’s office tofile complaints.

The case was handled by the Investigations Division of the District Attorney’s office.

Update: Tornado hits Missouri drive-through animal park

SPRINGFIELD, Mo. (AP) — The Latest on severe weather in the central United States (all times local):

First responders on the scene of the tornado damage photo courtesy KYTV

The Missouri State Highway Patrol says all the animals are accounted for after a tornado hit a drive-through wild animal park.

Patrol Sgt. Jason Pace says only minor damage was reported Tuesday to buildings at the Wild Animal Safari in Strafford, about 10 miles northeast of Springfield.

Webster County Emergency Management Director Tom Simmons says there were no reports that people or animals were injured. The park boasts on its website of having more than 450 animals.

Simmons also estimated that half a dozen homes were damaged in the county. In neighboring Wright County, a suspected tornado also damaged some homes and a grocery store.

Pace says there also were several water rescues, including one of an 18-year-old woman who was swept off a flooded road near Joplin and stranded overnight.

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WEBSTER COUNTY, Mo. (AP) — The Latest on severe weather in the central United States (all times local):

Authorities say a tornado has hit a drive-through wild animal park in central Missouri and blown a tractor-trailer off a nearby road.

Webster County Emergency Management Director Tom Simmons says the tornado damaged some buildings Tuesday at the Wild Animal Safari near Strafford, about 10 miles northeast of Springfield. He said there were no reports that people or animals were injured.

The phone number to the animal park rang unanswered. The park boasts on its website of having more than 450 animals on 350 acres.

Simmons estimates that half a dozen homes were damaged in the county. He says damage assessments are underway.

The tornado came amid storms that have brought flooding and strong winds to parts of Oklahoma, Kansas, Missouri and Arkansas.

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Despite protests, Missouri’s Legislature passes 8-week abortion ban

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) — Missouri’s Republican-led House on Friday passed sweeping legislation designed to survive court challenges, which would ban abortions at eight weeks of pregnancy.

If enacted, the ban would be among the most restrictive in the U.S. It includes exceptions for medical emergencies, but not for pregnancies caused by rape or incest. Doctors would face five to 15 years in prison for violating the eight-week cutoff. Women who receive abortions wouldn’t be prosecuted.

Republican Gov. Mike Parson is expected to sign the bill .

Several women dressed as characters from the “The Handmaid’s Tale” watched the debate silently. The Margaret Atwood book and subsequent Hulu TV series depicts a dystopian future where fertile women are forced to breed.

The Missouri legislation comes after Alabama’s governor signed a billWednesday making performing an abortion a felony in nearly all cases.

Supporters say the Alabama bill is meant to conflict with the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision that legalized abortion nationally in hopes of sparking a court case that might prompt the current panel of more conservative justices to revisit abortion rights.

Missouri Republicans are taking a different approach.

GOP Rep. Nick Schroer said his legislation is “made to withstand judicial challenges and not cause them.”

“While others are zeroing in on ways to overturn Roe v. Wade and navigate the courts as quickly as possible, that is not our goal,” Schroer said. “However, if and when that fight comes we will be fully ready. This legislation has one goal, and that goal is to save lives.”

Kentucky , Mississippi , Ohio and Georgia also have approved bans on abortion once fetal cardiac activity can be detected, which can occur in about the sixth week of pregnancy. Some of those laws already have been challenged in court , and similar restrictions in North Dakota and Iowa previously were struck down by judges.

If courts don’t allow Missouri’s proposed eight-week ban to take effect, the bill includes a ladder of less-restrictive time limits that would prohibit abortions at 14, 18 or 20 weeks or pregnancy.

“Laundry, bleach, acid bitter, concoction, knitting needles, bicycle spokes, ballpoint pens, jumping from the top of the stairs or the roof,” Democratic Rep. Sarah Unsicker told colleagues on the House floor. “These are ways that women around the world who don’t have access to legal abortions perform their own.”

A total of 3,903 abortions occurred in Missouri in 2017, the last full year for which the state Department of Health and Senior Services has statistics online. Of those, 1,673 occurred at under nine weeks and 119 occurred at 20 weeks or later in a pregnancy.

About 2,900 abortions occurred in 2018, according to the agency.

The wide-ranging bill also bans abortions based solely on race, sex or a diagnosis indicating the potential for Down Syndrome.

It also requires a parent or guardian giving written consent for a minor to get an abortion to first notify the other parent, except if the other parent has been convicted of a violent or sexual crime, is subject to a protection order or is “habitually in an intoxicated or drugged condition.” A change was made after hours of late-night negotiations in the state Senate to also remove the requirement when the other parent lacks legal or physical custody.

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Police: 4th teen arrested for threat at SW Kan. middle school

FINNEY COUNTY — For the fourth time in the past month, law enforcement authorities and USD 457 officials are investigating a threat toward Horace Good Middle School in Garden City.

Just after 6p.m. Monday, police receive a report of a possible threat toward the school, according to Sgt. Lana Urtega.

An investigation identified a 13-year-old student who had made several verbal threats and arrested him Monday night.

The boy is being held in the Southwest Kansas Juvenile Detention Center on allegations of criminal threat, according to Urtega.

On April 28, Garden City Police arrested Nick Trung Hang, 14, Garden City, for allegedly making a statement on his social media account and created the message to scare students and staff.

On April 23, police identified and arrested a 15-year-old who made a social media threat in attempt to get out of school for the day.

On April 18, police identified a 14-year-old Garden City student who made a social media threat that depicted the general use of firearms to harm students at the school.

Police and the school district encouraged parents to monitor their student’s social media and report any school safety related issues to administrators, school staff or law enforcement.

 

 

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