We have a brand new updated website! Click here to check it out!

Police investigate fatal NE Kan. train accident

train railroad trackLAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Authorities say a train has struck and killed a pedestrian in the northern part of Lawrence.

The Lawrence Journal-World reports that police responded Sunday afternoon after receiving multiple reports about the collision. The train tracks and the intersection remained closed much of Sunday while police investigated.

Police Sgt. Mark Unruh the cause of the accident wasn’t immediately known. He said the coroner was attempting to identify the victim who died at the scene.

Probation revoked for man who bilked elderly victim of hundreds of thousands of dollars

Donnie Embrey
Donnie Embrey

A judge revoked the probation of a man convicted of bilking hundreds of thousands of dollars from an elderly person, because the defendant hasn’t been paying back the victim as ordered.

On September 20, Donnie Embrey pleaded guilty to one count of the financial exploitation of an elderly or disabled person, a class-A felony. Judge Daniel Kellogg ordered 120 days shock time in the county jail, and suspended execution of a 25 year prison term, provided Embrey pay back the victim.

The court ordered Embrey to repay $242,000 at 9% interest, and his parole officer ordered Embrey to repay $4,000 per month. But the judge heard a report that Mr Embrey has barely paid half that amount.

On December 18, Judge Kellogg revoked Embrey’s probation, and ordered him to serve the full 25-year term.

A co-defendant, Richard Lee Edwards, was found guilty by a jury in a related scam, and was sentenced to 12-years in prison. In that case, Judge Kellogg ordered Edwards to pay back $108,000 plus interest.

Prosecutors say the pair took advantage of the victims by offering overpriced home repairs.

Police seek half a dozen suspects in home invasion

SJPD patchSt Joseph Police are on the lookout for suspects involved in a drug-related home-invasion Monday morning.

The victim says a number of people barged into her home in the 400 block of Virginia around 3am Monday. The woman tells officers she locked herself in the bedroom and called police.

There were no injuries.

Authorities put out a call for an unknown model black pickup truck which was described as “very loud.” Another vehicle, with up to six people inside, is believed to be stolen. That vehicle, a green BMW, was spotted at the scene by neighbors.

Mo. teen dies in Sunday accident

fatal crashMONTGOMERY CITY- A Missouri teenage died in an accident just before 9p.m. on Sunday in Montgomery County.

The Missouri State Highway Patrol reported a 2005 Chevy Uplander driven by Cody M. Dempsy, 18, Warrenton, was traveling on MO 161 just north of Cedar Ridge Road. The vehicle traveled off the right side of the road in a curve. The driver overcorrected. The vehicle rotated, traveled off the left side of the road and overturned. The driver was partially ejected.

Dempsy was pronounced dead at the scene and transported to Schlankers Funeral Home in Montgomery City.

The MSHP reported he was not wearing a seat belt.

Board meets to consider firing of Village Clerk

Country Club Village HallThe Country Club Village Board of Trustees is scheduled to meet tonight at the Village Hall. Among other things, the board is expected to take a formal vote on the recent resignation of Village Clerk Julia Elder.

Ms Elder offered her resignation, and two week notice, on Friday, Dec. 12. But she says she was greeted at Village Hall the following Monday by the Chief of Police and two board members. She was told to clean out her desk and not come back.

The board tried to schedule a pair of “emergency meetings” to consider the firing, but members were unable to agree on a date before today, just four days before Ms Elder’s two weeks notice passed.

There have been abundant rumors that the newly elected majority on the board of trustees already has a replacement in mind, but there has been no formal announcement.

Kansas senator skeptical of Obama moves on Cuba

Google map
Google map

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas Sen. Pat Roberts is skeptical of President Barack Obama’s decision to restore diplomatic ties with Cuba and suggested the result is only a “public relations change.”

The Republican senator said Sunday that the Democratic president needs to consult Congress on changing U.S. policy toward Cuba and questioned whether Obama can restore diplomatic relations through executive actions.

Roberts said failing to consult with Congress only will “poison the well.”

