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Missouri unemployment rate remains steady

Unemployment benefitsJEFFERSON CITY (AP) – Missouri’s unemployment rate held steady at 5.5 percent last month while the economy gained several thousand jobs.

The state Department of Economic Development released data Tuesday showing no change in the seasonally adjusted jobless rate from January to February.

Unemployment fell to 5.4 percent in December – its lowest rate since April 2008. That rate went up slightly the first month of the year.

Data show the state gained about 8,400 nonfarm jobs in February.

The department also scaled back an earlier estimate that nonfarm employment went up 14,300 jobs in January. The new figures put that at closer to 11,200 new jobs, meaning nonfarm employment rose by about 40,400 jobs in the past year.

House OKs adding advertising to Mo. sex trafficking law

Missouri capitolJEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) — The Missouri House has given initial approval to a bill that supporters say could help reduce sex trafficking.

The measure endorsed Tuesday would add the advertising of sexual acts with a minor to Missouri’s law against sexual trafficking.

Republican Rep. Elijah Haahr, of Springfield, says people exploiting minors are advertising children who have been trafficked online. He says giving prosecutors and law enforcement the ability to target websites that advertise sex acts with minors will help stop human trafficking in Missouri.

The bill mirrors an effort supported in the U.S. House by Rep. Ann Wagner to criminalize such advertising at the federal level.

The Missouri measure needs another vote in the House before moving to the Senate.

St. Joseph teen hospitalized after rollover accident

mhp khp emergencyBARNARD- A St. Joseph teen was injured in an accident just before 6 a.m. on Tuesday in Nodaway County.

The Missouri State Highway Patrol reported a 1997 Chevy Malibu driven by Nathaniel P. Stocking, 18, was northbound on U.S. 71 three miles southwest of Barnard.

The vehicle traveled off the east side of the road, struck an embankment and rolled.

A private vehicle transported Stocking to Mosaic Life Care.

The MSHP reported he was properly restrained at the time of the accident.

Mo. Father, Son Sentenced for Conspiracy to Steal Trucks and Trailers, Cargo

jail prisonKANSAS CITY, Mo. – Two Kansas City, Mo., area men were sentenced in federal court for their roles in a 14-year-long conspiracy to steal more than $1 million worth of trucks and trailers and their cargo according to Tammy Dickinson, United States Attorney for the Western District of Missouri.

Jon “Dirk” Dickerson, 57, of Raytown, Mo., and his son, Kyle Wayne Dickerson, 32, of Holden, Mo., were sentenced by U.S. Chief District Judge Greg Kays. Jon Dickerson was sentenced to 15 years and eight months in federal prison without parole. Kyle Dickerson was sentenced to nine years and two months in federal prison without parole. The court also ordered the Dickersons to pay $995,129 in restitution and a forfeiture money judgment of $1,270,089.

Jon and Kyle Dickerson have been in federal custody since the conclusion of a two-week trial on Feb. 28, 2014.

Jon and Kyle Dickerson, along with co-defendant Kenneth Ray Borders, 44, of Kansas City, Mo., were found guilty at trial of participating in a conspiracy that involved the theft of commercial trucks and trailers and their cargo in Missouri, Kansas, Florida, Arkansas, Oklahoma, and Nebraska from 1998 to December 2013. They worked together to steal trucks, trailers, and cargo and then dispose of them. Sometimes they used the trucks and trailers themselves to make money by hauling loads for customers and sometimes they sold the stolen trucks and trailers.

Eight additional defendants have pleaded guilty and been sentenced.

In addition to the conspiracy, Jon Dickerson was found guilty of three counts of aiding and abetting the possession of stolen goods and one count of aiding and abetting the possession of stolen vehicles. Kyle Dickerson also was found guilty of one count of aiding and abetting the transportation of stolen vehicles, two counts of aiding and abetting the possession of stolen goods and one count of aiding and abetting the possession of stolen vehicles. Borders also was found guilty of four counts of aiding and abetting the possession of stolen goods, one count of aiding and abetting the transportation of stolen goods and one count of aiding and abetting the possession of stolen vehicles.

Borders was sentenced on Dec. 8, 2014, to 21 years and 10 months in federal prison without parole. The court also ordered Borders to pay $1,270,089 in restitution to 27 victims. Borders’ sentence takes into account his previous criminal history of theft of a truck, trailer and cargo in this district and the District of Nebraska. He also has numerous instances of driving without a license or with a suspended license and was under a criminal sentence for driving while revoked during the conspiracy.

