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Riley County Arrest Report Saturday March 2

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The following is a summary of arrests, citations by the Riley County Police Department. Those arrested are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.

Jade Hoover -photo Geary Co.

JADE ELIZABETH HOOVER, 25, Junction City, Failure to Appear; Bond $20,000

HUBERT LEE JACKSON JR, 47, Manhattan, Driving while suspended; 1st conviction; Bond $750

STANTON LAMONT POPE JR, 26, Manhattan, Giving a worthless check; Value < $1,000; Bond $1000

HENRY BALDAMAR LEMUS OSARIO, 47, Manhattan, Probation Violation; Bond $3000

ROBERT ADONIS WEST, 22, Manhattan,Disorderly conduct; Brawling or fighting Possession of marijuana; Bond $750

TRAVELL DAVON HAIRSTON, 27, Manhattan,Domestic battery; Knowing or reckless bodily harm to family/person in dating relationship; Bond $1500 And Disorderly conduct; Brawling or fighting; Bond $500

KRISTIN ELIZABETH REED, 39, Wichita, Aggravated failure to appear; No bond reported

JESSIE LEE STUCKEY JR, 26, St. George, Probation Violation; Bond $1500

EDWARD WILLIAM SCHILLING, 75, Leonardville, Failure to Appear; Bond $100

 

 


Could Free College Classes In High School Put More Kansas Students On Track To Degrees?

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LIBERAL — Hefty college debt won’t saddle Bryan Medina.

He’s on a fast track to an energy career that he hopes will pave the road to family dreams: Buying his own cattle and going in on the purchase of 300 acres of land with his dad.

Students take a U.S. history class that also counts toward college credit at Liberal High School.
CELIA LLOPIS-JEPSEN / KCUR/KANSAS NEWS SERVICE

“We could grow and eventually own our own feedyard,” said Medina, who finished high school last May in the small southwest Kansas town of Sublette. “If things go great, if we put all the work into it, we’ll definitely get there.”

Medina had just one semester left of his natural gas studies at Seward County Community College in Liberal. Kansas footed much of the bill for him, meaning Medina can start banking paychecks faster toward those livestock purchases instead of pouring them into college loans.

“I left Wyoming Tech owing $17,000,” said David Ratzlaff, one of Medina’s instructors. “It took me about 10 years to pay that off.”

Savvy teens eyeing tech careers can get a leg up in life under a Kansas program that made college free for them while still in high school. Stories like Medina’s have generated buzz, and now some education officials and lawmakers are mulling how to help students shooting for non-technical careers, too.

Their idea? Let high school students who qualify academically take up to five popular college basics tuition-free, including algebra and English composition.

Cost and logistics could prove hurdles. The potential expenses of such a program remain unclear, as does legislative support amid the state’s gradual recovery from years of fiscal trouble.

New research on the dual credit boom in Texas also raises questions about how much money it really saves families. And it suggests dual credit mostly helps white students and those with more money, instead of the low-income and minority students policymakers want to put on a level playing field.

But if Kansas can smooth out the wrinkles, high school students see a way to build competitive college applications and get ahead, all while easing into more rigorous coursework. Many already enroll in dual credit at their own expense.

“It’s not as intimidating” starting college this way, said Nevaeh Bess, a Liberal High senior earning such credits at her own, familiar school. Her teachers explain class assignments and expectations clearly.

“That helps out a lot — knowing what your teacher is grading,” the aspiring anesthesiologist said. “I spoke to someone that is in college now, and she was like, ‘Well, sometimes I just don’t know what they’re looking for.’”

High stakes

For students plotting a direct course from high school to four-year colleges, taking dual credit may seem like an easy choice.

Students in Liberal pay around $300 per class. That’s less than a third of the price they’d pay as freshmen at the University of Kansas and many times cheaper than out-of-state tuition.

Liberal High senior Mica Watson-Huskey has her sights trained on a major in civil or aerospace engineering at the University of Texas at Austin because of the school’s research opportunities.

Last year, she took college algebra and trigonometry, but she lost some of the credits when she couldn’t pay in full. High school students don’t qualify for financial aid that can take some of the sting out of tuition bills.

If the state paid for even a few dual credit courses, Watson-Huskey said, that would lift ambitions at a school where many families struggle to make ends meet.

“They would have the motivation to do a college class,” she said. “They wouldn’t be limited because of the amount of money.”

One thousand of the 1,300 students at Liberal High come from low-income families.

The school lies in a corner of the state where meat drives the economy. The thousands of slaughterhouse jobs in the region pay $14 an hour on average, an annual salary of just under $30,000 a year.

Many of the students here would be the first in their family to attend college. Most learn English as a second language and four out of five are Hispanic.

Nationally, Hispanics and people whose first language isn’t English are less likely to go to college than other Americans.

The vast majority of students at Liberal High graduate. But of those only a third quickly head to college or work on an industry certificate. Across Kansas more than half of high school graduates do.

Yet missing out on higher education shuts doors. Decent jobs still exist for people with no more than a high school diploma, but not to the extent they once did.

Economist Nicole Smith says those jobs continue to dwindle. Today, just three in 10 teens who stop their educations at high school can hope to find jobs that will pay at least $35,000 from their mid-20s through their early 40s and at least $45,000 after middle age.

What of the other seven?

“They’re going to be experiencing significant amounts of hardship,” Smith said. “Even to get a job, and far less to keep that job and to earn a living wage with it.”

Smith — chief economist at Georgetown University’s Center on Education and the Workforce — co-authored studies on the changing job landscape. Those spurred Kansas and other states to ratchet up efforts to get more students to college.

Chart: The Kansas News Service Source: US Census Bureau Created with Datawrapper

 

 

Survival mode

That urgency has Kansas education officials hunting for ways to bridge the college gap — not just for go-getting teens planning careers in anesthesiology and engineering.

They hope free dual credit would plant the idea of higher education in more students’ minds, making it seem less scary, distant or unattainable.

“There are a lot of students that are college ready and college material,” said Jean Redeker, vice president for academic affairs at the Kansas Board of Regents. “But they don’t know it.”

Free tech classes have already built one bridge, college administrators say. They attract high school students whose families otherwise might not feel comfortable setting foot on a college campus — even just to ask questions.

Janeth Vazquez advises families at Seward County Community College.
CREDIT BETHANY WOOD / FOR THE KANSAS NEWS SERVICE

In Liberal, many may not know about federal financial aid and generous local tuition grants. That leaves families feeling Seward County Community College “is only for people with money,” said Janeth Vazquez, who advises students there. “A goal that’s just too out of their hand.”

Vazquez gets it. Many are in survival mode. When she was a teen, her father was deported and she worked long hours after school helping to pay the mortgage, utility bills and other family needs.

“That was my story,” she said. “That was my life.”

Last year, the Kansas Senate passed a bill that would have kicked off free general education dual credit in a test program — paying for English composition for high schoolers.

It’s Kansas’ most popular non-tech dual credit class. Free access to algebra, psychology, public speaking and U.S. history would possibly have come in the following years.

The idea never got a vote in the House. It fell to the wayside amid the broader school finance battle in the Legislature — yearslong wrangling over court rulings that demand Kansas increase funding to local schools.

Recommendations for the dual credit legislation came from the Regents and Kansas State Department of Education. To qualify, they suggested students would generally need:

  • A 3.0 GPA and a college-ready ACT score in math or English to take algebra or composition. Nationally, most ACT-takers hit the mark in English but not math.
  • A 3.0 GPA and a 20 or higher composite ACT score to take any of the other three free classes. That’s a little below the national average composite score.

Logistical hurdles

Pinning down the potential cost to taxpayers has proved complicated.

Just how many of the state’s 70,000 high school upperclassmen would jump at an offer for free college English, algebra and more remains unclear. After the state rolled out free tech college classes in 2012, student enrollment in those more than doubled.

About 15,000 Kansas high school students took college dual credit at their high schools last school year. They took, on average, two classes each.

Then there’s the matter of calculating cost per student. The Board of Regents finished a study in December, but the state’s two dozen two-year colleges reported huge variations in cost per credit hour. English composition ranged from more than $900 per credit hour to $1.

The board suggested this month that if the Legislature offered to pay the median — $71 — and 17,000 students signed up, that would cost Kansas $3.6 million. That price point has community colleges concerned.

