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Riley County Arrest Report Sunday Oct. 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.

JACQUELIN MARIE HEASLET, 27, Westmoreland, Driving under the influence of drugs/alcohol; 1st conv; blood/breath .08 or >; Bond $750

TAKEERA SHATAREE GRIFFIN, 39, Manhattan, Aggravated battery; Knowingly cause great bodily harm or disfigurement; Bond $5,000

ADRIANO FAURE GARNUETTE, 45, Manhattan, Domestic battery; Knowing or reckless bodily harm to family/person in dating relationship; No bond reported

CAROL MARIE HOPKINS, 57, Great Bend, Driving under the influence of drugs/alcohol; 1st conv; blood/breath .08 or >; Bond $750

GINA MARIA JONES, 25, Manhattan, Failure to Appear; Bond $6,000

KYLE DEAN PRUYN JR, 28, Manhattan, Failure to Appear; Bond $1500

 


Division of Vehicles announces dates offices will be closed for training

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TOPEKA – For the next two months, the Kansas Department of Revenue’s Division of Vehicles will intermittently close driver’s license offices across the state for regional training meetings.

These will close offices for one day by region. The purpose is to improve consistency across the state in customer service and process training.

“Our goal is to ensure adequate and consistent training for an improved customer service experience at our offices across the state,” David Harper, Director of Vehicles, said.

The driver’s license offices will be closed as follows on their respective dates:

Monday – Sedgwick County Region

  • Wichita, Derby, Andover, Winfield

Wednesday – East Region

  • Atchison, Baxter Springs, Chanute, Ft. Scott, Independence, Iola, Leavenworth, Ottawa, Parsons, Pittsburg

Oct. 14 – Johnson and Wyandotte Counties

  • Kansas City, Mission, Olathe, Overland Park

Nov. 6 – Shawnee & Douglas Counties

  • Lawrence, Topeka

Nov. 13 – West Region

  • Colby, Dodge City, Garden City, Great Bend, Hays, Liberal, Phillipsburg, Pratt, Scott City

Nov. 18 – Central Region

  • Concordia, Emporia, Hutchinson, Junction City, Manhattan, McPherson, Salina, Seneca

Riley County Arrest Report Monday Oct. 7

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Julie Maree Turner has a previous convictions for heroin distribution and violation of the offender registration act, according to the Kansas Dept. of Corrections

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.

JULIE MAREE TURNER, 37, St. George, Probation Violation (2x) $15,000

FRANCISCO JAVIER NEVAREZ ARRELLANO, 60, Manhattan, Failure to Appear; Bond $2000

CITATION REPORT

THATCHER CLUM, 18, MANHATTAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 1500 BLK ANDERSON AVE IN MANHATTAN FOR INATTENTIVE DRIVING (14-104) ON SEPTEMBER 27, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 2:30 PM.

LARRY SCHOOF, 66,  MANHATTAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT AMHERST AVE & RESEARCH DR IN MANHATTAN FOR NO PARKING AT ANY TIME (31-54) ON OCTOBER 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 7:56 AM.

VERONICA PITCHFORD, 25, MANHATTAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT AMHERST AVE & RESEARCH DR IN MANHATTAN FOR INATTENTIVE DRIVING (31-18) ON OCTOBER 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 8:13 AM.

CARTER FINCH, 19,  COUNCIL GROVE, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT BLUEMONT AVE & TUTTLE CREEK BLVD IN MANHATTAN FOR INATTENTIVE DRIVING (31-18) ON OCTOBER 2, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 4:18 PM.

SPENCER KENNEDY, 20, MANHATTAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT 710 N MANHATTAN AVE; EIGHTEEN63 IN MANHATTAN FOR POSSESSION OR CONSUMPTION OF ALCOHOL BY MINOR (4-3(B)) ON OCTOBER 3, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY10:48 PM.

ASHLEY HUTCHINSON, 30, ALTA VISTA, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT 401 E POYNTZ AVE; ACADEMY SPORTS IN MANHATTAN FOR THEFT (PETTY) (22-26) ON OCTOBER 3, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 4:20 PM.

RCPD: Persian rug worth $12K taken in business burglary

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RILEY COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating a burglary and asking the public for help to locate suspects.

Just before 7p.m. Saturday, police filed a report for burglary in the 3000 block of Anderson Avenue in Manhattan, according to the Riley County Police Department activity report.