The conspiracy involved the thefts of five Freightliner trucks and 17 trailers between 2005 and 2011. The stolen trailers included refrigerated trailers containing such cargo as 39,000 pounds of meat, 565 boxes of beef valued at $149,790, $125,000 worth of frozen ribs, and several refrigerated trailers that each contained tens of thousands of dollars’ worth of frozen chicken, including a load of frozen chicken wings valued at $59,706. Also stolen were utility trailers containing such cargo as Budweiser beer valued at $16,657, Nike shoes valued at $217,353 and 21,018 pounds of Little Sizzler sausages.

Stolen cargo was sold cheaply to anyone who would buy it. Some of the cargo was sold out of the back of the trailer; some of it was sold to a tow truck driver or a convenience store operator to resell.

Jon Dickerson often had the first right to purchase stolen trucks and trailers. In fact, Borders actually had a “shopping list” from Dickerson listing the trucks and trailers that he wanted, so that Borders could keep an eye out for them and steal them if the opportunity presented itself. Jon Dickerson had Borders steal vehicles to provide him with a supply of replacement parts for his trucks. For example, if an engine failed on one of Jon Dickerson’s trucks, he would have Borders steal a truck with a similar engine to replace it.

Jon and Kyle Dickerson also were involved in stealing trucks and trailers. They used them in their own trucking business, sometimes just for replacement parts with the remains sold for scrap. Kyle Dickerson had the tools, ability, and willingness to disguise the stolen nature of the trucks and trailers by altering their Vehicle Identification Numbers (VINs) so that they could be used in their trucking business without alerting authorities when they were stopped or inspected.

The Dickersons reduced their costs of doing business by stealing trucks and trailers themselves, or by buying stolen trucks and trailers from Borders, at a fraction of their fair market value. Since they had little financial investment in the stolen trucks and trailers, and knew that they had a readily-available and cheap supply of stolen trucks and trailers, they had little incentive to maintain and repair their fleet. As a result, their fleet wore out and had safety issues, such as problems with brakes and tires. When their fleet wore out, they simply replaced them with more stolen trucks and trailers.

The Dickersons did not bother to maintain and repair their trucks and trailers but continued to operate them in interstate commerce. As a result, the Department of Transportion (DOT) and other law enforcement repeatedly cited their company and drivers for failing inspections and violating regulations. The company’s compliance reviews led to unsatisfactory safety ratings which led to a total of $450,000 in fines and numerous “out of service orders” directing them to cease operating in interstate commerce. The Dickersons just ignored the orders and the fines.

The abuse in the trucking industry not only impacts public commerce, the government charges, but also public safety. While the thefts themselves were egregious, the Dickersons’ audacious use of worn-out vehicles and not maintaining equipment such as brakes puts the public’s safety at considerable risk.

At a DOT roadside inspection, a Dickerson truck, trailer, or cargo could be delayed, or even impounded, if their poor record or condition prompted too many questions. The Dickersons’ scheme, however, included a way to downplay this risk. The Dickersons operated what is known in the industry as “chameleon carriers.” They simply abandoned their old company – along with its “baggage” of safety violations, “out of service” orders, and unpaid fines – and began operating with a new company under a new name. Thus, after Jon Dickerson’s company Fish and More was subject to more than $150,000 in fines and four orders to cease interstate transportation, he began operating under the name D&T Trucking. After D&T Trucking was subject to nearly $300,000 in fines and 17 orders to cease interstate transportation, the United States obtained a civil injunction and default judgment, and D&T Trucking was permanently enjoined from operating in interstate commerce. At that point, Kyle Dickerson got a DOT number for Night Line Trucking and Repair. Night Line Trucking and Repair received an unsatisfactory safety rating and an order to cease interstate transportation. The Dickersons then started operating under the name Nightline Trucking, LLC.

Beyond the direct losses to their victims, the Dickersons’ actions had significant impact on the trucking industry and its regulatory system. Their business morphed through four versions over 14 years – Fish and More, D&T Trucking, Night Line Trucking and Repair, and Nightline Trucking, LLC. – in an effort to avoid DOT sanctions for faulty or failed equipment that would have shut down the businesses. These business practices resulted in hundreds of vehicle stops and inspections which taxed various arms of the DOT and parallel state agencies and created extensive and expensive legal processes. The Dickersons, using their knowledge of the trucking regulations, took advantage of slow reporting and lack of federal-state consolidated record keeping to exploit the system until finally the extreme measure of an Out of Service and Record Consolidation Order was issued on July 29, 2013, putting their last company officially out of business.

