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Vice President: U.S. ‘encouraged’ by Mexico’s proposals as tariffs loom

WASHINGTON (AP) — U.S. and Mexican officials claim to be making progress as they labored for a second day to avert import tariffs. But President Donald Trump is still threatening to impose them as he tries to pressure Mexico into stemming the flow of Central American migrantsacross the United States’ southern border.

Negoitiations with officials from Mexico photo courtesy Vice Pres. Pence

Vice President Mike Pence, monitoring the talks from his travels in Pennsylvania, said Thursday the U.S. was “encouraged” by Mexico’s latest proposals but that tariffs still were set to take effect on Monday.

Pence added that it would be “for the president to decide” whether Mexico was doing enough to head off the tariffs. Pence said that, among other issues, negotiators had been discussing a potential agreement to make it difficult for those who enter Mexico from other countries to claim asylum in the U.S. Mexico has long resisted that request.

Trump has threatened to impose a 5% tax on all Mexican goods beginning Monday as part of an escalating tariff regime opposed by many in his own Republican Party.

The frantic, last-minute talks underscore Trump’s chaotic approach even when decisions have enormous economic consequences for both the U.S. and its closest allies. Trump has embraced tariffs as a tool he can use as leverage against other countries, dismissing the potential harm to American consumers and manufacturers.

Traveling in Europe, Trump told reporters that negotiators had made “a lot of progress,” but continued to play coy.

“We’ll see what happens,” Trump said in Ireland before leaving for France to attend a D-Day ceremony. “But something pretty dramatic could happen. We’ve told Mexico the tariffs go on. And I mean it, too. And I’m very happy with it.”

It remained unclear whether any deal could be struck with Trump out of the country. Many in Washington still expect the tariffs to go into effect barring a major new concession from Mexico, though lawmakers who have been in talks with both U.S. and Mexican officials said they were hopeful a deal could be reached to satisfy Trump, or at least delay the tariffs’ implementation.

Mexican Foreign Secretary Marcelo Ebrard spent several hours at the State Department Thursday morning, while Trump’s legal counsel and other Mexican aides met at the White House Thursday afternoon.

Ebrard told reporters as he left the State Department that progress was being made and that he was likely to return following consultations at the embassy. He returned in early evening.

His spokesman, Roberto Velasco, tweeted that “Options continue to be explored.”

“The stance of the United States is focused on measures of migratory control, ours on development,” he said.

White House spokeswoman Mercedes Schlapp said in an interview that conversations were continuing but “it looks like we’re moving toward this path of tariffs because what we’ve seen so far is that the Mexicans, what they’re proposing, is simply not enough.”

Pence, who led the discussions Wednesday with Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and other U.S. officials, told reporters in Pennsylvania that the administration had “made it very clear that our neighbors to the south, Mexico, must do more to end the tide of illegal immigration that is besetting our southern border.”

During Wednesday’s talks, the gulf between the countries was clear as Mexico offered small, thus far undisclosed concessions, and the U.S. demanded major action. A senior administration official said the U.S. once again pressed Mexico to step up enforcement on its southern border and to enter into a “safe third country agreement” that would make it difficult for those who enter Mexico from other countries to claim asylum in the U.S.

But Mexico surprised U.S. officials Thursday when they returned to the negotiating table and said they would commit to what Pence had requested, according to the official, who cautioned that significant questions about timing and implementation remain.

Trump officials have said Mexico can prevent the tariffs by securing its southern border with Guatemala, cracking down on criminal smuggling organizations and overhauling its asylum system. But the U.S. has not proposed concrete metrics to assess whether Mexico is complying, and it is unclear whether even those steps would be enough to satisfy Trump on illegal immigration, a signature issue of his presidency and one that he sees as crucial to his 2020 re-election campaign.

Beyond Trump and several White House advisers, few in the administration believe imposing tariffs is a good idea, according to officials familiar with internal deliberations. Those people worry about the negative economic consequences for Americans and believe the tariffs — which would likely spark retaliatory taxes on U.S. exports — would also hurt the administration politically. The officials were not authorized to discuss the matter publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity.

Republicans in Congress have warned the White House that they are ready to stand up to the president to try to block his tariffs, which they worry would spike costs to U.S. consumers, harm the economy and imperil a major pending U.S.-Mexico-Canada trade deal .

Democratic House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Richard Neal said he will introduce a resolution of disapproval to stop the tariffs if Trump goes through with his threat, panning it as presidential “overreach.”

The Department of Homeland Security announced Wednesday that U.S. Border Patrol apprehensions of migrants illegally crossing the border hit the highest level in more than a decade in May: 132,887 apprehensions, including a record 84,542 adults and children traveling together and 11,507 children traveling alone.

KBI makes 16 arrests after 2-month drug investigation

CHANUTE, Kan. – The Kansas Bureau of Investigation (KBI), the Chanute Police Department, and the Allen County Sheriff’s Office made several arrests Thursday following a two-month long joint investigation into the distribution of illegal drugs, according to a media release.

Wade Wilson has four previous convictions in Neosho County for burglary and theft, according to the Kansas Dept. of Corrections

With the assistance of the Neosho County Attorney’s Office, arrest warrants were issued for individuals related to the distribution of methamphetamine. Then, on Thursday, June 6, in Chanute, Kan., and in the surrounding Neosho County area, the arrest warrants were executed as a part of “Operation Street Sweeper.”

