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Animal shelter sees another year of high adoption rates

The number of dogs and cats that came through the St. Joseph Animal Shelter was up this year, but so were adoption rates.

According to Kappy Hodges with the Friends of the Animal Shelter, this year 1,300 dogs came through the shelter, compared to 900 last year. This year, 1,200 cats came through the shelter compared to 950 last year. Hodges said those numbers include pets brought in for cremation and deceased animals that were picked up by Animal Control. 

Hodges said of the adoptable dogs that came through the shelter this year, 100-percent were adopted. That means they were placed in a new home, went to a rescue or they were returned to their family if they were lost. The cat adoption rate went up this year to 95-percent, up from 82-percent last year.

Hodges said there are many programs that help in reaching the adoption rates each year.

“Some of the things that have been successful that the staff at Animal Control and also the volunteers with Friends of the Animal Shelter have done and are always continually working on are the Puppies for Parole program, we have the adoptions through PetSmart and Petco,” Hodges said. “We have volunteers that bring in foster mamas and help the babies… and then we have adoption promotions that we do, so all of these ways we want to keep doing.”

Hodges said this is the fourth year the shelter has had a 100-percent adoption rate for dogs.

Body of Mo. man found near railroad tracks in Bend, Oregon

BEND, Ore. (AP) – Authorities investigating a car accident in Central Oregon discovered the body of a 24-year-old man near the scene.

Bend police say a driver suffered a medical problem before leaving the highway and crashing onto railroad tracks Wednesday night.

No one was hurt in the crash, but the body of Robert McKinney was found in a spot hidden from the highway.

Oregon court records show McKinney was arrested in November for stealing car keys and entering a motor vehicle. He failed to appear at his arraignment and a warrant was issued for his arrest in mid-December.

Police do not believe his death stemmed from the car accident or foul play.

It’s unknown if McKinney had shelter in Oregon. He listed a Joplin, Missouri, address in court papers following his arrest.

Man convicted of killing 10-year-old Mo. girl wants a new trial

Wood-photo Greene Co.

SPRINGFIELD, Mo. (AP) – A former middle school football coach convicted of kidnapping, raping and killing a 10-year-old girl is asking for an acquittal or a new trial.

The Springfield News-Leader reports that attorneys for 49-year-old Craig Wood argue that he didn’t get a fair trial in a motion filed earlier this month. Jurors found Wood guilty last month of first-degree murder in the February 2014 death of Hailey Owens but were unable to reach a unanimous decision about whether to recommend the death penalty.

A judge is expected to decide on Jan. 11 whether Wood should be sentenced to the death penalty or life in prison. But first, the judge must rule on the motion for a new trial.

Arguments in the motion include that too much evidence was allowed into the trial.

Police: One dead in reported NE Kansas accidental shooting

DOUGLAS COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating a shooting and are looking for a suspect.

Just after 11p.m. Wednesday, officers were dispatched to an apartment at 2310 W. 26th Street in Lawrence where they located 30-year-old Lei Ala A. Turner with a single gunshot wound to the chest, according to a media release.

Despite life saving measures attempted at the scene, Ms. Turner died from her injuries.

Investigators have identified a suspect in the incident, and are working to locate him. Initial information indicates the shooting may have been accidental. Police released no additional details early Thursday.

Missouri man admits sneaking into home to try to steal undies

Hassler- photo courtesy Washington Police Dpt.

WASHINGTON, Mo. (AP) – Police say a Missouri man told officers he has an “underwear fetish” and admitted to sneaking into a home to try to steal a pair.

Cody Hassler,  34, Washington, Missouri, was charged Wednesday with first-degree burglary, first-degree stalking and stealing. No attorney is listed in online court records. Bond is set at $75,000.

Police say Hassler admitted to sneaking into the house through an unlocked basement door in October while a mother and her teenage daughter were sleeping and taking a pair of underwear from the laundry room.

The teenager awoke when she heard footsteps and police were called. Officers found a pair of underwear that apparently had been dropped when the suspect fled. Hassler also admitted to looking through bedroom windows.