Some variation is inevitable. In addition to regional cost differences, colleges deliver dual credit through a variety of models. Some high school students travel to campus for class, or connect through remote video links and online tools. In other cases, colleges send professors to high schools or rely on high school teachers to run courses themselves.

Colleges and high schools would have to figure out how to ramp up capacity if English and other classes became free. The pilot proposal aims for a soft start that would buy time to identify and deal with hurdles.

Having high school teachers teach college classes only works when those instructors hold advanced degrees with significant relevant coursework. On the other hand, placing students in on-campus classes comes with potential transportation costs and difficulty aligning schedules, among other issues.

Administrators talk eagerly about the possibilities — enthusiasm tempered by the knowledge that logistics take time to solve. They worry, too, that they might build dual credit programs only to see the money disappear in a few years amid funding battles in the Legislature.

Even funding for the state’s free tech college program — popular with lawmakers across party lines — fell millions of dollars behind in recent years. That unsettles Seward County Community College president Ken Trzaska. A quarter of the students at his school now attend through that initiative.

“That program is a great program,” he said. At the same time, it’s a vulnerability. “If, suddenly, the funding goes away or that population of students go away, then that’s a huge hit.”

Good and bad news

Uneasy faculty at the University of Texas took the following question about dual credit to university brass: Might it inadvertently hurt freshmen? Some professors reported that students arriving with college basics out of the way struggled in next-level classes.

That prompted a two-year deep dive by UT into the outcomes of 130,000 students.

UT’s study and a separate one conducted by the American Institutes for Research both came out last summer, among the most ambitious dual credit studies to date.

They offer good and bad news from a state ripe for analysis. Texas has vigorously promoted early college credit for years. From 2000 to 2016, the number of high school students in dual-credit classes rose more than tenfold, topping 200,000 per year.

The bad news first:

  • Dual credit didn’t save students much money. UT students saw a negligible impact on debt unless they showed up at college with a full two years of credit. Savings may elude many people because their credits don’t align with their degrees or they opt against graduating early.
  • Past research oversold dual credit. Dual credit appeared to help students likely to succeed in college anyway. After factoring for that, college enrollment only ticked up by about 2 percentage points and graduation rates by an “insignificant” 1 percentage point. Many past studies touting robust benefits from dual credit fell short of standards for rigorous research.
  • Dual credit doesn’t solve achievement gaps — it mostly helps white, more affluent students. Poor students who took it became less likely to go to or finish college. Black students became more likely to attend two-year colleges, but not to graduate. Hispanic students became more likely to finish a two-year, but not a four-year, degree.

Now, the good:

  • Even if the benefits were less than previously touted, they were still statistically meaningful. Grade analyses and course comparisons also didn’t bear out faculty concerns that high school teachers might be watering down dual credit classes for their students.
  • Even with evidence of less significant benefit, the cost of dual credit paid off many times over. Better college outcomes mean higher eventual incomes for dual credit students, who earn more money and consequently pay more tax revenue to the state.
  • Dual credit does improve college prospects for some people. Though dual credit didn’t help poorer students as a whole, it did help the academic high-flyers among them to make it to college and graduate.

Kansas state Sen. Molly Baumgardner says some of the Texas findings point to problems unrelated to dual credit. Minorities enrolling but not graduating in larger numbers suggests colleges need to recognize that students need better support.

“They have a changing role,” she said.

Baumgardner, chair of the Senate’s education committee, spearheaded work on last year’s bill. In her combined 16 years of teaching high school and community college, she saw students grow when opportunity allows.

“Kids don’t really know their limits,” she said. “But they become limited if they’re told they can’t do something.”

This is Part Four in our series on college and careers. Don’t miss Part Oneon the advent of the “college economy,” Part Two on planning life after high school and Part Three on Kansas’ tech college boom.

Celia Llopis-Jepsen is a reporter for the Kansas News Service. You can reach her on Twitter @Celia_LJ.

Busy Fake Patty’s Day for RCPD

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Manhattan —Since 7p.m. on Friday to 6:30p.m. on Saturday, the Riley County Police Department has issued/made(final statistics from this year and years past will be included in the report released within the next week):

27 Open Container Citations
18 MIP/MIC Citations
3 Possession of Marijuana Citations/Arrests
2 Disorderly Conduct Arrests
11 Total Physical Arrests

In 2018 between these same time frames the Riley County Police Department issued/made:

39 Open Container Citations
9 MIP/MIC Citations
1 Possession of Marijuana Citation
4 Disorderly Conduct Arrests
13 Total Physical Arrests

Riley County Arrest Report Sunday March 3

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The following is a summary of arrests, citations by the Riley County Police Department. Those arrested are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.

Justice Kennedy-photo Saline Co.

JUSTICE JAMON KENNEDY, 24, Salina, Distribute hallucinogenic or marijuana; Unknown quantity, Driving under the influence of drugs/alcohol; 1st conv; blood/breath .08 or >, Possession of para w/intent to manufacture controlled substanceCriminal distribution of firearm to felon; Felony conviction < 5 yrs; Bond $50,000

COLTON JOHN MUNGER, 22, Manhattan, Criminal damage to property; Unknown value Battery; Bodily harm to another, Disorderly conduct; Brawling or fighting; Bond $750

HARLEY LEWIS HAZLETT, 21, Russell, DUI; Bond $750

CADEN JOSEPH CAMPION, 21, Topeka, Criminal damage to property; Without consent value < $1000; Bond $500

GAVIN ALEXANDER BROWN, 27, Junction City, Disorderly conduct; Fighting words or noisy conduct to cause resentment; Bond $500

MATHEW JOHN MARLER, 32, Manhattan, DUI; Bond $1500

CODY DUANE KREUTZIGER, 28, Manhattan, Criminal damage to property; Without consent value < $1000; Bond $1000

MALLORY MAY LANTZ, 21, Salina, Disorderly conduct; Brawling or fighting, Battery on LEO; Physical contact with county or city officer on duty; Bond $3000

SYLVESTER CALVERT JR, 31, Manhattan, Refusal to submit test for drugs or alcohol; 1st convictionDriving under the influence of drugs/alcohol; 1st conv; blood/breath .08 or >; Bond $4000

KAYLEE ELIZABETH FRIEDBERG, 21, Wichita, Domestic battery; Knowing or reckless bodily harm to family/person in dating relationship; Bond $1000

JAYLIE DANIELLE THORNTON, 19, Manhattan, DUI; Bond $750

PHILLIP ALLEN BRUMBELOE, 35, Manhattan, Failure to Appear; Bond $1000

DEVIN PRICE OWEN, 20, Manhattan, DUI; Bond $750

JOSH KOLBY BACHRODT, 25, Overland Park, DUI; Bond $1500

BRETT ALAN MOSS, 24, Hutchinson, Possession of stimulant, Possession of marijuana; one prior conviction; Bond;$5000

JOSHUA WAYNE REMBY, 21, Topeka, DUI; Bond $1500

SIR ALVIS JAI ONEAL, 20, Topeka, Driving while suspended; 1st conviction(2x) Bond $2000

ANDREW MARK TENHOLDER, 23, Topeka, DUI; Bond $750

RYAN READ ROUTSON, 37, Manhattan,  DUI; Bond $750

JOSEPH AARON ROLLO, 19, Basehor, DUR; Bond $750

HOWARD ALEXANDER HORTON III, 31, Manhattan, Possession of opiate, opium, narcotic or certain stimulant; Bond $2500

GLENN MICHAEL DEVLIN, 21, Manhattan, DUI; Bond $1500

MARCUS RAY RICHARDSON,18, Manhattan, DUI; Bond $750

CLAUDIA LYNN ALBRECHT, 20, Kewane, IA., DUI; Bond $750

RILEY DAVID PFANNENSTIEL, 22, Manhattan, DUI, Improper turn or approach; Bond $750

ZACHARY THOMAS COCKING, 19, Andale, DUI; Bond $1500

CELESTE MARIA HANNAN, 20, Manhattan, DUI; Bond $750

JOSHUA VICTOR LOPEZ, 20, Manhattan, Interference with LEO; obstruct/resist/oppose misdemeanor warrant service or execution Liquor; Purchase by minor; unknown conviction; Bond $500