The subjects were later booked into the Neosho County and Allen County Jails for drug-related crimes including the suspected distribution of methamphetamine, and the possession of controlled substances. Criminal complaints have been filed against the suspects in Neosho County District Court, and will be prosecuted by Linus A. Thuston, Neosho County Attorney. Every defendant is presumed innocent until and unless proven guilty in a court of law.

Arrested during this operation were:

 Arrestee Name,    Age,    City,    Charge (*Listed charge may be the most serious of several charges)

Wade W. Wilson, 48, Chanute, distribution of methamphetamine

Aubrey M. McKinney, 44, Humboldt, distribution of methamphetamine

Foster A. Curls, 37, Chanute, distribution of methamphetamine

Jeremy M. Wilmot, 39, Chanute, distribution of methamphetamine

Shelby T. Young, 27, Chanute, distribution of methamphetamine

Jeffery R. Sinclair, 32, Chanute, distribution of methamphetamine

Heather R. Treiber, 38, Chanute, distribution of methamphetamine

Patrick J. Blanchard, 40, Chanute, distribution of methamphetamine

Brion L. Dinkel, 45, Chanute, distribution of methamphetamine

Rickie A. Blanchard, 29, Chanute, distribution of methamphetamine

Donna R. Brewer, 36, Chanute, distribution of methamphetamine

Tim L. Ingles, 29, Chanute, distribution of methamphetamine

Heather A. Cox, 43, Chanute, distribution of methamphetamine

James A. Briggs, 50, Chanute, distribution of methamphetamine

Jessica M. Coyer, 40, Chanute, possession of a controlled substance

Ashten N. Wilson, 22, Chanute, possession of a controlled substance

The joint operation represented a coordinated law enforcement effort to combat drug violence and reduce the accessibility of illegal drugs affecting southeast Kansas. This investigation is ongoing and additional arrests are expected.

 

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The Latest: Effort to repeal Missouri 8-week abortion ban hits roadblock

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) — Efforts to repeal Missouri’s new eight-week abortion ban with a public vote hit a roadblock Thursday, the latest development in a fight over abortion rights that’s playing out on multiple fronts in the state.

Republican Secretary of State Jay Ashcroft told reporters that he rejected two referendum petitions aimed at repealing the sweeping abortion law — one backed by the ACLU of Missouri and the other backed by businessman David Humphreys, a wealthy GOP donor. Ashcroft cited a provision in the Missouri Constitution that prohibits referendums on legislation that has already taken effect.

Most new laws in Missouri automatically take effect on Aug. 28 of each year, as the ban on abortions at eight weeks of pregnancy will. The law includes an exception only for medical emergencies, not rape or incest.

The Republican-led Legislature, though, voted to make a section of the bill that changed parental consent laws for minors seeking abortions take effect as soon as Republican Gov. Mike Parson signed it into law.

Ashcroft, the state’s top election official, said that effectively blocked two efforts to repeal the law through a public vote. He cited a provision in the constitution that prohibits referendums on “laws necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health or safety.”

The new law requires a parent or guardian giving written consent for a minor to get an abortion to first notify the other custodial parent, unless the other parent has been convicted of a violent or sexual crime, is subject to a protection order or is “habitually in an intoxicated or drugged condition.”

The law’s “emergency clause” states that enacting the parental-consent portion is vital “because of the need to protect the health and safety of women and their children, both unborn and born.”

“Because of that declaration by the Legislature, we have no other avenue but to reject Referendum 1 and Referendum 2 for failure to comply with the requirements of the Missouri Constitution,” Ashcroft said.

The ACLU of Missouri sued Ashcroft on Thursday, and the attorney who filed the other rejected petition also said he will sue to force the secretary of state to approve that referendum.

“This move is so predictable, we’ve already assembled our suit to require the Secretary of State to put aside his anti-abortion agenda and do his job by certifying the referendum,” the ACLU of Missouri’s acting executive director, Tony Rothert, said in a statement.

Ashcroft said his office is still reviewing a third and slightly different referendum petition that was filed by attorney Lowell Pearson, who said he represents the Committee to Protect the Rights of Victims of Rape and Incest. That group is also supported by Humphreys, who last week called the eight-week abortion ban “bad public policy” because it lacks exceptions for pregnancies caused by rape and incest.

Pearson said the final pending referendum petition does not seek to force a vote on provisions in the legislation that are already in effect. It’s unclear whether that would satisfy Ashcroft, who said he aims to make a decision on the petition’s constitutionality by the end of next week.

A similar repeal tactic was used in 2017, when opponents of a law limiting union powers submitted enough signatures to block it from taking effect. Missouri voters overwhelmingly rejected that anti-union law in 2018.

The legal dispute over the abortion law comes as the state’s only abortion clinic fights its own court battle to continue providing the service, despite a licensing dispute with the state health department.

The health department last week declined to renew the St. Louis Planned Parenthood clinic’s license to perform abortions, saying March inspections at the clinic uncovered deficiencies. The agency cited “at least one incident in which patient safety was gravely compromised.” It also cited what it called “failed surgical abortions in which women remained pregnant,” and alleged that the clinic had failed to obtain “informed consent.”

Clinic leaders say the allegations are part of an effort by an anti-abortion administration to eliminate the procedure in the state. Planned Parenthood pre-emptively sued to ensure continued abortion services.

