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November motel death now called homicide

Police InvestigationTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The death of a Topeka woman found in a motel room in November has officially been classified as a homicide.

Police confirmed the classification Wednesday but would not say how 39-year-old Lee Ann Keithley died, citing the continuing investigation.

A worker found Keithley’s body the afternoon Nov. 16 in a room at the Country Club Motel on the city’s south side. No arrests have been made, and police Maj. Jerry Stanley declined to say if any suspects had been identified.

Investigators had treated the case as a possible homicide from the start but awaited the coroner’s report before classifying the death as a homicide.

The confirmation brings Topeka’s 2013 homicide count to 12, including four related and still unsolved killings that occurred Dec. 1.

Missouri project set to turn hog waste into energy

hog farm(AP) Developers of a renewable biogas project in remote north-central Missouri are hoping to turn hog manure into energy.

Murphy-Brown of Missouri LLC is teaming up with Roeslein Alternative Energy LLC on the project near Princeton, Mo., a small town in one of the most sparsely populated areas of the state. Plans, announced Wednesday, call for construction of the $100 million project to begin in April.

Murphy-Brown, a subsidiary of Virginia-based Smithfield Foods, is the world’s largest pork producer. All those hogs create plenty of waste that developers say can be turned into a renewable energy source. The project will also help eliminate some of the waste odor, they said, which frequently draws complaints from those living near corporate hog farms.

“Not only does it demonstrate our ongoing commitment to the environment and to our neighbors, but it also allows us to make facility upgrades that are good for our employees, our animals and the continuous improvement of our business in northern Missouri,” Murphy-Brown of Missouri General Manager Michael Rainwater said in a statement.

Murphy-Brown operates hog farms in 12 states. It is already among the biggest employers in north-central Missouri, with about 1,100 workers. The company did not say how many additional jobs could be created by the biogas project.

Biogas, also called renewable natural gas, is created when organic matter decomposes without oxygen present. Developers of the project will harvest biogas from Murphy-Brown finishing farms, using technology developed and installed by Roeslein Alternative Energy.

The process, organizers say, will work like this: Murphy-Brown will scrape manure into existing lagoons that will be covered to reduce odors and control water flow into them. There, the waste will decompose and produce gas. Alternative fuel equipment will harvest and commercialize the biogas.

“We expect to achieve reduced greenhouse gas emissions, shrink MBM’s carbon footprint, eliminate rainfall effects on treatment systems, all while capturing a valuable and renewable biogas energy resource,” Roeslein Alternative Energy President Rudi Roeslein said in a statement.

Stern Brothers & Co. is underwriting financing for project, but officials may also seek funding through a Missouri clean energy program, Murphy-Brown said in a news release. Smithfield Foods and Murphy-Brown are not providing funding for the project.

Blunt Co-Sponsors Bill To Restore Military Retirement Benefits

BluntU.S. Senator Roy Blunt (Mo.) co-sponsored U.S. Senator Kelly Ayotte’s (N.H.) legislation today, “Keeping Our Promise to Our Military Heroes Act” (S. 1869), as part of his continued efforts to protect military retirement pay for America’s servicemen and women.

Ayotte’s bill would repeal the harmful Cost of Living Allowance (COLA) reduction for military retirees that was included in the recent budget agreement, which Blunt voted against. The bill would repeal and replace the military retiree benefit cuts by making a simple fix to the U.S. tax code to require filers to have Social Security Numbers in order to qualify for the Additional Child Tax Credit (ACTC).

In 2011, the U.S. Department of Treasury reported that individuals who were not authorized to work in the U.S. received $4.2 billion by claiming the ACTC. The Joint Committee on Taxation (JCT) estimates that this change will save approximately $20 billion over 10 years.

“This bill would easily replace these unfair cuts and help keep our promise to the men and women who bravely serve to protect America in the Armed Forces,” said Blunt, who is one of three U.S. Senators to serve on the defense authorizing and appropriating committees. “I voted against the budget because it hurts our men and women in uniform. This bill is a common-sense solution to help keep our promise to them and to their families.”

In December 2013, Blunt also co-sponsored a “sense of the Senate” resolution that was introduced last month by U.S. Senator Saxby Chambliss (Ga.) and stated that Armed Forces retirees should not unfairly bear the burden of excessive government spending, and the Senate should seek alternatives to the current military retirement provisions in the budget legislation currently being considered. With this resolution, the Senate agrees to address the reduction of military retirement pension before it goes into effect in December 2015.

