We have a brand new updated website! Click here to check it out!

Deputy’s vehicle hit in Doniphan County chase

Doniphan County Sheriff shoulder patchA teenager was taken into custody in Doniphan County after allegedly crashing into a deputy’s vehicle.

Deputy Raymond Hall with the Doniphan County Sheriff’s Office said shortly before 11 p.m. Tuesday, a white vehicle was westbound on US 36 Highway near Saratogo Road traveling at a high rate of speed with no lights on and nearly hit a deputy.  A chase began westbound on 36 to Fleek’s Market where the suspect allegedly turned around and headed back eastbound nearly striking deputies again.  The chase went through Wathena and then south through a field off of south 1st St.  Hall said the suspect tried to exit the field to get back on the roadway when he hit a deputy’s vehicle disabling the suspect’s car. A 16-year-old was taken into custody.  No injuries were reported.

Crash slows traffic on I-29

(Update 3 p.m.) – No one was injured in a four vehicle crash that slowed traffic Wednesday morning on northbound I-29.

Sgt. Jake Angle with the Missouri State Highway Patrol said around 9:15 a.m. near the 48 mile marker the driver of a semi pulled over to check on a vehicle that was broke down on the side of the road. A vehicle behind the semi struck the corner of the semi, a second vehicle also hit the left corner of the semi and then a third vehicle hit debris in the roadway.

Angle said no injuries were reported. One lane of traffic was shutdown while crews worked the scene.

>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

crash

(Update 10:40 a.m.) – Traffic appears to be moving normal again.  We are currently waiting for authorities to call back with details on the crash.

>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

A crash on northbound I-29 is slowing drivers for several miles.

According to a caller, a Semi and a vehicle were seen along the highway around 9:30 a.m. Wednesday. Authorities were also on scene.

The caller said traffic was backed up from north of Frederick to nearly 36 Highway.

At 10 a.m. Sgt. Jake Angle with the Missouri State Highway Patrol said crews were still on scene working the incident.  He said there are two vehicles in the median and unknown injuries.

As we learn more we will update this post.

Woman life-flighted after Livingston County crash

wpid-mshp-logo111.jpgA woman was transported by life-flight after a one-vehicle crash Tuesday afternoon in Livingston County.

According to the Missouri State Highway Patrol, Jeanne Chaney 60 of Chillicothe was driving a 2012 Ford Focus on Route K just east of Chula around 3:39 p.m.  The patrol said Chaney crossed the center line and went off the north side of the road, through a ditch and hit a private drive.  The vehicle then became airborne, returned to the ground and rolled over two times.  Chaney was transported by life flight to Truman Medical Center for treatment of what was described as a serious injury.  According to the patrol’s arrest reports they are also investigating her for several possible charges including DWI. She was reported to be wearing her seat-belt.

20 arrested in Drug Strike Force operation

strike force featureA joint operation Tuesday in Buchanan County led to the round-up of 20 people during a strike force operation.

The Buchanan County Drug Strike Force assisted by the Sheriff’s Department and the St. Joseph Police Department arrested 10 defendants on drug charges as part of an investigation. The Buchanan County Prosecutor’s office has announced the following charges:

According to the prosecutor’s Office, the range of punishment for delivery of a controlled substance is as follows: 2016 CRIMES – CLASS B FELONY – 5-15 YEARS OR 2017 CRIMES – CLASS C FELONY – 3-10
YEARS.

During the execution of the arrest warrants officers arrested an additional six people on various felony warrants, one misdemeanor warrant and three city warrants. Those defendants and charges are:

Felony Warrants: Randi Babb, Stealing; Benjamin Everhart, Non-support; Gary Hale, Andrew County stealing;
Norman O’Dell, Non-support; Matt Smith, Parole Violation; Rick Wattenbarger, Parole Violation – Nonsupport
Misdemeanor Warrant: John Tolliver, Assault 3rd Degree
City Warrants: Joshua Butler, Jerry O’Dell and Jason Epperson

The arraignment for all the defendants in custody is expected for Friday, Feb. 24.

Record warmth expected today

sunset-431894_960_720Record warmth is expected across the area today as afternoon temperatures soar into the middle to upper 70s. An elevated fire danger is also expected today. Slightly cooler temperatures arrive on Thursday with the next chance for rainfall.  Here’s the 7-day forecast from the National Weather Service:

Today: Sunny, with a high near 77. South southwest wind 8 to 14 mph becoming west northwest in the afternoon. Winds could gust as high as 20 mph.

Tonight: Partly cloudy, with a low around 47. West northwest wind 6 to 8 mph becoming east northeast after midnight.

Thursday: A chance of showers. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 63. East wind 8 to 16 mph, with gusts as high as 28 mph. Chance of precipitation is 40%.

