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Boxing firm has suit against Kansas Senate hopeful

Orman
Orman

KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — Court records show that independent Senate candidate Greg Orman is embroiled in a federal lawsuit in Kansas with an international boxing equipment manufacturer.

The dispute with Everlast World’s Boxing Headquarters Corp. involves $30 million worth of payments for royalties and merchandise sales that the firm claims it will be owed through 2018.

Orman hopes to unseat three-term Republican Sen. Pat Roberts in the Nov. 4 election.

He is one of five defendants in the lawsuit filed by Everlast, initially in 2012. It is scheduled to go to trial in October 2015.

The lawsuit alleges Orman and the others remain responsible for payments owed to Everlast by a now-bankrupt Lenexa company because they formed new firms to take over its sales. Orman and the other defendants deny those claims.

KC man says attackers stole casino winnings

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — A Kansas City man who won nearly $2,000 at an area casino was beaten and robbed of his winnings after leaving the facility with a woman he just met.
The Kansas City Star reports the man told police he left with the woman early Sunday “with the intention to be romantic.” But when they arrived at their destination around 3 a.m., two men attacked him.
Police say one of the assailants hit the man in the head with a gun before they took his money and fled with the woman, who had set the victim up.
The victim was treated at a hospital with a gash on the head. A detailed description of the suspects was not available.

Home Depot confirms breach in U.S. stores

home depot

NEW YORK (AP) — Home Depot is confirming that its payment data systems have been breached, and says the hack could affect customers who used cards at U.S. and Canadian stores.

The largest U.S. home improvement chain says there is no evidence debit card PINs were compromised, and no evidence online customers or shoppers at stores in Mexico are affected.

The Atlanta company says its investigation is focused on the months since April.

Home Depot Inc. said last week that it was working with banks and law enforcement to investigate a potential hack.

Hackers have broken security walls for many retailers in recent months, including Target, grocer Supervalu, restaurant chain P.F. Chang’s and the thrift store operations of Goodwill.

US to spend $328 million protecting & restoring farmlands, grasslands and wetlands

USDASTEVE KARNOWSKI, Associated Press

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — The U.S. Department of Agriculture has announced $328 million for protecting and restoring farmlands, grasslands and wetlands across the country.

The initiative will buy conservation easements from farmers to help wildlife populations and promote outdoor recreation. The agency selected 380 projects covering 32,000 acres of prime farmland, 45,000 acres of grasslands and 52,000 acres of wetlands.

The money will come from the new Agricultural Conservation Easement Program. It consolidates three former programs into two — one protecting farmlands and grasslands and one for wetlands.

Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack told reporters Monday it’s a popular program. He says the USDA received more than 1,450 applications totaling $546 million covering 345,000 acres. He says the projects selected cover 129,000 acres, with 60 percent being farmland and grassland and 40 percent wetlands.

Prosecutor: No charges against Mo. trooper in drowning

KANSAS CITY (AP) – A special prosecutor says she will not file criminal charges against a Missouri Highway Patrol trooper in the drowning of a man who fell
court
from the trooper’s boat on the Lake of the Ozarks.

Monday’s announcement by Amanda Grellner follows last week’s conclusion by jurors at a coroner’s inquest that the death of 20-year-old Brandon Ellingson was accidental. The jury found that Trooper Anthony Piercy was not criminally negligent in the May 31 drowning.

Ellingson, a college student from Clive, Iowa, was being transported by Piercy after being arrested on suspicion of boating while intoxicated. Ellison was handcuffed when he somehow went into the water. His life vest came off, and he drowned.

Grellner said the trooper’s actions did not meet the legal definition of criminal recklessness.

Shoppers line up for opening of NE Kansas Ikea

Screen Shot 2014-09-08 at 3.00.01 PMMERRIAM, Kan. (AP) — A new Ikea store opens in northeast Kansas on Wednesday, but some shoppers couldn’t wait to get their hands on some of the Swedish furniture company’s products.