A 78-year-old man reported an unknown suspect took a Persian rug from his business. The estimated total loss associated with this case is approximately $12,000.00.

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.

Kroger, Walgreens to stop selling e-cigarettes in US

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NEW YORK (AP) — Two major retailers say they will no longer sell e-cigarettes in the U.S. amid mounting health questions surrounding vaping.

Supermarket chain Kroger and drugstore chain Walgreens announced Monday they would discontinue sales of e-cigarettes at their stores nationwide, citing an uncertain regulatory environment.

The vaping industry has come under scrutiny after hundreds of people have fallen ill and at least eight have died after using vaping devices.

Walmart announced last month that it would stop selling e-cigarettes at its stores nationwide.

Kroger said it would stop selling e-cigarettes as soon at its current inventory runs out at its more than 2,700 stores and 1,500 fuel centers. The Cincinnati-based company operates the Ralphs, Harris Teeter and other stores.

Walgreens, based in Deerfield, Illinois, operates more than 9,500 stores in the U.S.

Riley County Arrest Report Tuesday Oct. 8

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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.

Germy Cameron-photo Shawnee Co.

JONATHAN THOMAS COLE, 34, Manhattan, Failure to Appear; Bond $3000

JOSE MIGUEL FUENTES TRINIDAD, 23, Manhattan, Traffic contraband in corr/care facility; Intro item on grounds, Domestic battery; Knowing or reckless bodily harm to family/person in dating relationship; Bond $4000

GINA MARIA JONES, 25, Manhattan, Failure to Appear,Theft of property or services; Value $1,500 to $25,000; Theft from Building, Unlawful to possess tool to remove theft detection device; Held without Bond

EDIMELEZ ESPINOZA MORENO, 26, Manhattan, Vehicle liability insurance; Liability coverage required;Operate a motor vehicle without a valid license; Bond $1000

DANIEL JONATHAN VALAIKA, 22, Manhattan, Disorderly conduct; Fighting words or noisy conduct to cause resentment; Bond $2000

HASAN NAPOLEON PERRY, 24, Ashland, VA, Probation Violation; Bond $1000

DIOGENE VILCHE-BETANCO, 31, Manhattan, No Drivers License; Bond $500; Exceptionally Cleared

GERMY TERRELL CAMERON, 33, Manhattan, Failure to Appear (3x) Shawnee Co. Sheriff

RYAN JOSHUA TIERNEY, 15, Manhattan, Possession of marijuana and Cigarette and tobacco products act; Sell/give/furish to < 18 YOA; Juvenile

 

K-State hires vice provost for enrollment management

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MANHATTAN — Karen Goos is joining Kansas State University as its first chief enrollment officer and will lead implementation of the university’s comprehensive, multiyear strategic enrollment plan.

Karen Goos photo courtesy KSU

Charles Taber, K-State provost and executive vice president, has announced the appointment of Goos as vice provost for enrollment management following a national search. Goos, who currently serves as interim vice provost for enrollment management at the University of Central Missouri, will begin her new job on Nov. 18.

“With her strong background in enrollment management, Dr. Goos will be tasked with providing strategic leadership and vision to all aspects of enrollment management at K-State, including domestic and international student recruitment, financial aid, registration and transfer enrollment,” Taber said.

Goos’ key responsibilities will be implementing the university’s strategic enrollment plan; refining the university’s marketing position; managing, developing and leading K-State’s enrollment management organization; and ensuring the enrollment of a talented, diverse student body.

“I am excited to be joining the K-State,” Goos said. “The university has had a long history of valuing students and their success. I have always been impressed with K-State, and look forward to working with the talented campus community to help tell their story and commitment to academic excellence. This is an exciting time at K-State and I am thrilled to be a Wildcat.”

As the University of Central Missouri’s interim vice provost for enrollment management since January 2018, Goos has served as the school’s chief enrollment management and student success officer. She oversees undergraduate and graduate admissions, international student services, the registrar’s office and student financial aid, as well as the university’s advising center, academic support services, first-year experience program and other key student success programs. She also developed and managed the nearly $17 million budget for the enrollment management units and chaired the strategic enrollment management planning and implementation teams. Under her leadership, the University of Central Missouri has achieved an increase of 6% in graduate enrollment and 16% in international enrollment.

