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Man dies in Clinton County crash

wpid-mshp-logo111.jpgA 76-year-old Rayville man was killed in a crash Thursday in Clinton County.

According to the Missouri State Highway Patrol, Sammy Barger was driving a 1999 Ford Ranger eastbound on Missouri 116 around 8:30 a.m. just three miles west of Plattsburg when he went off the south side of the road and hit a tree. Barger was pronounced dead at the scene. He was reported to be wearing a seat belt.

Sunny and temps in the 70s today

weather-5-5A beautiful spring weekend is ahead with temperatures in the 60s to 70s and mostly sunny skies. Some low-end storm chances return Monday for portions of northern Missouri, but better chances hold off until at least the middle of next week. Here’s the 7-day forecast from the National Weather Service:

Today: Sunny, with a high near 73. North northwest wind 5 to 9 mph.

Tonight: Clear, with a low around 51. Northwest wind 5 to 7 mph becoming light and variable.

Saturday: Sunny, with a high near 76. West wind 6 to 9 mph becoming north northeast in the afternoon.

Saturday Night: Clear, with a low around 49. Northeast wind 5 to 7 mph.

Sunday: Sunny, with a high near 74. Southeast wind 5 to 11 mph.

Sunday Night: A slight chance of showers and thunderstorms after 1 a.m. Partly cloudy, with a low around 57. Chance of precipitation is 20%.

Monday: Partly sunny, with a high near 80.

Monday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 61.

Tuesday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 82.

Tuesday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 61.

Wednesday: Partly sunny, with a high near 79.

Wednesday Night: A chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 55. Chance of precipitation is 50%.

Thursday: A chance of showers and thunderstorms. Partly sunny, with a high near 68. Chance of precipitation is 50%.

 

Murder victim’s mom: “they get to go to prison and see their child. I don’t”

Jamie Jaramillo hugs Prosecutor Dwight Scroggins
Jamie Jaramillo hugs Prosecutor Dwight Scroggins

An emotional hearing ended with an audible, collective gasp of relief as Circuit Judge Daniel Kellogg sentenced Sebastian Dowell to life in prison for the Oct. 2016 murder of Kaytlin Root.

“It’s the only appropriate sentence,” Kellogg said.

Kaytlin’s mom Jamie Jaramillo agreed. “I’m ecstatic,” Jaramillo said. “I got the verdict I wanted. I will be at every parole hearing, every hearing he ever has,” she said.

“His family, they show no remorse, they don’t know what pain is. They didn’t lose a child. They get to go to prison and see their child. I don’t.”

Root was found naked, strangled and stabbed, in a remote area of the Krug Park trails on October 16, 2016. Dowell and co-defendant Amanda Bennett were charged with second-degree murder after an investigation that Prosecuting Attorney Dwight Scroggins said was a combination of great luck and great police work. Both suspects have pleaded guilty. Bennett is scheduled for sentencing next week.

During Dowell’s two-hour sentencing hearing Thursday, Scroggins laid out details of the crime that had not been publicly revealed before. One of the lead detectives, Frank Till of the St. Joseph Police Department, described how they linked Dowell and Bennett to the crime. They found part of Root’s damaged cell phone, and later, after a much wider and more exhaustive search, they found the rest of it. Within the phone’s memory they were able to piece together a Facebook Messenger dialogue with Root’s killer. They also found a cell phone photograph of Dowell at a convenience store where they stopped briefly shortly before the murder. From the store’s surveillance video and that cell phone photo, and the Facebook dialogue, they were able to identify the two suspects.

Scroggins says Dowell will be eligible for consideration for parole in a little over 25 years. This fact figured prominently in his decision to charge the teenager with second degree murder. He told the judge that given the facts, first-degree murder was appropriate. But Scroggins says that if Dowell had been charged and convicted of first-degree murder, given his age, and some recent Supreme Court rulings, the only possible sentence would be life without parole. He says the more appropriate way to ensure a just outcome for an 18-year-old murderer is to let the parole board consider his case in 25 years.

“Despite the awful tragedy of what occurred in this case, I think the more appropriate way in which to actually have a just outcome, is to let somebody take a look at this person 25 years down the road and see who he is then,” Scroggins said. “I think that decision, because of the gravity of it, is better made 25 years down the road, than if it is made today, in the light and the emotion of the crime having just happened.”

Scroggins said the defendants didn’t really care who they killed that night. They sent out Facebook messages to four or five people, and only Root responded. They asked if she wanted to hang out, and she said yes. “That’s very unusual in a homicide,” Scroggins said. “There’s usually some motive connection.”

