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House passes bill to allow for state takeover of Missouri prosecutor offices
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Missouri lawmakers advanced a proposal Thursday that would give the governor the ability to strip the authority of any elected prosecutor to handle violent crime cases.
The bill, sponsored by Rep. Lane Roberts, R-Joplin, would allow the governor to appoint a special prosecutor for five years if the number of homicide cases in any prosecuting attorney’s jurisdiction in the 12 months immediately preceding exceeds 35 cases per every 100,000 people.
The governor would also have to determine that “a threat to public safety and health exists” based on reviewing certain crime statistics.
The special prosecutor would have “exclusive jurisdiction” to prosecute certain offenses — including murders, assaults, robberies, hijacking and other violent offenses — and be given a budget to hire up to 15 assistant prosecuting attorneys and 15 staffers.
The House passed the bill with a 109-35 on Thursday. An attempt to pass an emergency clause, meaning the legislation would take effect immediately when the governor signs it, failed.
The bill now heads to the Senate.
The goal of the bill, Roberts said, is to decrease crime in the state.
“When you’re talking about things like prosecutorial discretion and prosecutorial independence, that’s treading on pretty sacred ground,” Roberts said. “So the idea that we are somehow encroaching on what is a mainstay of the judicial system, we didn’t do it lightly.”
The House bill originally targeted only St. Louis’ elected prosecutor, Kimberly Gardner, a progressive Black Democrat who won her re-election Democratic primary in 2020 with more than 60% of the vote. It was amended to apply to any elected prosecutors across the state, out of concern singling out one prosecutor would be unconstitutional.
However, before the final vote, Roberts affirmed that it was meant to target St. Louis because he couldn’t sit and “do nothing” about the homicides that occur in the city every year.
Rep. Peter Merideth, D-St. Louis, stood up after Roberts and said he was “angry” about the bill.
He told the story about his neighbor who was shot over the weekend, while sitting in his car, and Merideth had to go out and care for him. He spoke about his niece, who had to shelter in place at Central Visual and Performing Arts High School, when a shooter entered the school in October.
“So no, we don’t want you to do nothing,” Merideth said. “We want you to listen to us about what we need to do something about violence in our communities.”
The solutions are investments in social services that address the root causes of violence, he said, and common sense gun laws. It’s not disregarding city voters, he said, and taking over the city’s elected offices.
“What you always think is the solution is an easier political move of pointing the finger at elected Democrats in the cities and saying, ‘It must be their fault,’” Merideth said. “It’s politically easier to just say, ‘Now we’re going to take charge, we’ll fix it.’”
Rep. Kevin Windham, D-Hillsdale, spoke about how the Republican-dominated House of Representatives in Mississippi passed a bill this week to create a separate, unelected court system in the city of Jackson that would fall outside the purview of the city’s voters, the majority of whom are Black.
House Speaker Dean Plocher, a Republican, speaks to reporters during a press conference Thursday, Feb. 9, 2023, in the House Lounge of the state Capitol in Jefferson City, Mo. Plocher touted passage of a bill that Republicans say will help fight high rates of violent crime in cities such as St. Louis. Democratic Black lawmakers who opposed the bill accused Republican leaders of racism for shutting down debate on it. (AP Photo/David A. Lieb)
Windham read a quote from Democratic Mississippi Rep. Ed Blackmon, who said: “Only in Mississippi would we have a bill like this, where we say solving the problem requires removing the vote from Black people.”
House Speaker Dean Plocher, R-Des Peres, didn’t allow Windham to finish speaking, saying that he was off topic and out of order. And no other Democrats were allowed to speak before the bill went to a vote, after the House leader “moved the previous question” (known as a PQ) which forces an immediate vote.
Later in a press conference, House Democrats said they were appalled Windham was cut off and that several other representatives from St. Louis who were waiting to speak on the bill weren’t allowed to.
“This was the first previous question (PQ) of the entire session,” said House Minority Leader Crystal Quade, D-Springfield. “And it’s absolutely ridiculous that the floor leader decided to do this on a bill that was such an importance of the folks who are really the most impacted by it.”
Rep. Rep. LaKeySha Bosley, D-St. Louis, said she left the chamber in tears because the move was steeped in racism.
“It is blatantly racist when they get on the floor and say there’s a crime problem in the city of St. Louis, and the majority of the people that live there are African American,” Bosley said. “And yet you won’t let the Black representatives or even though who represent those Black folk to have a conversation. Yes, I’m furious.”
Missouri state Rep. Kevin Windham speaks to reporters during a press conference Thursday, Feb. 9, 2023, in the House Lounge of the state Capitol in Jefferson City, Mo. Missouri Legislative Black Caucus members accused the state’s House Republican leaders of racism for cutting off a House floor speech by Windham and halting debate on crime legislation that passed Thursday. (AP Photo/David A. Lieb)
Rep. Marlene Terry, D-St. Louis, and chair of the Missouri Legislative Black Caucus, said she and other St. Louis lawmakers weren’t allowed to represent their communities.