MICHAEL JEREMY SANCHEZ, 22, Ottawa, Driving under the infl of drugs/alcohol; 1st conv;competent evidence of blood/breath .08+ Improper turn or approachUnsafe turning or stopping; Failure to give proper signal; Bond $1500

RICARDO DIAZ GARAY, 19, Salina, Criminal trespass; Remain in defiance of order by owner; Bond $500

MATTHEW DANIEL LAMASTER, 42, Manhattan, Possession of marijuanaUse/possess w/intent to use drug paraphernalia into human body; Bond $500

CAMERON THOMAS MARTIN, 20, Fayetteville, AR., Liquor; Purchase/consumption of liquor/CMB by minor; 1st conviction; Bond $500

AUSTIN JOE NEWBERRY, 22, Attica, Driving under influence;1st conv; competent evidence blood/breath .08+; child present Possession of substance in KSA 65-4105 and KSA 65-4111; Bond $1000

LOGAN PAUL RUZICKA, 22, Palo, IA., Transmit/communicate false information to request emergency service assistance; Bond $1000

ELIZABETH JANE RUNNEBAUM, 38, Wamego, Driving while license cancelled/suspended/revoked; Bond $500

CURTIS RASHAWN SIMMS JR, 20, Manhattan, Possession of marijuanaUse/possess w/intent to use drug paraphernaliainto human body, Liquor; Purchase/possess/consume by minor 18-20 yrs; unknown conviction; Bond $750

KEEGAN LENIHAN AIMAN, 22, Manhattan, DUI; Bond $750

 

 

RCPD implements emergency accident reporting phase

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The RCPD is now out of the emergency accident reporting stage.

The Riley County Police Department has implemented their emergency accident reporting stage.

( Courtesy RCPD ) In certain instances it is necessary for the Riley County Police Department to enact the Emergency Accident Reporting Phase. EARP is put in place when a high volume of accidents are occurring, most frequently due to weather related circumstances. When EARP is in effect, motorists do not need to report crashes immediately as long as it meets all of the criteria below. Crashes  must be reported within 48 hours of occurrance. To report a crash after the EARP period is lifted, you need to come to the Riley County Police Department located at 1001 S Seth Child Rd. in Manhattan. All parties involved will need to be present when reporting the crash.

° No injuries to any parties involved

° No hit-and-run

° No DUI or suspected alcohol/drug related crimes

° Insurance and contact information is exchanged between responsible parties

° Property damage is over $1,000 (If it is under $1,000, you do not need to report it to police)

If there are injuries, a hit-and-run, or DUI, then you should call police immediately to report the crash.  

Former K-State AD John Currie named AD at Wake Forest

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WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. (AP) — Wake Forest athletic director Ron Wellman is retiring and the school has chosen former Kansas State AD John Currie to replace him.

President Nathan Hatch announced the moves Sunday, saying Wellman will retire and Currie will start on May 1.

“John is the perfect fit to follow in the footsteps of his mentor,” Hatch said.

Wellman, the longest-tenured AD in Division I, has led Wake Forest’s athletic department since 1992. The school has won five team national championships and seven individual titles under his watch, including men’s tennis in 2018, while raising $400 million in donations during his tenure of nearly 27 years.

The 47-year-old Currie is a Wake Forest alumnus who was Kansas State’s AD from 2009-17. He spent much of 2017 at Tennessee before he was suspended in the midst of the search to replace football coach Butch Jones that turned into a fiasco. He received a $2.5 million settlement with the school in March 2018.

He is taking over a Wake Forest program that is mostly on solid footing, with Dave Clawson’s football program winning three bowl games in three years and a collection of new facilities popping up all over the campus — including an indoor practice facility for football that opened in 2016 and a sports performance center and basketball facility that is scheduled to open later this year.

The most pressing immediate question faced by the department centers on men’s basketball, though the season will end well before Currie’s official start date.

Coach Danny Manning is 65-90 overall and 24-64 in conference play with one NCAA Tournament appearance in five seasons. Barring a miracle run in the postseason, the Demon Deacons are headed for their seventh losing season since 2010 — also the last year they finished above .500 in ACC play.

History: Episcopal Diocese of Kansas ordains woman as bishop

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TOPEKA —First woman elected bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Kansas was ordained Saturday.

The Rev. Cathleen Chittenden Bascom, D.Min., from the Diocese of Iowa,  was elected as the 10th bishop to lead the Episcopal Diocese of Kansas in October.

The diocese’s Youtube channel provided a live stream of the service from Grace Cathedral in Topeka.

According to a media release from the diocese, on October 19, the Rev. Cathleen Chittenden Bascom, D.Min., from the Diocese of Iowa, was elected as the 10th bishop to lead the Episcopal Diocese of Kansas. She was elected on the second ballot during an election that took place in the worship space of Grace Cathedral in Topeka, receiving 64 out of 122 votes from lay delegates and 56 out of 84 votes from clergy.

Image courtesy Episcopal Diocese of Kansas

Bascom is the first woman to be elected bishop since the diocese was formed in 1859. This also marked the first time in the history of the Episcopal Church that a bishop heading a diocese was elected from a slate of candidates who all were women.

The Very Rev. Foster Mays, president of the governing body that has overseen the diocese in the interim period between bishops, said, “ It delights me that Cathleen Bascom will be our next bishop. While this election was historic, at its core lay delegates and clergy were selecting the person who will lead this diocese for the next decade or more. I believe Mother Bascom’s many gifts and years of experience will serve this diocese well.

“I know that clergy and lay leaders from all our congregations are looking forward to the opportunity to participate in ministry with her, to share together the good news of Jesus and to serve the world in the name of our Lord. I’m very excited for the future of the Episcopal Diocese of Kansas under her leadership.”

Bascom has been serving since the fall of 2014 as Assistant Professor of Religion and Philosophy at Waldorf University in Forest City, Iowa. She previously had been dean of the Cathedral Church of St. Paul in Des Moines, Iowa, as well as rector of St. Stephen’s in Newton, Iowa.

She served for eight years in the Diocese of Kansas from 1993 to 2001, leading ministry efforts at Kansas State University in Manhattan.

She is the third priest to have served within the Diocese of Kansas to be elected its bishop. The first was Frank Millspaugh, who was dean of Grace Cathedral, Topeka, when he was elected bishop in 1895. The second was Richard Grein, who was rector of St. Michael and all Angels in Mission when he was elected in 1981.

She also is the second priest to become Kansas’ bishop while serving in the Diocese of Iowa. The first was Thomas Vail, the diocese’s first bishop, who was rector of Trinity Church in Muscatine, Iowa, when he was elected bishop in 1864.

Bascom and her husband Tim have two sons – Conrad, age 25, and Luke, age 21.

 

Wind chill advisory Sunday night – Monday morning

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Clay-Riley-Pottawatomie-Jackson-Jefferson-Dickinson-Geary-Morris-
Wabaunsee-Shawnee-Douglas-Lyon-Osage-
Including the cities of Clay Center, Manhattan, Wamego,
St. Marys, Holton, Valley Falls, Oskaloosa, Perry, McLouth,
Grantville, Meriden, Nortonville, Abilene, Herington,
Junction City, Council Grove, Alma, Eskridge, Maple Hill,
Alta Vista, McFarland, Harveyville, Paxico, Topeka, Lawrence,
Emporia, Osage City, Carbondale, Lyndon, Burlingame,
and Overbrook
410 PM CST Sun Mar 3 2019

...WIND CHILL ADVISORY REMAINS IN EFFECT FROM 9 PM THIS EVENING
TO 10 AM CST MONDAY...

* WHAT...Very cold wind chills expected. Wind chills as low as
  15 to 20 below zero expected.

* WHERE...Portions of central, east central, north central and
  northeast Kansas.

* WHEN...From 9 PM this evening to 10 AM CST Monday.

* ADDITIONAL DETAILS...The cold wind chills could cause
  frostbite on exposed skin in as little as 30 minutes.

PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS...

A Wind Chill Advisory means that cold air and the wind will
combine to create low wind chills. Frostbite and hypothermia can
occur if precautions are not taken. Make sure you wear a hat and
gloves.

Kansas man hospitalized after pickup rolls on I-70

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WABAUNSEE COUNTY— One person was injured in an accident just befor 3:30p.m. Sunday in Wabaunsee County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2003 Ford Ranger driven by Cole Alexander Fletcher, 20, Lenexa, was eastbound on Interstate 70 just west of Vera Road. The vehicle left the roadway to the north and rolled numerous times into the median.

