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Tag: topeka

  • By the Numbers: Why trick-or-treaters may bag more gummy candy than chocolate this Halloween

    Ghouls, goblins … and gummy bears.

    Trick-or-treaters may find more fruity candy than chocolate among their Halloween handouts this year. That should be fine with younger consumers, who have been gravitating for years toward non-chocolate candies like gummies, freeze-dried treats and other sweets that come in a variety of shapes, colors and flavors.

    Last year, 52% of the total volume of Halloween candy sold in the U.S. was made of chocolate, according to Dan Sadler, a principal for client insights at the market research company Circana. But in the 12 weeks ending Oct. 5, chocolate accounted for 44% of the Halloween candy sold in the U.S.

    Prices may be part of it. Global cocoa prices more than quadrupled between January 2023 and January 2025 due to poor harvests in West Africa, where 70% of cocoa is produced. Chocolate candy is lot more expensive as a result.

    Chocolate Halloween candy in the U.S. cost an average of $8.02 per pound in the 12 weeks ahead of Oct. 5, while non-chocolate candy cost an average of $5.77 per pound, Sadler said.

    Here’s a look at Halloween candy by the numbers:

    $7.4 billion

    The amount Americans spent on Halloween candy in 2024, according to the National Confectioners Association. That was 18% of all candy sales last year.

    30 million

    The number of M&M’s that Mars Inc. makes each day at the facility in Topeka, Kansas, that produces its Halloween candy.

    $10,710

    The price for a metric ton of cocoa in January, which was an all-time high. Cocoa prices have fallen since then, but Sadler said it will take months for consumers to see the impact of those lower prices.

    1,254

    Miles between Topeka and New York. If you stretched out all the Snickers bars that Mars makes annually in Topeka, you could make that trip seven times.

    61%

    Percentage of U.S. consumers who bought candy for trick-or-treaters last year, according to Hershey. Hershey said 45% of consumers reported buying Halloween candy for themselves.

    40.8%

    Market share for Hershey in Halloween candy last year, making it the top performer. Hershey said its Halloween assortment — which includes Reese’s, Kit Kat and Almond Joy — was the top seller last Halloween.

    July 5

    Date which Mars started rolling Halloween candy out to U.S. stores this year. Mars makes Snickers, M&Ms, Skittles, Starburst and other candies.

    4.9%

    Growth in dollar sales of non-chocolate candy in the U.S. in 2024, according to the National Confectioners Association. Chocolate candy sales, in comparison, grew 0.4%.

    3.6

    Average number of weeks ahead of Halloween that Americans buy Halloween candy, according to Mars. Generation Z buys it sooner, around 4.5 weeks in advance.

    2 years

    Amount of time Mars takes to plan for a Halloween season.

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  • Slain 5-Year-Old Had Been Kicked Out By Mom, Made To Live At Campsite: Neighbors

    Slain 5-Year-Old Had Been Kicked Out By Mom, Made To Live At Campsite: Neighbors

    A 5-year-old Kansas girl was sexually assaulted and killed after neighbors say her mother kicked her out of their home.

    Mickel W. Cherry, 25, was arrested on charges of murder and rape of a victim less than 14 on Tuesday in connection to the death of 5-year-old Zoey Felix, local news outlet WIBW reported. A day earlier, Topeka police found the child at a gas station with life-threatening injuries. She was pronounced dead after being taken to the hospital.

    Neighbors told the Topeka Capital-Journal that Cherry had previously been living in the same home as Zoey, along with several other people. About two weeks ago, Zoey’s mother reportedly kicked them all out. They went to live in a campsite less than a mile away.

    Cherry’s connection to Zoey and her mother is unclear.

    Zoey Felix, 5, via GoFundMe.

    According to the Capital Journal, citing court documents, Zoey’s mother pleaded guilty in March to aggravated battery causing bodily harm with a deadly weapon to a child born in 2018 identified by the initials Z.F.

    The mother was placed on 18 months of supervised probation for the aggravated battery conviction, according to the outlet.

    Zoey was often left unsupervised, but community members did their best to take care of her, neighbors said.