“Our gloves are off,” Terry said. “I call it racist, and so we’re gonna call a call to action from the citizens of St. Louis.”
The Missouri Association of Prosecuting Attorneys and Gardner’s office testified against the bill in committee.
Gardner’s representative, Chief Warrant Officer Chris Hinkley, told legislators during a Jan. 30 committee hearing that the bill wrongly assumes the prosecutor’s office has a backlog of violent crime cases.
“We’ve kept violent crimes at the top,” Hinkley said, even through the pandemic. “The violent crimes will never and were not ever delayed in review and issuance.”
Included in the bill is a line that explicitly states the special prosecutor “shall not be the attorney general.”
During special sessions in 2020, Republicans similarly made two failed attempts to hand over an unprecedented amount of Gardner’s authority to then-Missouri Attorney General Eric Schmitt.
Schmitt would have been allowed to take over homicide cases if Gardner’s office had not filed charges within 90 days of the incidents or upon request from the “chief law enforcement officer.”
The Missouri Association of Prosecuting Attorneys fought vehemently against the provision in 2020, saying that Missourians “have never wanted statewide politicians to meddle in local affairs.”
Roberts’ bill also includes other provisions regarding public safety, including expanding the areas where school safety officers can carry firearms and extending prison sentences.
The original bill had a provision to prevent children from carrying firearms in public without adult supervision. The provision was meant to reinstate something that the Second Amendment Preservation Act took out of Missouri law when it was passed in 2021.
“Prohibition that may have previously existed, no longer exists,” Roberts said. “That has left the police to have to bootstrap ways to deal with this sort of thing.”
But the provision was stripped from the bill, Roberts said, after several Republicans raised concerns about infringing on the Second Amendment.
Rep. Mark Sharp, D-Kansas City, was able to get his amendment through on Wednesday, which is a provision that establishes “Blair’s Law” to make celebratory gunfire a felony offense.
*This story has been updated since originally published.
Missouri Independent is part of States Newsroom, a network of news bureaus supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Missouri Independent maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Jason Hancock for questions: info@missouriindependent.com. Follow Missouri Independent on Facebook and Twitter.
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Man attacks Jeff Co. deputy with screwdriver during attempted arrest
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JEFFERSON COUNTY, Mo. – Two people are behind bars after a man reportedly attacked a Jefferson County deputy with a screwdriver during an attempted arrest over the weekend.
Prosecutors have charged Nicholas Davis, 47, and Amanda Davis, 45, of Dittmer, Missouri, with felonies in the investigation.
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The alleged attack followed a traffic stop of a driver in the 9500 block of Jones Creek Road on July 7, though the driver was not Nicholas or Amanda.
According to court documents obtained by FOX 2, Nicholas reportedly came out of his nearby home, yelled at a deputy and started approaching him while holding a screwdriver. The deputy initially ordered Nicholas to back away, then used pepper spray.
Per court documents, the deputy attempted to arrest Nicholas, who then struck him in the chest with the screwdriver. Amanda reportedly approached the deputy and pulled him away from Nicholas before both ran inside their home.
The Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office says the situation prompted an hours-long standoff involving negotiators, a SWAT team and a K-9 deputy. The situation led to Nicholas refusing warnings and being bitten by a K-9.
Nicholas and Amanda are both jailed in the Jefferson County Jail without bond. Nicholas is charged with first-degree assault on a special victim and armed criminal action. Amanda is charged with resisting/interfering with arrest.
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St. Louis Public Schools superintendent to be sworn in
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ST. LOUIS — The new St. Louis schools superintendent will be officially sworn into office today. Dr. Keisha Scarlett took over the job in July after the retirement of Dr. Kelvin Adams. She was assistant superintendent in the Seattle Public School District. The installation ceremony is at 6:15 p.m. before the regular school board meeting.
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Gas tanker crashes into St. Louis Metro transit center
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ST. LOUIS — A gasoline tanker truck crashed into a Metro transit center near Riverview and Hall Streets early Tuesday morning and knocked over a power pole. The pole is leaning on other power lines. Police have the area blocked off here because there is a downed power line. Ameren and Metro crews are also on the scene.
The incident happened around 12:30 a.m. It’s still unclear exactly what caused the crash, but we do that there was a second vehicle somehow involved. The airbags on that second vehicle did deploy.
Accused killer’s case thrown out over one question at trial
Police at the scene have not been able to give us a lot of details. Metro officials tell FOX 2 that the transit center here is operating this morning for passengers and buses. Access to certain areas will be limited here as clean up unfolds.
A Metro spokesperson says half of the station isn’t being used right now because of safety issues. It isn’t impacting overall bus operations, everything is just happening on the other side of transit center.
The extent of the damage to the actual transit center is still unclear, but I’m told it does not appear to be extreme. A Metro spokesperson tells me there were no injuries to any metro workers or passengers. The tanker driver also was not injured.
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