The senator also said he doesn’t think Cuban President Raul Castro or his older-brother and longtime Cuban dictator Fidel Castro have changed in not respecting individual freedoms. Roberts said the U.S. is supposed to stand for those freedoms.

Roberts said he doesn’t know what’s being gained from Obama’s actions “except a public relations change.”

Minimum wage increase coming to Mo. on Jan. 1

money  cashJEFFERSON CITY (AP) – Missouri’s low-wage workers are getting a small pay hike in 2015.

Starting New Year’s Day, the state’s minimum wage will increase by 15 cents to $7.65 an hour. The minimum wage for tipped workers in Missouri will rise by 9 cents to $3.83 per hour.

A law passed by voters in 2006 provides an annual cost-of-living adjustment to Missouri’s minimum wage.

The National Employment Law Project said in a news release that Missouri is joined by 19 states that will also raise their minimum wage on New Year’s Day. New York will do the same on December 31, 2014.

The advocacy group for low-wage workers says the minimum wage increases will boost pay for a total of 4.4 million workers, including 136,000 in Missouri.

Why Are Minorities Diagnosed With Autism At Lower Rates Than Whites?

Wendy Santillan's 3-year-old son Raoul, who was diagnosed with autism, has found help for him through a training program geared toward families living in rural or remote areas.-photo by Alex Smith
Wendy Santillan’s 3-year-old son Raoul, who was diagnosed with autism, has found help for him through a training program geared toward families living in rural or remote areas.-photo by Alex Smith

By Alex Smith
Heartland Health Monitor

KANSAS CITY, Kan. — Just after picking her son Raoul up from day care, Wendy Santillan serves him milk and cookies. Raoul, a 3-year-old with a crew cut and big brown eyes, happily devours his snack. But Wendy says she noticed early on some unusual behavior in her son.
“When he was 18 months, he starts to play with the toys in a different way,” she said. “He used to pass the toy (along) the corner of his eye, and that wasn’t normal at all to me.”

As Raoul grew older, he showed limited use of language. He wouldn’t point to objects. He became increasingly isolated. And in what doctors call self-stimulatory behavior, he still rubbed toys across his face.

In February, Raoul was diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder – among the one of every 68 children in the United States with the syndrome, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

“I was very worried because you, as a parent, never want your kid to be different,” Santillan said.

Wendy came to the United States from Mexico about eight years ago. She now works as a babysitter and lives in a mobile home in Kansas City, Kan. She says that when Raoul was diagnosed, she tried to do all she could to help him but had trouble knowing where to begin.

“I speak English, but it’s not my first language,” she said, “and it’s hard for me to understand, especially clinical words. And I was trying to find some information in Spanish, and you cannot find it.”

Misdiagnosing the disorder

For many Hispanic parents, getting help for their autistic children is a challenge. And that often starts with the failure to identify the disorder in the first place, said Jason Travers, an assistant professor in the special education department at the University of Kansas.

In an article in the Journal of Special Education, Travers demonstrates that Hispanic and black children are diagnosed with autism at lower rates than white children. That, he says, doesn’t make sense.

“We shouldn’t have this disparity because autism is a disability that, according to most of our evidence, affects people regardless of race or ethnicity and socioeconomic status,” Travers said.
Travers, then a faculty member at the University of Massachusetts-Amherst, and his fellow researchers examined the number of students across the country diagnosed with autism from 2000 to 2007 – whether the diagnosis was made by a doctor or by the schools themselves.

This was a time when autism diagnoses were soaring – for white students. But in just about every state for which data were available, that wasn’t the case for Latino or black students. Travers believes those children were misdiagnosed.

“The child might instead be identified as having an emotional or behavioral disorder or a learning disability or an intellectual disability,” he said. “The child might be identified as having a health impairment.”

Travers said these kids often receive a vague diagnosis of “adjustment disorder.”

Diminishing prospects

Under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, schools are required to provide special services for children with autism. But when students are not identified as being autistic, they miss out on crucial early help. And without that help, their long-term prospects diminish.

“They’re less likely to be gainfully employed and contribute to the tax base,” Travers said. “They’re more likely to live with their parents and be reliant on social services. They’re less likely to have a satisfactory quality of life.”