Fletcher was transported to the hospital in Manhattan. He was properly restrained at the time of the accident, according to the KHP.

Postponements and cancellations for Monday

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Postponements and cancellations Monday.

–The Geary County Senior Center will be closed on Monday due to the snow and extreme cold temperatures.

–USD 378 Riley County schools will begin two hours late. All classes will begin at 10 a.m. No breakfast will be served.

–Geary USD 475 schools will be on a two-hour delay Monday.

–USD 417 Morris County will begin classes two hours late. Bus service will be delayed two hours. There will be no A.M. preschool and no breakfast served.

–USD 379 schools, Clay Center, Wakefield, opening two hours late Monday, no morning pre-school.

Many universities in Kansas see drop in international students

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TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Many universities in Kansas are seeing a drop in the number of enrolled international students, which education leaders said hurts campuses’ cultural diversity and school finances.

Protests at KCi in January 2017 against the travel ban -photo courtesy Fox4 News

The number of international students enrolled in Kansas Board of Regents colleges has declined by more than 11 percent since 2015, or roughly 1,560 students.

Many of the affected schools already face limited state funding and declining enrollments, which is compounded by the lost revenue from international students who pay out-of-state tuition, often live on campus and contribute to local economies.

International students account for a roughly $260 million economic impact in Kansas, supporting about 2,500 jobs, according to data from the nonprofit NAFSA: Association of International Educators.

“These are 600 fewer students paying out-of-state tuition coming to our university,” said Charles Taber, provost of Kansas State University. “That’s millions of dollars of revenue loss.”

Chuck Olcese, director of international support services at the University of Kansas, acknowledged that money often leads conversations about a decrease in the number of international students. But Olcese said “the more guiding factor is the ability to make an international environment for students from Kansas or wherever they’re coming from across the U.S.”

About 70 percent of University of Kansas students may not have met someone from another country nor had any serious interaction with another culture, Olcese said.

Many school leaders have attributed the decline in the number of international students coming to Kansas to the perception that the country is increasingly unwelcoming to immigrants, pointing to issues such as President Donald Trump’s travel ban .

“The travel bans that came out right after the Trump presidency took effect and children being separated from parents at the borders, these all make international news in big ways, and just kind of underscores an unwelcome feeling,” Olcese said.

He said it’s difficult to imagine any profession that isn’t being affected by these issues.

“If you’ve done your whole education in a very isolated environment without interacting with someone who thinks different culturally than you, you’re really at a disadvantage,” Olcese said.

Riley County Arrest Report Monday March 4

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The following is a summary of arrests, citations by the Riley County Police Department. Those arrested are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.

EDGAR VICTOR CHAMBERS, 63, Manhattan,Criminal damage to property; Without consent value < $1000; Bond $1000

AMBER NICOLE WYATT, 32, Grandview Plaza, Criminal deprivation of property; Motor vehicle Driving under the infl of drugs/alcohol; 1st conv;competent evidence of blood/breath .08+; Bond $3500

KATHLEEN ANN COVERT, 47, Manhattan, Failure to Appear(3X) Bond $7000

DELANO PC BROWN, 28, Manhattan,Domestic battery; Knowing or reckless bodily harm to family/person in dating relationship; Bond $1000

ALAN JAMES MORROW, 54, Council Grove, Driving under the infl of drugs/alcohol; 1st conv;competent evidence of blood/breath .08+; Bond $750

KOLTEN JOHN BRACEBRIDGE, 30, Junction City, Driving while suspended; 1st conviction; Exceptionally Cleared

CITATION REPORT

CASEY WILLYARD, 22,  MANHATTAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT 1030 RATONE ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X URINATING IN PUBLIC (22-3) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY12:45 PM.

BRADY ROGERS, 19,  LONG ISLAND, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT 823 RATONE ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OR CONSUMPTION OF ALCOHOL BY MINOR (4-3(B)) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 2:10 PM.

AUBREY POWELL, 18, COUNCIL GROVE, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 1000 BLK RATONE ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X MINOR OBTAIN OR PURCHASE ALCHOL/CMB (4-3(A)) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 1:30 PM.

ANTHONY LOPEZ, 21,  MANHATTAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT 804 THURSTON ST IN MANHATTAN FOR UNNECESSARY NOISE STANDARD (22-55) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 8:49 AM.

NATHAN BERGKAMP, 23, MANHATTAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT 714 THURSTON ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X URINATING IN PUBLIC (22-3) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 8:25 PM.

JOHN SLIVKOV, 23, JUNCTION CITY, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 800 BLK MORO ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF AN OPEN CONTAINER IN PUBLIC (4-2) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 8:40 PM.

AUSTIN EPPERSON, 20,  SPRINGFIELD, MO WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 1000 BLK N 12TH ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X MINOR OBTAIN OR PURCHASE ALCHOL/CMB (4-3(A)) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 2:25 PM.

ELIZABETH SMITH, 22,  NEVADA, MO WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 1800 BLK LARAMIE ST IN MANHATTAN FOR LITTERING (22-28) AND FOR X POSSESSION OF AN OPEN CONTAINER IN PUBLIC (4-2) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 4:30 PM.

MASHAWNDA DOTSON, 30,  MANHATTAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT 828 DONDEE DR # A IN MANHATTAN FOR X BATTERY (22-17) ON FEBRUARY 18, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 9:30 AM.

KAESON RISNER, 21, MANHATTAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 1000 BLK MORO ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF AN OPEN CONTAINER IN PUBLIC (4-2) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 6:56 PM.

TERRELL LEON, 19,  ULYSSES, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 800 BLK RATONE ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X MINOR OBTAIN OR PURCHASE ALCHOL/CMB (4-3(A)) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY11 AM.

SLATER BLICK, 18, MANHATTAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 1000 BLK RATONE ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X MINOR OBTAIN OR PURCHASE ALCHOL/CMB (4-3(A)) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY12:45 PM.

HUNTER CHANDLER, 23,  NORTON, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 800 BLK RATONE ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF AN OPEN CONTAINER IN PUBLIC (4-2) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 1:10 PM.

OWEN GARTNER, 19, MANHATTAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 1000 BLK RATONE ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X MINOR OBTAIN OR PURCHASE ALCHOL/CMB (4-3(A)) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 1:28 PM.

DAN DOAN, 20,  MANHATTAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT 815 RATONE ST; 1/2 IN MANHATTAN FOR X CRIMINAL DAMAGE TO PROPERTY (22-27) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 2:55 PM.

GRANT NORMAND, 24, PITTSBURG, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 600 BLK N 9TH ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF AN OPEN CONTAINER IN PUBLIC (4-2) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 3:50 PM.

RYAN FLAGLER, 25,  ROSSVILLE, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 900 BLK OSAGE ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF AN OPEN CONTAINER IN PUBLIC (4-2) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 5:30 PM.

RACHEL TAYLOR, ROSSVILLE, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT 900 OSAGE ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF AN OPEN CONTAINER IN PUBLIC (4-2) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 5:30 PM.

JOSEPH FAJARDO, 21,  EL DORADO, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 700 BLK MORO ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF AN OPEN CONTAINER IN PUBLIC (4-2) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 6:50 PM.

JACKSON SYRING, 18,  DERBY, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 1700 BLK ANDERSON AVE IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF MARIJUANA (22-91) AND FOR X POSSESS DRUG PARAPHERNALIA (22-92) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 7:29 PM.

LANE KRAFT, 37,  OGDEN, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT 828 DONDEE DR # A IN MANHATTAN FOR X CRIMINAL TRESPASS (22-29) ON FEBRUARY 18, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY10:16 AM.

JOHN BODE, 22,  MINNEAPOLIS, MN WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 1100 BLK POYNTZ AVE IN MANHATTAN FOR SPEEDING (7-33) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY12:39 AM.

ABIEL TEKIE, 24,  WICHITA, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT N 11TH ST & POYNTZ AVE IN MANHATTAN FOR VEHICLE TAGS-EXPIRE/ILLEGBLE (19-198) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 1:02 AM.

HALEY HOLMAN, 21,  SALINA, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 700 BLK N 12TH ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF AN OPEN CONTAINER IN PUBLIC (4-2) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 2:35 PM.