KCTV reports customers began lining up at 9 a.m. Monday outside the store in the Johnson County city of Merriam.

Ikea was offering incentives, including a free sofa to the first 40 people in line and a free chair for the next 100.

About 300 people have been hired to work at the 359,000-square-foot store, which will also have a restaurant and a Swedish food market.

Merriam police are expecting up to 10,000 shoppers at Wednesday’s grand opening. Electronic signs are being placed on Interstate 35 to direct people to the store, and police will be at several intersections beginning at 6 a.m. Wednesday.

Ravens cut Ray Rice after violent video released (VIDEO)

OWINGS MILLS, Md. (AP) — The Baltimore Ravens released running back Ray Rice on Monday after a new video appears to show him striking his then-fiancee in an elevator last February. The video was released Monday on a website.  The NFL also suspended the star running back indefinitely.

The grainy video by TMZ Sports apparently shows Rice and Janay Palmer in an elevator at an Atlantic City casino. Each hits the other before Rice knocks Palmer off her feet and into a railing. An earlier TMZ video showed Rice dragging Palmer, now his wife, from the elevator.

Rice’s lawyer, Michael Diamondstein, would not comment to The Associated Press. NFL spokesman Greg Aiello says the latest video was not made available to the league and “no one in our office has seen it until today.” Phone messages and emails to the Ravens were not immediately returned.

Rice was suspended for two games by NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell, who later toughened penalties for domestic violence.

 

 

Savannah woman hospitalized after rear-end accident

ST. JOSEPH- Two people were injured in a crash just after 6:30 a.m. on Monday in Andrew County.

The Missouri State Highway Patrol reported a 2004 Chevy Silverado driven by Nicholas C. Stuber, 29, St. Joseph, was traveling northbound on U.S. 169 three miles north of Avenue City.

The truck rear-ended a 1994 Chevy Caprice driven by Megan D. Reid, 28, Savannah.

Stuber and Reid were transported to Heartland Regional Medical Center with minor injuries.

The Missouri State Highway Patrol reported both were properly restrained at the time of the accident.

Serious respiratory illness hits hundreds of kids

CDC logoLINDSEY TANNER, AP Medical Writer

CHICAGO (AP) — Hundreds of children in about a dozen states have been sickened by a severe respiratory illness that public health officials suspect may be caused by an uncommon virus similar to the germ that causes the common cold.

Nearly 500 children have been treated at one hospital alone — Children’s Mercy in Kansas City, Missouri — and some required intensive care, according to authorities.

The suspected germ, enterovirus 68, is an uncommon strain of a very common family of viruses that typically hit from summertime through the fall.

The virus can cause mild coldlike symptoms but this summer’s cases are unusually severe, said Mark Pallansch, director of the viral diseases division at the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

“It’s not highly unusual but we’re trying to understand what happened this year in terms of these noticeable and much larger clusters of severe respiratory disease,” Pallansch said Monday.

The virus typically causes illness lasting about a week and most children recover with no lasting problems.

Authorities in Illinois and Colorado said their states are among those with suspected or confirmed cases.

Children with asthma and other health problems are especially at risk, but reported cases include children without asthma who have developed asthmalike breathing problems, Pallansch said. He said no deaths have been reported in the outbreak.

Dr. Mary Anne Jackson, director of infectious diseases at Children’s Mercy, said local cases began appearing in mid-August and they appear to have peaked in her area.

Two hospitalized after Andrew Co. motorcycle accident

MHP motorcycle accident crashST. JOSEPH- Two people were injured in a motorcycle accident just before 11:30 p.m. on Sunday in Andrew County.

The Missouri State Highway Patrol reported a 2009 Harley Davidson driven by Ronald G. Wallman, 51, Odessa, was southbound on Interstate 29 five miles north of St. Joseph. The driver lost control of the vehicle and it overturned

 

Wallman and a passenger Denise M. Wallman, 41, Odessa, were transported to Heartland Regional Medical Center.

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