CARMACK, Mo.- A Missouri woman was injured in an accident just before 8 p.m. on Monday in Gentry County.
The Missouri State Highway Patrol reported a 1996 Mercury driven by Stacy A. Petty, 46, Albany, was eastbound on U.S. 136 two miles west of Carmack. The vehicle struck a deer, traveled off the south side of the road, down a a ditch and struck an embankment.
Petty was transported to Northwest Medical Center.
The MSHP reported she was properly restrained at the time of the accident.
WILLARD, Mo. (AP) — The Greene County Sheriff’s Office says a woman has been killed and that a person of interest in the case has been found dead.
Sheriff Jim Arnott tells the Springfield News-Leader that the woman was likely shot to death on Monday at a home in Willard. They say the person of interest was found dead in neighboring Dade County.
They haven’t released the identity of the woman or the person of interest. It’s unclear how the person died.
Today Mostly sunny, with a high near 82. Light east southeast wind becoming south 9 to 14 mph in the morning. Winds could gust as high as 18 mph.
Tonight Showers and thunderstorms, mainly after 1am. Low around 64. South southeast wind around 8 mph. Chance of precipitation is 80%. New rainfall amounts between a half and three quarters of an inch possible.
Wednesday Showers and thunderstorms. High near 77. South southeast wind 8 to 10 mph. Chance of precipitation is 80%. New rainfall amounts between three quarters and one inch possible.
Wednesday Night Showers and thunderstorms likely. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 63. Southeast wind 6 to 8 mph. Chance of precipitation is 70%. New rainfall amounts between a half and three quarters of an inch possible.
Thursday Showers and thunderstorms likely. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 73. East wind around 8 mph becoming west in the afternoon. Chance of precipitation is 60%. New rainfall amounts between a quarter and half of an inch possible.
Thursday Night Partly cloudy, with a low around 49.
KANSAS CITY (AP) – Royals manager Ned Yost went with a nine-man pitching staff and Oakland counterpart Bob Melvin opted to keep eight pitchers for their AL wild-card game Tuesday night.
The winner advances to face the Los Angeles Angels in the division series Thursday.
The Royals are sending James Shields to the mound to start their first postseason game in 29 years. He’ll be backed by one of the strongest bullpens in baseball, which includes left-hander Brandon Finnegan, the club’s first-round pick out of TCU just this year.
Here is the starting line-up for the Royals:
1. SS – Alcides Escobar
2. RF – Nori Aoki
3. CF – Lorenzo Cain
4. 1B – Eric Hosmer
5. DH – Billy Butler
6. LF – Alex Gordon
7. C – Salvador Perez
8. 2B – Omar Infante
9. 3B – Mike Moustakas
The Athletics will start Jon Lester. He’ll be backed by an equally stout bullpen and an offense that includes slugger Adam Dunn, making his first postseason appearance after playing 2,001 regular-season games for five clubs over 14 seasons.
Sen. Laura Kelly, left, and Rep. Jim Ward, the top Democrats on the KanCare Oversight Committee, on Monday requested that a special committee be appointed to study whether any legal or ethical boundaries were crossed when Gov. Sam Brownback’s administration contracted with three managed care organizations to privatize Medicaid.-Photo by Dave Ranney
By Andy Marso
KHI News Service
TOPEKA — The top Democrats on the KanCare Oversight Committee on Monday called for a separate committee to be appointed to study whether any legal or ethical boundaries were crossed when Gov. Sam Brownback’s administration contracted with three managed care organizations to privatize Medicaid.
Rep. Jim Ward, D-Wichita, and Sen. Laura Kelly, D-Topeka, said the request was spurred by the months-old news of FBI agents interviewing Capitol denizens for information on allegations of corruption within the administration. The FBI has not confirmed the investigation, per agency policy, but some of those interviewed have told news outlets that the $3 billion KanCare contracts are at the center of the questions.
Ward, a former prosecutor, said that the FBI would only seek out criminal activity, while a special legislative committee also could search for ethics violations.
“When there are instances when the integrity of the legislative process, the integrity of the executive and the taxpayers’ money is at risk, a special committee is not only appropriate, it’s needed,” Ward said.
Brianna Landon, deputy communications director for the governor’s office, said the governor supported the formation of the KanCare Oversight Committee on which Kelly and Ward sit, and questioned why neither raised their concerns at a meeting of that committee last month. Legislators and the general public can view theKanCare contract documents online, she noted.
“Five companies submitted bids in response to the KanCare request for proposal,” Landon said. “Dozens of subject matter experts, including many career state employees, selected the three winning companies. These experts selected the three lowest bidders with the three strongest proposals. Even the losing bidders have stated the process was open and fair.”
When asked why they waited until a month before the general election to request the special committee, Kelly noted that she had made a similar request for legislative inquiry when the story of the FBI interviews broke in April.
At the time, she likened it to an investigation of the Kansas Bioscience Authority ordered by Senate President Susan Wagle, R-Wichita.
“I did call for just this sort of investigative committee and paralleled it with what had happened with the KBA,” Kelly said.
Ward said Democrats waited to see how many days of interim meetings the Legislative Coordinating Council would grant to the KanCare Oversight Committee, in the hopes that the committee might have time to vet the KanCare contracting process.
“They gave us the minimum amount of days,” Ward said of the council, comprised of the Legislature’s top five Republicans and top two Democrats.
A statement on Monday from Wagle, the coordinating council’s vice chairwoman, made it seem unlikely she will vote for a special committee.
