KSNT Topeka on MSN1h
Kansas settles Medicaid fraud case against WalgreensAttorney General Kris Kobach announced today that Kansas has joined the United States, the District of Colombia, and several states in settling allegations against Walgreens.
Kansas Attorney General Kris Kobach signed onto a Texas-led lawsuit over Section 504. Now, amid disability rights concerns, he wants to amend it.
The storm is most remembered for the damage it did in Texas, where it crashed the power grid, leaving millions without electricity and killing 246 people.
Some agents with the Kansas Bureau of Investigation will get ICE training to help arrest and execute warrants for immigrants in the state illegally.
As Republican lawmakers pursue a constitutional amendment on gun rights, a Kansas court ruled gun rights are fundamental, applying strict scrutiny.
KBI Director Tony Mattivi told The Star his agents will only be involved in arresting immigrants with a known criminal history.
1don MSNOpinion
The SAVE Act’s “proof of citizenship” nonsense is the same play as the state’s SAFE Act, which disenfranchised 30,000 residents. | Opinion
Gov. Laura Kelly said she was skeptical the House and Senate would approve during the 2025 legislative session a bill that retroactively undermined property rights for thousands of tenured faculty at public universities, community colleges and technical colleges across Kansas. Photo by Tim Carpenter/Kansas Reflector
The Kansas Council on Developmental Disabilities joined the Disability Rights Center of Kansas in sending a letter to Kelly and Kobach, asking them to withdraw the state from a federal lawsuit called Texas v.
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KSNT Topeka on MSNFamilies protest in Kansas against lawsuit that would eliminate 504 protections for people with disabilitiesLawmakers joined with parents at the Kansas Statehouse on Monday to speak out against a multi-state lawsuit that would eliminate protections for people living with
12don MSNOpinion
Kris Kobach of Kansas and Andrew Bailey of Missouri want to eliminate Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act, which would hinder learning. | Opinion
A limited number of Kansas Bureau of Investigation agents will receive training from Immigration and Customs Enforcement for immigration-related activities.
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