KCKCC’s Moore, Davenport named to Region VI basketball teams

Lillie Moore

Juwan Davenport

by Alan Hoskins, KCKCC

Kansas City Kansas Community College’s Lillie Moore and Juwan Davenport have been named to All-Region VI basketball teams for 2017-2018.

Moore was named to the NJCAA Region VI Division II first team and the Jayhawk Conference Region VI second team while Davenport was named to the second team as selected by both the NJCAA and KJCCC.

A 6-1 freshman from Magnolia, Ark., Moore finished in the Top Five in four statistical categories in Region VI – fourth in rebounding (7.9) and fifth in scoring (13.6), field goal percentage (53.2 percent) and blocked shots (1.0). She also had six double-doubles and missed by either two points or two rebounds or less on four other occasions.

A graduate of Myers Park High School in Charlotte, North Carolina, Davenport did not see any playing time until the second semester after transferring from Coppin State, an NCAA Division I university in Baltimore. Playing in 16 games, the 6-3 guard led the Blue Devils in scoring (16.9) and assists (2.6) and was second in rebounding (4.4). He also shot 52.2 percent from the field.

Both All-Region VI first teams were made up of Anthony Lupardus of league champion Johnson County, Holden Redparth of Region VI champion Highland, Frank Royals of Labette and Tyler Zinn and John Montgomery of Fort Scott. Xavier Womack and Marquawn Wilson of JCCC and Alonzo Williams and Taiveyhon Mason of Highland joined Davenport on the second team.

Highland, which finished third in the national tournament after finishing unbeaten in the regular season and ranked No. 3, placed three players on the KJCCC first team – Mariane Carvalho, Berneizha Tidwell and Niccolly Ramalho – but only Carvalho and Ramalho were named on the NJCAA first team. Moore, Upe Atosu of No. 10 ranked Labette and Tristen McFeders of No. 11 ranked JCCC rounded out the NJCAA first team.

The NJCAA second team was made up of Tidwell, Paige Elston and Cerena Reeves of JCCC, Arkiarra Clark of Fort Scott and DeAshia Young of Labette. Joining Moore and Reeves on the KJCCC second team were Blaize Burgess of Highland, Shameka Tubbs of Labette and Kylee Williams of JCCC.

The NJCAA Region VI is made up of six colleges – Hesston, Highland, Fort Scott, Labette, JCCC and KCKCC. However, Hesston is not a member of the Jayhawk Conference.

Schlitterbahn co-owner charged with second-degree murder in KCK waterslide death

Schlitterbahn Waterpark co-owner Jeffrey W. Henry was arrested in connection with a waterslide death in August 2016 in Kansas City, Kansas, and an indictment of second-degree murder was filed in Wyandotte County District Court. Last week, the former Schlitterbahn operations director, Tyler Miles, was indicted along with the corporation on charges of involuntary manslaughter in connection with a death on the Verruckt waterslide.
(Wyandotte Daily file photo)

Jeffrey W. Henry, a co-owner of the Schlitterbahn Waterpark, has been arrested in Texas and a 46-page indictment for second-degree murder has been unsealed in Wyandotte County District Court in connection with an investigation into a death in August 2016 at the Kansas City, Kansas, waterpark.

Henry, besides being the co-owner, was one of the designers of the Verruckt waterslide here.

Also, the new indictment charges John Timothy Schooley, the lead designer of the Verruckt waterslide, and Henry and Sons Construction Company Inc. with second-degree murder. The second indictment was unsealed today by Judge Robert Burns.

Other counts listed by the indictment against Henry, Schooley and the Henry and Sons Construction included five counts of aggravated endangering a child, and 12 counts of aggravated battery, based on injuries sustained by persons who were riding the Verruckt waterslide.

Henry was arrested March 26 in South Padre Island, Texas, by the U.S. Marshals Service, according to a news release from Kansas Attorney General Derek Schmidt’s office. His next court appearance in Cameron County, Texas, District Court is scheduled for Thursday. Schooley is not in custody at this time.

The arrest and indictment follow on the heels of a grand jury indictment released on Friday of a former Schlitterbahn director of operations, Tyler Austin Miles, on charges of involuntary manslaughter. Miles pleaded not guilty. The indictment also charged Schlitterbahn as a corporation.

Besides involuntary manslaughter, Miles and the corporation also were indicted in connection with injuries sustained by 13 other persons, including four other minors, while riding the waterslide, according to the attorney general’s statement. Those charges include aggravated battery and aggravated endangering a child. In addition, Miles was indicted on two counts of interference with law enforcement, and Schlitterbahn was indicted on one count of interference with law enforcement.

Attorney General Derek Schmidt’s office is handling the case, after a 19-month investigation was conducted. The charges will be prosecuted by the Kansas Attorney General’s Office, which assumed responsibility for the case in December 2016 at the request of the Wyandotte County District Attorney’s Office, according to a news release from the attorney general’s office. Charges contained in both indictments are merely accusations, and each defendant is presumed innocent until and unless proven guilty.

The Cameron County, Texas, inmate list on Monday showed Jeffrey Henry had been arrested on a Kansas warrant.

A Schlitterbahn spokeswoman released this statement Monday about developments: “Considering the allegations from Friday’s indictment, we were not surprised at the actions taken by the Attorney General to charge Jeff Henry. We as a company and as a family will fight these allegations and have confidence that once the facts are presented it will be clear that what happened on the ride was an unforeseeable accident.”

The Schlitterbahn statement said on Monday that the indictment released last week against Miles and the Schlitterbahn corporation was “full of false information.” The indictment document against Henry was made public on Tuesday.