Goos served as associate vice provost for enrollment management at the University of Central Missouri from April 2016 to December 2018. In this role, she was the chief student success officer and was responsible for the design and implementation of a comprehensive retention and student success plan. Her work resulted in a 4% increase in freshman student retention, a 2% increase in transfer student retention and a 6% increase in graduation rates. She also developed and initiated a summer bridge program for low-income, first-generation and historically underserved students.

Before joining the University of Central Missouri, Goos worked at several campuses of Metropolitan Community College in Missouri. She was dean of student development and enrollment management from October 2012-March 2016 at Metropolitan Community College-Longview in Lee’s Summit; associate vice chancellor of student development and enrollment management at Metropolitan Community College-Kansas City from July 2014-August 2015; associate dean of student development and enrollment management from August 2010-October 2012 and registrar from May 2009-August 2010 at Metropolitan Community College-Blue River in Independence; enrollment services manager at Metropolitan Community College-Kansas City from April 2008-May 2009; and college relations coordinator from February 2005-April 2008 at Metropolitan Community College-Maple Woods, also in Kansas City.

Goos earned a bachelor’s degree in elementary and middle school education from Doane College; a master’s in exercise science-athletic administration from the University of Central Missouri; and a doctorate in educational leadership and policy analysis from the University of Missouri.

Sunflower CASA will present Cornhole for the Cause, Cornhole Tournament

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The Blue Earth Plaza will be the site on Saturday for a Cornhole for the Cause, Cornhole Tournament presented by Sunflower CASA Project.

The cost to enter will be $40 per team of two. There will be two leagues, one For the Cause and one that is competitive. There will be cash prizes for the winners.

Mr. K’s / Kites will be on site with their food truck and will serve as the beer garden vendor, as they donate back to CASA. Manhatchet will provide additional entertainment  while supporting CASA with donations back as well. Nate Hernandes & the Cover-Ups will provide live music. Staff and volunteers will have bake sale items available and there will be silent auction items available for bidding. They will range from 4-Golf passes at Colbert Hills, an autographed football by Coach Chris Klieman and a set of cornhole boards with bags.

Sunflower CASA is an umbrella agency serving three distinct programs. There is Sunflower Bridge Child Exchange and Visitation Center, Stepping Stones Child Advocacy Center and CASA Core Services.

Sunflower Bridge Child Exchange and Visitation Center is where children can come to have monitored exchanges or supervised visits with their non-residential caregivers, in a safe and child friendly setting.  Stepping Stones Child Advocacy Center is the part of the agency where child-friendly forensic interviews are provided for children who have disclosed physical or sexual abuse. In CASA Core Services community members are trained to advocate for children who have open child in need of care cases with the court due to issues of abuse or neglect.


Riley County Arrest Report Wednesday Oct. 9

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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.

Wilroy has previous convictions for theft, drugs and violation of the offender registration act, according to the Kansas Department of Corrections

MARY ELIZABETH SMITH, 27, Manhattan, Driving under the influence of drugs/alcohol; 1st conv; blood/breath .08 or >; Bond $750

AMANDA SUE WILROY, 41, Manhattan, Probation Violation (2x); Bond $16,000

HEATHER MARIE FLANARY, 39, Manhattan, Criminal trespass; Remain in defiance of order by owner; Bond $500

JESSICA RENEE STAMBAUGH, 29, Greenleaf, Failure to Appear; Bond $1,500

MICHAEL DEAN NASH, 41, Manhattan, Failure to Appear; Bond $2,000

HIGINIO M CALLEJA SIMON, 29, Lawrence, Arrest by LEO; Warrant arrest

 

 

 

Plan now to attend Tuesday’s Memory Care Gala

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Join us for the Memory Care Gala Tuesday October 15, from 4-7p.m at Home of the Flint HIlls, 11771 Legacy Place, St. George.

The event sponsored by Home of the Flint Hills and Interim Healthcare will benefit the Alzheimer’s Association.

Dress is casual and you will enjoy caramel apple martinis, other cocktails, appetizers, an auction and raffles!

Manhattan Fire Department Open House Sunday

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The Manhattan Fire Department will host its annual Open House on Sunday, October 13, from 11:00 a.m. until 3:00 p.m at the Headquarters Fire Station located at 2000 Denison Avenue.  Activities for all ages will include rides on Old Engine 1, outdoor fire safety, face painting, and visits from Frankie the Fireman. Kids will also have a chance to use a real fire hose.  A live side by side fire demonstration that shows the effectiveness of home fire sprinklers will take place at 2:00 p.m.