    Shaniqua Bradley, who lived next door to the house, told the Capital-Journal in a separate story that the 5-year-old “pretty much took care of herself.”

    “Everybody on the block took care of Zoey,” Sheryl Tyree, a local who frequents the neighborhood, told the news outlet. “Everybody loved Zoey, except her parents.”

    Neighbors who spoke to WIBW described Zoey as a “loving girl” who played with children in the area but was living in a less-than-ideal home that lacked utilities.

    In a GoFundMe for funeral expenses, Zoey’s uncle described her as a “sweet, funny and goofy little girl who had a great smile and laugh that lit up the world.”

    The Kansas Department for Children and Families did not immediately respond to HuffPost’s request for a comment.

    According to jail records reviewed by HuffPost, Cherry is being held on $2 million bond and is scheduled to appear in court Dec. 21.

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  • Democratic Kansas Gov. Kelly urges civility; Kobach is AG

    Democratic Kansas Gov. Kelly urges civility; Kobach is AG

    TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly called Monday for leaders in Republican-leaning Kansas to follow the lead of the state’s residents and “turn down the volume” on “this hate, this vitriol, this divisiveness” in politics as she started a second term with a new, hard-right state attorney general.

    Kelly and other statewide elected officials took their oaths of office under banners hung on the south side of the Statehouse, one declaring “Innovation,” and the others, “Unity” and “Prosperity.” Kelly was sworn in last and stuck with a pattern in major speeches of promoting bipartisanship after narrowly winning reelection in November.

    The Democratic governor told her audience that the COVID-19 pandemic showed that Kansas residents “came through for one another,” adding, “It’s a part of who we’ve always been.”

    “Time and time again, in ways big and small, Kansans choose kindness, cooperation and civility,” Kelly said in her 14-minute inaugural address. “Those in leadership positions have a particular responsibility to follow Kansans’ lead. The times demand it.”

    The ceremony also capped a big political comeback for Kris Kobach, the new attorney general. Over two decades, he gained a national reputation by advocating for strict immigration and election laws but became a lightning rod for controversy. He lost the 2018 governor’s race to Kelly and then a GOP primary for an open U.S. Senate seat in 2020.

    “I’ve always been willing to dust myself off and get up off the ground and keep on fighting,” Kobach said after the inauguration ceremony ended.

    Both Kelly’s and Kobach’s victories last year were narrow, as Kansas voters sent decidedly mixed messages. Voters in August decisively rejected a proposed change to the state constitution that would have allowed lawmakers to ban abortion, but Republicans maintained their supermajorities in both legislative chambers — keeping conservatives firmly in charge.

    The Legislature convened less than an hour after Kelly’s inauguration ceremoney ended for House and Senate sessions of mostly housekeeping and swearing in new members. Kelly is scheduled to outline her legislative agenda in the annual State of the State address Wednesday evening.

    “We cannot let the hostility and anger that has poisoned our national politics spread here to Kansas,” Kelly said in her inaugural address. “We should all agree: Now is the time to turn down the volume. This hate, this vitriol, this divisiveness, it is not who we are as Kansans.”

    Kelly’s centrist credibility has rested on a few high-profile moves, such as breaking with President Joe Biden on COVID-19 vaccine mandates in November 2021 and signing a bill to ban “sanctuary” cities for immigrants living in the U.S. illegally. Last month she banned the use of TikTok by state workers on state-issued devices, following similar action by Congress and a slew of Republican governors such as South Dakota’s Kristi Noem.

    Kelly’s reelection campaign featured television ads showing her standing in the middle of a rural row, and she said in her address, “I believe the best choice is right down the middle of that road.”

    “Because the middle of the road is where left and right come together, where well-intentioned people who hold different positions find common ground,” she said. “And progress is made.”

    But Kelly also has clashed frequently with Republican lawmakers on budget issues, tax cuts and education and public health policy. She twice vetoed their proposals to ban transgender athletes from girls’ and women’s K-12 and college sports. Her proposals to expand the state’s Medicaid coverage for another 150,000 people have been dead letters for top Republicans.

    Still, Senate President Ty Masterson, a conservative Wichita-area Republican, expressed some guarded optimism, saying, “We’d love to meet in the middle and have those words have meeting.” Masterson noted that Kelly is now term-limited.