GARRETT MENG, 26, OTROY, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT KEARNEY ST & N 11TH ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF AN OPEN CONTAINER IN PUBLIC (4-2) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 3:50 PM.

PAUL WICHMANN, 22,  MANHATTAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT KEARNEY ST & N 11TH ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF AN OPEN CONTAINER IN PUBLIC (4-2) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 3:50 PM.

NIKOLAI TOSTADO, 21, TOPEKA, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT N 12TH ST & BLUEMONT AVE IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF AN OPEN CONTAINER IN PUBLIC (4-2) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 9:22 PM.

BRANDON BISHOP, 32,  MANHATTAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT N 11TH ST & KEARNEY ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF AN OPEN CONTAINER IN PUBLIC (4-2) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 8:35 PM.

JORDAN VIERLING, 20, ASHLAND, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT BERTRAND ST & N 11TH ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X MINOR OBTAIN OR PURCHASE ALCHOL/CMB (4-3(A)) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 7:30 PM.

MEIKALO HALL, 19,  ARKANSAS CITY, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT VATTIER ST & N 11TH ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X MINOR OBTAIN OR PURCHASE ALCHOL/CMB (4-3(A)) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 4:20 PM.

MACY KELLER, 21, HAYS, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 1300 BLK N 11TH ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF AN OPEN CONTAINER IN PUBLIC (4-2) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 4:25 PM.

MANHATTAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT N 9TH ST & THURSTON ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OR CONSUMPTION OF ALCOHOL BY MINOR (4-3(B)) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 7:26 PM.

ANDREW WOLF, 19,  WELLINGTON, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 1300 BLK N 10TH ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OR CONSUMPTION OF ALCOHOL BY MINOR (4-3(B)) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 4:05 PM.

AIDEN BYRD, 20,  KANSAS CITY, MO WAS CITED WHILE AT N 10TH ST & RATONE ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OR CONSUMPTION OF ALCOHOL BY MINOR (4-3(B)) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 5 PM.

PATRICK GOSSERAND JR, 19,  KANSAS CITY, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT N 10TH ST & RATONE ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OR CONSUMPTION OF ALCOHOL BY MINOR (4-3(B)) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 5:15 PM.

MAX KUBIK, 21,  WICHITA, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT N 11TH ST & THURSTON ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF AN OPEN CONTAINER IN PUBLIC (4-2) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 6:34 PM.

MONICA ONTIVEROS, 19, LIBERAL, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT N 9TH ST & MORO ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X MINOR OBTAIN OR PURCHASE ALCHOL/CMB (4-3(A)) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 7:25 PM.

CARSON BOORIGIE, 23,  WICHITA, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT N 11TH ST & KEARNEY ST IN MANHATTAN FOR LITTERING (22-28) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 7:30 PM.

RICHARD CLARK, 19, WICHITA, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT 831 VATTIER ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF MARIJUANA (22-91) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 8:45 PM.

TRENTON HODSON, 18,  CHAPMAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 1300 BLK N 10TH ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OR CONSUMPTION OF ALCOHOL BY MINOR (4-3(B)) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 4:02 PM.

RUTGER JOHNSON, 20, MANHATTAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT N 11TH ST & VATTIER ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OR CONSUMPTION OF ALCOHOL BY MINOR (4-3(B)) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 4:25 PM.

RILEY WILSON, 22,  WATHENA, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 900 BLK THURSTON ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF AN OPEN CONTAINER IN PUBLIC (4-2) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 4:45 PM.

PHOENIX KELLER, 22,  WATHENA, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 900 BLK THURSTON ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF AN OPEN CONTAINER IN PUBLIC (4-2) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 4:45 PM.

DAVID SAXON, 19, CLAREMORE, OK WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 800 BLK BERTRAND ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OR CONSUMPTION OF ALCOHOL BY MINOR (4-3(B)) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 5:10 PM.

BRETT BOYLES, 22, WEBBER, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 800 BLK VATTIER ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF AN OPEN CONTAINER IN PUBLIC (4-2) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 7:10 PM.

ALVARO AGUILAR GONZALEZ, 20, FT RILEY, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 1600 BLK FORT RILEY BLVD IN MANHATTAN FOR WHEN LIGHTED LAMPS REQUIRED (17-144) ON MARCH 1, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY10:03 PM.

ALVARO AGUILAR GONZALEZ, 20,  FT RILEY, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 1600 BLK FORT RILEY BLVD IN MANHATTAN FOR VEHICLE TAGS-EXPIRE/ILLEGBLE (19-198) ON MARCH 1, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY10:03 PM.

AUSTIN MARSHALL, 24, RANDOLPH, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 12000 BLK TUTTLE CREEK BLVD IN LEONARDVILLE FOR X MAXIMUM SPEED LIMITS (08-1558) AND FOR X DRIVING WHILE SUSPENDED; 1ST CONVICTION (08-0262A11) ON MARCH 1, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 8 AM.

MILTON ULREICH, 21, TONGANOXIE, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT N 9TH ST & BERTRAND ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF AN OPEN CONTAINER IN PUBLIC (4-2) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 4:04 PM.

HARLEY HAZLETT, 21, RUSSELL, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT N 9TH ST & BERTRAND ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF AN OPEN CONTAINER IN PUBLIC (4-2) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 4:08 PM.

ALEXANDRA CORIA, 23,  WICHITA, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 1000 BLK N 9TH ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF AN OPEN CONTAINER IN PUBLIC (4-2) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 6:43 PM.

KAYLA GOKEY, 20, DENVER, CO WAS CITED WHILE AT N 9TH ST & MORO ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X MINOR OBTAIN OR PURCHASE ALCHOL/CMB (4-3(A)) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 7:25 PM.

WALKER BASSETT, 19, TOPEKA, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 1000 BLK RATONE ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X MINOR OBTAIN OR PURCHASE ALCHOL/CMB (4-3(A)) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 1:25 PM.

GUSTAVO MORENO MARTINEZ, 25, TOPEKA, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 1000 BLK RATONE ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF AN OPEN CONTAINER IN PUBLIC (4-2) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 1:42 PM.

KEITH MCDONNELL, 20, BASEHOR, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT 801 BLUEMONT AVE IN MANHATTAN FOR X MINOR OBTAIN OR PURCHASE ALCHOL/CMB (4-3(A)) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 2:55 PM.

BRETT MOSS, 24,  HUTCHINSON, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT N 9TH ST & BLUEMONT AVE IN MANHATTAN FOR IMPROPER PEDESTRIAN CROSSING AND FOR INTOXICATED PEDESTRIAN IN STREET (11-74) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 5:02 PM.

KALEB KNISELY, 21,  FT RILEY, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 1100 BLK MORO ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF AN OPEN CONTAINER IN PUBLIC (4-2) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY10:39 PM.

CURTIS HOUSER, 21,  MANHATTAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT N 17TH ST & LARAMIE ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF AN OPEN CONTAINER IN PUBLIC (4-2) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY12:18 PM.

BRYSON ROHR, 20, PITTSBURG, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 300 BLK N 15TH ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OR CONSUMPTION OF ALCOHOL BY MINOR AND FOR LITTERING (22-28) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 3:56 PM.

DARIEN PARR, 21, LANSING, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 300 BLK N 15TH ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF AN OPEN CONTAINER IN PUBLIC (4-2) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 2:03 PM.

PARKER DANYLHK, 18, HUTCHINSON, WAS CITED WHILE AT N 15TH ST & FAIRCHILD AVE IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OR CONSUMPTION OF ALCOHOL BY MINOR (4-3(B)) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 4:52 PM.

KOURINZA ELMORE, 20,  LAWRENCE, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT FAIRCHILD AVE & N 15TH ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OR CONSUMPTION OF ALCOHOL BY MINOR (4-3(B)) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 4:52 PM.

KURTIS BORNE, 27, MANHATTAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 1800 BLK ANDERSON AVE IN MANHATTAN FOR VEHICLE TAGS-EXPIRE/ILLEGBLE (19-198) AND FOR ADULT SEAT BELT (17-182.1) ON MARCH 1, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 8:29 PM.

LEGEND MILBOURN, 23, ST JOSEPH, MO WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 600 BLK N MANHATTAN AVE IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF AN OPEN CONTAINER IN PUBLIC (4-2) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 4:26 PM.

