South Mill Street Bridge over Turkey Creek closed for work

The South Mill Street Bridge over Turkey Creek is currently closed to traffic for phase three of the Turkey Creek flood protection levee being built by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.

According to those working on the project with the Unified Government, the Turkey Creek flood protection levee is being built in phases. The bridge was worked on last year, also. It will go up and over the levee.

The project started about 10 years ago, and this structure and the one by the Seventh Street Bridge are the final two parts of the project. The improvements have already brought better flood control to the area.

This project should be completed, and the bridge should reopen by the beginning of December, according to officials.

Cross-cultural literacy program coming to KCK Oct. 24

Richard Mabion, Kansas City, Kan., Branch NAACP president, is busy preparing for a unique event here, a cross-cultural literacy program Oct. 24 at the Reardon Convention Center.

The Harlem Book Fair event, a free public event, is unusual in that it is cosponsored by two groups, the NAACP representing the African-American community, and El Centro Inc., representing the Hispanic community in the Kansas City, Kan., area. Mabion and Irene Caudillo, executive director of El Centro, are working behind the scenes to bring the Book Fair to the community.

Mabion said he really likes that the event seems to be expanding beyond the two organizations, to start becoming a community event. Several organizations have expressed interest in having informational displays at the event, he added. He and Caudillo have been meeting with different organizations in the community about the upcoming event.

“I just see it as more than an individual thing between NAACP and El Centro, and am seeing it as a citywide project, and enjoying that happen,” Mabion said.

The Harlem Book Fair promotes literacy and cross-cultural dialogue through this event, and as part of the effort, free books are being distributed throughout the Kansas City area in advance, he said.

At the Harlem Book Fair, scheduled from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Oct. 24 at the center at 5th and Minnesota Avenue, there will be writers and artists who will engage in storytelling, readings from their works, music and art presentations.

Mabion said visitors to the event can expect to see an African village and a Hispanic village with storytellers. The villages are currently being put together by volunteers.

Poetry competitions for students were held in September conjunction with the event, and the final poetry competition is scheduled Oct. 23 at the Vision Building, 1017 N. 6th St., Kansas City, Kan.

“The Book Fair is the catalyst for the literacy education that we want to see occurring in our community,” Mabion said.

At the Harlem Book Fair, residents may see what other resources are available in the metropolitan area, he said. There is also some discussion currently about following up with other community events, he added.

Increasing literacy among the youth in the community is a challenge.

“I’m finding kids read for assignments, not for the love of reading,” Mabion remarked. “That’s the group I want to encourage to start loving to read.”

Literacy and reading leads youth to more educational opportunities, and then to more career opportunities, the event’s organizers believe.

Some youth today are spending more of their free time playing games than reading. Mabion said he recently met a computer science educator in Lawrence who wants to write programs to teach young people to take the computer skills past the games and into some productive activity and money-making activity.

“Right now, kids are on electronic devices, but they’re playing games,” he said. He’d like them to be able to use those skills to go to the next level, he added.

Mabion said he started reading books written in the Harlem Renaissance, and gradually, reading became a way of life for him.

One of the Harlem Renaissance authors, Claude McKay, a Jamaican-American writer who died in 1948, had some Kansas ties, Mabion said, having studied agriculture at Kansas State. He was famous for the novel, “Home to Harlem.”

Mabion has visited some community groups, delivering books to students from First Books Company, and promoting the upcoming Harlem Book Fair.

The Harlem Book Fair will also be a good opportunity for young authors who have written books, he said. There will be a publishing company represented, along with some authors. Two authors of children’s books are among those who will be attending, he added.

One of the authors who is scheduled to attend is Sarah Washington O’Neal Rush, the great-granddaughter of Booker T. Washington, who plans to discuss her recent book, “Rising Up from the Blood.”

Atlanta man sentenced for fraud scheme that used homeless to cash counterfeit checks

An Atlanta, Ga., man has been sentenced in federal court for his role in a bank fraud conspiracy that used homeless persons to cash counterfeit checks in the Kansas City metropolitan area and nationwide.

More than $400,000 in counterfeit checks was passed in the Kansas City area over the course of a few months in late 2012 and early 2013, according to Tammy Dickinson, U.S. attorney for the Western District of Missouri.

Nationwide, more than $8 million in counterfeit checks was passed by various crews that traveled across the country to steal business mail, create counterfeit payroll checks and recruit homeless men to cash the counterfeit checks.

Marion Anthony Norwood, also known as “Wee-Wee,” 47, of Atlanta, was sentenced by U.S. District Judge Beth Phillips on Monday, Oct. 5, 2015, to 12 years in federal prison without parole. The court also ordered Norwood to pay more than $200,000 in restitution.

On Aug. 20, 2014, Norwood was convicted at trial of participating in a conspiracy to commit bank fraud. Norwood was the leader of a crew that traveled to Kansas City and recruited homeless men to pass computer-generated counterfeit payroll checks at local banks. The scheme also involved the theft of mail at businesses, where the perpetrators looked for company checks to use as templates to make the counterfeit checks. Norwood manufactured and printed the counterfeit checks and gave them to co-conspirators.

Norwood traveled to Kansas City in November 2012 with Gary Merritt, 56, of Kansas City, Kan. (formerly of Atlanta), according to the U.S. attorney’s office. Merritt’s role in the conspiracy was to find homeless men in Kansas City and recruit them to pass counterfeit payroll checks at local banks, according to the U.S. attorney’s office. Anthony Bernard Lowe, 53, and Marcus Bryant, 33, both of Atlanta, traveled together from Atlanta and met Norwood and Merritt in Kansas City.

In a separate but related case, Merritt and Bryant each pleaded guilty and were sentenced to five years in federal prison without parole. Lowe pleaded guilty and was sentenced to four years and nine months in federal prison without parole.

Conspirators made a second trip to Kansas City shortly after Christmas in 2012 to continue the scheme with counterfeit checks that were manufactured and printed by Norwood.

Conspirators returned to Kansas City in January 2013 to continue the scheme with counterfeit checks that were manufactured and printed by Norwood. Some of the conspirators then traveled to Lincoln, Neb., to continue the counterfeit check scheme.

This case was prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney John E. Cowles. It was investigated by the U.S. Postal Inspection Service, the Kansas City, Mo., Police Department, the Leawood, Kan., Police Department and the Atlanta, Ga., Police Department.