Hill may return for Houston matchup

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The Chiefs could get star wide receiver Tyreek Hill back for Sunday’s game against Houston, and quarterback Patrick Mahomes avoided any serious injury to his ankle, though that may be about the end of their positive news on the injury front.

The Chiefs placed defensive tackle Xavier Williams on injured reserve Wednesday after he sustained a high ankle sprain in last weekend’s 19-13 loss to the Colts. He was among a handful of crucial players that went down during the game, many of whom could still be out for Week 6.

Left tackle Eric Fisher remains sidelined after core muscle surgery. Defensive tackle Chris Jones, wide receiver Sammy Watkins and offensive lineman Andrew Wylie all missed practice Wednesday after they were hurt during the game against the Colts, and their status for this weekend is murky at best.

Mahomes, meanwhile, was stepped on by left tackle Cameron Erving while planting to throw from his end zone Sunday. The reigning NFL MVP limped to the sideline when the Chiefs were forced to punt in a scene similar to that of Week 1, when Mahomes likewise hurt his ankle in Jacksonville.

“I actually feel pretty good today. It was sore after the game, but it was really feeling pretty good today,” Mahomes said, “so I’m glad to get out there and practice on it and move around. I feel like I’ll be able to move around enough to be able to win.”

That’s good news for the Chiefs, who struggled to score for the first time in more than a year against the Colts. Mahomes’ inability to escape the pocket was a big reason why their streak of 22 games with at least 26 points came to an end.

“It’s not perfect, I guess I should say that,” Mahomes said, “but it’s good enough that I feel I can still run, cut and do all of that stuff.”

It would help his cause to get Hill back on the field.

The two-time All-Pro broke his collarbone when he was driven into the sideline by the Jaguars, and only began to practice last week. The big hurdle for the speedy wide receiver is making sure that the repair can withstand a hard hit, something that he may not know until he gets into a game.

Chiefs coach Andy Reid said Hill will continue to practice but did not say when he would play.

“He did a little bit of everything last week. This is pure how he feels,” Reid said. “This isn’t a real common injury in the NFL. We’re just trying to make sure it’s right.”

Reid said that the Chiefs’ medical staff would evaluate a series of MRIs, along with any other necessary tests, to make sure Hill is available not only this weekend but the rest of the season.

“The guy is full of energy,” Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce said, when asked about the possibility of Hill returning this week. “During the game he’s hyping everybody up and trying to keep everyone focused and moving forward with positive thoughts, and we love him for it. Even when he’s not in the game, he’s trying to make an impact for the team.”

Hill’s return could be even more important given the fact that Watkins, who tried unsuccessfully to play through a hamstring injury against Indianapolis, appears unlikely to play this week.

That continues a trend of the oft-injured wide receiver missing games in Kansas City.

“He felt good going into the game, then when he planted it grabbed on him,” Reid said. “But he went through all the warmups, did everything, felt really good, felt good Saturday. One of those things.”

The Chiefs also lost middle linebacker Anthony Hitchens, who is responsible for calling the plays on defense, during their game against Indianapolis. But Reid indicated Wednesday that Hitchens would be at practice, and that should help a run defense that was abysmal against the Colts.

Not so helpful are the fact that Williams, a big run-stuffer, and Jones, one of the premier pass-rushing defensive tackles in the game, could be sidelined this weekend.

Throw in the injury to Wylie and the Chiefs were forced to bring in some reinforcements up front, signing veteran defensive tackle Terrell McClain and offensive lineman Stefan Wisniewski.

Reid said that both of them could be ready to play by this weekend.

“I’m learning as fast as I can,” said Wisniewski, who played for Reid protege Doug Pederson while in Philadelphia. “Luckily the offense is very similar, so I’m hoping to pick it up pretty fast.

El Paso mass shooting suspect faces trial judge for first time

EL PASO, Texas (AP) — The 19-year-old suspect in the fatal shooting of 22 people at a Texas Walmart is set to face his trial judge Thursday for the first time since his arrest.