Temps near 30 through Friday

Today and tomorrow we will get a break from the extreme cold with highs generally in the 20s to lower 30s. However, the extreme cold will return for the holiday weekend including New Year’s Eve and New Year’s Day. Highs will only be in the single digits to lower teens. Lows New Year’s Eve night/New Year’s morning will be in the single digits to teens below zero with wind chill values 15 to 30 degrees below zero. With that extreme cold New Year’s Eve/New Year’s morning, if you are outdoors you could quickly find yourself suffering from frostbite or hypothermia. It becomes particularly dangerous on New Year’s Eve as many of the signs of hypothermia are similar to someone who has done too much celebrating. Please be safe, limit outdoor exposure time and, dress appropriately. Here’s the 7-day forecast from the National Weather Service:

Today: Cloudy, then gradually becoming mostly sunny, with a high near 30. South southeast wind 5 to 7 mph becoming light and variable in the afternoon.

Tonight: Mostly cloudy, with a low around 14. Light and variable wind.

Friday: Mostly cloudy, with a high near 26. East southeast wind around 6 mph.

Friday Night: Cloudy, with a low around 8. Wind chill values between -1 and 4. North wind 6 to 10 mph.

Saturday: Mostly cloudy and cold, with a high near 8. North wind 7 to 9 mph.

Saturday Night: A slight chance of snow after midnight. Mostly cloudy, with a low around -2. Chance of precipitation is 20%.

Sunday: Partly sunny and cold, with a high near 3.

Sunday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around -10.

New Year’s Day: Sunny and cold, with a high near 5.

Monday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around -5.

Tuesday: Sunny, with a high near 19.

Tuesday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 8.

Wednesday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 19.

 

NE Kansas store clerk uses bat to fight off attempted-robbery suspect

Photo courtesy Topeka Police

SHAWNEE COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating an attempted aggravated robbery and have released security camera images of the suspect.

Just before 7p.m. Wednesday, an attempted robbery occurred at U-Market convenience store 935 SE 21st Street in Topeka, according to Police Lt. Aaron Jones.

The suspect threatened the clerk with a pocket knife and demanded money. The suspect fled the store after the clerk retrieved a bat and struck the suspect once.

The suspect was last seen running south in the 210 block of SE Virginia. He is described as a white male, 5-foot-10, to 6-foot, wearing a red hat, black facemask, grey hoodie, purple latex gloves, blue jeans, and black shoes.

Anyone with information on the crime is asked to contact Topeka Police 785-368-9551 Topeka Police (criminalintelligence@topeka.org) or call Crime Stoppers at #785 234-0007.

Charity gets a jolt from Trump tax law _ but due to drop next year

WASHINGTON (AP) — In this season of giving, charity seems to be getting an extra jolt because next year the popular tax deduction for donations will lose a lot of its punch.

Traditionally generous Americans may have less incentive to give to charitable causes next year because of the newly minted tax law. The changes that will make it less advantageous for many people to donate to charity in 2018 may be sparking a year-end stream of fattened contributions in anticipation, charity executives and experts say.

Starting next year, the millions of relatively small donations from moderate-income people to mainstream charities could be sharply reduced, they say. That means charity could become less of a middle-class enterprise and a more exclusive domain of the wealthy, who tend to give to arts and cultural institutions, research facilities and universities. Their use of the charitable tax deduction is less likely to be affected by the new law.

The sweeping Republican tax overhaul, delivered by the GOP-dominated Congress and signed into law by President Donald Trump, doesn’t eliminate or even reduce the deduction for donations to charitable, religious and other nonprofit organizations. Charitable giving should be encouraged with a tax incentive, congressional Republicans crafting the plan said early on, and the cherished deduction — though costing some $41.5 billion a year in lost federal revenue — wasn’t struck even as other longstanding deductions fell or were scaled back.

But it might as well have been, charity experts and advocates say.

A central pillar of the massive tax law doubles the standard deduction used by two-thirds of Americans, to $12,000 for individuals and $24,000 for married couples. That means many taxpayers who now itemize deductions will find it’s no longer beneficial for them do so. They’ll find that the deductions they normally take, including for charitable giving, don’t add up to as much as the new standard amount.