This week the Manhattan Fire Department is teaming up with the National Fire Protection Association (NFPA) to promote this year’s Fire Prevention Week campaign, “Not Every Hero Wears a Cape. Plan and Practice Your Escape!” The campaign works to educate everyone about the small but important actions they can take to keep themselves and those around them safe.

NFPA statistics show that U.S. fire departments responded to 357,000 home structure fires. These fires caused 2,630 fire deaths and 10,600 fire injuries in 2017. On average, seven people died in a fire in a home per day from 2012 to 2016.  In the City of Manhattan, 21 injuries and 2 fire deaths occurred in 302 home structure fires between between 2012 and 2018.

Why home escape planning and practice matter:

K-State to offer beer and wine sales at basketball games

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K-State Athletics has announced that it will offer sales of beer and wine to all public areas of Bramlage Coliseum during men’s and women’s basketball games beginning this season.

KSU has sold beer at K-State baseball games in Tointon Family Stadium since 2013 and at soccer matches in Buser Family Park since the program began in 2016.

“We want to continue to find ways to make the experience for our fans at our events more attractive and we feel expanding our beer and wine sales to Bramlage for basketball games will do that,” Athletics Director Gene Taylor said. “This was a decision that was thoroughly vetted with our staff, campus leaders and our Sodexo Inc., partners, as well as gathering input from our donors and fan base, and we look forward to this new addition to our game day operation.

Fans must be at least 21 years of age and present a valid state ID or driver’s license to purchase alcohol. Sodexo personnel will verify age and provide a wristband to those guests of age, who will be permitted to purchase up to two drinks per transaction. Multiple points of purchase in concession stands and at portable locations will be available throughout the concourse of Bramlage Coliseum, in addition to the premium areas of the arena. Sales will begin when doors open and close at the 15-minute mark of the second half for men’s games and with five minutes remaining in the third quarter for women’ games.

Taylor also emphasized there is no imminent plan to expand beer and wine sales to Bill Snyder Family Stadium for football games.

Riley County Arrest Report Thursday October 10

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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.

STEPHEN BRADLEY PRICE, 22, Manhattan, Failure to Appear; Bond $4000

KASEY J FEYH, 21, Wamego, Driving while license cancelled/suspended/revoked; Bond $750

Pawnee Mental Health Services offering free depression screenings on Thursday

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In conjunction with National Depression Screening Day, Pawnee Mental Health Services will be offering free depression screenings to the general public. No appointment will be necessary.

Locations include:

–Junction CIty, 814 Caroline Avenue, 785-762-5250

–Manhattan, 2001 Claflin Road, 785-587-4300

–Concordia, 210 West 21st Street, 785-243-8900

Accord Hospice hosts successful Camp Soar

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Accord Hospice held its 2nd annual Camp SOAR Saturday, September 28, 2019, in Junction City.

Since the 1st annual Camp SOAR was such a success, Accord partnered with the Elks Lodge #1037 to provide two additional mini camps this year. Camp SOAR day camps are for children ages 5-16 suffering from some type of loss.

These losses range from the death of a loved one, overlooked losses which include divorce of one’s parents, being separated from a parent or loved one by distance or deployment, being placed in foster care and missing one’s family of origin, and having a parent who is absent due to incarceration or present yet “absent” due to substance abuse.

While the reasons for loss are diverse, the pain of grief remains very much the same. “The focus of our camp”, said Camp Director Crystal Butler, “is sharing memories, trying new things, and learning we are never alone in our grief.”

Over 26 children and 25 experienced community volunteers descended on the 12th Street Community Center for an entire Saturday. They participated in arts & crafts, sports, games, face-painting, storytelling, martial arts instruction, and many other activities aimed at providing support, healing, and building memories. The campers enjoyed a demonstration by Fort Riley’s 523 Military Working Dogs Detachment and Elite Academy of Martial Arts. The Junction City High School J-Steppers Dance Team offered dance instruction for the campers and D.A.R.E. educated campers regarding drug abuse resistance. The camp gives children and volunteers the opportunity to share feelings, make new friends, and build trust. “Many of the children attending this camp have participated in previous camps,” said Butler, “which means we are meeting a need in the community.” Diedra Kearney, Chief Operating Officer of Accord Hospice states that the camp had been a long-standing goal of this agency, which has been serving the community since 2014, providing Hospice care, Palliative support, and Bereavement resources to over 300 families in that time. She notes, “We have always had grief and bereavement services for adults, but we recognized a gap in those services for children, and we are thrilled to provide such a necessary program for the community.” Kearney goes on to say that nearly 1.5 million children nationwide are living in a single-family household because of the death of one parent and one out of every 20 children age 15 and younger will suffer the loss of one or both parents.

