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| Sebelius signs gun bill into law Tue, 22 Apr 2008 01:01:00 EST Kansas dealers and private citizens can own automatic weapons, silencers and short-barrel shotguns after July 1. Gov. Kathleen Sebelius on Monday signed a law legalizing possession of such weapons. |
| Police probe drive-by on Vassar Mon, 21 Apr 2008 15:15 CDT Wichita police are looking for a blue Ford Expedition that may have been involved in a drive-by shooting on Sunday morning. A 43-year-old man reported that someone fired about nine shots into his house shortly before 9 a.m. Sunday in the 2600 block of North Vassar. While the man told police he did not see anyone, he did provide a description of the vehicle. Police found shell casings in the street. No one inside the house was injured. |
| Man sentenced in bombing of apartments Tue, 22 Apr 2008 06:20 CDT A federal judge on Monday sentenced Daniel Collins, 18, to five years in prison for bombing a south Wichita apartment building. Collins was convicted in January of one count of setting off explosives that damaged the Kingsborough Apartments, 2732 S. Seneca. Two others involved in the case, Antonio Ray and Nathan Gunter, pleaded guilty to two counts of arson by means of explosives. Gunter earlier was sentenced to 60 months and Ray to 36 months. |
| Schneider may be out this week Tue, 22 Apr 2008 01:41 CDT Former Haysville doctor Stephen Schneider could get out of jail as early as Thursday, with more than $4 million in bond and more than a dozen conditions for his release. Schneider and his wife have been held in the Butler County Jail without bond since their December arrest and indictment accusing them of running a "pill mill." The couple is charged with 34 counts related to their practice of prescribing painkillers at their medical clinic. But Monday, a federal judge agreed to let Stephen Schneider go back home to his two adopted daughters, as long as he doesn't practice medicine and puts up as collateral the clinic, his home, cars and bank accounts. "We're satisfied with the ruling and the conditions," said Schneider's lawyer, Lawrence Williamson of Kansas City. "Dr. Schneider is anxious to get out and start preparing for his defense." U.S. Magistrate Judge Don Bostwick said he will not rule on whether Linda Schneider will be released until after he sees the results of psychological evaluations ordered this month. She was a licensed practical nurse who managed the Schneider Medical Clinic. |
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