The result: some estimates project that as few as 10 percent of taxpayers will continue to itemize deductions on their returns, down from the current one-third.

By contrast, the wealthiest Americans likely will continue to receive the tax benefit of using itemized deductions, including for charitable giving.

Especially for people who currently itemize and donate small to moderate amounts to charities, the tax incentive to give diminishes. And with the new law kicking in Jan. 1, they may want to max out their donations before year’s end, rolling next year’s giving back into 2017.

“I think we’ll have some increased donations” this year, says Steve Taylor, senior vice president and counsel for public policy at the United Way. Already, United Way, one of the biggest U.S. charities, has seen some “doubling up” by large donors from what they would normally have been expected to give this year, Taylor said in an interview.

Some 7.2 million people donate less than $1,000 yearly — on average $154 —to the United Way, according to Taylor. “We’re very concerned,” he said. “A lot of charities are in shock. Charities feel totally blindsided and like we have been thrown under the bus” in the tax overhaul.

Experts say the same thing occurred in late 1986 — donations surged that year, dropped the next — after enactment of the Reagan administration tax overhaul, the biggest reworking of the U.S. tax system until this one.

Absent the incentive, Americans’ charitable instincts could still lead them to give, but they’re expected to give less — and may also change where and when they give.

For the large number of taxpayers who will no longer itemize, “their cost of giving goes up dramatically,” said Patrick Rooney, a professor of economic and philanthropy and director of the Lilly Family School of Philanthropy at Indiana University. “It will absolutely have a negative impact.”

Rooney and his colleagues foresee a resulting drop in charitable donations of around $14 billion next year, or 5 percent of the $282 billion that U.S. charities pulled in last year.

Religious congregations’ donors may continue to commit small amounts or a percentage of their income regardless of tax incentives. That could make them less affected than arts and cultural organizations or research facilities and universities, which tend to attract more affluent donors who keep a close eye on their tax options, Rooney said.

In the meantime, charities may have to rework how they pitch their appeals to donors, suggested Marcus Owens, a partner in law firm Loeb & Loeb’s Washington office. “I think what it will do is cause charities to sharpen their fundraising efforts. They’ll need more sophisticated fundraising techniques,” said Owens, who for 10 years headed the IRS’s exempt organizations division, which deals with charities and political organizations.

At Catholic Charities, “It seems now that we have to redouble our efforts,” said Lucas Swanepoel, the organization’s vice president for social policy. “We really need to make sure we’re telling the stories of the differences it makes in people’s lives.”

Because of the reduced incentive for moderate-income taxpayers, the United Way’s Taylor said his organization may have to focus more attention on wealthy donors.

DA won’t file charges against officers in Kansas man’s death

White-photo KDOC

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The local district attorney does not plan to file criminal charges against two Kansas police officers in the fatal shooting of a black man earlier this year.

Shawnee County District Attorney Mike Kagay announced his decision Wednesday in connection with the Sept. 28 shooting of 30-year-old Dominique White near a park in Topeka.

Kagay released a seven-page legal analysis that said White acted suspiciously after the officers responded to a report of shots being fired in the area. The analysis said White struggled with police and reached for a gun.

The analysis said no reasonable judge or jury would find that the actions of the two Topeka officers were unlawful. The officers’ names haven’t been released.

Police on the scene of the shooting-photo courtesy WIBW TV

An attorney for White’s family did not immediately return phone and email messages seeking comment.

Hat worn by duchess made in NE Kansas

TONGANOXIE, Kan. (AP) — The Christmas Day wardrobe for the Duchess of Cambridge included a touch of Kansas.

The Lawrence Journal-World reports that Kate Middleton wore a Vallnord alpaca fur hat from Tonganoxie-based Peruvian Connection on Monday to a Christmas service in Sandringham, England.
The company has a store in London, and six in the U.S., including one in Kansas City, Missouri. Peruvian Connection has operated in rural Tonganoxie for more than 40 years.

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