Research suggests grieving children are at a much greater risk than their peers for depression, suicide, poverty and substance abuse.  Director Butler explains, “Our vision is to provide children access to grief and loss support in an environment where they are encouraged to and allowed to feel like kids. Sometimes, just knowing that they are not alone helps children cope with their grief.”

Accord Hospice would like to thank their generous sponsors, Junction City Elks Lodge #1037, Valley View Senior Life, Home of the Flint Hills, Screen Machine Sports, Johnson Funeral Home, Junction City Transportation, Schoenrock Realtors, Baskin Robbins, The Tony Nardella Family, and the city of Junction City for allowing us the use of the 12th Street Community Center. “We have had the most amazing support the last two years from the Junction City community. We are honored to work with our volunteers and sponsors to make this happen,” exclaims Tammy Bruce, who is the Social Services Director at Accord Hospice.

Planning for the next camp is already underway and Accord Hospice is happy to have additional volunteers and support from the community. Please contact Crystal Butler at 785-376-0346 or email her at cbutler@accordks.com


Riley County Arrest Report Friday Oct. 11

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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.

ANTONIO CLIFTON ANDERSON, 27, Manhattan, Failure to Appear; Bond $2000

CITATION REPORT
SARAH RANKIN, 21,  MANHATTAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 7300 BLK TUTTLE CREEK BLVD IN RILEY FOR MAXIMUM SPEED LIMITS (08-1558) ON OCTOBER 9, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 4:14 PM.

TANNER HOCKENBURY, 22,  MANHATTAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 1000 BLK BLUEMONT AVE IN MANHATTAN FOR FOLLOWING TOO CLOSELY (8-47) ON OCTOBER 9, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 4:59 PM.

HENRY LEMUS OSARIO, 47,  MANHATTAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 700 BLK YUMA ST IN MANHATTAN FOR VEHICLE TAGS-EXPIRE/ILLEGBLE, FOR NO PROOF OF MOTOR VEHICLE LIABILITY (19-200) AND FOR NO DRIVERS LICENSE (19-192) ON OCTOBER 9, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 7:48 PM.

QURAYSHA KENNEDY, 24,  LEONARDVILLE, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT N ERPELDING AVE & W CHASE ST IN LEONARDVILLE FOR X VEHICLES;UNLAWFUL ACTS;REGISTRATION (08-0142) ON OCTOBER 8, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 8:56 PM.

ASHLEY CHARLES, 22, MANHATTAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT AMHERST AVE & N SETH CHILD RD IN MANHATTAN FOR SPEEDING (7-33) ON OCTOBER 7, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY12:15 PM.

LOGAN HAMILTON, 20,  MANHATTAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT KIMBALL AVE & RANSER RD IN MANHATTAN FOR FOLLOWING TOO CLOSELY (8-47) ON OCTOBER 7, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 4:25 PM.

PATRICIA FINN, 60,  KANSAS CITY, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT COLLEGE AVE & KIMBALL AVE IN MANHATTAN FOR FAIL TO STOP AT RED LIGHT (4-13(C)) ON OCTOBER 8, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 1:25 PM.

TONI LOWRY, 38,  MANHATTAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT N SETH CHILD RD & CLAFLIN RD IN MANHATTAN FOR VEHICLE TAGS-EXPIRE/ILLEGBLE (19-198) ON OCTOBER 8, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 4:05 PM.

BLAKE HECK, 22,  MANHATTAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT 3500 ANDERSON AVE IN MANHATTAN FOR SPEEDING (7-33) ON OCTOBER 9, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 3:39 PM.

DEANGELENA TERRELL, 21, MANHATTAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 3500 BLK ANDERSON AVE IN MANHATTAN FOR SPEEDING (7-33) ON OCTOBER 9, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 4:02 PM.

VIOLINA LEVASA, 31,  MANHATTAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 3500 BLK ANDERSON AVE IN MANHATTAN FOR SPEEDING (7-33) ON OCTOBER 9, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 4:24 PM.

