The man convicted in the 2015 traffic death of Washburn University art professor Glenda Taylor isn’t to drive a vehicle for the next two months while he is free on bond and awaiting a court hearing to determine whether his probation will be revoked, the Crawford County Attorney’s Office said Thursday.

Todd Kidwell, 39, of Chanute, pleaded guilty to involuntary vehicular manslaughter in Taylor’s death.

Kidwell was arrested May 4 by a Crawford County sheriff’s deputy in connection with reckless driving at the intersection of K-7 and K-126 highways in southeast Kansas.

Crawford County Sheriff Dan Peak said Kidwell was driving a 1999 GMC Safari van pulling a trailer when he failed to stop at the intersection with other traffic nearby.

Kidwell was booked into jail at 10 a.m. but posted a $500 bond and was released at 1:05 p.m. However, Crawford County Attorney Mike Gayoso confirmed his office filed a motion May 4 to revoke Kidwell’s probation, which lead to his arrest Friday on a "no bond warrant."

Kidwell remained in the Crawford County Jail for three days until a second cash-only $633 bond was posted at 3:50 p.m. Monday.

As part of his release, Kidwell isn’t to drive a vehicle until his court hearing July 6 before Crawford County District Judge Lori Bolton Fleming.

Kidwell, who is on 36 months of supervised probation, was released March 10 from the Crawford County Jail after serving a 60-day sentence for manslaughter in Taylor’s death.

Taylor, 60, was riding in an amateur time trial June 7, 2015, on K-146, near the outskirts of the Crawford County town of Walnut, when Kidwell’s pickup struck her bicycle.

In November 2016, Kidwell pleaded guilty to the charge of involuntary manslaughter and unlawful passing of a bicyclist, a traffic infraction. As part of the plea, a second infraction of reckless driving was dismissed.

The impact of the crash threw Taylor 169 feet, according to a report. A Crawford County sheriff’s deputy wrote that he didn’t think Kidwell took evasive action before the crash.

Kidwell told investigators he was trying to pass Taylor as they both traveled east when another truck approached going west, according to court documents obtained by The Topeka Capital-Journal.

Kidwell said he moved as far to the left as possible to avoid Taylor "but that she swerved left when he attempted to pass her," Crawford County deputy Chris Hall wrote in the affidavit.

Contact reporter Steve Fry at (785) 295-1206 or @TCJCourtsNCrime on Twitter.