Travers said the reason for these disparities is unclear. It may be lack of access to doctors. It may be a cultural phenomenon. Some parents may not have the knowledge, confidence or time to advocate for their children. And school themselves may be an issue. Travers said there seem to be significant differences in how schools recognize the disorder.

“Some schools are ready and willing to accept an outside evaluation, a clinical diagnosis, and others will refuse and resist that outside evaluation and instead prefer to conduct their own,” he said.

This is not the first time disparities in identifying autism have been discovered. David Mandell, an associate professor of psychiatry and pediatrics at the University of Pennsylvania, published an article exploring the problem in 2002, and he’s been involved with several influential studies since then. But he said Travers’ work is a big step forward in understanding what’s happening.

“It is truly a measure of the extent to which we are serving our most vulnerable children,” Mandell said. “And it suggests that we are underperforming and that we have a long way to go to improve care.”

A ‘call to arms’

Most of what’s known about autism disparities comes from health data or projections based on sample groups. By looking at individual numbers from individual schools, Travers’ study underscores how Hispanic and black students are missing out on services to which they are legally entitled.

Mandell hopes the new findings will serve as a call to arms.

“For a long time, advocacy around autism has really been led by very well-meaning, very effective, relatively wealthy or privileged individuals. And I think that this suggests an urgent need to engage other families in this battle to obtain appropriate care for children with autism,” he said.

After Raoul finishes his snack, Wendy Santillan’s son grabs his mother’s smart phone. Wendy was lucky; she found help for Raoul through Oasis, a KU training program for parents of autistic children geared toward families living in rural or remote areas.

Raoul is doing well. Defying stereotypical autism behavior, he smiles and seems to enjoy playing with his mother. But Wendy said she gets nervous thinking about his future and what will happen when he starts grade school.

“I don’t know what’s coming next, you know?” she said. “I don’t know if there’s public resources or if I’m going to have to put him in private. I don’t know. I have no idea what’s next. And it’s a worry. Of course it’s a worry, as a parent.”

Wendy still encounters hostility from some Hispanic parents when she suggests their children may have symptoms of autism. So she’s not only doing all she can to educate herself about the disorder, she’s working to educate other families in her community as well.

Alex Smith is a reporter for Heartland Health Monitor, a news collaboration focusing on health issues and their impact in Missouri and Kansas.

Police departments on alert after cop killings

policeTOM HAYS, Associated Press

NEW YORK (AP) — Big-city police departments and union leaders around the country are warning the rank and file to wear bulletproof vests and avoid making inflammatory posts on social media after a gunman ambushed and killed two New York City officers.

The slayings of Officers Rafael Ramos and Wenjian Liu on Saturday heightened fears about the safety of law enforcement officials nationwide, though there is no evidence any threats are imminent. The gunman, Ismaaiyl (IHSH’-mayl) Brinsley, had vowed online to put “wings on pigs” as retaliation for the slayings of black men at the hands of white police.

Investigators are trying to determine if Brinsley had participated in any protests over the deaths of Michael Brown and Eric Garner or simply latched onto the cause for the final act in a violent rampage.

Trial set for man who escaped Mo. jail cell

Image-Brian-AdkinsonCOLUMBIA – A man who was caught inside a suburban Cleveland nursing home after a escaping from a Missouri jail is preparing to stand trial.

Twenty-five-year-old Brian Adkison is scheduled to be tried Jan. 7 in Boone County on charges of forcing his way into a woman’s home and raping her. His attorney couldn’t immediately be reached by The Associated Press for comment Sunday.

The Columbia Daily Tribune reports that Adkison is accused of escaping in August 2013 from his Caldwell County Jail cell by climbing through the ceiling. Authorities say he was on the run for about a month before he was arrested in Cuyahoga County, Ohio.

Besides Boone and Caldwell counties, Adkison faces charges in five other Missouri counties. Those charges include kidnapping, domestic assault, burglary and tampering.

Copyright Eagle Radio | FCC Public Files | EEO Public File