Icy roads may have contributed to fatal accident in Bonner Springs

Bonner Springs police are investigating a fatal cross-over accident this morning on K-7 highway near K-32.

Bonner Springs authorities believe icy roads were a contributing factor in the accident.

K-7 has now reopened after the accident, according to the Kansas Department of Transportation.

According to Sgt. Heather Brooks of the Bonner Springs Police Department, the emergency call was received at 6:45 a.m. Monday, Jan. 8.

A Toyota truck crossed over the dividing line of the highway after losing control, from the northbound to the southbound lanes, and then collided with a Volkwagen Passat, Sgt. Brooks said.

One person was killed in the accident. Another person was taken to the hospital by ambulance, she said.

The Bonner Springs police are working to notify families at this time, she added.

Sgt. Brooks said the accident involved a side impact, one person was ejected from a vehicle, and the truck rolled over during the accident.

She added the Bonner Springs police also were dealing with several other accidents in the area this morning, but no other accidents were fatal.

KCKCC to hold first Blue Devil Classic after 87-78 On Point loss

by Alan Hoskins, KCKCC

Kansas City Kansas Community College’s men basketball returns home for the first time in nearly five weeks Friday and Saturday as host to the inaugural Blue Devil Classic.

Back in action in an 87-78 loss to On Point Hoops Academy in El Reno, Okla., Saturday, the Blue Devils sabotaged their best shooting performance of the season with a season-high 37 turnovers.

The Blue Devils (4-11) will take on yet another basketball academy Friday when they are hosts to Strength N Motion, a fifth-year program for promising high school graduates headquartered in San Antonio, Texas. Game time is 7:30 p.m. and will follow a matchup of Penn Valley and Fort Scott at 5:30 p.m.

On Saturday, Fort Scott will play Strength N Motion at 2 p.m. with KCKCC squaring off against long-time rival Penn Valley at 4 p.m.

Leading just 37-35 at halftime, On Point Hoops Academy used a 50-point second half to pull away from KCKCC in a game featuring deadly shooting and faulty ball-handling.

The Blue Devils connected on 29 of 49 shots for a torrid 59.1 percent while On Point had one less field goal but converted 28 of 54 shots for 51.8 percent. The Blue Devils also forced 23 On Point turnovers and had a 31-23 advantage in rebounding but could not overcome the 37 errors and a 24-14 On Point edge in free throws.

Solomon Thomas, Ro Ratlift and Sterling Hicks combined for 57 points to lead KCKCC in scoring. Thomas led with 22 points on 8-of-14 shooting including 3-of-5 three-pointers; Ratlift had a career high 20 points on 7-of-9 shooting from the field and 6-of-6 from the foul line; and Hicks had 15 points. DuVonte Beard added eight points and Andre Williams seven off the KCKCC bench.

Tyson Beringer, who is third in Region VI in rebounding, led KCKCC with nine rebounds while Ratlift added five. Thomas also led in assists with five with Hicks contributing four.

Kansas gun bills tough sell to 2018 Legislature

by Stephen Koranda, Kansas News Service

Kansas Democrats have filed two gun control bills for the legislative session. With some key lawmakers signaling resistance, the proposals could be a tough sell.

Still, legislators from both parties expect discussion of the state’s role in regulating firearms.

Rep. Vic Miller, a Topeka Democrat, wants to ban bump stocks – rifle add-ons that make a semi-automatic weapon work much like a fully automatic gun – following the Las Vegas massacre in October that left almost 60 people dead at a music festival. In that shooting, multiple semi-automatic weapons had been modified with bump stocks.

“It’s in direct response to the incident out in Las Vegas,” Miller said. “Before that, I’d never heard the term ‘bump stock.’”

Miller said bump stocks effectively circumvent federal laws that place tight restrictions on automatic weapons that can reel off several rounds of ammunition with a single pull of the trigger.

“The only purpose these devices serve is so madmen can kill more people quicker,” Miller said.

Another Democrat, Lawrence Rep. Boog Highberger, has introduced legislation to make it a crime to abandon a firearm in public. He said the bill is in response to a gun found in a bathroom on the University of Kansas campus.

Last year, a state lawmaker also left a handgun in a committee room during a meeting.

Republican House Majority Leader Don Hineman, from Dighton, expects there will be firearm debates. He believes the fact that it’s an election year may prompt more talk of social issues and gun laws.

“We do need to look at the issues that are raised by both of those gun bills,” Hineman said.

However, Hineman doesn’t see an easy path for any firearms legislation. If the bills come up, more issues could be piled on, such as barring guns from college campuses. That would complicate the debate.

“That’s the problem with any legislative proposal,” Hineman said. “It can morph into something more than the author intended.”

Some lawmakers have criticized the state law that allowed concealed weapons on college campuses last year, but efforts to amend the policy have failed in recent years.

Lawmakers modified state law last year, allowing public hospitals to continue banning concealed weapons. Hineman said after that heavy lifting, there might not be much appetite among lawmakers to consider gun bills this year.

“They’ll come up in committee. I’m not sure they’ll survive the committee process,” Hineman said.

Stephen Koranda is Statehouse reporter for Kansas Public Radio, a partner in the Kansas News Service. Follow him on Twitter @kprkoranda. Kansas News Service stories and photos may be republished at no cost with proper attribution and a link back to kcur.org.

See more at http://kcur.org/post/kansas-gun-bills-tough-sell-2018-legislature.