“This is a pathetic attempt to distort the truth and deceive voters in an election year,” Wagle said. “Public records clearly show the KanCare contracts were bid in a transparent process and awarded to the lowest bidders.”
The period Ward and Kelly want to investigate dates back to 2012, when United Healthcare, Amerigroup and Sunflower State Health Plan (a division of Centene) were awarded contracts to administer the state’s $3 billion Medicaid program.
Gary Haulmark, a former deputy secretary in the Brownback administration, subsequently went to work for Amerigroup, while two lobbyists connected to Brownback’s former chief of staff, David Kensinger, were employed by the other managed care companies. One of them, Riley Scott, is Wagle’s son-in-law.
Ward said that fit a pattern of other Statehouse advocacy groups changing their representation to lobbyists with ties to the administration.
“All are representing these private companies,” Ward said. “How did that happen? Were there carrots and sticks offered?”
Ward also pointed to smaller-dollar contracts handed out to fully privatize the state’s child support enforcement. The recipient of the majority of those contracts was a company owned by a Brownback donor from Mississippi who privately conversed with Kensinger and a Cabinet secretary about the benefits of privatization years before the contracts were bidded out.
In addition to the bioscience authority investigation, Ward cited other recent precedent for the Legislature investigating possible corruption in other branches of government. He pointed to a 2006 special committee appointed by then-House Speaker Doug Mays, a Topeka Republican, to look into a lunch conversation Kansas Supreme Court Chief Justice Lawton Nuss had with state senators while a school finance lawsuit was pending in Nuss’ court.
Ward said a special committee with subpoena power could forward evidence of criminal activity to the U.S. Attorney’s Office, while directing evidence of lower-level ethics violations to other bodies like the Kansas Governmental Ethics Commission. He said an investigation also could be useful in determining whether state laws governing “pay-to-play” deals or influence-peddling need to be tightened.
He said it did not matter whether the investigation is launched before the November election.
“The goal is, whoever the governor is, whoever the Legislature is, people know what the rules are, and the public is confident we’re working for their interest rather than individual interests,” Ward said.
CLINTON COUNTY- Two men were injured in an accident just after 2 p.m. on Monday in Clinton County.
The Missouri State Highway Patrol reported a 2013 Ford Edge driven by Grant E. Hon, 30, Omaha, was northbound on U.S. 69 and traveled into the path of a 2001 Ford F 250 driven by Dustin E. Noble, 31 Polo, that was westbound on Mo 116. The front of the truck struck the passenger side of the Edge. Both vehicles skidded of the northwest corner of the intersection.
Hon and Noble were transported to Liberty Hospital.
The MSHP reported Hon was properly restrained at the time of the accident and it was unclear if Noble was wearing a seat belt.
LAS VEGAS (AP) — Gambling officials say the industry paid out a jackpot-worthy $38 billion in federal, state and local taxes in 2013.
It’s the first time the American Gaming Association has added tribal casinos and casino game makers into the mix for its annual study of the industry’s impact in the U.S. The Associated Press obtained a copy of the report’s tax revenue figures before its release Tuesday.
Of that total tax revenue, $10 billion came directly from gambling. Worker income and Social Security taxes as well as casino property taxes, and more, accounted for the rest.
Gaming association president Geoff Freeman is expected to reveal gambling’s total economic impact at a Tuesday press conference. The announcement comes as the association’s annual G2E conference and trade show kicks off at the Sands Expo and Convention Center off the Las Vegas Strip.
CLAYTON (AP) – A St. Louis County grand jury will review another case involving the Ferguson police officer who fatally shot an unarmed 18-year-old.
A judge approved the request by county prosecutors Monday in a case involving a drug suspect arrested in 2013 by officer Darren Wilson. The man’s attorney wants the drug distribution charge dismissed because he doesn’t expect Wilson, who did not attend the hearing, to show up in court.
Wilson received a Ferguson City Council commendation for his role in Christopher Brooks’ arrest. But defense attorney Nick Zotos said his client was “roughed up” by Wilson and also questioned whether his actions merited special recognition.
The grand jury is also reviewing evidence in the early August shooting death of Michael Brown to determine whether Wilson should face criminal charges.
DETROIT (AP) — The rewards for surviving last winter’s punishing weather are tight supplies and drastic price increases for road salt across much of the U.S.
Local officials in several Midwestern states are facing prices that are twice what they were last season. In some cases, the price is five times as much.
And that’s only if they can get road salt.
Replenishing stockpiles is proving to be a challenge nationwide after so much salt was used last winter, when supplies were diminished by frigid weather and record snowfall.
From Boston to Raleigh, North Carolina, many cities are increasing their stocks by at least 20 percent.
But some local governments are avoiding the problem, thanks to previous contracts or secured bids, or simply being close to salt sources.
SPRINGFIELD, Mo. (AP) — The state’s supreme court will hear arguments this week about whether a Springfield man is guilty of child abuse.
In 2011, 50-year-old Peter D. Hansen was convicted of abusing one of his children by locking him in a bathroom for several days and restricting his diet as punishment. He’s appealing the ruling.
Hansen says he is a Seventh Day Adventist and that his religion encourages vegetarianism. He says the child’s punishment doesn’t constitute child abuse.
The Springfield News-Leader reports the Supreme Court will hear arguments on Wednesday.
The family was evicted from their home in April 2009 and lived in a car before their local church allowed them to live in their building. Hansen says while the family had little money, they ate two meals a day.