“The only motive in this case was they wanted to kill someone,” he said, “and didn’t seem to particularly care who it was.” Scroggins says that’s more heinous than a homicide with a motive, and an intended victim, and it deserved a harsher sentence.

Scroggins also said he doesn’t pay a lot of attention to the defendants’ claims that this was part of some ritual sacrifice. The defendants don’t agree on whose idea it was, or which one believed in what was described as “dark religion.” In an interview, Dowell told Detective Till he had “dabbled in” that sort of thing since he was a child. But he said the killing was Bennett’s idea. Scroggins also said it doesn’t really matter which of the co-defendants strangled Root. Each one blames the other in interviews. Till said after strangling Root, the pair took off some of her clothes, cut off the rest, and then stabbed her and slashed her throat. Scroggins said it doesn’t matter who did what, because they had the knives, they had the gloves, and they had the plan. And because she was the one who responded to the Facebook messages, they had Root.

Arranging the meeting at random, via social media, was frightening for Jaramillo. “It is scary to know that she was number four or five, and the rest didn’t comment, but she did,” Jaramillo said.

“But she loved everybody. And social media, it does scare me, because who’s to say there isn’t somebody that says ‘hey you want to hang out?’ and then the next thing you know…”

Jaramillo trailed off, not wanting to describe what happened next to her daughter. She was quick to change the subject.

“I’ve told everybody from day one, I’m thankful that somebody found her, that I got to see her, I got to say goodbye. It might have been her laying in a casket, but I got to see my baby.”

“And they stole my best friend.”

Dowell gets life behind bars for Krug Park murder

Sebastian Dowell
Sebastian Dowell

One of two defendants has been sentenced to life in prison for the murder of Kaytlin Root at Krug Park last fall.

Sebastian Dowell, 18, admitted in March to stabbing Root, but denied strangling Root, as asserted by co-defendant Amanda Bennett. Dowell said Bennett knocked the victim on the ground and began strangling her.

Judge Daniel Kellogg sentenced Dowell Thursday on the charge of second-degree murder.  Judge Kellogg said a life sentence was the only appropriate sentence.

Bennett also pleaded guilty in February. She told a judge that the killing was part of what she described as a demonic sacrifice. Bennett’s sentencing is scheduled for next week.

Root was found by a runner near one of the trails at Krug Park on Oct. 16, 2016.

 

Coalition encourages safety through Youth Alcohol Enforcement Campaign

car-key-842106_960_720The Missouri Coalition for Roadway Safety begins its annual Youth Alcohol Enforcement Campaign Thursday. 

According to the Coalition, in 2016, 201 people were killed and 652 were seriously injured in crashes involving a substance-impaired driver.

The Coalition will use the campaign time through May 15th to encourage Missouri’s youth to be smart, brave and be a good friend by not letting anyone drink and drive.

Sgt. Larry Stobbs with the St. Joseph Police Department works with the Underage Drinking Task Force. Sgt. Stobbs said in 2011, in the 20 counties of the Missouri Department of Transportation Region 1 in Northwest Missouri, there were 43 traffic fatalities, 15 of those were people under 21 and seven of those 15 were alcohol related.  

With prom and graduation season underway, Sgt. Stobbs, along with the Coalition for Roadway Safety, encourages students to not drink and drive. 

“It should be the happiest time of the year. Law enforcement and the community doesn’t want this to be that tragic time of the year because some underage person went out and drank alcohol and got behind the wheel,” Stobbs said. “If we can do anything to keep that from happening, so much the better, but we don’t want to lose another young person in particular up here in northwest Missouri because of drinking and driving. So if you’re going to go out and you make a foolish decision, call mom or dad, call a sober friend, call a cab, somebody to come pick you up, just stay away from the vehicle.” 

An all-night lock-in event through the St. Joseph Youth Alliance will be held on May 14th at the East Hills Mall for graduating seniors in the St. Joseph School District area. It will offer games, prizes, food and a safe place for seniors to celebrate. For more information, contact the St. Joseph Youth Alliance at (816) 232-0050.

For more information on the Youth Alcohol Enforcement Campaign, click here.

Two allegedly arrested in Andrew County with skimming device

Yainier Pena Valera
Yainier Pena Valera
Yasmany Rosas
Yasmany Rosas

Two people have been arrested in Andrew County while allegedly in possession of a credit card skimming device.