 

Kansas City police investigating officer involved shooting

police shootingKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Kansas City police say officers were involved in a non-fatal shooting while investigating an earlier shooting.

Police say in a news release that the shootings occurred Monday afternoon in central Kansas City.

Officers were responding to a shooting in progress and shot one armed person. That person and another person who was shot before police arrived were taken to a hospital in critical condition.

The officers involved were not injured and were placed on administrative leave.

No further details were immediately available.

St. Joseph teen survives Monday evening crash

Missouri Highway Patrol  MHPST JOSEPH – A St. Joseph teen was injured in an accident just after 10:30 p.m. on Monday in Buchanan County.

The Missouri State Highway Patrol reported a 2001 Saturn LS driven by Xena C. Zahau, 16, St. Joseph, was northbound on U.S. 169 one mile north of St. Joseph.

The vehicle wet off the east side of the road. The driver overcorrected and the vehicle skidded off the east side of the road a second time. The vehicle rotated clockwise, became airborne, struck an embankment and hit some trees.

Zahau refused treatment at the scene.

The MSHP reported she was properly restrained at the time of the accident.

Attorney for Ferguson suspect: Officers shot ‘accidentally’

PoliceALAN SCHER ZAGIER, Associated Press

CLAYTON, Mo. (AP) — A defense attorney says a man accused of shooting two officers last week in Ferguson was not targeting police or aiming at demonstrators at a late-night protest.

Defense attorney Jerryl Christmas also suggested Monday that St. Louis County police may have used excessive force when arresting Jeffrey Williams. Christmas says his client had bruises on his back, shoulders and face and a knot on his head.

Police spokesman Brian Schellman called the lawyer’s allegations “completely false.”

Williams is accused of shooting the two officers early Thursday outside Ferguson’s police station, which has been the scene of protests since last summer’s fatal shooting of 18-year-old Michael Brown.

Christmas countered an earlier police description of the crime, saying it wasn’t an ambush shooting.

Mo. inmate asking Supreme Court to spare him from execution

Clayton
Clayton

ST. LOUIS (AP) – Missouri’s oldest death row inmate is asking the U.S. Supreme Court or the governor to spare him from being executed as scheduled Tuesday for the 1996 shooting death of a sheriff’s deputy.

Attorneys for 74-year-old Cecil Clayton argue in last-minute appeals that he has dementia and lingering effects from a 1972 sawmill accident that forced surgeons to remove part of his brain.

Clayton’s attorneys are seeking a competency hearing, and said Clayton isn’t mentally fit to be put to death.

Clayton was convicted of gunning down sheriff’s deputy Christopher Castetter in rural southwest Missouri’s Barry County while Castetter was investigating a report of a suspicious vehicle.

The Missouri Supreme Court on Saturday declined to intervene.

A spokesman for Gov. Jay Nixon said only that the Democrat is weighing Clayton’s clemency request.

Mo. Senate advances bill to access $200M in bonds

MoneyJEFFERSON CITY (AP) – Missouri senators have given initial approval to use $200 million in bonds meant for a new mental health facility at Fulton State Hospital to instead pay for other state building repairs and some new construction.

Senators in a voice vote Monday approved lifting restrictions on those bonds. The measure needs another vote to move to the House.

The Legislature last year authorized $200 million in bonding to pay for the mental health facility, but Missouri later found a different way to finance it.

Republican Sen. Mike Parson’s bill would allow the state to use that bonding authority to pay for other building repairs and $75 million in new construction.

Proposals include $75 million to renovate the Capitol and convert the Department of Transportation headquarters into additional office space.

Missouri House OKs requirements for school bullying policies

Mo Capitol DomeJEFFERSON CITY (AP) – A bill that would require Missouri school districts to meet new state requirements for anti-bullying policies is moving to the Senate.

The measure to require school anti-bullying policies include procedures for reporting, investigating and responding to bullying passed the House on Monday by a vote of 121-33.

State law already requires school districts to have a policy on bullying.

The bill lays out more detailed guidelines, including expanding when an employee should report bullying. The measure would also require a formal policy on cyberbullying.

Some Democrats against the bill say it does not do enough because it does not allow district policies to protect specific classes of students, such as lesbian, bisexual, gay and transgender students.

Supporters say every student should be treated equally to prevent any bullying.

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