The Schlitterbahn statement also said, “We were shocked by the allegations being made by the Attorney General about Tyler and our KC park. The allegation that we operated, and failed to maintain, a ride that could foreseeably cause such a tragic accident is beyond the pale of speculation. Many of us, and our children and grandchildren, have ridden the ride with complete confidence as to its safety. Our operational mantra has been and will forever be Safety First.”

The Schlitterbahn statement continued, “Our legal team will be speaking out against each of the allegations point by point in the coming weeks and months. Rest assured, we stand behind our staff and all our parks. We will be fighting these charges aggressively. We know that Tyler is innocent and that we run a safe operation – our 40 years of entertaining millions of people speaks to that.

“We look forward to proving this in court where we know the facts will prove this was an accident.”

A Wyandotte County grand jury looked into the death of a 10-year-old boy, the son of a state legislator, who was riding the Verruckt waterslide and died after his raft went airborne, hitting a pole with nets attached. The boy was decapitatated.

The waterslide at the time was called the tallest in the world. Since the incident, the waterslide has been shut down.

The indictment released Friday against Miles is online at https://www.wycocourtks.org/cases.html.

Schlitterbahn’s attorneys will be answering the allegations point-by-point in the upcoming weeks and months, according to the spokeswoman.

Last week’s indictment also alleged that the former operations director and the Schlitterbahn Waterpark were concealing evidence from authorities.

“The accusation that we withheld information or altered evidence is completely false,” Schlitterbahn said in a statement.

A statement by Tyler Miles’ attorneys, Tom and Tricia Bath, denied that information was withheld. The statement is online at https://wyandotteonline.com/schlitterbahn-makes-statement-about-allegations-contained-in-indictment/.

The indictment against Henry, Schooley and Henry and Sons Construction is online at https://www.wycocourtks.org/uploads/4/4/1/2/4412070/indictment.pdf.

A Texas jail log detailed the booking of a Schlitterbahn co-owner in connection with a waterslide death in August 2016 in Kansas City, Kansas. Jeffrey W. Henry was charged with second-degree murder, aggravated endangering a child and aggravated battery in connection with the death on the waterslide and other injuries on the slide.

Cannabis oil advances in Kansas Legislature as other medical marijuana proposal dies

by Stephen Koranda, Kansas News Service

Lawmakers in the Kansas House rejected an effort Monday to allow medical marijuana in the state.

But they advanced a plan to allow the sale of some products made from cannabis — if the high-producing compounds have been removed.

The discussion over legalizing cannabis for medical purposes came as lawmakers considered regular updates to the state’s drug laws.

Democratic Rep. Cindy Holscher of Olathe, Kansas, offered an amendment that would have created a medical marijuana system in Kansas.

She said that her daughter was diagnosed with juvenile rheumatoid arthritis and that the side effects of some of her medications have been severe. Marijuana, she said, might offer some relief.

“Please don’t make us lawbreakers,” Holscher said. “Give us an option for something that has been proven to work.”

Marijuana offered a safer alternative to medications such as opioids, Holscher argued.

Republican Rep. Abraham Rafie of Overland Park, Kansas, called research on the issue “noisy.” He said studies had shown medical benefits from medical marijuana use but had also showed dangers of using cannabis.

“There’s a motivation to find what each side wants to see in the research,” Rafie said.

Rafie also raised concerns about other complications from medicinal marijuana, such as greater availability of cannabis to minors and driving under the influence.

Several lawmakers lined up during the debate to offer stories of people fighting cancer or other ailments who could benefit from medical marijuana.

Republican Rep. Troy Waymaster of Bunker Hill, Kansas, said he had known someone with ovarian cancer who had used medical marijuana to ease pain. However, Waymaster said such a major policy change should not have been brought up through an amendment on the floor.

“I do acknowledge the benefits of it, I’ve seen it,” Waymaster said. “But to bring this forward in a 116-page amendment is not the right process.”

Other supporters of the amendment said the normal process hadn’t given medical marijuana a fair hearing in the legislature. Democratic Rep. Steven Crum of Haysville, Kansas, serves on the House health committee and said the bill had not been given a chance to advance.

Crum said the proposal had been in the Legislature for multiple years.

“Yes, it’s in a 116-page amendment right now, but we have all had access to read what’s in this plan,” Crum said.

The proposal came up short of the 63 votes needed, failing on a vote of 54-69.

However, the underlying bill advanced. It contained a provision allowing the sale of some products containing a cannabis extract, cannabidiol, commonly called CBD. Those products can’t contain THC, the compound in marijuana that gets people high.

That measure survived a fight in the chamber. Republican Rep. John Barker of Abilene, Kansas, tried to strike the CBD provision out of the bill. He said the product is illegal under federal law.

He said it would be easy to smuggle illegal THC-containing products into Kansas along with CBD products.

“It could be what we used to call in the old days a bootlegger’s paradise,” Barker said.

That’s not a realistic scenario, said Republican Rep. Willie Dove of Bonner Springs, Kansas. He said the factories that manufacture the product are regulated and have oversight.

One of the uses of the CBD oil is treating seizures. Families have asked lawmakers to legalize the product to treat their children.

Republican Rep. Erin Davis of Olathe, Kansas, said a friend had used the oil to treat seizures in his son, Eli. She said the treatment had cut down on his seizures and allowed Eli to take part in activities he never could before.

“Just this weekend, he participated in a Special Olympics basketball tournament,” Davis said. “Eli went from having several seizures per week to having none.”

House members still need to take a final vote on the bill. If they approve it, there will be conference committee including House and Senate lawmakers. When the legislation passed the Senate it did not include the CBD provision.

The legislation was also amended in committee to remove kratom from the list of illegal drugs. It’s a supplement used by people trying to wean themselves off opioids.

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 the original post.

See more at http://kcur.org/post/cannabis-oil-advances-kansas-legislature-other-medical-marijuana-proposal-dies.