Circuit Judge Michael Stelzer last week issued a ruling allowing the clinic to continue performing abortions as the court challenge plays out. During a Wednesday hearing, he did not indicate when he might rule on Planned Parenthood’s request for a preliminary injunction to allow abortions to continue.
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JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) — Efforts to repeal Missouri’s new eight-week abortion ban with a public vote have hit a roadblock.

Republican Secretary of State Jay Ashcroft said Thursday that the state Constitution prohibits a referendum on the bill.

The state’s top election official says that’s because of what’s known as an emergency clause making part of the measure take effect immediately.

While the ban on most abortions at eight weeks of pregnancy is slated to take effect Aug. 28, another section on parental notification for minors receiving abortions was enacted when Gov. Mike Parson signed the bill last month.

The ACLU of Missouri had submitted a referendum petition on the legislation after Parson signed it. A referendum would force a public vote on the law in 2020 and prevent it from taking effect until then.

Missouri students suing for-profit college for false claims

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Two former Missouri college students are suing a for-profit school, alleging they were deceived into borrowing thousands of dollars in student loans with false assurances about the quality of the education and their job prospects after graduation.

Shayanne Bowman and Jackquelynn Mortenson filed the lawsuit against National American University in Jackson County Circuit Court.

The women say the school ran a “systematic, deceptive marketing scheme” that tricked them into applying for federal student loans that they cannot repay.

National American University closed its two Kansas City-area campuses in May to focus on online education.

Emails show chaos before Kan. community college player’s death

By ROXANA HEGEMAN

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — The assistant football coach at a Kansas community college told officials a 300-pound defensive lineman who died of heatstroke after practice was “making a stressful moan” when he arrived to help, but rather than immediately dial 911 he called the head coach “for instruction to see how we wanted to handle the situation.”

Bradforth and his mother after his graduation from Neptune High School -courtesy Joanne Atkins-Ingram

That account and others from emails The Associated Press obtained through an open records request detail a chaotic nearly 30-minute period last August between when teammates found 19-year-old Braeden Bradforth in an alley outside his dorm and the arrival of paramedics, who struggled to reach him with a gurney.

“The fact that (the assistant coach) determined he was in visible distress was not enough for him to call 911 and get emergency help there immediately, I mean it is just mindboggling — just reckless disregard for this child’s life and it really disturbs me,” said Jill Greene, the attorney for Bradforth’s mother, Joanne Atkins-Ingram.

Greene provided the AP with copies of dispatch and emergency medical service records, hospital records, a coroner’s report and autopsy results from Bradforth’s death after the Aug. 1, 2018 , practice at Garden City Community College in western Kansas. The prominent program lost the junior college national championship game by 1 point last year after winning the title in 2016.

Bradforth was from Neptune, New Jersey, where the air is much thicker than in Garden City, which is about a half mile in elevation. The death happened on the first day of conditioning practice, when players were required to run 50-yard sprints 36 times.

“The whole way that they handled this is wrong and we need to change this,” Atkins-Ingram told the AP in an interview.

The assistant coach, Caleb Young, wrote in one email to university officials that while he was on the phone talking to head coach Jeff Sims, players were filling jugs and bottles to pour water on Bradforth.

Paramedics wrote that when they arrived Bradforth was wet, moaning and sitting slouched over with his head leaning on a building. The paramedics’ report noted coaches had made all the players go back to their rooms “so any witness(es), if any, were not present at this time.”

As emergency workers loaded him onto the stretcher, Bradforth began to choke, opened his eyes and threw up what looked like “dirty motor oil,” Young wrote. Bradforth arrived at the hospital at 10:33 p.m. in critical condition. He died at 11:06 p.m., hospital records show.

E. Randy Eichner, a former team physician and professor emeritus of medicine at the University of Oklahoma has researched deaths of football players for 30 years, said Bradforth’s was one of the most egregious he has seen. Had Bradforth been put in a tub of iced water when he got off the field, he would have walked home in good health and played the next day, Eichner said.

“They did a lot wrong,” Eichner said.

The death was ruled an exertional heat stroke. Eichner said heat stroke has killed more than 40 high school football players and at least 10 college players since 2000.

College officials did not directly respond to the AP’s questions about the emails. Instead, they re-sent a previous written statement noting they authorized an independent investigation and saying they are “aware of the misconception that the college is unwilling to give answers to the family or has interfered with information about the events that transpired on the day of Braeden’s death.”

Under pressure from Bradforth’s family and the New Jersey congressional delegation , the college hired independent investigators to review the case, including the firm that was brought in by the University of Maryland after the heatstroke death of offensive lineman Jordan McNair after a workout last year.

The emails and documents the AP reviewed showed the internal review the college released last month under mounting pressure mostly regurgitated Young’s statement from August. Notably, the college did not include in its publicly released internal review several details that call into question the coaches’ handling of the situation, such the assistant coach immediately recognizing when he got to the scene that the collapsed player was “in visible distress … and making a stressful moan.”

Young’s email says Bradforth did not show signs of distress during the conditioning or immediately after it ended at 9:05 p.m., but he stumbled as they were walking from the football field toward a team meeting in a nearby building. Young describes being interested in getting the last straggling players, including Bradforth, to the meeting on time. He wrote that he told Bradforth, “Hey, you’re good. Let’s go,” to which Bradforth responded, “Yeah, I’m good. I’m good.”

