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

Update: Body of missing Nebraska man found in Kansas

CLAY CENTER, Kan. (AP) — Kansas authorities say a Nebraska man who was reported missing earlier this week was found dead in his car.

Mr. Kubes -Photo courtesy Clay Co. Sheriff

Clay County Sheriff Chuck Dunn says the body of 66-year-old Rick Kubes, of Auburn, Nebraska, was discovered Wednesday evening about 3 miles north of Clay Center on Kansas 15.
Dunn says an official cause of death hasn’t been determined but it appeared Kubes had a medical issue because his vehicle had drifted off the road.

The sheriff says Kubes left a home in Clay Center early Sunday to drive to a hospital in Auburn because he was suffering from back pain.

A statewide silver alert was issued on Monday when after he didn’t arrive at the hospital.

———–

CLAY COUNTY – The statewide silver alert issued for Rick Kubes has been canceled, according to a media release from the Kansas Bureau of Investigation. They reported he was located deceased, Wednesday evening.

The KBI released no additional details.

——————-

CLAY COUNTY – The Clay County Sheriff’s Department requested the Kansas Bureau of Investigation (KBI) issue a statewide Silver Alert for a missing 66-year-old Nebraska man. Rick Kubes  was last seen Sunday morning in Clay Center, according to the Sheriff’s Department.

He was last seen wearing dark long sleeve shirt with a dark green windbreaker, blue jeans. a red/white ball cap, red in the front with mesh in the back and wearing glasses and large mustache.  He is 5-foot-10, and weighs 175 pounds. He has white hair and a white mustache.

He was heading to his home in Auburn, Nebraska from Clay Center.

Mr. Kubes travels from Clay Center north on K-15 to Highway 36 then East bound on 77 then North to Beatrice Nebraska and then east on 136 to Auburn.  His family states that he doesn’t travel outside this normal route.

He is driving a 2010 Ford Super Ranger pickup, silver in color. The back window has an “N” Nebraska sticker and a pass thru window.  The front has a black bug guard. There is also a cooler and red two wheel appliance cart in the back.

The tag that is on the vehicle is Nebraska KUMFISH.

Kubes was in pain when he left Clay Center and was headed to the hospital in Auburn. He does have a phone but is not answering it.

Anyone with information is encouraged to call the Law Enforcement Center of Clay Center Kansas at 785-632-5601 opt #5.

Trump Talks Trade During SOTU Speech

President Donald Trump had a lot to say about trade during his State of the Union speech before Congress. However, there may be a battle over trade policy coming in the near future. Trump’s hardline policies are drawing increased scrutiny on Capitol Hill. There is another bipartisan bill coming before Congress designed to limit the president’s ability to impose duties based on national security.

As the president made his first-ever address to a divided Congress, he spoke about the USMCA trade agreement. Politico says the new agreement now partly rests in the hands of the Democratic majority in the House. Trump calls the agreement a “win for farmers and manufacturers,” as well as a no-brainer when compared to the “historic trade blunder and catastrophe known as NAFTA.” However some groups disagree with that assessment. Some Representatives are already asking for a few changes to the USMCA, including stronger labor protections.

Several lawmakers also told Politico that there isn’t any hope of passing the pact while the steel and aluminum tariffs on Canada and Mexico are in place. Trump was more guarded in talking about trade discussions with China, saying “any agreement with Beijing must include real, structural change to end unfair trade practices, reduce the chronic trade deficit, and protect American jobs.”

Driver dies after car rear-ends KDOT truck on I-70

SHAWNEE COUNTY — One person died in an accident just before 3:30a.m. Thursday in Shawnee County.

First responders on the scene of Thursday’s I-70 crash –photo courtesy WIBW TV

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported 2006 Pontiac G6 driven by Dana MichelleThowe, 51, Topeka, was eastbound in Interstate 70 at Fairlawn. The vehicle was traveling too fast for road conditions and rear-ended a 2003 Sterling KDOT truck doing snow removal.

Thowe was pronounced dead at the scene. The truck driver Wasson, Caleb AnthonyWasson, 39, Topeka was not injured.  Thowe was not wearing a seat belt, according to the KHP.

