Three fatal crashes reported over Thanksgiving weekend in Kansas

Three fatal crashes were reported over the Thanksgiving holiday reporting period in Kansas, according to the Kansas Highway Patrol.


Fatal crashes were reported in Marion and Harvey counties in Kansas.

The Highway Patrol reported one fatal driving under the influence crash, one DUI-related fatality and two non-DUI related fatal crashes. There were a total of four non-DUI relatated fatalities in the 2022 holiday statistics, as compared to one in 2021 and one in 2020.

The Highway Patrol made 29 DUI arrests in the Thanksgiving 2022 period; gave out 1,087 speed citations, delivered 937 speed warnings, made 88 safety belt citations for adults, gave out 12 adult warnings on safety belts, issued 2 safety belt citations to teens, gave out 0 teen warnings on safety belts, handed out 13 child restraint citations and made 931 motorist assists during the 2022 Thanksgiving holiday, according to the highway patrol.

The reporting period was 6 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 23, through 11:59 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 27.

Highway Patrol to be out in force on Labor Day weekend

The Kansas Highway Patrol is planning an increased presence on highways over Labor Day weekend.

The patrol will participate in Operation C.A.R.E. (Crash Awareness and Reduction Effort).

A spokesman for the highway patrol encouraged residents to plan for a safe weekend.

Speed, inattention and impaired driving are leading causes of traffic crashes, according to the spokesman. Troopers will be on the roadways enforcing Kansas laws and also available to assist motorists.

The highway patrol is participating in the annual Special Traffic Enforcement Program, “You Drink, You Drive, You Lose” campaign.

For this enforcement, the Kansas Department of Transportation has provided funding for troopers to work overtime so they can have more law enforcement officers patrolling the roadways, helping reduce the number and severity of crashes.

“As the summer travel season comes to a close, the Kansas Highway Patrol will be working to ensure our travelers make it to their destinations safely. As you celebrate the upcoming Labor Day weekend, we urge everyone to play it safe and have a sober driver or use a rideshare service if you will be drinking,” said Lt. Candice Breshears, public information officer. “If you are traveling and suspect another motorist may be impaired, please dial 911.”

If you’re traveling for the Labor Day holiday, the patrol offers these tips:


• Always wear your seatbelt every trip, every time. It’s your best defense against impaired drivers.
• Check your vehicle’s condition, including tires, fluid levels and mechanical equipment.
• Check road conditions at www.kandrive.org to look for construction or delays on your route.
• Allow plenty of time to arrive at your destination.
• Buckle up and make sure your children are in the appropriately fitted child safety seats.
• Have an emergency kit in your vehicle with essentials such as water, flashlights, chargers, blankets and non-perishable food.
• Always have a sober driver before you drink alcohol away from home or take a sober ride to and from the location if you will be consuming alcohol. Remember, this is your decision.
• Before you take a new prescription medication, check your medication for driving warnings.
• Before you choose to drive after drinking, know that Kansas Ignition Interlock laws require that any driver convicted of driving under the influence (DUI) must install an Ignition Interlock Device, including an electronic log device, on every vehicle you own or which is registered to you.
• Before you choose to drink and drive, think about your family, friends, coworkers and neighbors.

Motorists who need assistance on a Kansas highway may call KHP for assistance at 47 (HP), or for those traveling on the Kansas Turnpike, call 582 (KTA).

Kansas Supreme Court works to clarify state law for lawsuit filed by former KHP colonel

U.S. judge asks for help sorting through statute called ‘not a model of clarity’

by Tim Carpenter, Kansas Reflector

Topeka — Former Kansas Highway Patrol Col. Mark Bruce’s attorney went before the Kansas Supreme Court to argue state law required his client’s return to the rank of major instead of being ousted three years ago amid a domestic-violence scandal involving the agency’s lieutenant colonel.

A lawyer representing Gov. Laura Kelly; Will Lawrence, the governor’s chief of staff; and KHP Col. Herman Jones argued the claims by Bruce in a lawsuit lacked merit because he voluntarily signed resignation and retirement papers after being informed his services were no longer needed in the Kelly administration. In addition, the governor’s attorney said Bruce was misinterpreting state employment law.

A U.S. District Court judge handling the Bruce lawsuit against Kelly, Lawrence and Jones said he was so perplexed by the applicable Kansas law — “not a model of clarity” — that he took the unusual step of requesting the state Supreme Court resolve disputes about interpretation of the state statute. The analysis could include work to understand intent of the Legislature when it tinkered with the Kansas Civil Service Act in 2018.

State Supreme Court Justice Dan Biles said during oral argument Wednesday night in Great Bend that Kansas law on this point was so garbled the state’s highest court would have to enter the “minefield” of legislative intent to figure out what lawmakers attempted to achieve.

He said Topeka attorney Alan Johnson, who represented Bruce, and Topeka attorney David Cooper, who represented the three defendants, were struggling with the poorly articulated statute.

“This is the biggest mess of statutes that I can remember. This just doesn’t make sense,” said Biles, who was appointed to the court in 2009. “Aren’t we just stuck with legislative history?”

In March 2019, Bruce was told by Lawrence that he would need to step down as KHP superintendent. He complied with that directive and retired from the Kansas law enforcement agency after 30 years of service.

The motivation for the move was an allegation Bruce improperly used his authority at KHP to shield the second in command, Lt. Col. Randy Moon, who was investigated for a 2018 assault of a woman at a hotel in Excelsior Springs, Missouri. Moon left the highway patrol along with Bruce.

Bruce’s lawsuit in federal court asserted Kansas law required Bruce to be returned to the rank of KHP major if removed as superintendent of the law enforcement agency. Johnson, his attorney, claimed the Kelly administration caused Bruce’s “constructive discharge from employment” by denying him what amounted to a property interest in that job without due process.

In response, Cooper said the Kelly administration considered the job of KHP colonel, lieutenant colonel and major to be unclassified, or at-will, positions in which employees served at the pleasure of the governor. Unclassified personnel in state government can be dismissed at any time.

Bruce’s theory that he was entitled to employment at the rank of major with permanent status in the classified service “cannot withstand scrutiny,” Cooper said.

If KHP majors were found to be part of the classified employee system, Cooper said, Bruce would be obligated by state law to complete a six-month probationary period after transitioning to the rank of major. During that probation, KHP leadership would have the authority to dismiss Bruce. Johnson said his client shouldn’t have to be part of the probationary system.

Bruce was hired by KHP in 1989 and promoted to major in 2008. Gov. Sam Brownback selected Bruce to be superintendent of the agency in 2015. Three years later, Kelly was elected governor. She retained Bruce as the KHP’s commander.

But in March 2019, Bruce was summoned to Lawrence’s office and told he would be replaced as colonel of KHP. He officially resigned in April and retired in May of that year.

Johnson, Bruce’s attorney, told the Supreme Court that all KHP majors became eligible for higher salaries in 2016 if they surrendered their civil service job protections to become unclassified state workers. He said an individual major accepting that offer of a pay raise in exchange for giving up job protections of classified state workers didn’t mean others serving as a major, such as Bruce, would be considered unclassified employees.

In 2018, Bruce lobbied for the Legislature to pass a bill to prevent dismissal of majors unless a civil service hearing affirmed the decision. The resulting state statute was written in a way that was open to disagreement and a puzzle to federal and state courts.

Kansas Reflector stories, www.kansasreflector.com, may be republished online or in print under Creative Commons license CC BY-NC-ND 4.0.

See more at https://kansasreflector.com/2022/04/07/kansas-supreme-court-works-to-clarify-state-law-for-lawsuit-filed-by-former-khp-colonel/