Soon, however, Bradforth started walking toward his dorm, and Young asked him if he was quitting the team. Bradforth didn’t respond verbally but shook his head. Young said he went to the team meeting and told a coach that Bradforth had quit.

Sims told Young to call the athletic trainer, T.J.Horton, who came to the scene and attempted to get Bradforth to respond. Horton called 911 at 10:01 p.m., around 25 minutes after players first found him on the ground, dispatch records show.

Sims has since been hired as head coach at Missouri Southern State, a Division II school closer to his native St. Louis.

The responding ambulance crew was unable to get a gurney into the narrow alley where he was found. Instead, paramedics and coaches carried Bradforth to the gurney on a stretcher.

Atkins-Ingram said she still has many questions about what happened after that, before her son died.

“Did anybody ride in the ambulance with him? Was he able to even ask for me?” his mother said. “I don’t know any of those details and it may not be important to anybody else, but they are very important to me … I deserve to know about my son’s last moments.”

Topeka Zoo releases detailed, official report on tiger attack

TOPEKA, Kan – During an incident with a Sumatran tiger at the Topeka Zoo and Conservation Center in April, 40-year-old zoo keeper Kristyn Hayden-Ortega sustained critical injuries.

Sanjiv the tiger involved in the incident photo Topeka Zoo

On Thursday, the zoo released a detailed incident report on what happened April 20 when the tiger attacked the veteran zoo keeper, statements from witnesses, the emergency response, staff response, the violation of protocol and process corrections.

Preface:

What follows is a narrative summarizing the tiger incident that occurred at the Topeka Zoo and Conservation Center on April 20, 2019 in which a zoo keeper was injured.  This narrative will serve as the official report to the greater Topeka community, the media and several related agencies and organizations.   In some areas of the report, extra explanation is added with the intent of making it understandable by all that read it.  Further questions about the content of this narrative can be directed to the following individuals:

Brendan Wiley, Topeka Zoo and Conservation Center Director, [email protected]

Molly Hadfield, City of Topeka Communications Director, [email protected]

Jacque Russell, City of Topeka Human Resources Director, [email protected]

 

Incident Summary:

On April 20, 2019 at approximately 9:30 AM, a zoo keeper at the Topeka Zoo and Conservation Center entered an outdoor Sumatran tiger habitat.  Seconds later, a male Sumatran tiger left an adjoining indoor holding space and entered the outdoor habitat the keeper was in.  Seeing the tiger, the keeper retreated towards the exit of the habitat.  The tiger grabbed the keeper from behind and pulled her back into the habitat and subsequently inflicted injuries.  Within three minutes and forty-five seconds after the tiger grabbed the keeper, the tiger was secured in an inside holding space and first responders were administering first aid to the injured keeper.

Internal Investigation/Review of Incident:

The purpose of the internal investigation or review is to provide a holistic summary of what went wrong, why it went wrong and what action steps will be taken to prevent a similar incident from occurring at the Topeka Zoo.  Management of the Zoo has elected to expand the findings of this review to all similar situations at the Zoo.  If through this review an area of improvement is identified to improve tiger management, where it makes sense that same improvement will be made throughout the Zoo’s other carnivore programs.  It is not the purpose of this review to describe potential disciplinary actions surrounding this incident.  Personnel matters relating to this incident will be managed in accordance with City of Topeka Personnel Code, City and Zoo policies along with union bargaining agreement guidelines.  As such, those outcomes will remain confidential.

Witness Account:

Zoo Keepr Kristyn Hayden-Ortega injured in the tiger attack-photo courtesy Topeka zoo

On the morning of April 20, 2019, a Topeka Zoo Docent (trained volunteer) was stationed at the zoo’s Sumatran tiger habitat as part of the zoo’s plan to celebrate Earth Day.  Shortly after, the Docent was joined by two zoo guests, a wife (Guest 1) and husband (Guest 2).  The Docent and the two guests watched a Zoo Keeper (Tiger Keeper) complete the morning cleaning routine in the South side of the Sumatran tiger habitat.  During this time, the zoo’s male Sumatran tiger housed on the North half of the habitat had access to both the indoor and outdoor areas of the habitat through Tiger Outside Shift Door D.  The Docent and the two Guests watched the male tiger in the North enclosure go inside and back out several times during their stay in front of the tiger habitat.  During this time, Tiger Outside Shift Door D was locked in the open position giving the male tiger free access to choose whether he wanted to be inside or outside.

At approximately 9:25 AM, the Tiger Keeper was observed coming around the North side of the tiger habitat where she proceeded to open a drain valve to drain the pool in the male tiger’s outdoor habitat.  The Tiger Keeper then proceeded into the keeper area of the tiger holding building.  The male tiger went into his portion of the tiger building through Tiger Outside Shift Door D.

At approximately 9:30, the Docent and two guests observed the Tiger Keeper again proceeding around the North side of the exhibit.  The Tiger Keeper proceeded to the North Habitat Access Gate and entered the outdoor tiger habitat.  Seconds later, the male tiger went through Tiger Outside Shift Door D thereby entering the same outdoor space that the Tiger Keeper was in.  Seeing the tiger, the Tiger Keeper turned and proceeded back towards the access gate.  The tiger caught the Tiger Keeper from behind and pulled her to the ground.  The tiger proceeded to bite and claw at the Tiger Keeper several times inflicting wounds to the head, neck, back and one or both arms.

