Today’s forecast: Sunny, temperatures in low 90s

National Weather Service graphic

Today’s forecast from the National Weather Service is sunny with a high near 92 and a north wind of 3 to 5 mph.

Storms are not in the forecast for the weekend here. Severe weather is not expected next week.

Tonight, the low will be around 69 with a north wind of 5 mph becoming calm in the evening, according to the weather service.

Saturday, it will be sunny with a high near 90 and a light west northwest wind becoming north northwest 5 to 10 mph in the morning, the weather service said.

Saturday night, it will be clear with a low of 67 and a north wind of 5 to 9 mph, according to the weather service.

Sunday, it will be sunny with a high near 90 and a north wind of 5 to 7 mph, the weather service said.

Sunday night, it will be mostly clear with a low of 69, according to the weather service.

Monday, skies will be mostly sunny with a high of 88, the weather service said.

Monday night, it will be partly cloudy with a low of 70, according to the weather service.

Tuesday, it will be mostly sunny with a high of 90, the weather service said.

Tuesday night, it will be mostly clear with a low of 69, according to the weather service.

Wednesday, it will be mostly sunny with a high near 91, the weather service said.

Wednesday night, it will be partly cloudy with a low of 69, according to the weather service.

Thursday, it will be mostly sunny with a high near 87, the weather service said.

DA explains $1 million estimated costs for Schlitterbahn prosecution

District Attorney Mark A. Dupree Sr. tonight explained to the Unified Government Commission that he was surprised by an estimated $1 million unexpected cost for the Schlitterbahn prosecution.

The prosecution of the case is being handled by the state attorney general. Dupree said when he took office, he did not know that a request had been made by his predecessor for the state attorney general’s office to handle the case. Dupree said the former district attorney sent the attorney general a letter Dec. 9, 2016, asking him to review the case and decide whether to prosecute it.

Dupree said that Dec.9 letter was not in his office when he took office in January, and he did not know about it until almost a year later. He also didn’t know about another letter dated Dec. 16, 2016, he said.

If he had known, he would have told the administrator so they could put it in the budget last year, he said. Dupree said his office did find a letter from Nov. 30, 2016, stating that there was no conflict of interest and the DA was keeping the case.

Whoever is in the district attorney’s seat has the authority to bind the county, and the UG has to pay the bills, he told the commission.

“It’s not something I like, it’s not something I appreciate,” Dupree said, “it’s something that has to be paid.”

It is a normal procedure for the state to bill a county if the state attorney general handles a case for the county, according to Dupree.

In response to a question from Commissioner Gayle Townsend, Dupree said the amount that has been spent on the case already is about $94,000, including expert fees and travel fees.

Dupree said the estimate was placed at a million dollars in order to pay the DA’s portion of the costs, along with court reporters costs, fees and other expenses split between the court and the DA’s office.

He said he was looking at one to two years for these cases to be completed.

He has spoken with the attorney general’s office, and he said the $1 million estimate is on the high end, in answer to a question by Commissioner Jane Philbrook.

Commissioner Brian McKiernan said the district attorney’s 2018 amended budget is about $1.4 million higher than the actual expenses in 2017. He said he understood the $500,000 in the budget for the Schlitterbahn prosecution, but he wanted to know where the other $900,000 went.

UG Budget Director Reginald Lindsey said these funds include grants that the DA’s office has received, as well as increases in personnel and capital increases. It also included funding for initiatives such as a drug court diversion program. Lindsey said in 2017, not all positions were fully staffed, and most of them are now staffed.

The new budget also includes funding for making electronic copies of old court files.

Commissioner Angela Markley suggested that Doug Bach, UG administrator, bring back a plan for paying the costs of the Schlitterbahn prosecution. Commissioners suggested asking the state if it might be able to spread the costs over several years.

Dupree also discussed other aspects of his budget.

“This community is left with a few things that it has to clean up,” Dupree said. That includes the old jail, the Schlitterbahn case, and it has to clean up injustices, he said.

After a case from last year, where a man was found to have been wrongfully convicted and served 23 years in prison, other cases have come to his office’s attention, according to Dupree. He is getting many requests to review these cases.