    “People say, well, she’s not accountable to voters anymore, so she can go as far left as she wants, or whatever, but the flip side is that she’s also not beholden to kind of that radical base,” Masterson told reporters after the Senate’s brief session.

    Meanwhile, Kobach and his family marked his return to public office in what, as a former law professor, he called “a role that will suit me well.”

    Kobach lost a congressional race in 2004 before winning the first of two terms as Kansas secretary of state in 2010. He was the first prominent Kansas elected official to endorse Donald Trump’s bid for president in 2016 and served as vice chairman of a short-lived Trump commission on voter fraud.

    His unsuccessful 2018 and 2020 races crashed his political career and left many Republicans believing that he couldn’t win a statewide race. But many GOP leaders and activists said his 2022 campaign was better organized and more focused, generating less drama or outrage.

    The more combative Kobach could return: He’s promised to file lawsuits to challenge Biden administration policies.

    He’s already identified as potential targets a listing of the lesser prairie chicken as a threatened species and an expansion of waters covered by U.S. Environmental Protection Agency regulations.

    Kobach said Monday that the attorney general’s office also will examine a new U.S. Food and Drug Administration rule allowing more pharmacies to dispense abortion medications. Kobach is a strong abortion opponent, while Kelly supports abortion rights.

    ___

    Follow John Hanna on Twitter: https://twitter.com/apjdhanna

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  • Authorities conduct search, tow away car from missing Omaha woman’s home

    Authorities conduct search, tow away car from missing Omaha woman’s home

    OMAHA, Neb. (WOWT) – UPDATE: Douglas County sheriff’s office confirms they are searching the landfill potentially connected to Cari Allen’s case.

    —————-

    Douglas County Sheriff’s deputies were at the home of a missing Omaha woman on Wednesday morning, wrapping up their search just before noon.

    It’s Day 4 of the search for 43-year-old Cari Allen.

    Cari Allen, 43(Douglas County Sheriff’s Office)

    “We are constantly searching based on tips that we receive,” Douglas County Sheriff’s Chief Deputy Wayne Hudson told 6 News.

    6 News saw a K-9 unit search Stolley Prairie near 168th Street between Blondo Street and West Dodge Road.

    Douglas County Sheriff’s deputies conducted a search Wednesday morning, Nov. 23, 2022, near the home of a missing Omaha woman.

    Stolley Prairie is 24 acres — a lot of ground to cover. The 43-year-old missing woman lives nearby, in a neighborhood near 168th and Blondo streets. She was last seen in that area late Saturday night.

    After an hour of following the tree lines, there was no sign of her, so investigators said they were off to the next search area. 6 News spotted more investigators on the other side of 168th Street, under West Dodge Road — a known dumping ground that’s well hidden.

    “I think they should search here because that is a place that’s isolated and alone,” said jeri Whitmarsh of Omaha. “You don’t know if she came down here or someone brought her here — that would be sad.”

    Meanwhile, back at Allen’s home, lab techs removed envelopes of possible evidence. A tow truck driver also collected the dark sedan in the garage for closer inspection back at headquarters.

    Authorities removed a car from a home in west Omaha while conducting a search for Cari Allen.
    Authorities removed a car from a home in west Omaha while conducting a search for Cari Allen.

    Investigators have said very little about Allen’s disappearance, other than she was last seen around 11 p.m. Saturday by her home.

    On Monday night and into Tuesday morning, Douglas County investigators, with the help of the Topeka Police Department, executed a search on a home in Kansas. Nebraska investigators told 6 News it was connected to the Allen case.

    A K-9 unit was also involved in that search.

    No one came to the door in Topeka when police there asked. The home belongs to a man by the name of Aldrick Scott.

    The connection to the two locations was seemingly made after an odd 9-1-1 call Monday night that came from a third party in Texas, according to WIBW, our sister station in Topeka. Dispatch mentioned a code that means dead body.

    Investigators carried evidence from the Kansas home, but there was no sign of Scott — or Allen, so the mystery remains separated by 150 miles for now.

    Investigative reporter Mike McKnight contributed to this story.

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