Thursday Night: A chance of showers before 8 p.m., then a chance of showers and thunderstorms between 8 p.m. and midnight. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 41. East wind 10 to 13 mph becoming west after midnight. Winds could gust as high as 18 mph. Chance of precipitation is 30%.

Friday: Partly sunny, with a high near 46. Breezy, with a west wind 14 to 21 mph, with gusts as high as 32 mph.

Friday Night: A chance of rain showers before 10 p.m., then a chance of rain and snow showers between 10 p.m. and midnight, then a slight chance of snow showers after midnight. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 26. Blustery. Chance of precipitation is 30%.

Saturday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 40.

Saturday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 26.

Sunday: Partly sunny, with a high near 49.

Sunday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 29.

Monday: A chance of rain and snow showers. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 55. Chance of precipitation is 30%.

Monday Night: A chance of showers. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 44. Chance of precipitation is 30%.

Tuesday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 65.

 

Prosecutor’s office releases statement in officer-involved shooting investigation

(Click to enlarge)
(Click to enlarge)

The Buchanan County Prosecutor’s Office has released the results of an autopsy and said it is working with authorities in connection with an investigation after a man was killed in officer-involved shooting early Monday morning.

According to the release, Prosecuting Attorney Dwight Scroggins has confirmed his office is working closely with the Missouri State Highway Patrol on the investigation into a confirmed St. Joseph Police Department involved shooting that resulted in the death of 27-year-old Jason Fanning.

As we previously reported, the St. Joseph man was fatally wounded in the shooting incident that took place at the intersection of 20th and Charles St. after Captain Jeff Wilson said an officer responded to a report of a suspicious vehicle. Fanning, allegedly the driver of the vehicle was hit during the incident and transported to the hospital where he later died.

Scorggins said the preliminary autopsy report indicates Fanning was killed by a single, penetrating gunshot wound.

“There remains a lot of additional work yet to be done,” Scroggins said. “I met today for approximately two hours to review preliminary information with investigators and discuss additional steps that need to be taken.”

Police previously told us the officer has been placed on administrative leave. Scroggins said the investigation remains ongoing.

Buchanan County Comissioner looks at drug monitoring program debate

Buchanan County Courthouse
Buchanan County Courthouse

Buchanan County Commissioner Harry Roberts said he is watching the debate in Jefferson City over the approval of a prescription drug monitoring program.

Currently, Missouri is the only state without a PDMP. As we previously reported, in January the U.S. Department of Justice announced that Missouri counties are now eligible to receive federal funds for prescription drug monitoring programs to combat the opioid epidemic. Roberts said in Buchanan County the illegal use of prescription drugs is a big problem.

“We do know for a fact that folks come from other states to fill those prescriptions with no good intentions,” Roberts said. “The illegal sale of prescription medications is not just a problem it’s an epidemic.”

Officials have said that a PDMP would allow doctors and pharmacies to enter prescriptions into a statewide database where they are cross referenced before being dispensed again. According to Missourinet, in the past, legislation to put a PDMP in place in Missouri has been blocked by Senate Republican Rob Schaaf of St. Joseph, who thinks it would infringe on peoples’ privacy.  Roberts said he feels like there should be a way to put the monitoring program in place without violating people’s privacy.

“They are going to be debating this this week in Jefferson City,” Roberts said. “I spent some time talking to the Senator over the weekend about it.  I’ve talked to our Drug Strike Force, I’ve talked to the folks in Jeff City and they said it’s going to be debated this week….I hope they really have it thought out so it doesn’t need a lot of amendments.”

Roberts said the PDMP is a start to battling the problem.

“No one says the people who use and get hooked are bad people, they’ve just made some bad decisions,” Roberts said. “I believe that laws should be to protect us from other people and this is a perfect example.  We’ve got to have this to protect us against the bad people who are selling the drugs. Anybody who doesn’t think that’s not affecting people’s lives, it doesn’t affect that one person’s life, it affects the lives that surround that person.”

Home sales on the increase

NARealtors logo
Area realtors report another big month for home sales in January.

According to new numbers from the St. Joseph Regional Association of Realtors, sales in the nine-county area were just over $11.9 million in January, up more than 72% from a year earlier.

The organization says realtors sold 81 homes, up about 40% from the January, 2016 total of 58 homes sold.

Last year, the association reported more than $187 million in home sales, the largest total in more than five years.

Missouri man accused of trying to plot terrorist attack in KC

Robert Lorenzo Hester, Jr. Columbia Police Department Booking Photo
Robert Lorenzo Hester, Jr.
Columbia Police Department Booking Photo

(News Release) KANSAS CITY, Mo. – A Missouri man has been charged in federal court for his role in making preparations to launch a terrorist attack with persons he believed were members of ISIS, but who were actually undercover law enforcement agents.

