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Missouri governor signs bill on high school computer science

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) – Missouri Gov. Mike Parson has signed a bill to allow high schoolers to apply a computer science credit toward math, science or practical art credits needed for graduation.

Parson signed the bill Tuesday. It takes effect in Dec. 18.

The legislation also calls for the state Department of Elementary and Secondary Education to roll out an online course intended to boost career awareness for science, technology, engineering and mathematics professions.

Lawmakers passed a similar bill during their annual legislative session that ended in May. But Parson vetoed it, saying the bidding criteria appeared to apply to only one company.

Lawmakers revised the bill during a special session in September in an attempt to open bidding for the online course up to more businesses.

Kan. lawyer sentenced for hitting pregnant woman with car

KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — A recently disbarred lawyer has been sentenced to two years and four months in prison for hitting a nurse while she was crossing a street.

Mark Logan -photo Wyandotte Co.

Fifty-five-year-old Mark Logan was sentenced for aggravated battery and failure to yield to a pedestrian.

The victim, who was pregnant, was hit in October outside the University of Kansas Hospital in Kansas City, Kansas. The collision broke both of her legs. The woman’s baby is 10 months old and in good health.

The Kansas Supreme Court disbarred Logan in June after he voluntarily surrendered his law license.

The court noted in the disbarment order that Logan, who had a law office in Shawnee, faced six disciplinary complaints. He admitted to such violations as misappropriating client money and not cooperating with investigators.

Orman’s campaign treasurer resigns to support Democrat Kelly

Democrat candidate for Kansas governor Laura Kelly

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The campaign treasurer for independent candidate Greg Orman has resigned to endorse Democrat Laura Kelly in the Kansas governor’s race.

Tim Owens, a former Republican state senator from Overland Park, resigned Tuesday, effective immediately. In a news release issued by Kelly’s campaign, Owens said it was time to unite behind Kelly and stop GOP candidate Kris Kobach.

Kelly and Kobach are locked in a tight race with Orman a distant third in recent polling.

The Lawrence Journal-World reports Owen said he has supported Orman’s political ambitions for several years. He said he resigned because he believes electing Kobach would be one of the worst things that could happen to the state.

Orman said he accepted Owens’ resignation but he did not intend to leave the race.

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TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Democratic state Sen. Laura Kelly has raised $900,000 more than Republican Secretary of State Kris Kobach since the end of July in the tight governor’s race.

New campaign finance reports filed Monday show that Kelly has raised $2.3 million, Kobach $1.3 million and Independent Greg Orman $805,000 over that period. In the final weeks of the campaign, Kelly has half a million available to spend, compared to $61,000 for Kobach and less than $15,000 for Orman.

Kobach, who is nationally known for advocating tough immigration and voter identification policies, enjoys the support of President Donald Trump. But Kelly said in a statement that her advantage is “enthusiasm.” She says Kansans of “all political stripes have a home in our campaign to rebuild our state.”

Appeals judges OK lawsuit on Missouri voter photo ID funding

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) – Appeals court judges say a lawsuit challenging Missouri’s new voter photo identification law can proceed.

A Western District Court of Appeals panel on Tuesday undid a lower judge’s earlier decision to toss the case, meaning it can move forward.

At issue is a lawsuit filed by the American Civil Liberties Union, Missouri NAACP and League of Women Voters alleging that Missouri lawmakers did not budget enough money to implement the new voter ID law. They argued that consequently, it should not be enforced.

The law had required voters lacking valid photo ID to sign a sworn statement and present another form of identification to cast a regular ballot, although another recent court ruling removed the law’s teeth.

UPDATE: Body of missing 4-year-old Missouri boy is found

Photo courtesy Jefferson City Police

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) – The body of 4-year-old Missouri boy who has been missing for nearly a week has been found.

Jefferson City police Lt. David Williams said Darnell Gray’s body was discovered about noon in Jefferson City.

Williams said it was too early to tell how the boy died and the medical examiner has been called in. He would not discuss the condition of the body.

When asked if the case was now a homicide investigation, Williams would say only that investigators are working to determine how the boy died.

The FBI is assisting with the investigation.

Darnell was last seen Wednesday night at a Jefferson City apartment where he lives. A woman who was caring for him while his father worked reported the child missing early Thursday.

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JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) – The mother of a missing 4-year-old Missouri boy is asking anyone with information to come forward.

Darnell Gray’s mother made a brief statement at a news conference Monday asking for the public’s help. Her name was not released.

Darnell was last seen Wednesday night at a Jefferson City apartment where he lives. His father was working early Thursday when a woman who was caring for the child reported him missing.

Police spokesman Lt. David Williams said neither parent was with Darnell when he disappeared, and the boy’s disappearance does not appear to be a custody situation.

Williams said the search has expanded beyond the neighborhood where Darnell lived, and he acknowledged the child could no longer be in Jefferson City.