Dupree is proposing a conviction integrity unit that would review old cases, and take action if necessary. Because of the high cost of his initial request for $302,000 for these reviews, he has come up with a new plan to reduce its cost, he told the commission.

Dupree will ask university legal programs to review the cases, with students and their legal adviser assisting. That will reduce the cost to his office of the reviews to about $162,000. After the students review the cases, some of them will be forwarded to the district attorney’s office for more work. The district attorney’s office is asking for one more attorney, plus a part-time investigator and secretary, to handle the cases.

“We cannot turn a blind eye to what we have seen, wrongful convictions across this county,” Dupree said.

“There’s always room in the budget for justice,” he said. “Right now, that justice is going to cost $162,000.”

To see a story about the former district attorney’s reasons for requesting the state attorney general to handle the Schlitterbahn case, visit https://wyandotteonline.com/gorman-explains-his-request-for-state-ag-to-handle-schlitterbahn-case/.

T-Bones sweep Cleburne, 8-3

The Kansas City T-Bones (37-20) offense was too much for the Cleburne Railroaders (19-36) Wednesday night in Texas, as KC completed the three-game series sweep by a final score of 8-3.

Todd Cunningham, the league leader in batting average, doubled with out to start off the game for Kansas City off Cleburne ace Jared Mortensen.

Two batters later, Noah Perio Jr. singled to center scoring Cunningham giving the T-Bones an early 1-0 lead. Taylor Featherston wasn’t satisfied with a one run lead, so he decided to rock the park himself with a two-run home run to finish out the first inning 3-0 KC.

Former T-Bone Angel Rosa was walked by starting pitcher Pasquale Mazzoccoli in the bottom of the first. Rosa then stole second before advancing to third on a single from Chase Simpson.

With one out, Mazzoccoli balked as it appeared that his spike caused him to stumble in his release, scoring Rosa while Simpson would advance to second base. Kansas City put the brakes on Cleburne’s offense ending the inning with a dominant strikeout from Mazzoccoli.

Rosa once again got the offense going for the Railroaders with a single to lead off the third inning. The duo of Rosa and Simpson combined for five hits Wednesday night.

Simpson then doubled which drove Rosa into scoring position. Rosa then scored off an RBI put out by Levi Scott to end the inning.

The top of the fourth inning began with a drop third strike followed by an error from the catcher that put Keith Curcio on second base. Dexter Kjerstad then singled, driving in Curcio to put the T-Bones lead at 4-2. Kansas City ended the inning leaving both Tice and Kjerstad on first and second.

In the bottom of the fifth, Angel Rosa continued his terror on T-Bones pitching by crushing a home run over the center field wall putting Cleburne back by only one run.

Jared Mortensen walked Keith Curcio to start the sixth inning. A single up the middle from Mason Davis put Curcio on second.

Todd Cunningham came in clutch for Kansas City, crushing a single to right field that scored both Curcio and Davis making the score 6-3.

Jackson Lowery, Nick Lee, Joe Filomeno, Ian Hardman, and Marcus Crescentini silenced the bats for the last three innings unlike the Railroaders’ closer John Menken.

Filomeno returned to the T-Bones bullpen tonight after his recent contract deal fell through with the Seattle Mariners.

In the top of the ninth, Todd Cunningham was walked to start off the long inning. He then stole second and was joined on base after Colin Walsh also drew a free pass.

Noah Perio Jr. smashed a single that then scored Cunningham. A Taylor Featherston single then drove in Colin Walsh putting the score at 8-3. Featherston recorded three RBIs on the night.

Kansas City’s Nick Lee (1-0) got the win Wednesday night in relief, while Cleburne’s Jared Mortensen (3-3) was credited with the loss.

The T-Bones will return home to Kansas City for a three-game series against Texas Friday night.

The first game of the series is on Friday night and first pitch is at 7:05 p.m.

Individual tickets, season, group, mini-plans and nightly party suites are on sale and can be purchased by visiting the box office at T-Bones Stadium or www.tbonesbaseball.com. Box office hours are 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday-Friday and 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday.

The T-Bones’ games are airing on the T-Bones Broadcast Network, http://mixlr.com/t-bones-baseball/.

– Story from T-Bones