Patrick Crusius of Dallas is expected to appear in an El Paso courtroom for a brief hearing. Police say he confessed to the Aug. 3 mass shooting and that he carried out the attack targeting Mexicans.

Some two-dozen people survived the attack with injuries; Hospital officials say two victims are still in the hospital.

Local prosecutors say they will seek the death penalty. Federal authorities are also considering capital murder charges and are investigating possible hate crimes charges. The Department of Justice has called the shooting an act of domestic terrorism.

There were 2,000 witnesses at the scene of the massacre, so almost everybody in the city of about 700,000 knew somebody affected by the shooting.

The first judge assigned the case recused himself, because he knew one of the people killed in the attack. The lead prosecutor says his sister was in the Walmart during the attack and that the gunman walked right by her.

Crusius turned himself in less than an hour after the shooting after fleeing the scene in his car, according to police. His arrest warrant says he turned himself in, saying “I’m the shooter.” Police say he published a racist screed a few minutes before the shooting, saying he wanted to kill Latinos to balkanize the U.S. along racial lines.

Crusius has been held without bond in an El Paso jail. He’s been on a suicide watch since shortly after his arrest and is separated from other prisoners.

Anticipating a large crowd from the public, state District Court Judge Sam Medrano will hold the hearing in the county’s largest courtroom, which seats 100. He said Wednesday that members of the public should arrive an hour ahead of the 2 p.m. hearing for a security screening. Security will be heightened, according to a spokeswoman at the sheriff’s department, which operates both the court and the jail.

Letter to the editor

Dear editor,

I would like to see a law that allows a “Guilty but insane” verdict. The problem is having to declare someone innocent when as the case recently in the news, the person is indisputably guilty. 

When the person is clearly guilty and clearly insane, call it that and sentence accordingly. 

It is difficult to meet the criteria for a “not guilty by reason of insanity” because it is rarely the case.

Betty Hawley,

Savongburg, Kan.

Teen vaping booth to challenge parents

A mock teenager’s bedroom will be on display during Farm City Days to raise awareness about the dangers of vaping. The booth will be open from 8 a.m. to 5 pm. Saturday. 

Visitors can examine what appears to be a typical teenager’s bedroom, and search for items to determine if a child might be experimenting with drugs, alcohol and tobacco/vaping products. Items will be hidden in plain sight as clues for how such products work. If a visitor finds all the items, their name will be entered into a drawing for a prize.

Educational material will also be provided.

The booth was made possible by a grant written by Riley Schmidt, a junior at Humboldt High School, and Jessica McGinnis, Drug Free Communities Coordinator for Southeast Kansas Mental Health Center and the Allen County Multi-Agency Team. The $250 Resist Mini-Grant was provided by the Kansas Department of Health and Environment.

Students from Iola, Humboldt and Marmaton Valley high schools are expected to help with the booth.

White House, Dems spar on impeachment proceedings

WASHINGTON (AP) — The U.S. Constitution gives the House “the sole power of impeachment” — but it confers that authority without an instruction manual.

Now comes the battle royal over exactly what it means.

In vowing to halt all cooperation with House Democrats’ impeachment inquiry, the White House on Tuesday labeled the investigation “illegitimate” based on its own reading of the Constitution’s vague language.

In an eight-page letter, White House counsel Pat Cipollone pointed to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s failure to call for an official vote to proceed with the inquiry as grounds to claim the process a farce.

“You have designed and implemented your inquiry in a manner that violates fundamental fairness and constitutionally mandated due process,” Cipollone wrote.

But Douglas Letter, a lawyer for the House Judiciary Committee, told a federal judge Tuesday that it’s clear the House “sets its own rules” on how the impeachment process will play out.

The White House document lacked much in the way of legal arguments, seemingly citing cable TV news appearances as often as case law. And legal experts cast doubt upon its effectiveness.

