Rotary awards six scholarships

Six Wyandotte County students received Village West Rotary Club scholarships recently. Recipients were announced at a recent weekly Rotary breakfast. Lee Urban is the president of the club and was speaking at the event. (Photo by Christina Hankinson)

Cindy Cash, head of the Village West Rotary scholarship committee, introduced the scholarship recipients at a recent meeting. (Photo by Christina Hankinson)

Village West Rotary Club member Steve Beaumont, left, and member Adam Ehlert, right, congratulated Parker Richardson, center, one of six scholarship award recipients, at a recent Village West Rotary Club meeting. Richardson is a Piper High School graduate and University of Saint Mary student who aspires to be a doctor. Richardson, who wrote a winning essay, plans to attend the University of Missouri at Kansas City. (Photo by Christina Hankinson)

Torrid 3-point shooting rallies KCKCC to 78-63 win at Hesston

by Alan Hoskins, KCKCC

Fueled by a barrage of three-point goals, Kansas City Kansas Community College’s men roared from behind for a 78-63 opening Jayhawk Conference win at Hesston Tuesday,

The second win in four starts in 2017, the Blue Devils are right back in action tonight as they play host to Washburn’s JV at 7:30 p.m. followed by their conference home opener against Brown Mackie Saturday at 4 p.m. The KCKCC women will also play both days at 5:30 and 2 p.m.

Sophomore guard Kellen Turner continued his hot shooting, leading four Blue Devils in double figures with 26 points. Turner, who was 4-of-7 from 3-point and 8-of-14 for the game, has now scored 92 points in KCKCC’s first four games of 2017, an average of 23.0 per game.

Mike Lee added 15 points and four assists in his first game of the new year while Lane Hartley and Daniel Kingcannon chipped in with 11 points each. Jon Murray led rebounding with nine and scored seven points.

Taking advantage of chilly KCKCC shooting, Hesston opened a 22-15 lead with nine minutes left in the half before the Blue Devils charged from behind with one of their all-time best three-point shooting efforts. During a 10-minute span, the Blue Devils were seven of nine from long range. Turner had three, Lee and Kingcannon two each as they propelled KCKCC to a 38-32 halftime lead.

Turner and Lee each finished with four three-pointers, Hartley and Kingcannon three each as the Blue Devils were 10-of-16 the first half (.625) and 14-of-23 (.609) for the game.

“A great team effort, especially in the second half when the defense was outstanding” said KCKCC coach Kelley Newton. “It was really nice to have Mike Lee back in the lineup. I was especially pleased with our composure and patience but at the same time we were aggressive. Very happy to get the win and looking forward to the next one.”

KCKCC had just six turnovers in the game and limited the Larks to just 31.4 percent shooting in the second half in building a lead of 22 points.

Special prosecutor appointed in Pledger case

Tamika Pledger

A special prosecutor has been appointed for the Tamika Pledger trial, scheduled Feb. 6 in Wyandotte County District Court.

The action was taken because of conflicts with the current administration and past administration, a spokesman for the Wyandotte County District Attorney’s office said today.

James Spies will serve as a special prosecutor in the case, according to the announcement.

Jonathan Carter, a spokesman for District Attorney Mark Dupree, said they are not going into the details of why a special prosecutor was appointed, just that there were conflicts.

Pledger, a community activist, during the last election campaign put up campaign signs for Dupree. Pledger was running for a Unified Government Commission, 1st District at large, office at the time of her accident. In the Jan. 30, 2015, accident at 13th and Troup, Pledger was charged with involuntary manslaughter and aggravated battery. A teenager died after the accident.

Pledger also had a case in U.S. District Court in Kansas City, Kan., in which she filed suit against a Wyandotte County District Court judge.

According to U.S. District Court documents, the federal court ruled Jan. 6 of this month that Pledger’s case against the state judge would be dismissed. The federal court stated the judge is entitled to immunity, the federal court lacked subject matter jurisdiction, and the complaint failed to state a claim.

Pledger also filed a petition to the Kansas Court of Appeals in 2015. In her petition, she brought up several questions about her case, including that a lot of youths were in the street fighting and blocking traffic, contributing to the accident, and that there were tire marks left by another vehicle obstructing traffic that were not mentioned in the accident report.