PEAWOE MCELROY, 25,  WICHITA, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 600 BLK N 12TH ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF AN OPEN CONTAINER IN PUBLIC (4-2) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 8:10 PM.

JOHN PEREZ, 19, LAKIN, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 1000 BLK BERTRAND ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X MINOR OBTAIN OR PURCHASE ALCHOL/CMB (4-3(A)) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 1:23 PM.

ROBERT ERIKSON, 19,  MANHATTAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 1000 BLK N 12TH ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OR CONSUMPTION OF ALCOHOL BY MINOR (4-3(B)) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 4:20 PM.

BROOKE WOODWARD, 21,  MANHATTAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 1300 BLK N 11TH ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF AN OPEN CONTAINER IN PUBLIC (4-2) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 4:26 PM.

LANE HECHT, 20,  MCLOUTH, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 900 BLK BERTRAND ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OR CONSUMPTION OF ALCOHOL BY MINOR (4-3(B)) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 4:41 PM.

JACOB LOZANO, 27,  MANHATTAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 300 BLK HOUSTON ST IN MANHATTAN FOR INATTENTIVE DRIVING (14-104) ON MARCH 1, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 7:30 AM.

ALEXANDER BROWN, 25,  MANHATTAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT 1030 KEARNEY ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF AN OPEN CONTAINER IN PUBLIC (4-2) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY10:15 AM.

TAYLOR LEETCH, 23, MANHATTAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT 1030 KEARNEY ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF AN OPEN CONTAINER IN PUBLIC (4-2) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY10:15 AM.

VICTORIA GELLOTT, 24,  MANHATTAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT 1030 KEARNEY ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF AN OPEN CONTAINER IN PUBLIC (4-2) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY10:15 AM.

JAYSON MARGHEIM, 20,  MONUMENT, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT N 9TH ST & VATTIER ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X MINOR OBTAIN OR PURCHASE ALCHOL/CMB (4-3(A)) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY11:50 AM.

KATELYNN KEHL, 23, MANHATTAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT N 11TH ST & KEARNEY ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF AN OPEN CONTAINER IN PUBLIC (4-2) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY12:35 PM.

LAURA TOON, 21,  WICHITA, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 900 BLK N 11TH ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF AN OPEN CONTAINER IN PUBLIC (4-2) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 1:10 PM.

AUSTEN HUBERT, 22,  TOPEKA, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT N 11TH ST & THURSTON ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF AN OPEN CONTAINER IN PUBLIC (4-2) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 2 PM.

JOSEPH REYNOSO, 22,  WICHITA, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT N 10TH ST & THURSTON ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF AN OPEN CONTAINER IN PUBLIC (4-2) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 2:40 PM.

GARRETT SIGMAN, 23, WICHITA, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT N 10TH ST & THURSTON ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF AN OPEN CONTAINER IN PUBLIC (4-2) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 2:40 PM.

E CHARLES HINZ, 19,  NEWTON, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT N 12TH ST & VATTIER ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X MINOR OBTAIN OR PURCHASE ALCHOL/CMB (4-3(A)) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 4:25 PM.

KELSEY BECRAFT, 23,  BELTON, MO WAS CITED WHILE AT N 11TH ST & KEARNEY ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF AN OPEN CONTAINER IN PUBLIC (4-2) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 8:25 PM.

TRYSTON BROWN, 20,  BERRYTON, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT N 12TH ST & THURSTON ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X MINOR OBTAIN OR PURCHASE ALCHOL/CMB (4-3(A)) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 9 PM.

SAMARA ALLRED, 20,  STERLING, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT N 8TH ST & VATTIER ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X MINOR OBTAIN OR PURCHASE ALCHOL/CMB (4-3(A)) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY11 PM.

KALLISTA BROOKS, 20, MANHATTAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 900 BLK THURSTON ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OR CONSUMPTION OF ALCOHOL BY MINOR (4-3(B)) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 8 PM.

CHANTZ BARTA, 18,  TOPEKA, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT N 8TH ST & VATTIER ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X MINOR OBTAIN OR PURCHASE ALCHOL/CMB (4-3(A)) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY11:20 PM.

CAMERON BANWELL, 20,  GARDEN CITY, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT N 9TH ST & VATTIER ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X URINATING IN PUBLIC (22-3) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY11:40 PM.

JACOB SMITH, 22,  BENTON, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT N 11TH ST & KEARNEY ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF AN OPEN CONTAINER IN PUBLIC (4-2) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 4:24 PM.

LANDON TAETS, 20,  MANHATTAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 1100 BLK KEARNEY ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OR CONSUMPTION OF ALCOHOL BY MINOR (4-3(B)) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 4:41 PM.

CHRISTOPHER MONTGOMERY, 19, PRATT, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT N 11TH ST & THURSTON ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X MINOR OBTAIN OR PURCHASE ALCHOL/CMB (4-3(A)) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 7:53 PM.

JOSHUA MORAN, 22, GREAT BEND, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 1000 BLK BERTRAND ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF AN OPEN CONTAINER IN PUBLIC (4-2) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 3:43 PM.

SHASTINA LINCOLN, 22,  MANHATTAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 800 BLK THURSTON ST IN MANHATTAN FOR LITTERING (22-28) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY11:40 AM.

ASHLEIGH GORGES, 21,  MANHATTAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 800 BLK THURSTON ST IN MANHATTAN FOR LITTERING (22-28) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY11:40 AM.

ALI MOHAMMED A H, 25,  MANHATTAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT 821 N 11TH ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X URINATING IN PUBLIC (22-3) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY11:30 AM.

JOHN DILL, 22, MANHATTAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT 800 N 10TH ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF AN OPEN CONTAINER IN PUBLIC (4-2) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 1:48 PM.

NIKOLAI TOSTADO, 21,  TOPEKA, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 900 BLK N 11TH ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF AN OPEN CONTAINER IN PUBLIC (4-2) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 2 PM.

KAYLEE SLATER, 20, HAYS, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 1000 BLK THURSTON ST IN MANHATTAN FOR LITTERING (22-28) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 2:09 PM.

KARSON MCGINN, 24,  SEDGWICK, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 800 BLK THURSTON ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF AN OPEN CONTAINER IN PUBLIC (4-2) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 2:30 PM.

BRAYDEN COLLINS, 20,  TOPEKA, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 1000 BLK N 10TH ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X MINOR OBTAIN OR PURCHASE ALCHOL/CMB (4-3(A)) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 2:45 PM.

BRAYDEN COLLINS, 20, TOPEKA, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 1000 BLK N 10TH ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF AN OPEN CONTAINER IN PUBLIC (4-2) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 2:45 PM.

BRAYDEN COLLINS, 20,  TOPEKA, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 1000 BLK N 10TH ST IN MANHATTAN FOR LITTERING (22-28) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 2:45 PM.

SHAYNE RENKEN, 22,  DOWNS, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT N 10TH ST & BERTRAND ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF AN OPEN CONTAINER IN PUBLIC (4-2) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 3:30 PM.

JAMES ELLIS, 21, WELLSVILLE, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 900 BLK THURSTON ST IN MANHATTAN FOR LITTERING (22-28) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 4 PM.

LOGAN LUND, 23,  LEAVENWORTH, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT 1001 KEARNEY ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X URINATING IN PUBLIC (22-3) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 4:13 PM.

CHASE HULL, 22,  WICHITA, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT N 11TH ST & VATTIER ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF AN OPEN CONTAINER IN PUBLIC (4-2) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 4:20 PM.

SAMUAL GUERARA, 19,  WICHITA, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 1100 BLK N 10TH ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X MINOR OBTAIN OR PURCHASE ALCHOL/CMB (4-3(A)) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 3:45 PM.

JENNIFER CHILDERS, 39,  OGDEN, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 300 BLK N PARK ST IN OGDEN FOR NO DRIVERS LICENSE (19-192) AND FOR X NO PROOF OF MOTOR VEHICLE LIABILITY (19-200) ON FEBRUARY 25, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 7:08 PM.

ROBERT BARNETT, 50,  GODDARD, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 1000 BLK THURSTON ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OR CONSUMPTION OF ALCOHOL BY MINOR (4-3(B)) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 3:39 PM.