GOP lawmakers in Kansas advance tax relief plan, face battle with governor

By JOHN HANNA

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly’s election victory suggested that Kansas repudiated past GOP fiscal policies, yet voters also encouraged top Republicans to pursue income tax relief by giving conservatives more power in the Legislature.

The contradiction is driving a political clash coming to a head quickly, with the state Senate advancing a tax bill Wednesday. The proposal is designed to keep Kansas residents and businesses from paying higher income taxes to the state because of changes in federal tax laws at the end of 2017.

Providing the tax relief would threaten Kelly’s agenda of boosting spending on public schools, expanding state Medicaid health coverage for the needy and rebuilding parts of state government she believes fell into disrepair under GOP governors. Earlier this week, she called the tax bill a “redo” of failed fiscal policies.

She also pledged repeatedly on the campaign trail last year to accomplish her goals without increasing taxes. Republican leaders argue that if they fail to adjust state taxes following the federal overhaul that would amount to raising taxes on individuals and businesses, which would effectively break Kelly’s promise.

Kelly’s aides have called the tax bill irresponsible and the governor argues that she was elected because voters wanted her to fix state government and avoid fiscal mistakes of the recent past. But many Republican legislators are unimpressed: She won with 48 percent of the vote as conservatives picked up seats in the GOP-controlled Legislature at the expense of moderate Republicans who might have helped her.

“I don’t think she had an election mandate at all,” said Sen. Ty Masterson, a Wichita-area Republican, chairman of a group of conservative lawmakers calling itself the Kansas Truth Caucus.

The federal overhaul is expected to raise revenue in some states and lower it in others. Officials in GOP-led Georgia, Idaho, Iowa, Missouri and Utah cited new revenues in justifying state tax cuts adopted last year. Yet in Arizona, Republican Gov. Doug Ducey last week vetoed a tax relief bill from GOP lawmakers, calling it “poorly conceived.”

In Kansas, Kelly’s campaign last year tapped voter frustration with state income tax cuts championed by former Republican Gov. Sam Brownback, which lawmakers rolled back in 2017 because of the budget woes that followed.

Conservative GOP nominee Kris Kobach made adjusting state tax laws in response to the federal tax overhaul a major issue, while Kelly said legislators should wait to consider changes.

She told reporters Monday: “I can’t imagine why anybody who was here in 2012 and lived through the Brownback tax cuts and the experiment would even consider voting for that bill.”

Kelly added in an Associated Press interview Wednesday: “I’ve consistently said for over a year now that we need to let the dust settle.

“I’m very confident that the people of Kansas are behind me,” she said.

Policies championed by President Donald Trump and Republicans in Congress slashed federal income taxes but included provisions forcing some to pay more to their home states. The federal standard deduction increased — discouraging itemizing — and it triggered a change in Kansas because its tax code is tied to federal law.

The result is that thousands of Kansas residents will pay higher taxes because they claimed itemized deductions on state returns and now can’t if they don’t itemize on their federal returns.

The measure being debated in the Senate Wednesday would allow state filers to claim itemized deductions even if they do not on their federal returns, and it also provides relief from state taxes for businesses triggered by the federal changes. The Kansas Department of Revenue estimates that the bill would save taxpayers $192 million during the budget year beginning in July.

“This is a tax increase if we do not pass this bill,” said Sen. Richard Hilderbrand, a conservative Republican from the state’s southeastern corner.

Republicans also argue that when voters heard that Kelly wouldn’t increase taxes, they saw it as a pledge that they wouldn’t pay more to the state.

“We look forward to her honoring that commitment,” said Eric Stafford, a lobbyist for the Kansas Chamber of Commerce, which is backing the bill. “I don’t know how you can parse it any other way.”

But Sen. Tom Holland, a northeast Kansas Democrat, said it’s no surprise that Republicans and their allies are “going to stretch” the governor’s no-tax-increase pledge.

“It’s not fair at all,” he said.

Projections from legislative researchers show that the state could not provide the proposed tax relief and boost spending on public schools and other parts of the budget as much as Kelly wants without facing a budget shortfall again in 2022.

Lindenwood University president placed on leave

ST. CHARLES, Mo. (AP) — The president of Lindenwood University’s flagship campus in suburban St. Louis has been placed on paid administrative leave but says he’s been given “no reason why.”