“I think the goal of this letter is to further inflame the president’s supporters and attempt to delegitimize the process in the eyes of his supporters,” said Stephen Vladeck, a law professor at the University of Texas.

Courts have been historically hesitant to step in as referee for congressional oversight and impeachment. In 1993, the Supreme Court held that impeachment was an issue for the Congress and not the courts.

In that case, Walter Nixon, a federal district judge who was removed from office, sought to be reinstated and argued that the full Senate, instead of a committee that was established to hear testimony and collect evidence, should have heard the evidence against him.

The court unanimously rejected the challenge, finding impeachment is a function of the legislature that the court had no authority over.

As for the current challenge to impeachment, Vladeck said the White House letter “does not strike me as an effort to provide sober legal analysis.”

Gregg Nunziata, a Philadelphia attorney who previously served as general counsel and policy adviser to Republican Sen. Marco Rubio, said the White House’s letter did not appear to be written in a “traditional good-faith back and forth between the legislative and executive branches.”

He called it a “direct assault on the very legitimacy of Congress’ oversight power.”

“The Founders very deliberately chose to put the impeachment power in a political branch rather the Supreme Court,” Nunziata told The Associated Press. “They wanted this to be a political process and it is.”

G. Pearson Cross, a political science professor at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette, said the letter appeared to act as nothing more than an accelerant on a smoldering fire.

“It’s a response that seems to welcome a constitutional crisis rather than defusing one or pointing toward some strategy that would deescalate the situation,” Cross said.

After two weeks of a listless and unfocused response to the impeachment probe, the White House letter amounted to a declaration of war.

It’s a strategy that risks further provoking Democrats in the impeachment probe, setting up court challenges and the potential for lawmakers to draw up an article of impeachment accusing President Donald Trump of obstructing their investigations.

Democrats have said that if the White House does not provide the information, they could write an article of impeachment on obstruction of justice.

It is unclear if Democrats would wade into a lengthy legal fight with the administration over documents and testimony or if they would just move straight to considering articles of impeachment.

House Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff, D-Calif., who is leading the Ukraine probe, has said Democrats will “have to decide whether to litigate, or how to litigate.”

But they don’t want the fight to drag on for months, as he said the Trump administration seems to want to do.

A federal judge heard arguments Tuesday on whether the House had undertaken a formal impeachment inquiry despite not having taken an official vote and whether it can be characterized, under the law, as a “judicial proceeding.”

The distinction matters because while grand jury testimony is ordinarily secret, one exception authorizes a judge to disclose it in connection with a judicial proceeding. House Democrats are seeking grand jury testimony from special counsel Robert Mueller’s Russia investigation as they conduct the impeachment inquiry.

Police search homes for suspect

KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — The hunt continues for a second suspect in a weekend Kansas bar shooting that left four dead and five wounded after officers searched two homes in the area without finding the fugitive.

The Kansas City Star reports that police looked Tuesday for 29-year-old Hugo Villanueva-Morales first at a duplex that’s less than 1 mile away from the Tequila KC bar.

Gunfire erupted at the bar early Sunday about two hours after Villanueva-Morales got into an argument and was forced to leave. Police Officer Jonathon Westbrook says police also searched a second home before determining Villanueva-Morales wasn’t there.

Villanueva-Morales and 23-year-old Javier Alatorre are charged with four counts of first-degree murder. Alatorre was arrested Sunday in Kansas City, Missouri. Police say Villanueva-Morales should be considered “armed and dangerous.”

Iola Youth Mustangs

Baron Folk runs out of the Mustang tunnel on Aug. 24 during an inter-squad scrimmage. Tuesday night, the Mustangs took care of business with a 20-0 win at home over Louisburg. 

 

Prairie Dell 4-H members talk candy bars, pumpkins

Milky Way, Kit Kat, Almond Joy and Butterfinger were some of the answers to the roll call, “What is your favorite candy bar?” at the Oct. 7 meeting of the Prairie Dell 4-H Club.