BRYCE SUMMERVILLE, 18,  OLATHE, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT 918 THURSTON ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X MINOR OBTAIN OR PURCHASE ALCHOL/CMB (4-3(A)) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 6:01 PM.

SVETLANA HOLLIDAY, 20, OVERLAND PARK, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 300 BLK DENISON AVE IN MANHATTAN FOR X URINATING IN PUBLIC (22-3) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 1:40 PM.

SHARON HILL, 40,  MANHATTAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 1100 BLK MORO ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF MARIJUANA (22-91) ON FEBRUARY 28, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY10:57 PM.

SHARON HILL, 40,  MANHATTAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 1100 BLK MORO ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESS DRUG PARAPHERNALIA (22-92) ON FEBRUARY 28, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY10:57 PM.

MARCUS JONES, 38,  TOPEKA, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 1900 BLK LINCOLN DR IN MANHATTAN FOR X DRIVE CANC/SUSP/REV LICENSE (19-194) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 4 AM.

TAYLOR HARDEN, 21, TOPEKA, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 1200 BLK LARAMIE ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF AN OPEN CONTAINER IN PUBLIC (4-2) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 4:35 PM.

BRAYDEN GODDARD, 18,  HOLCOMB, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT 1127 MORO ST; TUBBY’S SPORTS BAR IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OR CONSUMPTION OF ALCOHOL BY MINOR (4-3(B)) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY12:50 AM.

JORGE DELAO RIVERA, 21,  ULYSSES, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 1100 BLK MORO ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X URINATING IN PUBLIC (22-3) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY12:18 AM.

CEDRIC LOGAN JR, 22,  MISSION, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 900 BLK BERTRAND ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF AN OPEN CONTAINER IN PUBLIC (4-2) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 4:06 PM.

SAMUEL CARVER, 21, TOPEKA, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT N 10TH ST & RATONE ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF AN OPEN CONTAINER IN PUBLIC (4-2) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 4:25 PM.

CASEY KOHLMAN, 21,  CLAY CENTER, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 1000 BLK BERTRAND ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF AN OPEN CONTAINER IN PUBLIC (4-2) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 6:53 PM.

REID JOHNSON, 20, AUBURN, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 1000 BLK RATONE ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF AN OPEN CONTAINER IN PUBLIC (4-2) AND FOR X POSSESSION OR CONSUMPTION OF ALCOHOL BY MINOR (4-3(B)) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 7:05 PM.

JOSHUA PFLUMM, 23,  SHAWNEE, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 800 BLK MORO ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF AN OPEN CONTAINER IN PUBLIC (4-2) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 7:25 PM.

MASON BASS, 22,  SALINA, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 600 BLK N 12TH ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF AN OPEN CONTAINER IN PUBLIC (4-2) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY11:35 PM.

COREY HILKEMANN, 21,  HUTCHINSON, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT N 10TH ST & THURSTON ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF AN OPEN CONTAINER IN PUBLIC (4-2) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 3:40 PM.

DAVIS CUNNINGHAM, 21, WICHITA, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT N 11TH ST & VATTIER ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF AN OPEN CONTAINER IN PUBLIC (4-2) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 4:15 PM.

SYDNI JOHNSON, 21, MANHATTAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT N 10TH ST & RATONE ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF AN OPEN CONTAINER IN PUBLIC (4-2) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 3:58 PM.

JACOB TIERNAN, 20, MCPHERSON, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 900 BLK BERTRAND ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OR CONSUMPTION OF ALCOHOL BY MINOR (4-3(B)) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 4:30 PM.

CHLOE SCOTT, 19, STOCKTON, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 900 BLK BERTRAND ST; N ALLEY IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OR CONSUMPTION OF ALCOHOL BY MINOR (4-3(B)) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 4:48 PM.

TREY THOMPSON, 18, MANHATTAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 900 BLK BERTRAND ST; N ALLEY IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OR CONSUMPTION OF ALCOHOL BY MINOR (4-3(B)) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 4:48 PM.

CALEB DARMOND, 23, HUMBOLDT, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT 931 BERTRAND ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X URINATING IN PUBLIC (22-3) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 9 PM.

HOLLIS THARP, 22, HAYS, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT N 11TH ST & KEARNEY ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF AN OPEN CONTAINER IN PUBLIC (4-2) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 3:51 PM.

CASSIDY HUTTON, 20,  ARKANSAS CITY, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT N 11TH ST & VATTIER ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X MINOR OBTAIN OR PURCHASE ALCHOL/CMB (4-3(A)) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 4:23 PM.

KYLER ALDERSON, 22, MANHATTAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT N 12TH ST & VATTIER ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF AN OPEN CONTAINER IN PUBLIC (4-2) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 5:14 PM.

JORGE DE LA GUARDIA, 19,  MANHATTAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT N 12TH ST & THURSTON ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X MINOR OBTAIN OR PURCHASE ALCHOL/CMB (4-3(A)) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 6:33 PM.

DEREK HAVERKAMP, 21,  HOLTON, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 1100 BLK BERTRAND ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X URINATING IN PUBLIC (22-3) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 8 PM.

STEPHANIE MILLER, 23,  BELTON, MO WAS CITED WHILE AT N 11TH ST & KEARNEY ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF AN OPEN CONTAINER IN PUBLIC (4-2) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 8:22 PM.

JACOB WINTER, 22,  TOPEKA, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT N 12TH ST & BLUEMONT AVE IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF AN OPEN CONTAINER IN PUBLIC (4-2) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 9:22 PM.

MALORA LAKE, 20, MANHATTAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 1000 BLK RATONE ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X MINOR OBTAIN OR PURCHASE ALCHOL/CMB (4-3(A)) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 1:31 PM.

LACEY TAVIS, 20, BONNER SPRINGS, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT 801 BLUEMONT AVE IN MANHATTAN FOR X MINOR OBTAIN OR PURCHASE ALCHOL/CMB (4-3(A)) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 2:59 PM.

COLIN CHUN, 21, MANHATTAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 800 BLK THURSTON ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF AN OPEN CONTAINER IN PUBLIC (4-2) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 3:26 PM.

KYLIE HEINEKEN, 22, OVERLAND PARK, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT 1224 MORO ST; THREAD IN MANHATTAN FOR X THEFT (PETTY) (22-26) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 1:30 PM.

MUSA MUTAZMI, 18, LAWRENCE, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT 1218 MORO ST; JOHNNY KAWS SPORTS BAR IN MANHATTAN FOR X UNLAWFUL USE OF LICENSE (19-199) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 6:12 PM.

KAYLEE VISSER, 23,  MANHATTAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT 814 FREMONT ST # C IN MANHATTAN FOR X LIQUOR; OPEN SALOON (41-0803) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY11:43 AM.

CASEY ROBBEN, 19,  HAYS, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT N 9TH ST & VATTIER ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X MINOR OBTAIN OR PURCHASE ALCHOL/CMB (4-3(A)) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY11:54 AM.

MONICA GOLDBERG, 22,  MANHATTAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 1000 BLK KEARNEY ST IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OF AN OPEN CONTAINER IN PUBLIC (4-2) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY11:20 AM.

RCPD: Two 24-year-olds were victims in shooting

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RILEY COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities continue their investigation of a weekend shooting that sent two people to the hospital.

Crime scene tape in Manhattan early Saturday during the investigation –image courtesy WIBW TV

Just before 2:20 a.m. Saturday, the Riley County Police Department Dispatch Center received a report of shots fired in the 2300 block of Tuttle Creek Blvd in Manhattan.

According to a media release form RCPD, an aggravated battery report was filed listing two 24-year-old men from the Kansas City area as victims.
Both victims were life-flighted to Stormont-Vail in Topeka and were reported in stable condition on Monday.
The victims and suspects were not known to each other.  RCPD personnel have been in contact with one person of interest. Authorities have not released names of the victims or the person of interest.
Police ask that anyone with information contact the Riley County Police Department or the Manhattan Riley County Crime Stoppers. Using the Crime Stoppers service can allow you to remain anonymous and could qualify you for a cash reward of up to $1,000.00.

RCPD: $2400 worth of electronics taken in Manhattan burglary

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MANHATTAN — Law enforcement authorities are investigating a burglary and asking the public for help to identify suspect.

Just after 5:30p.m. Sunday, police filed a report for burglary in the 1200 block of Pomeroy in Manhattan, according to the Riley County Police Activity report.