CHRISTOPHER OKRASINSKI, 32, MANHATTAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 3500 BLK ANDERSON AVE IN MANHATTAN FOR SPEEDING (7-33) ON OCTOBER 9, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 3:57 PM.

MATTHEW PERRY, 32, , MANHATTAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 3500 BLK ANDERSON AVE IN MANHATTAN FOR SPEEDING (7-33) ON OCTOBER 9, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 4:19 PM.

LINDSAY FLORES, 25, , MANHATTAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 3600 BLK ANDERSON AVE IN MANHATTAN FOR SPEEDING (7-33) AND FOR NO DRIVERS LICENSE IN POSSESSION (19-193) ON OCTOBER 9, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 3:41 PM.

AVERY GROOVER, 19,  MANHATTAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 3600 BLK ANDERSON AVE IN MANHATTAN FOR SPEEDING (7-33) ON OCTOBER 9, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 4:13 PM.

TOREY BURKHARDT, 20,  MANHATTAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE IN THE 3600 BLK ANDERSON AVE IN MANHATTAN FOR SPEEDING (7-33) ON OCTOBER 9, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 4:30 PM.

KARLEE STEBRAL, 21, MANHATTAN, KS WAS CITED WHILE AT CLAFLIN RD & BROWNING AVE IN MANHATTAN FOR FOLLOWING TOO CLOSELY (8-47) ON OCTOBER 9, 2019 AT APPROXIMATELY 9:10 AM.

Check Flipp interactive online circulars on Little Apple Post

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Little Apple Post has partnered with Flipp to offer interactive online circulars! Check this week’s bargains out here! Don’t see the circular you want in the preview? Click on an ad to pull up a search menu for retailers like Dillons, Walmart, JCPenney and so much more!

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RCPD: Police investigating home burglary in Manhattan

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MANHATTAN — Law enforcement authorities are investigating a burglary in the 500 block of Fremont Street in Manhattan.

Just after 11:30p.m. Thursday, a 34-year-old woman reported an unknown suspect entered her home, according to the Riley County Police Department Activity report.

Authorities have released no additional details.

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 Saturday Oct. 12

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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.

JOHN DEAN SCHUM, 32, Manhattan,Ignition interlock device; Operate a car without a required device; Bond $750

SHAPHAN SIRQUEZ WILLIS, 21, Manhattan,Aggravated domestic battery; impede breath; blocking nose/mouth of family/dating relation; Bond $5000

LAMARQUES ATEZ CHANNEL, 36, Manhattan,Interference with LEO; Conceal/alter/destroy evidence in felony case and Possession of marijuana; 2 or more prior convictions; Bond $3000

DEANA LYNN CURRY, 44, Manhattan, Failure to Appear; Bond $1000

Those Pushing A Higher Vaping Age In Kansas Worry Big Tobacco Will Water Down Rules

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Vape shops often have scores, or even hundreds of e-liquid flavors. This shop in Topeka doesn’t sell to people under age 21.
CELIA LLOPIS-JEPSEN / KANSAS NEWS SERVICE

TOPEKA, Kansas —Cigarettes are so yesterday.

Or yesteryear.

That’s why that old-fashioned, combustible path to a nicotine buzz wasn’t the top concern for a small group of high schoolers in Sabetha — a 2,500-person town about an hour north of Topeka near the Nebraska border — when they got city council to hike the minimum age for buying tobacco products to 21.

“I don’t really know anyone that smokes cigarettes around here because they’re really gross,” Sabetha High senior Kinsey Menold said. “Then, like, Juuls came in.”

The slender, chic vaping devices took off among teens in recent years. Notoriously easy to hide from parents and teachers, Menold says her classmates took hits of nicotine in the hallways, in the bathrooms — sometimes even in class.

“It was like our new thing instead of cigarettes,” she said. “Our new challenge, for our generation.”

Statewide, more than two dozen cities and counties have raised the age for buying tobacco and vaping products by three years, part of a national “Tobacco 21” movement that includes more than 500 city and county ordinances.

Yet enforcing those rules has proven tricky because of the gap between state and local law. That could change. This winter, health advocacy groups will press state legislators to make 21 the law of the land.

The city of Lawrence hasn’t raised the minimum age for buying tobacco, meaning 18-year-olds are allowed into vape shops like this one.
CREDIT CELIA LLOPIS-JEPSEN / KANSAS NEWS SERVICE

They’re bracing themselves for pushback from tobacco lobbyists. Major industry players support Tobacco 21, but their critics accuse them of co-opting the effort, leading in some places to watered-down laws that lack teeth or pre-empt other anti-tobacco efforts.