A statement by the observing Docent, recounts that as the Tiger Keeper entered the outdoor habitat the situation appeared wrong as the Docent thought the tiger had access to the outdoor habitat as the Docent had recently observed the tiger going in and out.  Because the tiger was not outside, the Docent assumed the tiger was secure in a separate indoor area.

Emergency Response:

The incident was witnessed by the Docent and Guests 1 and 2 through a glass viewing window into the outdoor habitat.  Both the Docent and Guest 1 took immediate actions which triggered the Zoo’s emergency response.

Realizing what time of day it was, the Docent knew there would be numerous keepers around nearby animal exhibits.  Across from the Zoo’s outdoor tiger habitat is an outdoor hippo pool.  She saw a staff person cleaning the hippo’s outdoor pool.  In an effort to convey the emergency of the situation, she shouted, “There is a tiger out!  There is a tiger out!”

At the same time as the Docent turned to seek a staff person to initiate the zoo’s emergency response, Guest 1 placed a call to 911.  We estimate that the 911 call was placed between 7 and 15 seconds after the tiger grabbed and pulled the Tiger Keeper to the ground.  Because the 911 operator kept Guest 1 on the call until after first responders began administering first aid to the Tiger Keeper, we are confident in stating that the entire incident occurred between three minutes forty-four seconds and four minutes two seconds.

Based on the 911 call placed by Guest 1 at 9:29 AM on April 20, 2019, we can establish time markers within the emergency.  To understand the 911 call, it is important to note two things.  First, during the 911 call Guest 1 walked away from the tiger habitat.  Guest 1’s husband (Guest 2) stayed at the tiger habitat and watched the incident progress and relayed information to Guest 1 to convey to the 911 operator.  Second, Guest 1 stated in an interview that she placed the 911 call immediately after the tiger grabbed the Tiger Keeper.  Yet during the call, she stated this but also stated that the incident happened about five minutes ago.  Her guess at the time frame was more than twice the actual time.  It is interesting to note that all but one witness accounts more than doubled the estimate at how long things took.  This is the human reaction that, “it felt like an eternity.”  The one staff person that had an almost accurate sense of the time duration has a military background and served in active duty.  The time markers of the 911 call are as follows:

 

0:01     911 operator answers call

0:37     Keeper 1 arrives at tiger habitat

1:00     Outdoor tiger habitat secured

2:33     Keeper 1 and Keeper 2 calling tiger into indoor area

3:09     Sirens from first responders approaching zoo can be heard

3:47     Tiger is secured inside building and first responders are already treating Tiger Keeper

 

Staff Response:

At hearing the Docent’s shout, an Animal Care Assistant cleaning the hippo pool immediately proceeded inside the Animals and Man building and notified a Zoo Keeper (Zoo Keeper 1).  While the description of the emergency from the Docent was a little unclear, it gave enough information that something serious was going on near the tiger habitat.  Keeper 1 immediately raced to the tiger habitat going through an unoccupied elephant habitat to get there.  A few seconds later, another keeper (Keeper 2) arrived at the location of Keeper 1 via golf cart.  Keeper 1 pointed to where the tiger had the Tiger Keeper in the tiger habitat.  Keeper 2 assessed the situation then raced around the North side of the habitat and secured the access gate into the outdoor tiger habitat.  At the same time, Keeper 2 declared over the zoo’s radio system a “Keeper Down” emergency at the tiger habitat.

Keeper 2 went into the back area of the tiger building.  Keeper 2 unlocked Tiger Outside Shift Door D that was in the open position and grabbed the tiger’s meat and began calling the tiger inside.

A member of the zoo’s firearms team was headed towards one of two gun safes maintained on the zoo’s property.  The firearms team member selected a 30.06 rifle from the safe and proceeded towards the tiger habitat.

Initially, the tiger did not respond to being called inside.  Keeper 1 ran into the building and grabbed some of the meat in the event the plan shifted to simply luring the tiger away from the Tiger Keeper in the outdoor habitat.  Keeper 1 returned to the outside vantage point.

Having heard a follow up radio call, a third keeper (Keeper 3) arrived quickly at the tiger habitat from the nearby Children’s Zoo Barn.  Keeper 3 assisted Keeper 2 in trying to call the tiger inside.

Keeper 3 took some meat to take to the outdoor habitat.  As Keeper 3 was heading towards the outside area, the tiger entered the building and was secured inside by Keeper 2.  Keeper 2 declared an “All Clear” over the radio system giving staff and first responders clearance to enter the outdoor tiger habitat and begin administering first aid.

Just prior to the arrival of the zoo’s firearms team member at the tiger habitat, the tiger had entered and been secured in the inside tiger holding area.

Violation of Protocol:

Zoo policy never allows for a person and a tiger to share the same space.  Multiple Zoo protocols and procedures dictate what must happen before a staff person enters a space previously occupied by a tiger.   On the morning of April 20, a staff person omitted the crucial step of locking the tiger inside prior to the staff person entering the outdoor habitat.

Prior to the tiger incident occurring, safety protocols centered on duplication of processes such as two doors to unlock and enter to gain access to the tiger holding building and two locks on every door that a person might use to enter a space that a tiger may have access to.  Specific instructions detail the sequence of steps that tiger keepers follow through the progression of daily tiger management.  Until that morning, these policies and protocols had provided safe management of large cat species at the zoo.  As evidenced by the events of the morning of April 20, these policies which proved safe for decades did not prevent a human from skipping a critical process (securing a tiger in an inside space prior to entering the outdoor habitat) and creating a dangerous situation.

