Piper results

Piper High School swimmers received medals recently at a meet at Turner. (Piper High School photo)

Piper High School – boys swimming at Turner (Wyco)

– 3rd place
– 200 Medley Relay A placed 3rd (Jonny Moon, Kyle Chambers, Drew Englis, Jack Roland)
– 200 Medley Relay B placed 6th (Chase Bundy, Dalton White, Hunter Calovich, Ben Rehm)
– 200 free: Ari Butler (3rd with a medal), Chase Lee (4th), Obinna Okoye (6th)
– 200 IM Chase Bundy (4th), Zane Howell (5th)
– 50 free: Jonny Moon (4th), Jack Roland (6th), Drew Englis (9th)
– 100 fly: Zane Howell (7th), Jack Roland (8th)
– 100 free: Ben Rehm (6th), Conner Berry (8th)
– 500 free: Drew Englis (2nd with a medal and new school record!), Jonny Moon (3rd with a medal)
– 200 Free Relay A placed 4th (Ari Butler, Chase Lee, Ben Rehm, Hunter Calovich)
– 200 Free Relay B placed 5th (Takeshi Pollard, Zane Howell, Dalton White, Conner Berry)
– 100 Back: Chase Bundy (5th with a school record), Ari Butler (7th), Chase Lee (8th)
– 100 Breast: Dalton White (6th), Nikolaj Konradsen (9th)
– 400 free relay A placed 4th (Jack Roland, Drew Englis, Jonny Moon, Kyle Chambers)
– 400 free relay B placed 7th (Chase Bundy, Obinna Okoye, Dalton White, Conner Berry)

Piper High School – girls basketball at Wellsville Top Gun Tournament
– Piper varsity defeated Nemeha Central 39-31
– Play for the championship on Saturday at 5 p.m. vs. Baldwin

– From Doug Key, Piper High School activities director

Shots fired at Price Chopper parking lot Thursday night

Shots fired in the parking lot of the Price Chopper at 7600 State Ave. in Wyandotte Plaza had some shoppers concerned on Thursday night.

Dennis McKinley, a lifelong resident of Wyandotte County, was shopping in the frozen foods section at Price Chopper on Thursday night around 8:30 p.m. when the incident occurred. According to media reports, no one was injured when shots were fired.

After shots were fired in the parking lot, two persons ran into the store, and officers followed later with assault rifles. McKinley said he wasn’t scared at the time.

McKinley said everyone in the store had to stay in the store until it was cleared. The two suspects were not near the frozen food section, where McKinley was, he added.

He said he saw officers arrest and handcuff the suspects, taking them outdoors.

“They did a good job,” McKinley said about the officers.

McKinley sent a text message to his wife while he was in the store about what was happening, and later he posted a photo of it on social media.

“Had I known it was to happen, I probably would have waited until it was all over ’til going up there,” McKinley said.

Kobach pulls personal ID info from state website after Gizmodo report

by Kansas News Service

The Kansas Secretary of State’s office took a trove of public records offline Thursday after a technology website discovered that they reveal partial Social Security numbers for potentially thousands of state officials.

Gizmodo reported that the last four digits of those Social Security numbers appeared in scores of records. Those forms must be submitted by legislators, state officers, people appointed to a range of councils and commissions — and high-ranking office holders such Secretary of State Kris Kobach.

His office, in turn, said state law demands that the records be available to the public.

When a person’s name and the those bits of their Social Security number are connected, they can be considered “personally identifiable information.” The use of that combination is illegal under some state and federal laws and might be used for identity theft.

The information — names matched with partial numbers — is included in “statements of substantial interest” required of a wide range of people elected or appointed to state office or high-ranking agency jobs. The forms are intended to show financial interests of the public official or their spouse. They can help reveal potential conflicts of interest.

Government transparency advocates have pushed heavily in recent years for more public records to be displayed online. That’s made investigation by journalists and the public easier, and made uncovering some information possible in ways that weren’t practical before widespread internet access.

But Gizmodo was highly critical of Kobach for putting the information online. The website has a reputation for reliable reporting, often delivered with biting, even flippant, commentary.
“Putting these statements of substantial interest online without redacting the (numbers) is beyond reckless,” its story said. “It’s stupid.”

Kobach, the chief record keeper for the state and its top election official, is running for the Republican nomination for governor. He’s carved out a national profile as an advocate for tougher immigration policy and as a crusader against voter fraud.

Kansas, through Kobach’s office, has become a clearinghouse for the Crosscheck program that tries to identify voters registered in multiple states. Concerns over earlier handling of voter data submitted to Crosscheck have prompted some states to delay sharing information with Kansas until cybersecurity is tightened.

In a statement to Gizmodo, Kobach’s office said the Kansas Ethics Commissions requires the collection of the information and that the records be publicly available. The statement said Kobach “ does not believe that the last four of a person’s social security number should be part of this publicly available information” but that state law requires the secretary of state to make it publicly available.

The information was pulled from the Secretary of State’s website. But, to comply with the law, Kobach’s office said the records will still be available to request in person.

“Secretary Kobach takes security measures very seriously,” his office said in the statement, “and is looking for a solution that would allow this sensitive information to be redacted, while still following the rule of law.”

The story created an opening for other candidates for governor to attack Kobach. In a news release, Republican candidate Jim Barnett said the handling of the information “only underscores the incompetence of a politician. … He should, at a minimum, know how to protect (sensitive information) from personal ID data miners.”

Gizmodo said the state website revealed more than 106,800 records, but that long-term employees have multiple files.

The Kansas News Service is a collaboration of KCUR, Kansas Public Radio, KMUW and High Plains Public Radio covering health, education and politics. Kansas News Service stories and photos may be republished at no cost with proper attribution and a link back to the original post. kcur.org

See more at http://kcur.org/post/kobach-pulls-personal-id-info-state-website-after-gizmodo-report.