“Absolutely,” said Jordan Feuerborn, a lobbyist for the American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network. “We’ve seen this play out in other states.”

The law that her group will seek together with the American Lung Association, American Heart Association and others would target shop owners who flout the minimum age, rather than blaming the cashiers or teens who get caught.

“The profit-gaining entity should be the party responsible,” she said. “We don’t want to punish minimum wage workers, and we really don’t want to punish children.”

Easier said than done

No one has tried to enforce Tobacco 21 in Kansas longer than Wyandotte County and Kansas City, Kansas — an area with one of the state’s highest smoking rates and where most high schools sit within short walking distance of convenience stores that sell cigarettes and vape pens.

In late 2015, the combined city-county government kicked off the cascade of local ordinances that today cover a third of the state’s population, largely in northeast Kansas.

The change looked better in print than in practice. Two years into the new regime, Wyandotte-KCK put 130 shops to the test to see if they’d sell to someone under age. A quarter did.

The city-county government will ramp up compliance checks on cigarette and vape sellers, thank those that pass and urge the rest to do better.

“We don’t have any clear way of enforcement,” said Bianca Garcia, who is in charge of the city and county’s anti-tobacco efforts. “That’s why we’re looking into this reward and reminder program.”

It’s a soft-glove approach, but going after the cashiers who screw up doesn’t appeal to city-county officials. Nor can they suspend the licenses of the shop owners, they say, because the state licensing system only requires those shops not sell to minors.

A recent Kansas Health Institute* study found none of the state’s local ordinances have the necessary teeth to clamp down on problem shops. Health experts who applauded their passage now see them as only partial victories.

“We learned, we learned,” said Edward Ellerbeck, a University of Kansas School of Medicine professor who researches tobacco cessation. “I was at the beginning of this. I thought we were doing the right thing.”

E-liquids for sale at Top Shelf Vapors in Topeka.
CREDIT CELIA LLOPIS-JEPSEN / KANSAS NEWS SERVICE

Anti-tobacco groups such as the American Cancer Society will hammer home that lesson while pushing legislators in the 2020 session for an air-tight Tobacco 21 law — with ample funding for compliance checks and solid penalties for businesses that don’t toe the line.

Addiction and the brain

Smoking remains the country’s top preventable cause of death, killing about half a million people per year. For every one of those, another 30 are seriously sick.

In Kansas, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimated, health problems stemming from tobacco cost the state and its residents about $1 billion in a single year.

But cigarettes have enticed fewer and fewer new smokers as their death toll and massive anti-tobacco campaigns transformed public opinion.

In 2005, half of Kansas high schoolers reported ever trying a cigarette. In 2017, that was down to one-quarter. By then, though, vaping had arrived on the scene. A third had tried it.

High school journalists in Johnson County surveyed their peers and found a third said they owned Juuls, often puffing their way through more than one cartridge a week (roughly a pack of cigarettes).

Read Shawnee Mission East’s “Juul: From Craze To Epidemic”

Nicotine poses the greatest risk for these still developing brains, scientists say, because they’re most likely to end up wired for a lifelong habit.

Cities and counties saw a chance in Tobacco 21 to cut off a key nicotine pipeline to their minors: the many 18-year-olds still in school. Topeka battled to do so all the way to the Kansas Supreme Court.

“Tobacco use stopped at an early age can extend the life,” Mayor Michelle De La Isla said this June, when her city finally defeated a legal challenge that could have overridden local ordinances across the state. “Municipalities should be able to have (that) ability.”

A 2014 survey found most American adults support the higher age. Most smokers, too.

Cope’s bestsellers are Smok models. He stocks Juul pods, but doesn’t sell many and says they don’t appeal much to older customers.
CREDIT CELIA LLOPIS-JEPSEN / KANSAS NEWS SERVICE

Vaping versus smoking

Eric Cope estimates his small specialty vape shop, Top Shelf Vapors, near a busy intersection in west Topeka offers more than 300 e-liquids.

Fruits and sweets sell best, and Cope bristles at the narrative that options like strawberry-lemonade target kids. Adults of all ages want to escape the taste of cigarettes, he says. Few people ask for tobacco flavor.