Process Correction:

Within two hours after the incident occurred, the Zoo’s two Animal Care Supervisors put into place additional policy to prevent the chance of human error repeating a situation like the one that occurred the morning of April 20.  The zoo’s organizational culture allows frontline leadership to put safety related procedural changes in place prior to formal review with senior management.  The change that the Supervisors put into place is that before a person enters a space that a potentially dangerous animal was previously authorized to access and vice versa, a second person must check locks, doors and location of animals within, before a staff person opens a door or gate to that previously authorized space.

While this change in policy is a clear enhancement to reduce the risk of human error, we don’t know that it is our end policy.  In the days leading up to this event, the Zoo’s Animal Care Supervisors were at an Association of Zoos and Aquariums Safety Summit in which a topic of discussion was a Two Lock Two Key System for potentially dangerous animal management.  In this system, there are two differently keyed locks on all potentially dangerous doors and no staff person has both keys to both locks.

It is the current belief of management that the Two Key Two Lock system is the long-term direction the Zoo will pursue.  We will spend the next 90 days evaluating our facility in line with the Two Key Two Lock system and the resources needed to safely operate it.  As part of this evaluation, we will work with an outside consultant.  If through the evaluation process our hypothesis holds true, we plan to implement the Two Lock Two Key System by the end of the first quarter of 2020 based on an approximate three month evaluation and facility modification process followed by a six month training and implementation process.

Emotional Wellbeing of Zoo Staff:

Within an hour and a half of the emergency the City of Topeka Human Resources Director was in touch with the Zoo Director wanting to know what resources may be helpful to staff involved in the incident.  Based on the Zoo Director’s initial interview with Zoo Keepers 1, 2 and 3, the Zoo Keepers welcomed the opportunity to debrief in a professionally guided situation.  As such, a counselor was available on April 21.  On Monday April 22, all paid and unpaid staff of both the Zoo and Friends of the Zoo were allowed and encouraged to participate in the first of two group sessions with the Topeka Police Department’s Peer Support Team.  On Tuesday April 23, through the City’s Employee Assistance Program, private counseling sessions were available to anyone involved with the incident.  Three additional days of private counseling sessions were offered.  Additionally, as per normal, employees have access to the Employee Assistance Program on their own initiative.

Outside Agency Review:

There have been a lot of questions as to what outside agencies will review this incident.  There is one agency responsible for a holistic review with the purpose of preventing similar incidents from happening again – that agency is the City of Topeka.  Other agencies will review from the angle that relates to their authority.  The USDA will review as it relates to the Animal Welfare Act.  OSHA does not regulate governmental organizations.  The government counterpart to OSHA is the state level Department of Labor.  The KDOL will review the incident from the perspective of employee safety.  The final agency to review the situation is the Association of Zoos and Aquariums (AZA).  The AZA will perform an in-depth evaluation as to whether or not the Topeka Zoo had sufficient policies up to industry standard in place to prevent an incident like this from happening.  The AZA will utilize its Accreditation Commission to make this determination.

  • USDA – The USDA and specifically the APHIS (Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service) is responsible for reviewing this incident as it relates to animal welfare within the standards of the Animal Welfare Act. The Topeka Zoo has a history of self-reporting potential violations of the Animal Welfare Act with APHIS.  In that vein, it is also important to note that the Topeka Zoo does not determine whether or not an item or act is compliant or noncompliant with the Animal Welfare Act.  That responsibility lies with APHIS Veterinary Medical Officers (VMO) and their superiors.  As such, in self reporting the Zoo only relays information.  Information was relayed to a VMO on April 20, 2019 regarding the Zoo’s tiger incident.  A VMO arrived at the Zoo on the morning of Wednesday, April 24 to gather information.  The next morning, she arrived to gather additional information.  Based on the information available to that point; because the tiger was not injured, the tiger never left the enclosure, no members of the public were injured and the fact that the staff person involved was clearly an experienced employee – there was no apparent animal welfare issue.
  • Kansas Department of Labor – A Safety and Health Inspector from the Kansas Department of Labor was on site to interview management staff and to see the site where the incident occurred on the afternoon of Thursday, April 25. The inspector returned for additional information on Wednesday, May 8.  During the review by the KDOL, the inspector interviewed staff regarding safety protocols, reviewed training processes and reviewed the tiger programs Continuity of Operations Plan.  The inspector also reviewed the qualification of the Tiger Keeper.  Zoo staff shared with the inspector the protocol change to the Two Person System implemented the day of the tiger incident.  On Friday, May 10, the KDOL released their findings that the Topeka Zoo is not required to make any additional changes.
  • AZA – The Association of Zoos and Aquariums is the accreditation authority that the Topeka Zoo and Conservation Center belongs to. AZA was notified about the incident within an hour of the time the incident occurred.  As it relates to this incident, AZA will review the incident to understand what happened and focus on preventing such incidents from recurring at all AZA accredited institutions.  As such, the Topeka Zoo will provide an initial report to the accreditation commission and will follow up on any recommendations or questions the Commission may have.