The club discussed volunteering for the Salvation Army Christmas bell ringing at Walmart.

For new business Prairie Dell decided to have an exchange meeting with Barn Harvesters 4-H Club. Luke Wicoff was elected the new club treasurer.

Annika Hobbs gave a talk about preparing and canning apples.

Following the meeting apple cupcakes were served and pumpkins were carved for Halloween.

The next meeting will be at 7 p.m. Nov. 4 at the Riverside Park Community Building. Luke Wicoff will give a talk, and everyone is to bring a non-perishable food item.

Honor Flight program raising money in Iola

Organizers of the Southern Coffey County Veterans Honor Flight program will be in Iola Saturday as part of its ongoing fundraiser for the next trip to Washington, D.C.

The Neosho Lodge No. 27, based in Le Roy, will have an informational tent set up during Farm-City Days activities in downtown Iola for the 2019 campaign.

The flights take military veterans on a sightseeing trip to Washington, D.C.

The Masonic Lodge has raised more than $106,000 for previous trips. This year’s goal is $75,000, noted Don Meats, secretary.

This year’s raffle includes 18 prized, including processed beef and hogs, Kansas City Royals tickets, a quilt painting and several firearms. The total combined value for the prizes is about $10,000.

Winners will be drawn Dec. 5 at the Southern Coffey County High School season-opening basketball game.

As of this year, 16 flights have taken 430 veterans to Washington for the two-day trip.

Turkey begins offensive against Kurdish fighters

AKCAKALE, Turkey (AP) — Turkey launched a military operation today against Kurdish fighters in northeastern Syria after U.S. forces withdrew from the area, with activists reporting airstrikes on a town on Syria’s northern border.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan announced the start of the campaign, which followed an announcement Sunday by U.S. President Donald Trump that American troops would step aside in a shift in U.S. policy that essentially abandoned the Syrian Kurds. They were longtime U.S. allies in the fight against the Islamic State group.

“Our mission is to prevent the creation of a terror corridor across our southern border, and to bring peace to the area,” Erdogan said in a tweet.

He added that Turkish Armed Forces, together with the Syrian National Army, had launched what they called “Operation Peace Spring” against Kurdish fighters to eradicate what Erdogan called “the threat of terror” against Turkey.

TV reports in Turkey said its warplanes had bombed Syrian Kurdish positions across the border.

Turkish airstrikes hit the town of Ras al-Ayn on the Syrian side of the border, activists in Syria said.

Mustafa Bali, a spokesman for the U.S.-backed Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces, said Turkish warplanes were targeting “civilian areas” in northern Syria, causing “a huge panic” in the region.

There were no independent reports, however, on what was being struck in the initial hours of the operation.

Earlier today, warning of a “humanitarian catastrophe” were sounded. Syrian Kurdish forces who are allied with the United States issued a general mobilization call ahead of Turkey’s attack.

The Turkish operation would ignite new fighting in Syria’s 8-year-old war, potentially displacing hundreds of thousands of people, and the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human rights reported that people had begun fleeing the border town of Tal Abyad. Kurdish politician Nawaf Khalil, who is in northern Syria, said some people were leaving the town for villages farther south.

Turkey has long threatened to attack the Kurdish fighters whom Ankara considers terrorists allied with a Kurdish insurgency in Turkey. Associated Press journalists on the Turkish side of the border overlooking Tal Abyad saw Turkish forces crossing into Syria in military vehicles today, although there was no official statement from either side that the offensive had begun.

 

EXPECTATIONS of an invasion increased after Trump’s announcement on Sunday, although he also threatened to “totally destroy and obliterate” Turkey’s economy if the Turkish push into Syria went too far.

Turkey has been amassing troops for days along its border with Syria and vowed it would go ahead with the military operation and not bow to the U.S. threat. A senior Turkish official said Turkey’s troops would “shortly” cross into Syria, together with allied Syrian rebel forces to battle the Kurdish fighters and also IS militants.