Driver arrested following High Speed chase UPDATE

police chase

12:45 p.m.  update..   The Missouri Highway Patrol confirmed to St. Joseph Post that Tuesday evening’s pursuit and arrest involved report of a stolen vehicle driving south out of Iowa.  Authorities used spike sticks to slow the diver. The suspect  continued south, left the interstate at mile post 112 and then exited the vehicle. After a foot race, the suspect,Thirty-two year old Leron D. Mcelveen  was arrested. He is being held in the Harrison County Law Enforcement Center.

 

5 :10 a.m.   Following a high speed pursuit on Tuesday evening the Missouri Highway Patrol arrested a Columbia, South Carolina driver on DWI, driving while revoked, resisting arrest and additional charges.

Thirty-two year old Leron D. Mcelveen is being held at the Harrison County Law Enforcement Center in Bethany.

Biotech soybean sales good for Monsanto

Monsanto(AP) Monsanto reported better-than-expected first quarter earnings Wednesday on higher sales of the company’s biotech soybean seeds and its signature herbicide Roundup.

Its earnings rose 8 percent, and its shares rose more than 2 percent in morning trading.

 The St. Louis-based company said it earned $368 million, or 69 cents per share in the three months ended Nov. 30. That compares to earnings of $339 million, or 63 cents per share, in last year’s quarter.

Revenue climbed 7 percent to $3.1 billion, driven by sales of its Intacta soybean seeds to farmers in Argentina and Brazil. The biotech engineered soybean, which is the company’s first product designed for a non-U.S. market, repels caterpillars and withstands Monsanto’s herbicide Roundup. Soybean sales grew 16 percent to $267 million for the quarter.

The company’s performance beat the average estimate of analysts polled by FactSet. The consensus estimate was for earnings of 64 cents per share on sales of $3.069 billion in revenue for the quarter.

Its shares rose $2.93, or 2.5 percent, to $116.12 in morning trading.

Monsanto reiterated previous expectations of earnings between $5 and $5.20 per share for fiscal 2014. Analysts expected earnings of $5.25

Daisy Coleman hospitalized

Daisy
Daisy

Daisy Coleman is hospitalized in Kansas City after reportedly trying to take her own life.

The Marysville, Missouri teen is the subject of a rape case that has received national attention.

Coleman was 14 in January 2012 when she says a 17-year-old boy plied her with alcohol and had sex with her while a second 17-year-old recorded the incident on his cell phone.

Felony charges against both boys were dropped months later after Nodaway County prosecutor Robert Rice says Daisy and her family stopped cooperating with the investigation.

Melinda Coleman, Daisy’s mother, says the family never stopped cooperating

In October, a Nodaway County judge appointed Jean Peters Baker to serve as a special prosecutor in the case.

Missing Maryville Men Located

missing menTwo Maryville men reported missing on New Year’s Eve have been located.

On January 3, the Department of Public Safety sought help from the media and the public to find Timothy Allen Clayton and Virgil David Ivey.

On Wednesday DPS announced that the pair have been located and are safe.

Law enforcement officials made contact with them where they were located to verify their condition. Maryville DPS offered thanks to everybody who assisted them in finding the two men.

Gov’t offers new approach to classroom discipline

school classroom(AP) — The Obama administration is issuing new recommendations on classroom discipline that seek to end the apparent disparities in how students of different races are disciplined for breaking school rules.

Government civil rights data show that black students without disabilities are more than three times as likely as whites to be expelled or suspended. Critics say that creates a “school-to-prison” pipeline because many students enter the criminal justice system for violations.

The recommendations being released Wednesday encourage schools to ensure that all school personnel are trained in classroom management, conflict resolution and approaches to de-escalating classroom disruptions.

They also suggest that school employees understand they are responsible for administering routine student discipline instead of security or police officers and that clear distinctions be drawn about the responsibilities of school security personnel.

Dr. King Day Program At East Hills To Focus On Volunteerism

Youth Alliance via facebookAmeriCorps and the St Joseph Youth Alliance will present a special program to honor Dr. Martin Luther King Day and the National Day of Service.

On Thursday, January 16, at the East Hills Library, multiple speakers will present a history of Dr. King and the importance of volunteering.

The speakers begin at 6pm, with refreshments served beginning at 5:30.

Agri-Business Expo Center receives USDA grant

Agri business expoUSDA looks for ways to grow the economy and create jobs. They brought good news and a significant financial contribution to the area on Tuesday.

USDA Rural Development Missouri State Director Janie Dunning was in St. Joseph to present a certificate of funding to the Buchanan County Agri-Business Expo Center for a Rural Business Enterprise Grant and Rural Business Opportunity Grant worth a total of $80,000.

The dollars will be used for a feasibility and marketing study, a business plan and engineering fees on the project.

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