Robert Lorenzo Hester, Jr., 25, of Columbia, Mo., (Correction on city of residence) was charged in a criminal complaint filed in the U.S. District Court of Kansas City, Mo., with attempting to provide material support to a foreign terrorist organization. Hester, who remains in federal custody, was arrested on Friday, Feb. 17, 2017, when he arrived at an arranged meeting with an undercover law enforcement agent. The criminal complaint was signed on Sunday and made public today following Hester’s initial court appearance.

“First on social media, then during face-to-face meetings with an undercover FBI employee, this defendant repeatedly expressed his intent to engage in acts of violent jihad against the United States,” Dickinson said. “He believed he was part of an ISIS-sponsored terrorist attack that would result in the deaths and injuries of many innocent victims. He readily participated in the preparations for an attack, provided materials and resources for an attack, and voiced his intent to carry out an attack. I commend the FBI for protecting the public from a security threat.”

“Terrorism knows no demographic boundaries and remains the FBI’s top priority,” said FBI Special Agent in Charge of the Kansas City Field Office Eric Jackson. “The arrest of Hester is the culmination of an extensive FBI investigation and demonstrates the challenges law enforcement faces in identifying individuals intent on causing harm.”

“As alleged in the complaint, Robert Lorenzo Hester, Jr. attempted to provide material support to ISIS by participating in what he believed would be a deadly attack committed in the name of the foreign terrorist organization,” said Acting Assistant Attorney General McCord. “Countering terrorist threats remains the highest priority of the National Security Division, and we will continue our efforts to identify and hold accountable those who seek to commit acts of terrorism within our borders.”

According to an affidavit filed in support of the criminal complaint, Hester demonstrated through his statements and actions that he posed a security threat by his willingness to provide material support to a foreign terrorist organization and his willingness to assist in what he believed would be a murderous terrorist bombing and gunfire attack.

Hester is a U.S. citizen who was born in Missouri. He was enlisted in the U.S. Army for less than a year, receiving a general discharge from service in mid-2013.

FBI agents undertook a review of Hester’s publicly available posts on multiple social media accounts in September 2016. On Oct. 3, 2016, Hester was arrested by the Columbia, Mo., Police Department in an unrelated case and remained in state custody until he was released on bond on Oct. 13, 2016. His bond conditions included electronic monitoring. While Hester was being monitored, undercover federal agents maintained regular contact via an encrypted messaging app and text messages, and met with him on several occasions.

On Jan. 24, 2017, Hester pleaded guilty in state court to property damage and unlawful use of a weapon and was released on his own recognizance. Hester was no longer on electronic monitoring after that date. Undercover agents continued to meet in person with Hester and communicate via social media, texting and an encrypted message app.

Hester agreed to meet again with an undercover agent on Friday, Feb. 17, 2017. When Hester arrived for that meeting, he was arrested. Hester was the sole subject of this undercover investigation.

Undercover Investigation

According to the affidavit, the investigation began when the FBI became aware (through multiple confidential sources) of Hester’s social media posts, in which he expressed animus towards the United States and suggested an adherence to radical Islamic ideology and a propensity for violence. Hester used several online aliases, including “Mohammed Junaid Al Amreeki,” “Junaid Muhammad,” “Rabbani Junaid Muhammad,” “Rami Talib,” “Ali Talib Muhammad.”

On Oct. 3, 2016, Hester was arrested by Columbia police officers after an incident in the parking lot of a grocery store. Hester, who appeared to be in an argument with his wife, threw a folded pocket knife through a plate-glass window near the entrance of the store. When store employees confronted Hester, he assumed an aggressive stance and forcefully placed his hand into the diaper bag he was carrying in a manner that appeared to be reaching for a weapon. Police officers later recovered a 9mm handgun from the diaper bag. Hester was in custody until Oct. 13, 2016, when he was released on bond and placed on electronic monitoring.

On Oct. 15, 2016, two days after Hester’s release on bond, an FBI employee using an undercover identity contacted Hester by private message. The FBI employee had accepted a friend request from Hester the day before Hester was arrested for the grocery store incident. They continued to communicate via social media, text and an encrypted messaging app, the affidavit says, during which Hester presented himself as a security threat, stating, for example, that the U.S. government should be “overthrown,” and suggesting “hitting” the government “hard,” while noting that it would not be “a one man job.” Hester identified categories of potential targets for attack and said he wanted a “global jihad.” Hester stated that he was trying to find like-minded people to help. When the undercover employee mentioned “brothers,” Hester said he wanted to meet them.