Trump later cast his decision to pull back U.S. troops from parts of northeast Syria as fulfilling a campaign promise to withdraw from the “endless war” in the Middle East. Republican critics and others said he was sacrificing an ally, the Syrian Kurdish forces, and undermining Washington’s credibility.

Fahrettin Altun, the Turkish presidency’s communications director, called on the international community in a Washington Post op-ed published today to rally behind Ankara, which he said would also take over the fight against the Islamic State group.

Turkey aimed to “neutralize” Syrian Kurdish militants in northeastern Syria and to “liberate the local population from the yoke of the armed thugs,” Altun wrote.

Erdogan discussed plans for the incursion with Russian President Vladimir Putin. Erdogan’s office said the Turkish leader told his Russian counterpart by phone that the planned military action in the region east of the Euphrates River “will contribute to the peace and stability” and also “pave the way for a political process” in Syria.

Turkey’s Defense Minister Hulusi Akar told the state-run Anadolu Agency that Turkish preparations for the offensive were continuing.

In its call for a general mobilization, the local civilian Kurdish authority known as the Autonomous Administration of North and East Syria, also asked the international community to live up to its responsibilities as “a humanitarian catastrophe might befall our people.”

“We call upon our people, of all ethnic groups, to move toward areas close to the border with Turkey to carry out acts of resistance during this sensitive historical time,” it said, adding that the mobilization would last for three days.

The Kurds also said that they want the U.S.-led coalition to set up a no-fly zone in northeastern Syria to protect the civilian population from Turkish airstrikes.

The U.S.-backed Syrian Kurdish group urged Moscow to broker and guarantee talks with the Syrian government in Damascus in light of Turkey’s planned military operation. The Syrian Kurdish-led administration said in a statement it is responding positively to calls from Moscow encouraging the Kurds and the Syrian government to settle their difference through talks.

Syria’s Foreign Ministry condemned Turkey’s plans for an invasion, calling it a “blatant violation” of international law and vowing to repel the incursion. Although it blamed some Kurdish groups for what is happening, saying they were being used as a tool to help an alleged “American project,” it said Syria is ready to welcome back its “stray sons if they return to their senses,” referring to the pro-U.S. Kurdish fighters.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov accused Washington of playing “very dangerous games” with the Syrian Kurds, saying that the U.S. first propped up the Syrian Kurdish “quasi state” in northeastern Syria and is now withdrawing its support.

“Such reckless attitude to this highly sensitive subject can set fire to the entire region, and we have to avoid it at any cost,” he said during a visit to Kazakhstan. Russian news media said Moscow communicated that position to Washington.

Earlier Wednesday, IS militants targeted a post of the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces in the northern Syrian city of Raqqa, which was once the de facto IS capital at the height of the militants’ power in the region.

The SDF, which is holding thousands of IS fighters in several detention facilities in northeastern Syria, has warned that a Turkish incursion might lead to the resurgence of the extremists. The U.S.-allied Kurdish-led force captured the last IS area controlled by the militants in eastern Syria in March.

In the IS attack, three suicide bombers struck Kurdish positions in Raqqa. There was no immediate word on casualties. An activist collective known as Raqqa is being Silently Slaughtered reported an exchange of fire and an explosion.

The Observatory said the attack involved two IS fighters who engaged in a shootout before blowing themselves up.

IS claimed responsibility, saying one of its members killed or wounded 13 SDF members.

Also Wednesday, Iranian state TV reported a surprise military drill with special operations forces near the country’s border with Turkey, in Iran’s Western Azerbaijan province. The TV didn’t mention the expected Turkish offensive into Syria or elaborate on the reasons for the drill.

The head of the Arab League, Ahmed Aboul Gheit, said he was alarmed at Turkey’s planned offensive, adding in a statement that such an invasion would be a “blatant violation of Syria’s sovereignty and threatens Syria’s integrity.”

Aboul Gheit said it also threatens to inflame further conflicts in eastern and northern Syria, and could lead to an IS revival.