Sedgwick County commissioner charged with fraud

Sedgwick County Commissioner Michael O’Donnell has been charged with wire fraud, bank fraud and money laundering, U.S. Attorney Stephen McAllister said.

A federal indictment unsealed today in Wichita alleges O’Donnell took money from his campaign accounts to put into his personal account and to give to his friends and covered it up by making false reports electronically to the Kansas Governmental Ethics Commission.

Michael B. O’Donnell, II, 33, Wichita, Kan., is charged with five counts of wire fraud, five counts of bank fraud and two counts of money laundering. O Donnell is also a former state senator.

The indictment alleges O’Donnell provided false information in five reports he emailed to the state ethics commission in 2016 and 2017. At issue are a series of transactions that the indictment alleges O’Donnell falsely represented as payments made for campaign-related expenses. They include:

 A $1,000 check O’Donnell wrote from his “Michael for Kansas” campaign account to a person identified as C.R. The indictment alleges that after C.R. cashed the check, O’Donnell deposited the $1,000 into his personal checking account.
 A $1,000 check O’Donnell wrote from his “Michael for Kansas” campaign account to a person identified as J.D. After receiving the check, J.D. allegedly wrote a $1,000 personal check to O’Donnell and O’Donnell deposited the $1,000 check into his personal account.
 A total of 12 checks from the “Michael for Kansas” campaign account O’Donnell wrote to a friend identified as D.J., totaling $5,650.
 Three checks O’Donnell wrote from his “Michael for Sedgwick County” account to D.J. totaling $750.
 Six checks O’Donnell wrote from his “Michael for Kansas” account to a friend identified as J.M. totaling $2,100.

If convicted, the crimes carry the following penalties:
Wire fraud: Up to 20 years in federal prison and a fine up to $250,000.
Bank fraud: Up to 30 years and a fine up to $1 million.
Money laundering: Up to 20 years and a fine up to $500,000.

Special Agent Chuck Pritchett of the FBI and Detective Jon Gill of the Sedgwick County Sheriff’s Office investigated. Assistant U.S. Attorney Aaron Smith and Assistant U.S. Attorney Mona Furst are prosecuting.

NASCAR driver to compete in ‘culinary throw down’ at KCKCC-TEC

Kansas City Kansas Community College and the Kansas Speedway are working together to bring a cooking challenge to KCKCC just in time for the 37 Kind Days 250 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series race at the Kansas Speedway.

The Dr. Thomas R. Burke Technical Education Center is holding a “Cooking Throw Down” featuring Chef Justin and KCKCC students vs. NASCAR driver Johnny Sauter, No. 21 GMS Racing.

The 2016 champion in the Truck Series for GMS Racing, Sauter has 18 career Truck Series victories, finishing no worse than ninth in the points in his eight seasons. Sauter has also raced in the NASCAR XFINITY Series and the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series.

During the Cooking Throw Down, each team will have a mystery basket of food with identical ingredients.

They will then have 30 minutes to create a “tailgate style” plate of food that will be judged by a panel of guest judges. All of the ingredients in the basket must be used for the dish, and competitors will have access to a pantry of dry and cold storage items.

The panel will include one judge from NASCAR, one KCKCC judge and guest celebrity judge, Jasper J. Mirabile Jr., of Jasper’s Ristorante in Kansas City.

The Cooking Throw Down will be at 2 p.m. May 10 at KCKCC-TEC. Because of space constraints, it is not open to the public.

“This is a great opportunity for our students to showcase the skills they have learned throughout the program,” said Chef Cheryl Runnebaum, assistant professor of culinary arts at KCKCC. “It will also give them an opportunity to network and expand on communication skills. In addition, this is an excellent way to demonstrate the talent of our instructors and students as well as to showcase our state-of-the-art lab spaces.”

Kansas lawmakers approve budget, dive into tax cut debate

by Stephen Koranda, Kansas News Service

Kansas lawmakers voted to inject money into state services, pensions and higher education just hours before debating legislation to send millions of dollars back to taxpayers.