An $11,000 reward is being offered for information in the case.

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JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) – Authorities have drained a pond while searching for a 4-year-old boy who disappeared last week in Jefferson City.

Police say the pond is close to the apartment from which Darnell Gray was reported missing Thursday morning. Also missing was the boy’s coat, backpack, two juice boxes and some cookies.

Police Lt. David Williams says divers were in the pond last week but wanted to check it again.

As the search continues, the reward for information has been raised to $11,000. Williams says the amount of time that Darnell has been missing is “beyond critical.”

The Missouri State Highway Patrol has issued an endangered persons advisory for Darnell. He is believed to be wearing a black and white sleeper, black coat and red Spiderman shoes.

Demolition begins of waterslide on which Kan. boy died

KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — Crews are tearing down a giant waterslide that a 10-year-old Kansas boy was riding when he was decapitated two years ago.

A huge crane is assisting with the demolition -image courtesy KCTV

Deconstruction of the 17-story Verruckt, which was billed as the world’s tallest waterslide, began Tuesday.

Caleb Schwab, the son of a Kansas legislator, was riding the slide at the Schlitterbahn water park in Kansas City, Kansas, in August 2016 when the raft he was in went airborne. Caleb was killed when he struck a metal rod that held a safety net in place.

The demolition was delayed because of disagreements over which parts of the slide should be preserved for evidence in criminal cases. Two maintenance workers have been acquitted of impeding the investigation. Charges are pending against the park’s co-owner and the ride’s designer.

Vice President will make another campaign stop for Missouri, Kansas candidates

JOHNSON COUNTY —Vice President Mike Pence is returning to Kansas Friday to help candidates in Kansas and Missouri.

Pence during a campaign stop in Topeka earlier this month. Photo courtesy office of Vice President Mike Pence

The American Conservative Union and Family Research Council Action will be holding a campaign rally for Gubernatorial Candidate from Kansas Kris Kobach, Kevin Yoder (KS-03), Steve Watkins (KS-02) U.S. Senate Candidate Josh Hawley, U.S. House candidates Vicky Hartzler (MO-04) and Sam Graves (MO-6).

The event in Kansas City on Friday November 2, at 1:00PM at the Hy-Vee Arena (formerly Kemper Arena) will allow guests to be among the first to see the remodeled multilevel nationally recognized sports and entertainment venue. An innovative reuse of a city landmark. Site of the 1976 Republican National Convention.

The event is free.

Tariffs to Change U.S. Crop Plantings

The trade war between the U.S. and China is likely to shift U.S. soybean plantings to corn. For the first time in three decades, U.S. farmers planted more soybeans than corn in 2018. However, that’s likely to reverse again due to tariffs on U.S. soybeans from the ongoing trade war between the U.S. and China. Dow Jones Business and Financial News reports farmers could convert as much as four million acres from soybeans to corn next spring. For 2018, the Department of Agriculture estimated U.S. farmers planted 89.1 million acres of corn, and 89.6 million acres of soybeans. Soybean inspections from U.S. west coast ports are down 82 percent from year-ago levels, and soybean prices have dropped 11 percent as China has enforced a 25 percent tariff on U.S. soybeans. Market experts say final planting decisions for 2019 may not occur until weeks or even days before farmers plant fields due to the uncertainty over tariffs.

Sentencing in Kansas bomb case moved to November

WICHITA— A federal judge has again delayed the sentencing of three men who plotted to bomb a mosque and apartment complex housing Somali refugees in Kansas.

Wright, Allen and Stein-photos Sedgwick Co.

According to a media release from U.S. Attorney Stephen McAllister, U.S. District Judge Eric Melgren on Tuesday moved the sentencing scheduled this week to November 19, for Patrick Stein, Gavin Wright and Curtis Allen.

The men were convicted in April of one count of conspiracy to use a weapon of mass destruction and one count of conspiracy against civil rights. Wright was also convicted of lying to the FBI.

They were indicted in October 2016 for an attack planned for the day after the presidential election in the western Kansas meatpacking town of Garden City.

Trump plans 2 Missouri stops before US Senate election

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) – President Donald Trump will visit Missouri twice to urge the defeat of Democratic Sen. Claire McCaskill as part of his final campaign blitz heading into the midterm elections.

Trump’s campaign says he will rally supporters Thursday in Columbia to vote for McCaskill’s Republican rival, state Attorney General Josh Hawley.

Trump will also visit Cape Girardeau on Monday, the day before the Nov. 6 election.

Trump won Missouri by nearly 19 percentage points in 2016. McCaskill is a top target for Republicans seeking to expand the party’s slim 51-49 edge in the U.S. Senate.

She is among 10 Senate Democrats up for re-election this year in states where Trump won, and is considered among the most vulnerable incumbents.

Trump plans a heavy schedule of campaigning and fundraising through the midterm elections.

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