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Kobach raises $96K in Kansas secretary of state race

Kobach and Schodorf
Kobach and Schodorf

(AP) Campaign finance records show that Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach began the year with a significant fundraising advantage over Democratic challenger Jean Schodorf.

The Republican secretary of state’s re-election campaign filed a report earlier this month showing that he raised $96,000 in cash contributions last year and ended the year with $125,000 in his campaign treasury.

Schodorf raised $44,000 and loaned her campaign an additional $2,000. She ended 2013 with almost $39,000 in campaign funds. Her finance report says the Democratic challenger didn’t begin raising money until late September.

However, Kobach raised at least $64,800 in cash contributions after Schodorf began her fundraising.

Kobach is seeking his second, four-year term. Schodorf is a former state senator from Wichita and a former moderate Republican who switched parties.

 

Conservation Agency Warns of Salt Damage to Plants

road salt (AP) – Salt used to make roads and sidewalks passable after winter weather can damage surrounding plants.

The Department of Conservation says Missourians can protect plants by creating drainage channels or barriers, using ice melting chemicals in moderation and by being particularly careful about applying salt in late winter and early spring.

Damage can be treated by pruning dead or deformed branches and washing away surface salt residue. Powdered gypsum can be applied if soil has been contaminated by long and heavy exposure. Moderately contaminated soil should get 100 to 200 pounds of gypsum for every thousand square feet.

Officials say symptoms of exposure to salt spray include yellowing or dwarfing of foliage.

 

Russian Islamic video threatens Sochi Olympics

olympic ringsMOSCOW (AP) — An Islamic militant group in Russia’s North Caucasus has claimed responsibility for twin suicide bombings in the southern city of Volgograd last month and posted a video threatening to strike the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi.

There had been no previous claim of responsibility for the bombings, which killed 34 people and heightened security fears before next month’s Olympics.

In the video, two Russian-speaking men sitting in front of black banners with Arabic verses warn President Vladimir Putin that if the games are held, “we will give you a present for the innocent Muslim blood being spilled all around the world.”

They add that “for the tourists who come there will be a present, too.”

The video was posted Sunday on the website of the militant group Vilayat Dagestan.

Body found at Lawrence home UPDATE

police

Sunday UPDATE   LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Lawrence police have identified a 52-year-old man whose body was found at his home while police were looking for a missing woman.

Sgt. Trent McKinley said Sunday in a release that officers found the body of Harold M. Sasko late Friday. He says officers went to the house in an attempt to locate 19-year-old Sarah Brooke Gonzales McLinn, who has not been seen for several days. Her family reported her missing.

McKinley says the cause of Sasko’s death was not released. No suspects have been identified.

He says police continue to try to locate McLinn and Sasko’s vehicle, a dark gray or blue 2008 Nissan Altima with Kansas license number AK149.

 

Saturday  (AP) — Lawrence police are investigating the death of a man whose body was found inside a home officers were checking on a missing person report.

Sgt. Trent McKinley said Saturday that officers went to the home late Friday in an attempt to contact the individual reported missing by family members. Officers found the body of the man, who apparently suffered traumatic injuries that police didn’t specify.

McKinley says the case is considered a homicide, and the victim has not been positively identified.

He says police are still looking for the missing person, identified as 19-year-old Sarah Brooke Gonzales McLinn, who also lives at the home and hasn’t been seen in several days. Police say she may be in a dark gray 2008 Nissan Altima with a license number AK149.

 

Obama: Pot is not more dangerous than alcohol

ObamaWASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama says he doesn’t think marijuana is more dangerous than alcohol.

Obama doesn’t argue for legalizing pot. But he says in an interview with “The New Yorker” that pot is less dangerous than alcohol, quote, “in terms of its impact on the individual consumer.”

The president has acknowledged using pot when he was young and calls it “a bad idea.” He says he’s troubled that poor kids, many of them African American and Latinos, are far more likely to get locked up for smoking pot than middle-class kids.

But Obama urges a cautious approach, saying people who think legalizing pot will solve social problems are, quote, “probably overstating the case.”

When it comes to harder drugs, he says, the harm to users and the social costs are profound.

 

No more in-person visits at Shawnee County jail

Screen Shot 2014-01-19 at 3.01.49 PM (AP) — In-person visits at the Shawnee County Jail are being replaced with videoconferencing for inmates and their families.

The jail’s communication vendor, Securus Technologies, has installed a videoconferencing system that lets family and friends catch up with inmates from their homes or offices. The county doesn’t pay for the new system because Securus relies on the $1 per minute user charge.

The first video visits will be Wednesday.

Lawyers and other professionals can still visit the jail.

Maj. Tim Phelps says the new system has several benefits, including increased visitation hours. Opponents question the cost for users.

Shawnee County Commissioner Kevin Cook also says videoconferencing could mean trouble for people on the other end of the conversation if anything illegal is going on in the background.

Surgeon General: Cigarettes Are More Deadly Today than 50 Years Ago

Jeffrey Willett Courtesy Kansas Health Foundation
Jeffrey Willett
Courtesy Kansas Health Foundation

KHI News Service

A new report from the surgeon general finds that smoking causes even more physical and financial damage than previously estimated.