Lawmakers approved a $6.6 billion state general fund budget with bipartisan support late Thursday and sent it to Gov. Jeff Colyer.

Senators then narrowly advanced a package of tax breaks on a 21-19 vote. That bill now awaits consideration by the House on Friday, the final day of the legislative session.

The tax bill was prompted by federal changes, which would mean many Kansans could no longer itemize on their state taxes. That would raise taxes for people who lost the chance to itemize.

The legislation would allow Kansans to continue itemizing, and trim their state tax bill, whether or not they do on the federal form. It would also add additional business expensing and cut taxes by reinstating state deductions eliminated or rolled back in recent years.

Republican Sen. Caryn Tyson, the chair of the Senate’s tax committee, said after last year’s tax increase, lawmakers should be sending money back to taxpayers. She said the loss of itemizing would hurt the lower-income Kansans who use the tax filing strategy.

“If we do not allow individuals like that the opportunity to itemize,” she said, “we are harming Kansans.”

An estimate from legislative staff pegged the cost of the tax break package at $78 million in fiscal year 2019, $73 million in 2020 and $43 million in 2021.

Lawmakers reversed the state’s 2012 tax cuts last year to stabilize the state budget after struggling with finances for multiple years.

Critics of the package, like Democratic Sen. Tom Holland, said it could cause further trouble for the state budget.

“Have we all forgotten what life was like last year?” Holland asked. “We’re still digging out, yet we’re going to turn around and bury ourselves again.”

The debate on the tax plan was a sharp departure from the budget passed earlier in the day, which boosted spending on many services. The House’s top budget writer, Republican Rep. Troy Waymaster, said the investments added this year are needed after several years of austere budgets.

“We were able to identify projects, agencies and departments that had drastic cuts,” Waymaster said, “and build from that. It may not be solid footing, but at least we’re starting to move forward with it.”

Waymaster said salaries for state employees have been particularly paltry.

“In the past few years, I think we sent the message that we took our employees for granted,” Waymaster said.

The spending plan includes $15 million from the state general fund to boost pay for state workers. Employees passed over for a raise last year will get larger increases under the budget plan.

Additional raises will also target judicial branch employees and corrections workers.

The raises won’t apply to university employees, state legislators and Kansas Highway Patrol officers.

The top Democrat on the House budget committee, Rep. Kathy Wolfe Moore, said the pay bump will help reduce pay discrepancies among employees.

“We have to have a fair pay plan, and this is a way to honor our very hard working state employees,” Wolfe Moore said.

Lawmakers had previously underfunded the state pension plan, KPERS, to help balance the budget. The Senate’s lead budget writer, Republican Carolyn McGinn, said the spending plan will make a missed $194 million payment over two budget years.

“We’re continuing to try to restore what has happened to KPERS in the last few years,” McGinn said.

The budget will also reverse some of the cuts universities and colleges absorbed in 2016 at the order of then-Gov. Sam Brownback. The new spending plan restores about $15 million of the $30 million that was cut.

Transportation funding sweeps in recent years have led to almost two dozen major road projects being delayed. The plan prioritizes those projects for future funding.

While the budget passed with big majorities in both chambers, some lawmakers raised concerns about the levels of spending. Republican Sen. Rob Olson said in the coming years the state budget would be out of balance unless the economy keeps growing.

“This balance sheet is loaded with debt,” Olson said. “We’ll probably be talking about another tax increase.”

Others hoped to see even more investment. Republican Sen. Barbara Bollier said after years of lean spending plans she wished they could spend more on substance abuse treatments and transportation.

“It’s been a long haul, seven years, of having to cut and cut,” Bollier said. “I’m concerned in certain areas we’re not spending enough.”

McGinn said they state would still be sweeping around $290 million from the highway fund as part of the spending plan. However, she said they were slowing the sweeps.

“We’ve started the process,” McGinn 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 the original post.

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