Kansas City, Missouri, man sentenced for distributing heroin

A Kansas City, Missouri, man was sentenced on federal charges of distributing heroin, according to the U.S. attorney’s office.

Titus Sanders, 24, of Kansas City, Missouri, was sentenced to 12 years in federal prison, followed by five years of supervised release, according to acting U.S. attorney Duston Slinkard.

Sanders pleaded guilty on Oct. 19 to the charge.

According to court records, Westwood, Kansas, police responded to a Walmart and found a man suffering from a drug overdose. The victim later died as a result of the overdose, according to records. Information contained on the victim’s cell phone led police to Sanders as the source of the heroin purchase, according to court records.

The case was investigated by the Drug Enforcement Administration, Westwood, Kansas, Police Department, Fairway, Kansas, Police Department, Kansas City, Kansas, Police Department, Overland Park Police Department, Lee’s Summit, Missouri, Police Department and Johnson County Sheriff’s Office. Assistant United States Attorneys Trent Krug and Kim Flannigan prosecuted the case.

Murder charges filed in connection with deaths of elderly couple

First-degree murder charges have been filed in Wyandotte County District Court in the death of Mario Florencio Madruga and Delia Madruga, according to the Wyandotte County district attorney’s office.

The Madrugas, ages 89 and 85, died as a result of a vehicle crash at 1:45 p.m. Dec. 25 , 2020.

Jesse A. Acosta III was in a vehicle fleeing from police, according to the charges that were filed.

Acosta, besides the two counts of first-degree murder, also was charged with aggravated assault on a law enforcement officer from the ramming of the police vehicle, eluding a police officer and theft of a Ford F-250 pickup truck. Acosta, 26, is a resident of Kansas City, Kansas.

The Madrugas were the parents of Wyandotte County District Court Judge Delia York, and the mother-in-law and father-in-law of acting Police Chief Michael York.

The Kansas Highway Patrol crash log at the time stated that the truck was pursued by Kansas City, Kansas, police officers because it was a stolen vehicle that had rammed a police patrol vehicle near the 2500 block of Grandview Boulevard.

The Madrugas were in a Cadillac DTS that was stopped at a stop sign at 17th and Orville when it was struck by the stolen vehicle. The pickup truck ran a stop sign and hit the Cadillac on the driver’s side, forcing it into a nearby tree, the trooper’s report stated.

The Highway Patrol’s crash log listed Acosta as a passenger in the Ford pickup. The driver of the pickup was listed as Roberto Vallejo-Avelrya Jr., 22, of Kansas City, Kansas.

Man who killed three at Jewish centers in Overland Park seeks to overturn his death sentence

Frazier Glenn Miller Jr., a self-avowed anti-Semite, testified that he drove to Overland Park from his Aurora, Missouri, home looking to murder Jews. None of his victims turned out to be Jewish.

by Dan Margolies, Kansas News Service

The man who said he was looking to kill Jews when he shot three people to death in Overland Park, Kansas, in 2014 is asking the Kansas Supreme Court to overturn his death sentence.

In oral arguments before the court Monday, a lawyer for Frazier Glenn Miller Jr. said that Miller should not have been allowed to represent himself in such a complex capital case and that prosecutors made improper closing arguments.

Miller was convicted of capital murder in August 2015 for the premeditated killings of 69-year-old William Corporon and his 14-year-old grandson, Reat Underwood, at the Jewish Community Center in Overland Park and the killing of 53-year-old Teresa LaManno at the nearby Village Shalom retirement complex.

A Johnson County jury also convicted Miller of three counts of attempted murder, aggravated assault and the criminal discharge of a firearm.

Miller, who also went by Frazier Glenn Cross Jr., insisted on representing himself at trial, although the court provided him with standby counsel. The self-avowed anti-Semite testified that he drove to Overland Park from his Aurora, Missouri, home looking to murder Jews. None of his victims turned out to be Jewish.

Miller’s appellate attorney, Reid Nelson, argued that Kansas’ capital murder statute allows a jury to consider only certain types of conduct by the defendant and not his state of mind or motivation when deciding whether to impose the death penalty.

He said that prosecutors improperly argued that Miller had committed a hate crime that was an aggravating factor suitable for consideration by the jury.

“Mr. Cross was entitled to a jury verdict that was not tainted by the prosecutors’ inflammatory comments,” Nelson told the seven justices of the Supreme Court in proceedings conducted via Zoom.

Nelson also argued that Miller should not have been allowed to represent himself because he had mental health issues that made him incompetent to represent himself in a capital murder case.

Johnson County District Attorney Steve Howe urged the court to uphold the death penalty for Miller, saying it “was created for cases like this.”

“I think the Legislature structured a limited type of cases to meet these criteria — the worst of the worst, as indicated by counsel — and I think they did this in this case,” Howe told the court.

During his jury trial, Miller frequently interrupted the proceedings, often railing against Jewish conspiracies and Jewish control of the government and media. Upon being sentenced to death, he yelled, “Heil Hitler.”

The Corporon family issued a statement on Monday, saying they lived with the events of April 13, 2014 “in our hearts and minds daily.” William Corporon, a retired physician, was Mindy Corporon’s father. Reat Underwood was her son.

In the wake of the killings, the family created the Faith Always Wins Foundation, which is dedicated “to promoting dialogue for the betterment of our world through kindness, faith and healing.”

“Regardless of the outcome of today’s legal hearing,” the family said in its statement “we continue to honor the legacies and memories of our loved ones, William Corporon and Reat Underwood. We are lifted by our faith in God, your kind words, and your prayers.”

Dan Margolies is senior reporter and editor at KCUR. He can be reached by email at [email protected] or on Twitter @DanMargolies.
The Kansas News Service is a collaboration of KCUR, Kansas Public Radio, KMUW and High Plains Public Radio focused on health, the social determinants of health and their connection to public policy.
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See more at https://www.kcur.org/news/2021-03-29/man-who-killed-three-at-jewish-centers-in-overland-park-seeks-to-overturn-his-death-sentence