Among the highlights in the report, which was released 50 years after the first report tied cigarettes to lung cancer:

Cigarettes play a part in causing 10 more diseases than previously thought, including diabetes, liver cancer and colorectal cancer, bringing the total to more than 30.
480,000 Americans die each year from these disease — up from the previous estimate of 443,000.
Smoking leads to $289 billion in medical bills and lost productivity — nearly $100 billion more than previously reported. This includes as much as $176 billion for direct medical care of adults, $151 billion for lost productivity due to premature death and $5.6 billion for lost productivity due to exposure to secondhand smoke.
Today’s cigarette smokers face a much higher risk of lung cancer and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease than smokers did 50 years ago, despite smoking fewer cigarettes. The report points to changes in the design and composition of cigarettes as the only reasonable explanation for the increased risk of lung cancer.
Without action to reduce smoking, 5.6 million children under age 18 alive today will die prematurely from smoking-caused disease.
“The battle is not over,” said acting Surgeon General Boris Lushniak. “The problem isn’t solved. We still have 18 percent of our adult population smoking. And 5.6 million kids who are alive today will die early unless we take immediate action.”

Kansas advocates for tobacco control echoed Lushniak’s call to action.

“We must not think that tobacco use is a problem of the past,” said Jeff Willett, Vice President of Programs at the Kansas Health Foundation, the parent organization of the KHI News Service.

“Tobacco kills more Kansans than illegal drugs, homicide, suicide, car crashes and AIDS combined. Treating diseases caused by smoking is one reason our Medicaid and other health care costs are out of control. Reducing smoking will save lives and money in Kansas. Kansans need to support efforts that prevent kids from starting and help adult smokers who want to quit,” he said.

In a joint media release, the Kansas Health Foundation, Tobacco Free Kansas, the American Lung Association in Kansas, the American Heart Association and the Cancer Action Network said the state needs to do more to reduce tobacco use, noting that 1 of every 7 deaths in the state in 2012 was caused by smoking.

The Wichita-based health foundation recently launchedan initiative aimed at reducing smoking among Kansans with mental illness. It is recruiting 25 people from across the state to participate in its 2014 fellows program, which will be devoted to devising a specific plan to address the problem.

Persons with serious mental illness on average die 25 years earlier than people in the general population due primarily to smoking- and obesity-related diseases, Willett said.

“This population is rapidly becoming the last frontier (in the effort to reduce smoking),” he said. “In Kansas, roughly one-third of all cigarettes smoked are smoked by people with mental illness.”

U.S. Census data showing where smokers are concentrated in Kansas
County Adult Smokers % of Adults Who Smoke
Sedgwick 84,835 23.0%
Johnson 64,898 15.6%
Shawnee 32,298 23.9%
Wyandotte 28,484 30.9%
Douglas 17,709 19.3%
Leavenworth 15,615 26.5%
Riley 13,033 21.1%
Reno 12,488 25.3%
Butler 10,556 21.7%
Saline 10,512 25.0%

Man sentenced for taking photos of unsuspecting woman

Symington
Symington

(AP) — A 38-year-old registered sex offender has been sentenced to six months in jail after his second eavesdropping conviction.

Christopher John Symington was accused of taking photos up the skirts of an unsuspecting woman in a Johnson County business. He was sentenced Friday in Johnson County District Court after pleading guilty to breach of privacy.

Symington had previously been placed on probation after a conviction for a similar crime in 2010 at a business in Overland Park. Court records show Symington also has a 2002 statutory sodomy conviction in Missouri in a case involving a 16-year-old girl.

 

Dispute between courts, Kan. GOP turns heads

During Brownback's 2014 State of the State address
During Gov. Brownback’s 2014 State of the State address

(AP) — The bitter legal battle in Kansas over education spending is garnering national attention, thanks to the defiant tone struck by conservative Republican leaders as they wait for a state Supreme Court ruling in a funding lawsuit.

Top Republicans in the GOP-dominated Legislature contend the Supreme Court doesn’t have the authority under the state constitution to tell lawmakers how much to spend on schools.

Republican Gov. Sam Brownback is with them. He pointedly called out the Supreme Court in his State of the State speech last week with five of the seven justices present.

With such statements, Brownback and GOP legislative leaders suggest they’re prepared to ignore a Supreme Court order for a massive spending increase.

And experts say such a move could resonate around the country.

KC Police Say Witnesses Needed to Solve Homicides

police (AP) – Kansas City police say they could solve more homicides if more witnesses would step forward with information about the killings.

Investigators typically solve about half of the city’s homicides each year. They had a 55 percent clearance rate in 2013.

Their efforts to raise that rate are hampered by reluctant witnesses, tougher suspects and blurred lines between self-defense and murder.

Last year 58 of the city’s 106 homicides were solved, with criminal charges filed in 36 cases.

Police say they usually know fairly quickly who killed someone, but without witnesses who will cooperate it’s often difficult to get enough evidence for charges.

Experts say the lifestyles of many homicide victims mirror those of their killers, making it even more difficult to crack cases.

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