A 23-year-old victim told police an unknown suspect took a TV and other electronic items.

The estimated total loss associated with this case is approximately $2,400.00.

Police ask that anyone with information please contact RCPD or the Manhattan Riley County Crime Stoppers. Using the Crime Stoppers service can allow you to remain anonymous and could qualify you for a cash reward of up to $1,000.00.

Riley County Arrest Report Tuesday March 5

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The following is a summary of arrests, citations by the Riley County Police Department. Those arrested are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.

JAIANN ANTOINETTE DESTINA, 30, Manhattan, Probation Violation and Failure to Appear, Bond $7500

Eladio Alvarez -photo courtesy Johnson Co.

ELADIO FUENTES ALVAREZ JR, 40, Manhattan,Parole violation, Aggravated failure to appear, Interference with LEO; obstruct/resist/oppose, felony warrant service or executionPossession of para w/intent to 1 manufacture/plant/cultivate controlled substance; Bond $750

CARISSA KAY HARKINS, 30, Manhattan, Driving while suspended; 1st conviction; Bond $750

STANTON LAMONT POPE JR, 26, Manhattan,Giving a worthless check; Value < $1,000; Bond $258

MARGARITA DONNA CLARK, 46, Manhattan, Failure to Appear (2x); Bond $5000

TROY ARNET RHODD, 48, Manhattan, Probation Violation; Bond $408

Andrew Wallace photo Shawnee Co.

ANDREW RICHARD WALLACE, 21, Topeka, Probation Violation; Shawnee County Sheriff

MARIAH JEAN MYRICK, 23, Topeka, Failure to Appear; Other jurisdiction

CITATION REPORT

DESTINY PITTMAN, 20, WICHITA, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT PRIDE DR & PILLSBURY DR IN MANHATTAN FOR X NO PROOF OF MOTOR VEHICLE LIABILITY (19-200)AND FOR SPEEDING (7-33) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY10:09 PM.

HAVEN TURNER, 19, OF 1620 ENGLE RD; RM 303, LAWRENCE, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 600 BLK N 4TH ST IN MANHATTAN FOR INATTENTIVE DRIVING (14-104) ON MARCH 1, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 5:40 PM.

ANGEL VEGA, 48, MILFORD, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 3700 BLK FORT RILEY BLVD IN MANHATTAN FOR X MAXIMUM SPEED LIMITS (08-1558) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 9:50 PM.

NICKEL DALEY, 30, MANHATTAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 1500 BLK POYNTZ AVE IN MANHATTAN FOR X DRIVE CANC/SUSP/REV LICENSE (19-194) ON MARCH 3, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 2:25 AM.

LOREN PEPPERD, 74,  MANHATTAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT TUTTLE CREEK BLVD & E POYNTZ AVE IN MANHATTAN FOR X IMPROPR DRIVE ON LANED ROADWAY (08-1522) ON MARCH 3, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 4:03 PM.

GRAHAM HARTON, 22,  MANHATTAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 300 BLK N 11TH ST IN MANHATTAN FOR SPEEDING (7-33) ON MARCH 3, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 4:41 PM.

ANTHONY KING, 18,  ST MARYS, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT N 17TH ST & ANDERSON AVE IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OR CONSUMPTION OF ALCOHOL BY MINOR (4-3(B)) ON MARCH 3, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY12:58 AM.

DAQUAN PATTON, 22, MANHATTAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT N JULIETTE AVE & LEAVENWORTH ST IN MANHATTAN FOR FTY RIGHT OF WAY STOP/YIELD (159) ON MARCH 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 8:50 PM.

ANNA LOIBL, 20, WICHITA, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 1100 BLK POYNTZ AVE IN MANHATTAN FOR X TRANSPORTING OPEN CONTAINER (14-106) ON MARCH 3, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 2:02 AM.

MITCHELL BLAHA, 56, MANHATTAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 2900 BLK TUTTLE CREEK BLVD IN MANHATTAN FOR VEHICLE TAGS-EXPIRE/ILLEGBLE (19-198) ON MARCH 3, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 1:22 PM.

ANTHONY FATINO, 25,  MANHATTAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 1800 BLK KIMBALL AVE IN MANHATTAN FOR FAIL TO STOP AT RED LIGHT (4-13(C)) ON MARCH 3, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 1:48 PM.

ERICK BARRAZA, 19,  EL DORADO, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT 1218 MORO ST; JOHNNY KAWS SPORTS BAR IN MANHATTAN FOR X POSSESSION OR CONSUMPTION OF ALCOHOL BY MINOR (4-3(B)) ON MARCH 3, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 1:20 AM.

MYRIAH ORDOYNE, 24, WICHITA, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT 615 N 12TH ST; KITE’S GRILLE & BAR IN MANHATTAN FOR X CRIMINAL DAMAGE TO PROPERTY (22-27) ON MARCH 3, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 1:40 AM.

 

 


Check Flipp interactive online circulars on Little Apple Post

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Study: Medicaid expand in Kansas would cost $47.4M in first year

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TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A new study says expanding Medicaid in Kansas would have a net cost of $47.4 million in the first year.

Image courtesy KHI.org

The nonprofit Kansas Health Institute estimated in the study released Tuesday that an additional 130,000 low-income adults and children would sign up if the program was expanded. That accounts for adults who already are eligible but may not know it, as well as those who already have insurance but would switch if state assistance were available.

The number is lower than previous estimates that 150,000 would sign up for the coverage. KHI policy executive and lead author Kari Bruffett says that’s because economic improvements have left fewer people uninsured.

Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly has made expansion a top priority, although Republican leaders are opposed.

Riley County Arrest Report Wednesday March 6

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The following is a summary of arrests, citations by the Riley County Police Department. Those arrested are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.

NAUTIKA ALEXANDRA SAUCEDA, 22, Manhattan, Theft of property or services; Value less than $1,500; Shoplifting(23X)  Bond $10,000

Brett Hogan has previous convictions for endangering a child and 7 convictions on various drug charges, according to the Kansas Dpt. of Corrections

ABDUL LATEEF NAJEE BEECHAM, 22, Manhattan,Theft of property or services; Value less than $1,500; Shoplifting (5x) Bond $5000

GERALD ROBERT COX JR, 50, Manhattan,Issuance of Governor’s warrant of arrest; Held without Bond

DOMONIC DONTRELL ODEN, 26, Manhattan,Aggravated domestic battery; choke in rude manner; family member/dating relationship Aggravated battery; Knowingly cause great bodily harm or disfigurementBattery; Physical contact in rude, insulting, angry manner; Bond $12,000

JACOB MICHAEL VESTWEBER, 22, Manhattan, Probation Violation, Bond $1341.60

DANIEL DAVID SHERRADEN, 23, Manhattan,Traffic contraband in corr/care facility; Intro item on grounds. Possession of opiate, opium, narcotic or certain stimulant; Bond $5000

BRETT FRANCIS HOGAN, 32, Blue Rapids, Probation Violation; Bond $500

BRYCE DALTON MORGANFIELD, 24, Manhattan, Harass by telecom device; Cause device to ring/activate to harass; Bond $1000

JENNIFER DAWN THOMAS, 40, St. George, Failure to Appear; Bond $1500

ALAN CHRIS INGWERSEN, 65, Manhattan, Domestic battery; Knowing or reckless bodily harm to family/person in dating relationship, Criminal restraint; Bond $2000

 

Dollar Tree to close up to 390 Family Dollar stores

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CHESAPEAKE, Va. (AP) — Dollar Tree is closing up to 390 Family Dollar stores this year and rebranding about 200 others under the Dollar Tree name.

The company closed 84 Family Dollar stores in the fourth quarter, 37 more than originally planned. The company has said that it will renovate at least 1,000 stores this year.

The Family Dollar store in Junction City is at 505 W 6th Street.

Dollar Tree Inc., based in Chesapeake, Virginia, acquired Family Dollar in 2015 for almost $9 billion.
The company said Wednesday that it’s seeking rent concessions from landlords at the 84 stores closed late last year and if it doesn’t get them, it’ll speed up the pace of store closings to as many as 390 locations. Dollar Tree closes about 75 stores annually.

The company had 15,237 stores in 48 states and five Canadian provinces as of Feb. 2.

Eighth annual disco party to support Kansas State University cancer research April 5

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