Kansas
Kansas Cold Cases: Nelson Jones
HOPE, Kan. (WIBW) – Rising up within the small city of Hope, Kansas, Nelson Jones was each bit the standard boy.
“He preferred the outside. He preferred to fish, baseball,” his youthful sister Melissa Bowell stated.
Melissa, the center of three kids, stated her brother additionally was aggressive – and fearless.
“(We’d see) who might go the bottom, who might bounce the farthest, who might run the quickest,” she stated. “We might climb on high of the water shed, and he had tied a water hose to a tree and we’d climb on high of the shed and we might swing down like Tarzan! He all the time had loopy concepts.”
Courageous sufficient that on October 27, 1990, he insisted he might keep house alone whereas the remainder of the household took a day journey to Wichita.
“He had begged my mother to remain house,” stated Melissa, who was 9 on the time. “He was 11, and he had by no means stayed house by himself earlier than, and he was supposed to hang around with anyone across the neighborhood.”
Dickinson Co. Sheriff Jerry Davis, who was a 12 months into his job as a patrol deputy in 1990, would later took a more in-depth have a look at the case as a prison investigator.
“They acquired house round 6 p.m. Nelson wasn’t at house,” Davis stated. “There was a faculty carnival only a few blocks away on the faculty, so the household assumed he’d left and gone to the carnival.”
Melissa stated the household went to the carnival to search out Nelson.
“We went up there and couldn’t discover him. No one had seen him, so we went again house,” she stated.
Whereas Melissa’s mother acquired on the telephone to name neighbors to ask if any of them knew the place he was, her youthful sister went into Nelson’s room.
“She got here out and he or she stated, ‘Mother, I discovered Nelson and he appears to be like all beat up.’ So all of us went into the bed room, and he was kneeling like he would to wish on the mattress, and his higher half (of his physique) was laying on the mattress. I simply keep in mind he regarded very pale and blue,” Melissa remembers. “Mother walked across the aspect and he or she grabbed his arm to really feel for a pulse and I keep in mind her saying, ‘Oh, God, Dennis. He’s lifeless;’ and my stepdad ran up barefoot to get the law enforcement officials.”
Nelson had been strangled. Greater than 30 years later, Davis stated, the case stays open.
“There have been a number of witnesses who noticed him taking part in with folks and biking round city. They have been all interviewed,” he stated. “It was type of a neighborhood the place everybody acquired alongside, everybody knew one another, and everyone trusted one another, so this was very stunning for the neighborhood at the moment.”
It was particularly stunning – and devastating – for just a little woman.
“I used to be terrified. I used to be terrified of the darkish. I used to be scared to show 11 – I used to be afraid I’d get killed, too,” Melissa stated. “To be in your house and to not really feel protected in your individual house is…is fairly traumatizing.”
Melissa stated her emotions about not understanding who killed Nelson travel.
“Generally I’m actually offended, as a result of I take into consideration the way it modified our household, the dynamics and all of the ache it introduced,” she stated.
The home the place it occurred is gone now. The situation is a grassy lot within the city of Hope. Melissa’s mother has handed away, as effectively.
However among the many pictures and a poem her mother wrote a couple of youngster at heaven’s gate with massive blue eyes. Melissa nonetheless finds hope. Nelson was chosen because the three of hearts within the Kansas Chilly Case deck. It’s a brand new effort to get suggestions in unsolved circumstances by that includes them on taking part in playing cards.
Melissa says she’s grateful Nelson shouldn’t be forgotten.
“I usually take into consideration what life could be like if he’d been right here,” she stated. “What sort of brother would he be? What sort of uncle would he be to my kids? Would now we have competed in sports activities in highschool?”
Sheriff Davis stated the case stays private to him.
“Nelson was an harmless sufferer, and he deserves to have his story informed. His household deserves to know what occurred,” he stated. “Proper now, Nelson would know what occurred and the one who killed Nelson would know what occurred. Proper now, these are the one two leads we could have, and Nelson’s gone. He can’t converse for himself, so hopefully the proof will converse for him.”
Greater than 30 years later, Melissa wish to discover closure.
“I feel I’d need to know why – why did they do this? And perhaps inform them what it did to my household – the implications of their actions, that alternative that that individual made,” she stated. “I’d wish to know that they’ve a conscience, and I hope sometime that they may confess and search forgiveness.”
If something about Nelson’s demise – or any unsolved case – name the Kansas Bureau of Investigation at 1-800-KS-CRIME.