Michael Shonrock -photo courtesy Lindenwood

Michael Shonrock says he expects to be fired Friday, when Lindenwood’s Board of Trustees meets. There’s no published agenda.

Shonrock was the president of Emporia State University in Kansas before coming to the St. Charles-based Lindenwood in June 2015. Shonrock says he has received favorable reviews each year. He was placed on leave Tuesday in a letter that he said “doesn’t describe any rationale at all.”

A university spokeswoman says the school doesn’t comment on personnel matters. The president of Lindenwood’s Belleville, Illinois, campus was placed on administrative leave in November and is no longer at the university.

Shonrock holds a Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) from the University of Kansas, an Educational Specialist (Ed.S.) from Pittsburg State University, and a Master of Science (M.S.) and Bachelor of Science (B.S.) from Western Illinois University, according to his bio on the Lindenwood website.

Former student teacher in Missouri faces new sexual misconduct charges

LAMAR, Mo. (AP) — A 35-year-old former student teacher at Lamar Middle School is facing new charges of sexual misconduct with three of the school’s students.

Edson -photo Barton Co.

Emily Edson, of Golden City, was charged in 2017 with two counts of possession of child pornography.

She was charged Tuesday with three counts of sexual misconduct with a child and a count of enticement of the child. The alleged acts were committed while Edson was attending Missouri Southern University and student teaching at the middle school.

The new charges stem from the same investigation that led to charges in 2017.

Police look for truck that rammed vehicles on dealer lot in Kansas

SHAWNEE COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating a case of vandalism and asking the public for help to identify a vehicle.

According to a social media report from Topeka police, just after 12:30a.m. February 2, a driver struck vehicles in the lot of John Hoffer Chrysler Jeep, 3220 SW Topeka Boulevard.

The suspect vehicle appears to be a blue truck, possibly with an extended cab.

If you were in the area and witnessed this, or know any information contact police. The dealership is also offering a reward for information that leads to an arrest.

Missouri wants to put a Truman statue in the U.S. Capitol

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) — Missouri lawmakers are trying again to replace a statue at the U.S. Capitol with one of former President Harry Truman.

photo courtesy Architect of the Capitol

The Senate passed a resolution Wednesday to put Truman’s statue in place of one of former Sen. Thomas Hart Benton, who was instrumental in the nation’s westward expansion.

State lawmakers passed something similar last year. But it was vetoed by Gov. Mike Parson because the version sent to him mistakenly referenced the accomplishments of Benton’s great-great nephew, a famous painter by the same name.

Unless the Benton resolution passes, Truman’s statue is to replace one of former U.S. Sen. Francis Preston Blair Jr., who was instrumental in keeping Missouri out of the Confederacy.

The resolution now goes to the Missouri House.

Substitute teacher accused of racist remark banned from Missouri district

SPRINGFIELD, Mo. (AP) — A Missouri school district says a substitute teacher was escorted out of a school after he was accused of making racist and threatening comments to two black students.

Parent Jean Hawkins says the substitute told her eighth-grade son and a classmate last month that “black boys are nothing but trouble” and that he “was told to shoot you black boys.”

Springfield Public Schools spokesman Stephen Hall described the comments as “disturbing.”

He said the substitute is banned from working in the district. The district also notified its contractor for substitute teachers, Penmac Education Staffing. Penmac said in a statement that there’s “no tolerance for such behavior.” The substitute is suspended pending an investigation.

The substitute’s name hasn’t been released.

Drug charge filed in University of Missouri student’s death

COLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) — A University of Missouri student has been charged with providing the pain medication Percocet to a classmate from Illinois who died in his dorm room.

Boston Perry -photo courtesy Elias, Kallal & Schaaf Funeral Home

Nineteen-year-old Carson Latimer was charged Monday with a felony count of delivery of a controlled substance. His attorney didn’t immediately return a phone message.

University police say Latimer sold Percocet to 19-year-old Boston Perry, of the St. Louis suburb of Bethalto, on Jan. 21. Perry was found unresponsive the next afternoon in his room at the Mark Twain Residence Hall. Emergency medical services were unable to revive him, and he was pronounced dead at the scene.

Charging documents say a Percocet pill found in Latimer’s room had the same imprint as the pills found near Perry’s body. Perry’s toxicology report has not yet been returned.

Copyright Eagle Radio | FCC Public Files | EEO Public File