“A cigarette tastes terrible,” Cope said. “If you want to know, go lick an ashtray.”

Though cigarette giant Altria now has a hefty stake in Juul Labs, vape shop owners harbor no love for Big Tobacco, which they see as peddling poor health and quashing fledgling competitors.

Topeka’s Tobacco 21 ordinance means Cope can’t sell to 18-, 19- and 20-year-olds, but that hasn’t cost him much business, he says. Most of his customers were older — smokers who’ve ditched cigarettes or want to.

But Cope, himself a former long-time smoker who refuses to stock combustible tobacco, worries the non-vaping public has whipped itself into a frenzy of fear that blows the risk of e-cigarettes vastly out of proportion.

“Vapor is pretty safe,” he said. “At least 95% safer than smoking. And it should get a lot of credit for that.”

“I work at this every day and I see the transformation of people,” he said. “They all say, I can taste better. I can breathe better, I can sleep better. I have more energy.”

That “95%” comes from Great Britain, where an English public health agency argues vaping is that much safer, and that smokers should urgently switch.

The Royal College of Physicians agrees, calling vaping’s risks nothing compared to the potential “to prevent death and disability” by quitting cigarettes.

Many scientists disagree.

KU pulmonologist Matthias Salathe tests vaping on human respiratory cells. That British 95% ballpark isn’t based on trial results, he said, but rather assumptions about chemical content and carcinogens.

“I have a hard time (with) that logic,” he said. “We don’t have the data.”

Salathe’s own findings in pre-clinical and animal trials have him worried that vaping could cause chronic bronchitis.

More than 1,000 people nationwide have sustained lung injuries from vaping in recent months. Most have so far reported using fluids laced with cannabis compounds. Public health officials in Kansas, where two people are dead, have urged people to stop vaping immediately.

The CDC’s latest update on the outbreak of vaping injuries

Physicians in England and the U.S. alike agree on one thing: Whether vaping is safer than smoking or not, that doesn’t make it safe.

“The vast majority of youth that take up vaping,” Ellerbeck at KU said, “are not doing it to quit smoking.”

Juul in the crosshairs

Nationwide, litigation against Juul is piling up.

In Kansas, the Goddard and Olathe school boards announced lawsuits last month, accusing the company of marketing to minors and making schools divert precious resources to deal with the fallout.

Juul Labs has drawn criticism for ads that tobacco researchers say target teens in the same way cigarette ads did decades ago.

A Johnson County man sued, too, arguing he got hooked in high school and paid a steep personal price in just a few short years.

Juul Labs has said its products were only ever meant to help adult smokers give up cigarettes.

Call tobacco researcher Stanton Glantz a skeptic.

“If your campaign is nominally trying to reach middle-age smokers,” the University of California San Francisco professor said, “you don’t run it on Instagram promoting parties with hip 20-somethings.”

In decades past, tobacco companies brazenly marketed to teens, and Glantz says Juul’s tactics follow that tradition.

Explore Stanford’s gallery of historical and modern tobacco ads

The company pounded social media feeds with chic short videos of ultra fashionable young people dancing to hip beats and sparse messages — “Get #vaporized” — that didn’t mention kicking any habits.

Juul has suspended its U.S. advertising as state and federal lawmakers and regulators ratchet up scrutiny. It’s thrown its weight behind Tobacco 21 efforts, too, at both state and federal levels.

One of the many cigarette ads from the 1950s targeting teens, archived by Stanford Research Into the Impact of Tobacco Advertising.

Eighteen states have now passed Tobacco 21 as state laws.

In several cases, though, health advocates argue tobacco interests watered down the bills and the ability to enforce them through shrewd lobbying. They want Kansas to adopt clear enforcement funding and procedures.

Public policy and investment analysts at DC-based Beacon Policy Advisors say Tobacco companies glomming onto Tobacco 21 see it as “the lesser of two evils.” They’ve lobbied to at least include provisions that undercut other anti-tobacco efforts, such as flavor bans.

“There’s a general sense that tobacco companies are willing to make a compromise,” senior analyst Ben Koltun wrote in an email, “if it heads off potentially more negative developments.”

*Editor’s note: The Kansas Health Institute receives funding from the Kansas Health Foundation, a financial supporter of the Kansas News Service.

Celia Llopis-Jepsen reports on consumer health and education for the Kansas News Service. You can follow her on Twitter @Celia_LJ or email her at celia (at) kcur (dot) org. 

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