Other Enhancements:

Immediately following this incident, a procedure was put into place using a second person to prevent an emergency of this nature ever occurring again at the Topeka Zoo.  While that procedure was already in place with elephants and apes, it now applies to all carnivores as well.  Additionally, Zoo management wanted to perform a comprehensive review of all of the Zoo’s carnivore facilities and procedures with the intent of providing additional policy to guard against further incidents.  To that end, the following items were or are being evaluated:

  • Ante Areas (Safety Entrance) to potentially dangerous animal areas – Some of the Zoo’s carnivore habitats have outdoor habitat entrances that assume all protocols and policies are followed correctly before a staff person enters the outdoor habitat.  Because this incident points to the fact that human error is something we need to guard against, the decision has been made to fabricate and install safety entrances at all large carnivore outdoor habitat entrances to insure that when an outdoor habitat receives routine servicing, there is never an open access point to the habitat
  • CO2 Fire Extinguishers – The Topeka Zoo maintains several CO2 fire extinguishers to be used in an animal emergency or animal introduction if needed to alter aggressive acts between conspecifics. Previously, the CO2 extinguishers were stored in a centralized building within the zoo’s property ready for deployment when needed.  When a CO2 fire extinguisher is activated, it releases a loud roar and creates a fog that can distract an animal.  The use of a CO2 fire extinguisher was not needed in this emergency.  However, because of how fast this emergency played out, if a CO2 extinguisher would have been needed, retrieving one from the stored location would have been time prohibitive.  The zoo is in the process of ordering a CO2 extinguisher for each building.  They will be installed in each building at the same location to make them easier to find in an emergency situation.  They will be clearly labeled so that they can be differentiated from the dry powder extinguishers to be used in a fire related emergency.
  • Pepper Spray – Inside each potentially dangerous animal holding building there is a pepper spray canister in a wall holder painted in a bright yellow color. This canister is placed in a location for a staff person to grab in the event of a potentially dangerous situation.  While it is not required, the zoo maintains a supply of smaller canisters that can be worn on a person for staff who choose to do so.  The potential use of pepper spray was evaluated during this incident.  In regards to the Tiger Keeper, the use of pepper spray is considered to be contraindicated.  The Tiger Keeper was only two steps into the exhibit when she saw the tiger.  Her instinct was to retreat to the exit.  Within that time, the tiger grabbed her and pulled her back into the exhibit.  It is estimated that the Tiger Keeper would not have had time to grab and discharge the pepper spray before the tiger was on her.  With the emergency response, pepper spray was on scene.  Because of the relatively calm nature of the tiger, the decision was made not to discharge pepper spray in fear that the spray might incite the tiger.  In hind sight, this was the right decision for this emergency.  As such, management continues its policy of providing pepper spray to staff that want it but not requiring that it be worn by every employee.
  • Panic Alarms and Personal Body Alarms – This item of consideration does not apply to this emergency. This emergency did raise the question with staff as to what if this scenario presented itself on a cold winter day when there might not be someone that witnesses an emergency.  The Topeka Zoo is investigating options of a device that staff can wear on their body that would declare an alarm even when the staff person in danger cannot declare the alarm on their own behalf.
  • Monthly Staff Tours – This item also does not directly relate to this emergency but relates to the general emergency readiness within the team that operates the Topeka Zoo. This emergency reminds us that you cannot readily predict when or where your next emergency will take place.  Based on those unknowns, we visualized a need to get all of our staff into all of our buildings on a regular basis so that all of our staff can be more comfortable with the situation if they find themselves actively managing an emergency situation.  As a collective team that operates the Topeka Zoo, we meet on the first Wednesday of every month.  With our May meeting we began a plan where each month we will tour an area of the Zoo.

Emergency Response Tactics to Improve On:

The staff at the Topeka Zoo regularly tabletops and practices drills for a number of situations.  It is our belief that practicing emergency drills led to the rapid outcome of this event.  This was the first incident of this nature in this zoo’s history.  Given that this was a terrible experience from the get go, a better outcome could not have been imagined.  Immediately after the incident was resolved, a request was made of all paid and unpaid staff for a statement of what they saw, heard and did during the emergency.  A debriefing was held with Keepers 1, 2 and 3 and a debriefing was held with the entire staff.  On June 5, the zoo will conduct drills on the emergency reenacting exactly what happened and then reviewing what could have been done better.

Even before that review begins, we can identify ways we can improve our emergency responses.  Some of those observations and improvements are as follows:

  • Training drills are valuable however, this real emergency played out much faster. In a drill, our tendency has been to role play all the different steps that occur in a potential situation one at a time.  This emergency demonstrated that many emergency processes transpire simultaneously.  We think we can come up with a better system for drills that can better replicate a true emergency environment with multiple active processes.
  • Radio Communication – Radio communication is something we work on in every drill. Given the speed and outcome at which this emergency resolved, it is hard to be critical at how the radio communication was managed.  Having said that, it was unclear for support staff to know who the ICO was.  Because most of our drills center around complicated and worst case emergencies in which for public safety reasons the zoo gets closed, the Zoo was closed for a brief time the morning of the tiger incident.  However, the Zoo closed after the tiger was secured in the building.  These are items we will work on as we reenact this emergency and drill on others.
  • In an Emergency, Things Happen Fast – As referenced earlier, we will be making an effort to make sure that items needed during emergency situations are readily accessible throughout the Zoo and where possible, emergency items are stored or installed in similar places in all facilities.