Yasmany Rosas, and Yainier Pena Valera both listed as Florida residents are both charged in Andrew County with a class D felony of Forgery. Velera is also charged with a felony as a fugitive from out of state.

According to court documents, Tuesday shortly before 2:30 p.m. Sgt. M. Wilhoit with the Missouri State Highway Patrol said he stopped a Ford Expedition for speeding on I-29 near the 58 mile marker.

“I made contact with the front seat passenger and identified him as Yainier Pena Velera. The driver claimed to not understand English,” Wilhoit said. “I brought the passenger back and a routine computer check revealed a Felony Warrant for his arrest for Larceny out of Wisconsin.”

Wilhoit said after searching the vehicle a credit card skimming device was found on the front passenger floorboard. Both defendants allegedly possessed magnetic strip cards with fraudulent information in their wallets with someone else’s name.

As we’ve previously reported, a skimming device is a device that is installed inside a gasoline pump and it goes between the card reader and the computer and it captures the data from the card when it’s inserted in the machine

Rosas and Velera are currently being held in the Andrew County Jail on $20,000 cash bail.  A court date was not listed on online documents as of Thursday morning.

Man accused of trying to flee police while in possession of meth

BURWELL, JOSHUA STEVEN
BURWELL, JOSHUA STEVEN

A St. Joseph man is accused of trying to drive away from pursuing officers while in possession of methamphetamine.

Joshua Burwell, 24 is charged in Buchanan County with a felony of resisting arrest.

According to court documents, Tuesday in the 2200 block of Union St. Burwell was approached by two uniformed police officers to be detained for the Missouri State Highway Patrol on a vehicle pursuit from the week before.

“When the officers approached his vehicle and ordered him to not attempt to run he started the vehicle and put it in gear and attempted to get away in the vehicle putting the officers at risk of physical injury,” said Det. Frank Till with the St. Joseph Police Department.

Till said Burwell drove over a grass hill and hit the neighbor’s vehicle, causing damage.

“He was then arrested and methamphetamine was located in his pants pocket and his backpack,” Till said.

Court documents stated that Burwell is known for running from police in cars, often stolen cars. Till said Burwell is also a suspect in other crimes.

Burwell is currently being held without bail in the Buchanan County Jail.  He is due in court Friday for an arraignment

Sentencing delayed for defendant in assault with pipe

lawrence-lake-moberly-correctional-center-mdocSentencing has been delayed for a St. Joseph man convicted by a jury last year for assaulting another man with a pipe.

Officials say Lawrence Lake is serving a prison sentence for non-support at the Moberly Correctional Center and was not returned to St. Joe in time for a sentencing hearing scheduled Thursday morning.

As we reported in March, a Buchanan County jury returned a guilty verdict on one count of 2nd-degree assault, a class-c felony. Witnesses said Lake attacked Randal Riley with a pipe on August 27, 2016, knocking him unconscious and causing serious head injuries. He faces up to seven years in prison.

Circuit Judge Daniel Kellogg rescheduled the case for May 18 at 10:30 a.m.

Warrant issued after drug suspect fails to show up in court

Melissa Bowman
Melissa Bowman
A 39-year-old St. Joseph woman charged with trying to pass a fraudulent prescription for narcotics failed to show up in court Thursday. Judge Daniel Kellogg asked the attorneys in the case if they had tried to call the telephone number on her blog.

After attempts to contact Melissa Bowman failed, Judge Kellogg issued a warrant for her arrest. Bowman was free on her own recognizance, but Judge Kellogg revoked the OR bond and set bond at $25,000.

Bowman is charged with one class-d felony count of fraudulently attempting to obtain a controlled substance. A court affidavit accused Bowman of going to a local pharmacy last October and trying to pass a stolen, forged narcotic prescription for the drug Percocet.

Armed robbery reported in Atchison, Kan.

police lights featureAuthorities in northeast Kansas are investigating after a man reported being hit in the head and robbed at gunpoint.

Atchison County Sheriff, Jack Laurie said deputies responded around 4 a.m. Monday to the area near 258th and Sherman Road in Atchison, Kan. on a report of an aggravated robbery. A 28-year-old Oak Grove, Mo. man reported he was robbed by two men after going to an ATM and withdrawing money.

“The victim claimed that he was struck in the back of the head with a shotgun and that the suspect(s) fired two shots from the shotgun over the victim’s head, “Laurie said.

Laurie said they do have suspect(s) in the case but that the case is still under investigation.

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