KANSAS CITY, KAN. – An inmate at Leavenworth federal prison was sentenced Monday to 42 months in prison for attacking another prisoner with a metal pipe, according to U.S. Attorney Stephen McAllister.
Seaman from his time in the Kansas Department of Corrections for convictions including theft, battery, aggravated escape from custody and drugs.
Jimmy A. Eastep, Jr., 49, pleaded guilty to one count of assault with a dangerous weapon. In his plea, he admitted he was working in prison electrical shop when he attacked another inmate.
Prison staff found the victim identified as 52-year-old Michael Seamen lying on the floor in a pool of blood.
He suffered a skull fracture and other serious injuries and was transferred to U.S. Medical Center for Federal Prisoners in Springfield, Mo.
TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas’ new Democratic governor on Monday vetoed a measure that would require clinics and doctors to tell their patients about a disputed treatment to stop a medication abortion after a woman has taken the first of two pills.
Gov. Laura Kally during a Monday bill signing session in Topeka-photo courtesy office of Kansas Governor
The action by Gov. Laura Kelly, an abortion-rights supporter, sets up a confrontation with a Republican-controlled Legislature that has had solid anti-abortion majorities for more than two decades. Supporters of the abortion “reversal” bill appeared to have the two-thirds majorities needed in both chambers to override Kelly’s veto once lawmakers return on May 1 from a weekslong break.
Abortion opponents contend the bill ensures that women who harbor doubts about ending their pregnancies will learn that they can stop a medication abortion by taking the hormone progesterone. Abortion-rights supporters say the proposal would force doctors to provide dubious information to their patients.
Kelly said such a requirement would interfere with the relationship between patients and their physicians.
“This unwarranted legislation will create confusion and could be harmful to women’s health,” Kelly said. “The practice of medicine should be left to licensed health professionals, not elected officials.”
Seven states with Republican governors have enacted such laws, starting with Arkansas in 2015, and Oklahoma’s GOP-controlled Legislature recently approved a measure. Kelly was elected last year and took office in January after the state imposed a raft of new abortion restrictions under her Republican predecessors.
Kelly’s veto came after other states, including Kentucky, Mississippi and Ohio, have moved to ban abortions when a fetal heartbeat is detected, as early as the sixth week of pregnancy. Kansans for Life, the state’s most influential anti-abortion group, has long favored an incremental approach and restrictions that it believes will survive court challenges.
Medication abortions using Mifepristone, also known as RU-486, are the most common way of terminating a pregnancy in Kansas, accounting for 61% of the total last year, according to statistics from the state health department.
Supporters of “reversal” laws cite a 2018 study led by an anti-abortion doctor and medical school professor in California and note that progesterone has been used for decades to prevent miscarriages.
Abortion-rights supporters have said that study is flawed and that progesterone’s use for reversing a medical abortion hasn’t been adequately tested. The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists has disputed the usefulness of the procedure.
Under the Kansas legislation, an abortion clinic would have to display a sign with the abortion reversal notice, and the physician would have to tell a patient in writing that a medication abortion can be reversed. A clinic that failed to post a sign could be fined $10,000, and a doctor who failed to notify a patient could be charged with a misdemeanor for a first offense and a felony for a second.
CLAYTON, Mo. (AP) — A St. Louis County judge on Monday refused to lower bail for a former Catholic priest who was previously imprisoned and labeled sexually violent.
74-year-old Fred Lenczycki photo courtesy child Sex Offender of Illinois
Fred Lenczycki, 74, of suburban Chicago, was charged in February with two counts of sodomy for allegedly abusing two boys in the early 1990s at a north St. Louis County parish. He is jailed on $500,000 cash-only bond but was seeking an unspecified reduction.
Lenczycki has admitted abusing up to 30 boys in Illinois, Missouri and California over 25 years, according to court and church files. He was removed from the ministry in 2002, when he was charged with sexually abusing three boys at a church in Hinsdale, Illinois, in the 1980s.
The victims told authorities that “Father Fred” repeatedly molested them, often using the pretense of swaddling them in “Baby Jesus” costumes for pageants that never took place.
He pleaded guilty in 2004 and was sentenced to five years in prison. In 2008, a year before his release from prison, he became the first U.S. priest to be labeled sexually violent when he was committed under Illinois’ Sexually Violent Persons Commitment Act.
St. Louis County Circuit Judge Gloria Clark Reno was expected to hear testimony from the two alleged Missouri victims, Chris Gensler III, now 37, and Ron Kanady, 38, at a hearing Monday. But prior to the hearing, officials with the Illinois agency that monitors Lenczycki and others classified as sexually violent said it would not be responsible for transporting him to court from his Chicago-area home.
Assistant prosecutor Melissa Price Smith said that if Lenczycki had to take public transportation to St. Louis without supervision, he could be in contact with children.
Based largely on the logistical concern, Reno denied the bond reduction.
Defense attorney Matthew Radefeld said Lenczycki is seeking a re-evaluation to clear himself from the Illinois sexually violent person listing.
In the St. Louis County case, charging documents allege that from 1991 through 1994, Lenczycki repeatedly grabbed one boy’s genitals and tried to force another boy to expose himself.
“I feel like a weight has been lifted from my shoulder,” Kanady said after the judge’s ruling Monday. Gensler called the ruling “a blessing from God and a step in the right direction for kids who could be exposed to him.”
Victims of clergy sexual abuse have demanded more accountability and transparency from the Catholic church since last year, when a Pennsylvania report detailed seven decades of child sexual abuse by more than 300 predator priests. The Vatican convened a sexual abuse summit in February to hear the testimony of several victims.
In addition to the criminal cases, Lenczycki is named in several lawsuits.