Conclusion:

Until a perfect system can be put in place that can prevent the possibility of human error from occurring, organizations that manage potentially dangerous animals must have facilities and teams prepared for emergency situations.  The Topeka Zoo family would like to express our sincere gratitude to the Docent and Guest 1 and 2 for their willingness to act in a critical situation and to Keepers 1, 2 and 3 for their swift and decisive actions that most likely saved the life of a coworker.

 

Grassley, Fortenberry urge USDA Secretary to enact payment limits

Two Midwestern lawmakers are calling on the Department of Agriculture to enact payment limits through farm programs. Senate Republican Chuck Grassley of Iowa along with and Representative Jeff Fortenberry of Nebraska penned a letter to Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue, urging him “use his existing regulatory authority” in order to ensure that individuals receiving farm payments are actively engaged in farming.

The letter states the farm safety net “was never intended to maximize government payments.” The letter calls for “an effective payment limit system,” one in which each farm is subject to the same limitation. Grassley has been a vocal advocate for farm payment limitations. A Grassley amendment to close a loophole allowing an unlimited number of so-called managers to qualify for federal subsidies was included in the last two farm bills.

In both of the last two farm bill negotiations, Grassley’s amendment was removed from the final bill. Before the last farm bill, the Government Accountability Office documented that at least $259 million was paid out through the actively engaged loophole Grassley’s amendment sought to close.

Indictment: 4 went shopping in Kansas City with counterfeit $100 bills

KANSAS CITY, KAN. – Four defendants were charged Wednesday in an indictment alleging they “washed” $1 bills to produce counterfeit $100 bills that they passed during a shopping spree, according to U.S. Attorney Stephen McAllister.

Campbell photo Johnson Co.
Escamilla photo Johnson Co.

Steven Shane Escamilla, 30, Laguna Hills, Calif., Courtney Campbell, 37, Bouse, Ariz., John Sebestyen, 50, Mission Viejo, Calif., and Jonathan Washington, 33, no known address, are charged with conspiracy to commit counterfeiting. In addition, Escamilla is charged with one count of possessing counterfeit bills and one count of possessing methamphetamine; Campbell is charged with one count of possessing counterfeit bills and one count of possessing methamphetamine; Sebestyen is charged with one count of possessing counterfeit bills and one count of possessing methamphetamine and heroin; and Washington is charged with one count of possession with intent to distribute methamphetamine.

Sebestyen-photo Johnson Co.
Washington -photo Johnson Co.

According to documents filed with the court, an employee at a hotel in Overland Park contacted police to report that the defendants were acting suspiciously. They deposited trash in containers away from their rooms that contained evidence of criminal activity.

The indictment alleges that in some cases defendants purchased goods with counterfeit cash and then returned the goods for a refund at another branch of the same store.

Upon conviction, the crimes carry the following penalties:

Conspiracy: Up to five years in federal prison and a fine up to $250,000.

Possessing counterfeit cash: Up to 20 years and a fine up to $250,000.

Possession with intent to distribute methamphetamine: Not less than five years and not more than 40 years and a fine up to $4 million.

Possessing a controlled substance: Up to a year and a fine up to $1,000.

The Overland Park Police Department and the U.S. Secret Service investigated. Assistant U.S. Attorney Leon Patton is prosecuting.

House appropriations ag spending bill rejects many Trump proposals

The House Appropriations Committee 2020 Agriculture spending bill rejects many of the cuts proposed by President Trump. Representative Nita Lowey, a New York Democrat who chairs the full Appropriations Committee, says the bill “rejects the President’s misguided budget and instead invests in important initiatives for the people.”

Subcommittee Chair Sanford Bishop, a Democrat from Georgia, says the bill “invests in America’s fundamental needs and rejects the Administration’s radical cuts.” The bill allocates $24 billion, four percent above the fiscal year 2019 enacted level, and more than $5.1 billion above the budget request. The bill provides nearly $4 billion for rural development, $1.8 billion in farm programs, $3.3 billion for agricultural research, and fully funds the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program.

For the Food and Drug Administration, the bill provides $3.2 billion in discretionary funding, which is $185 million above fiscal year 2019. The bill reported out of committee in a vote of 29 to 21 and now awaits further consideration by the full U.S. House of Representatives.

Subcommittee explores USDA agency relocation proposal

A House subcommittee hearing on the relocation proposals for two Department of Agriculture agencies highlights further contention regarding the move. USDA has proposed relocating the Economic Research Service and the National Institute of Food and Agriculture to one of the following areas, the Kansas City metro, Indiana, or to Research Triangle Park in Raleigh, North Carolina.

Subcommittee chair Stacey Plaskett, a Democrat from the U.S. Virgin Islands, opened the hearing stating the proposal will “undermine the integrity of these agencies and their ability to operate.” The National Farmers Union contends the proposal is already damaging the industry, as experienced researchers scramble to find new jobs, alleging that NIFA and ERS have both “lost decades of institutional knowledge.”

However, the top Republican on the House Agriculture Committee, Mike Conaway, states, “There is nothing that prevents USDA’s mission from extending outside of the beltway.” Conaway adds, “The elitist notion that all wisdom and knowledge stems from Washington, D.C. is offensive to me and should be offensive to anyone who resides in rural America.” Conaway called the hearing a distraction that fails to focus on the pressing issues facing agriculture today, such as farm income, weather and trade.

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