Prior KS Chilly Case Profiles:
John Waller
Joshua Jernagin
Clarence “Butch” Lavin
Arthur Goebel
Gary Leo Nelson
Charles Giles
James Winston III
Mercedes Holford and Crystal Andrews
Tirell Ocobock
Carla Avery, Eric Avery, Tamesha Lee, and Marvin Woods
Copyright 2022 WIBW. All rights reserved.
Kansas
KC Current’s Chawinga named NWSL MVP
Kansas City Current forward Temwa Chawinga was named the 2024 National Women’s Soccer League MVP on Friday, one day ahead of the league’s championship match.
Chawinga set a new single-season NWSL record with 20 goals this year for the Current.
She also scored the lone goal in the team’s quarterfinal victory and both goals in the championship of the NWSL x Liga MX Summer Cup last month.
“From the moment Temwa came to Kansas City, we knew she was capable of playing at an MVP level,” general manager Caitlin Carducci said in a statement.
“Not only has she been an incredible player on the pitch, she’s also been an incredible teammate and representative of the organization off it. Temwa laid an incredible foundation with her play in 2024, and we’re so excited for what’s to come in the years ahead.”
Chawinga is the eighth NWSL Golden Boot winner to also win MVP in the same season since the league’s launch in 2013. She is the first African international to win either award.
The 26-year-old Malawi international arrived in Kansas City this year from the Chinese Super League and took the league by storm in the first season with her eye for goal and her game-changing speed.
Chawinga scored in 13 of the Current’s final 14 matches of the regular season, including goals in eight straight games, which was a first in league history.
She also scored a goal against all 13 other NWSL teams this season, another first, and she added five assists to the Current’s league-record 57 goals this season.
Chawinga’s 20 goals broke Sam Kerr’s previous record of 18 in a season, which Kerr scored in 21 games.
Chawinga played in 25 regular-season games this year.
The next closest scorer in the regular season was Orlando Pride forward Barbra Banda, who finished with 13 goals.
Banda scored in last week’s semifinal to help Orlando eliminate Kansas City from the playoffs.
Orlando takes on the Washington Spirit on Saturday in the NWSL Championship at CPKC Stadium in Kansas City.
History of NWSL MVPs
2013: Lauren Holiday, FC Kansas City midfielder
2014: Kim Little, Seattle Reign FC midfielder
2015: Crystal Dunn, Washington Spirit forward
2016: Lynn Williams, Western New York Flash forward
2017: Sam Kerr, Sky Blue FC forward
2018: Lindsey Horan, Portland Thorns FC midfielder
2019: Sam Kerr: Chicago Red Stars forward
2021: Jess Fishlock, OL Reign midfielder
2022: Sophia Smith, Portland Thorns FC forward
2023: Kerolin, North Carolina Courage forward
Kansas
Top takeaways from Iowa's win over Kansas
The Sanford Pentagon in Sioux Falls sounded like Carver-Hawkeye Arena on Wednesday night as a capacity crowd of 3,400 watched Iowa defeat Kansas 71-58. The Hawkeyes jumped out to an 18-4 lead after the first quarter and never let the lead dip below eight points the rest of the way. They are now 5-0 for the first time since 2017.
Here are my top takeaways from the win and what it means for Iowa moving forward.
Kansas
Kansas State Coaches Searching For Answers After Two-Game Skid
A season that began with national championship aspirations is now in danger of ending in disappointment.
Three weeks ago, the Kansas State Wildcats controlled their hopes of making the Big 12 title game and possibly the College Football Playoff. Now, they are just searching for another victory to salvage a once promising season.
“Obviously a disappointing performance on Saturday,” Kansas State coach Chris Klieman said about Saturday’s loss to Arizona State. “We had a long staff meeting yesterday and talked about a lot of things. We looked at offense, defense and special teams. I don’t think anybody could point a finger at anybody because I don’t think any unit played up to its capabilities.”
The Wildcats were in the driver’s seat after a victory against rival Kansas Oct. 26 in the annual Sunflower State Showdown. They were 7-1 with wins against Oklahoma State and Colorado, the lone blemish coming against BYU.
The victory against the Jayhawks was followed by two upset losses to Houston and the Sun Devils, which all but ended their chances of making the Big 12 championship game.
With two games left against Cincinnati and Iowa State, the Wildcats are basically playing for a more appealing bowl game.
“Our job this week is to right the ship, because we have another opportunity,” Klieman said. “I want our seniors to have an opportunity to go out well.”
Shandel Richardson is the publisher of Kansas State On SI. He can be reached at shandelrich@gmail.com
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