MEXICO, Mo. (AP) — A man has pleaded guilty to a reduced charge in a fatal drug deal shooting that started when the victim was forced into a pickup truck at a Columbia motel.
Henry -photo Audrain Co.
37-year-old Richard Henry II, of Overland, pleaded guilty Monday to voluntary manslaughter in the killing of 30-year-old Leon Wilder III, of Columbia.
Witnesses told investigators that they saw Wilder being forced into a pickup truck in July 2017 after an argument about money. Wilder was near death when he was found along a road near the Boone-Audrain county line.
Investigators found blood in Henry’s truck after spotting the vehicle on surveillance video. Two others pleaded guilty to drug trafficking in the case. Authorities said Henry was the triggerman. His sentencing is set for June 24.
Fort Hays State University graduate Addy Tritt, whose story about buying out the Hays Payless store to help Nebraska flood victims went viral, appeared on “The Ellen Degeneres Show” on Monday. The show airs at 4 p.m. CST on CBS.
Ellen surprised Tritt with a game of “Holey Roller” — which Tritt “won.” The prize money Tritt is coming home with is made possible by Cheerios.
The latest outlook from the Federal Reserve regional surveys shows low prices, severe weather, and trade tensions continue to weigh heavily on large segments of the agricultural economy. Politico says the Fed gathers information eight times a year on economic conditions in its 12 districts to make up its Beige Book Report.
For example, southeastern states faced “abnormally dry to moderate drought conditions.” Cash prices were lower for cotton, rice, soybeans, broilers, and eggs compared to last year. Farm conditions remained “weak” in the Ninth District, which includes much of the Upper Midwest. Severe flooding in South Dakota and southern Minnesota is expected to heavily impact planting.
The Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago oversees much of the Corn Belt, saying low corn and soybean prices remain a big problem for growers in that region. The Fed’s farm contacts also expect soybean prices to remain low. That means the corn-soybean acreage totals could be closer to a more typical 50-50 split after soybean acres jumped higher in 2018.
While the St. Jo Frontier Casino might have re-opened for business, a major portion of the casino remains under repair.
Frontier Casino Vice President Mike Tamburelli says the casino, slots and tables, re-opened Saturday. The land-based portion of the casino – the bar, buffet, and ballroom – were heavily damaged by the flood and is undergoing restoration.
“We’ve had design teams come in,” Tamburelli tells St. Josephs Post. “So, we’re going to re-design our bar, re-design our buffet, actually the whole area. There’s a ballroom that we have to take care of. We don’t know right now. It’s going to be at least a couple of months.”
Flooding from the Missouri River closed the St. Jo Frontier Casino in mid-March. Floodwaters heavily damaged the land-based portion of the operation. The casino, which floats on a moat of Missouri River water, simply rose with the floodwaters and was not damaged. Floodwaters, though, surrounded the complex and had to recede for it to re-open. A new entrance has been constructed so patrons can enter the casino directly.
Tamburelli says the casino is attempting to turn something bad into something good.
“We’re really getting a brand-new buffet, a brand-new bar,” Tamburelli says. “It’s strange it happened. It’s unfortunate. But, we are going to remodel.”
And while the casino is open for business, Tamburelli looks forward to having the full operation back soon.
“This is the opening, but in June we’re celebrating our birthday here. So, I think we’ll combine that and, hopefully, the land-based facility will be open, too. So, we could really make it a grand re-opening.”
The St. Jo Frontier Casino celebrates its 25th anniversary this summer. The casino, though now at a different location, opened June 24th of 1994, one of the first four casinos to operate in Missouri.
JEFFERSON COUNTY — A registered Kansas sex offender is back in jail after a weekend incident involving a 14-year-old girl.
Early Sunday, the teen’s parents reported her missing, according to Jefferson County Sheriff Jeff Herrig. The teen was originally reported abducted by 21-year-old Jacob Cowles, a registered sex offender. “We learned she went willingly and so there was no Amber Alert issued,” said Herrig.
Cowles lives with his parents in Lakeshore Estates. When the two returned to the home, the parents contacted authorities who arrested Cowles, according to Herrig.
He is being held in the Jefferson County Jail on requested charges that include aggravated criminal sodomy; with person/animal by force, indecent liberties w/ child 14-16 years of age and solicit to engage, according to online jail records.
Cowles was expected to make a court appearance in the case Monday, according to the sheriff.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Relatives of a slain Kansas City man say the 25-year-old had been excited about the birth of his first child.
Police haven’t released the name of the man who was shot and killed Saturday. But Dana Pearson identified the victim as his nephew, Jordan Matthews. Relatives say Matthews played drums for a neighborhood church and had been lining his room with baby items.
On Sunday, relatives placed the large pink bear Matthews had been saving for his child on a makeshift memorial on the corner near where he died. Pearson said his nephew “never hurt nobody” and “shouldn’t’ be gone.”
A World Trade Organization dispute settlement panel found that China has administered its tariff-rate quotas (TRQs) for wheat, corn, and rice, inconsistently with its WTO commitments. The way China runs its TRQ administration isn’t transparent, not predictable, not fair, and it ultimately prevents TRQs from filling. In turn, that denies U.S. farmers’ access to China’s grain markets, a clear violation of its WTO commitments.
A USDA release says the panel report is the second significant victory for American agriculture this year. Together with the victory against China’s excessive domestic support for grains, this will help American farmers compete on a more level playing field. China’s grain TRQs have annually underfilled.
USDA estimates that if Chinese TRQs had been fully used, the country would have imported up to $3.5 billion worth of corn, wheat, and rice in 2015 alone. Secretary Sonny Perdue says, “Making sure our trading partners play by the rules is vital to providing our farmers the opportunity to export high-quality, American-grown products to the world. The announcement is another victory for American farmers and fairness in the global trade system.”