Hester then established that he would act on the statements he made online. In early November, the affidavit says, Hester made arrangements with the undercover employee – whom he never met in person – to meet with “one of the brothers.” The undercover employee arranged this meeting with another undercover FBI employee.

During a Jan. 31, 2017, meeting, the undercover employee provided Hester with a list of items to purchase, including 9-volt batteries, duct tape, copper wire, and roofing nails. The undercover employee implied that these items would be used to make bombs, the affidavit says, stating that those materials are needed “to make … things … to bring some kind of destruction.” Hester allegedly responded by stating: “I’m just ready to help. I’m ready to help any way I can.” When the undercover employee stated that what they were planning was “going to bring them to their knees … and then they gonna know to fear Allah,” Hester expressed his anticipation by stating: “I can’t wait. I can’t wait.”

Hester and the undercover employee agreed to meet again at Hester’s residence the next day. When the undercover employee arrived, the affidavit says, Hester gave him the items he had purchased. The undercover employee told Hester they were planning something “10 times more” than the Boston Marathon bombing, and Hester expressed his approval. The undercover agent told Hester that they were planning on “killing a lot of people.” The undercover employee told Hester that he could “walk away,” the affidavit says, but Hester said, “I’m down.” The undercover employee told Hester they were going to “wage all kinda war,” and Hester again expressed his approval.

The undercover employee then pulled back blankets in the back of the SUV to show Hester three AK-47 style rifles and two .45-caliber handguns. The undercover agent told Hester that, while they had plenty of firearms, they needed more ammunition. Hester stated that he could not purchase ammunition because of his state charges, but that he had a friend that could get ammunition for him. Hester stated that he would have money to purchase ammunition after he received his tax refund and after he was paid in a couple of weeks.

The undercover employee also opened a backpack, which contained pipes and fuse, stating, “these are bombs right here.” The undercover employee explained that the duct tape Hester provided would be used to tape the bombs together, which Hester acknowledged, and that the nails Hester provided would “cut peoples’ heads off.” Hester responded: “Oh yeah. I know,” indicating that he understood the nails were to be used as shrapnel for bombs.

The undercover employee stated that they had more backpacks that they were going to put in different locations. Hester acknowledged that he understood, and stated that they had to be smarter than the Boston Marathon bombers. Hester again confirmed that he was “down,” the affidavit says, and that he understood they had to “lay low” and act in a manner to avoid detection.

The undercover employee stated that they were going to “strike fear in all these infidel hearts,” and Hester responded that he agreed and that he was ready.

According to the affidavit, Hester contacted the first undercover employee via text message on Feb. 2, 2017, and indicated he would “have some more stuff … in a couple of weeks when I get paid.” Hester asked the undercover employee, “When you talk to the brother again let him know I’ll have some more gifts in a couple of weeks.”

On Feb. 4, 6, 7, 11 and 16, 2017, Hester communicated with an undercover employee via an encrypted messaging app. Hester said that he was excited, that he was “happy to be part” of it, and that it was “time they answer for their atrocities.” Hester predicted that it was “going to be a good day for Muslims worldwide.” Hester asked how the “party plan” was coming along and reiterated that he would get more “supplies.” The undercover employee told Hester that the “party” would take place on Presidents’ Day and that the targets of the operation would include busses, trains and a train station in Kansas City, Mo. Hester said, according to the affidavit, that it felt “good to help strike back at the true terrorist.”

On Feb. 17, 2017, Hester met again with the second undercover employee and provided more roofing nails. Hester accompanied the undercover employee to a nearby storage facility, where the two examined the security cameras. Hester was arrested shortly thereafter.

Dickinson cautioned that the charge contained in this complaint is simply an accusation, and not evidence of guilt. Evidence supporting the charge must be presented to a federal trial jury, whose duty is to determine guilt or innocence.

 

Robbery suspect appears in court

Shania Harness
Shania Harness
An 18-year-old St. Joseph woman appeared in court Tuesday for circuit court arraignment on charges stemming from an armed robbery last month at a local cell phone store.

(As we reported) Shania Harness and co-defendant Isaiah Williams were charged with first-degree robbery after a stickup at the Metro PCS store at 3202 South Belt January 17. Witnesses said the pair entered the store, pointed firearms at customers and employees, and demanded cash.

The suspects fled, but an employee got a description of the suspects and their vehicle and gave officers the information. The vehicle was located a short time later by a trooper with the Missouri State Highway Patrol.

Harness waived formal circuit court arraignment before Judge Patrick Robb, who scheduled her next court appearance March 13. Thomas is scheduled to appear in court Thursday.

Copyright Eagle Radio | FCC Public Files | EEO Public File