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Update on condition of 2 officers shot in Ferguson during protest

Chief Belmar
Chief Belmar

FERGUSON (AP) – St. Louis County Police Chief Jon Belmar said Thursday the two officers who were shot during a protest in Ferguson Wednesday night aren’t expected to have long-term injuries.

Belmar said one of the officers was shot in the face, just below his right eye and the bullet lodged behind his ear. The other officer was shot in his right shoulder, with the bullet leaving out his back.

Belmar said the shooting easily could have resulted in two deaths. He cited two New York City officers who were ambushed in their police cruiser in December.

Belmar said the shots were fired from across the street. They came as protesters gathered, following the resignation yesterday of Ferguson’s police chief. The community saw similar and much larger demonstrations after the shooting death of black 18-year-old Michael Brown last summer by white police officer Darren Wilson.

Following last week’s scathing Justice Department report, Ferguson’s city manager and four other employees also have left.

Missouri GOP chair defends himself against calls to resign

 GOP Chairman John Hancock
GOP Chairman John Hancock-courtesy photo

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) — The chairman of the Missouri Republican Party is defending his reputation as several state lawmakers call for his resignation over his alleged involvement in an anti-Semitic whispering campaign against the deceased state auditor.

Five lawmakers held a news conference Thursday at the Capitol in Jefferson City calling for GOP Chairman John Hancock’s resignation. Hancock simultaneously conducted media interviews defending himself.

Hancock says he will not resign. He says he’s been the subject of “malicious rumors” from people who believe he was telling Republican donors that former Missouri Auditor Tom Schweich was Jewish.

Schweich fatally shot himself Feb. 26, minutes after telling reporters he was ready to go public with allegations that Hancock had made anti-Semitic comments about him. Schweich said he was a Christian.

Kansas City police investigate another shooting death

PoliceKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Kansas City police are investigating a shooting that left one person fatally wounded.
Police said in a news release that officers were dispatched at 9 p.m. Wednesday to the scene of the shooting. One person was rushed to a hospital and died. The release said another person had suffered a grazing wound.
The name of the victim wasn’t immediately released. Police are urging anyone with information to come forward.

Police: 2 officers shot in Ferguson UPDATE

police crime

The Associated Press

10 A.M.

Local and national civil rights leaders are condemning the shootings of two police officers in Ferguson, Missouri.

John Gaskin III, a St. Louis community activist, says the “disgraceful and cowardly” attack was conducted by outside agitators who were intent on hijacking attention from protests that he says have produced meaningful reforms.

Gaskin says activists “cannot afford these kinds of incidents happening, because that gets us absolutely nowhere.”

One officer was shot in his face, the other in his shoulder, early Thursday morning during a protest outside Ferguson police headquarters following the resignation of the city’s police chief. Both officers are hospitalized.

A spokesman for the Rev. Al Sharpton says Sharpton is against violence of any kind, especially against police.

9:30 A.M.

St. Louis County’s top official says the shooting of two officers in Ferguson shouldn’t be a setback for the community’s healing process.

County Executive Steve Stenger says he supports residents expressing their First Amendment rights in a nonviolent way, and believes Ferguson residents are concerned about the officers.

He says, “I think everyone with reasonable minds would want to avoid situations like this.”

St. Louis County Police Chief Jon Belmar says a protest outside Ferguson police headquarters appeared to be winding down when the officers were shot just after midnight. He characterized the shooting as an “ambush.”

He says both officers “are good guys. I’m proud of them.”

9 A.M.

St. Louis County Police Chief Jon Belmar says the two officers shot during a protest in Ferguson aren’t expected to have long-term injuries.

Belmar says one of the officers was shot in his face, just below his right eye and the bullet lodged behind his ear. The other officer was shot in his right shoulder, with the bullet leaving out his back.

Belmar says the shooting easily could have resulted in two deaths. He cited the two New York City officers who were ambushed in their police cruiser in December.

Belmar said, “we could have buried two police officers next week over this.”

8:45 A.M.

U.S. Sen. Claire McCaskill is calling for “healing and reform” after the shooting of two police officers outside the Ferguson Police Department.

The Missouri senator released a statement Thursday saying “acts of violence have no place in this process.”

Gunfire that erupted after midnight left a 32-year-old officer from nearby Webster Groves with a facial wound and a 41-year-old officer from St. Louis County with a shoulder wound. Both were rushed to a hospital. St. Louis County Police Chief Jon Belmar described their injuries as serious.

The shootings followed a scathing Justice Department report alleging bias in the police department and court.

McCaskill says she hoped for a “full recovery” for the officers and added that she was praying for them and their families.

8 A.M.

St. Louis County Police Chief Jon Belmar is planning a news conference to further address the shooting of two police officers during a protest outside the Ferguson Police Department.

A 32-year-old officer from nearby Webster Groves was shot in the face and a 41-year-old officer from St. Louis County was shot in the shoulder.

Belmar said earlier Thursday that the officers were taken to a hospital, where they are conscious, but that both are seriously injured.

He is scheduled to speak again at 9 a.m. at the St. Louis County Police Headquarters.

The shootings happened after midnight as demonstrators gathered after the city’s police chief resigned in the wake of a scathing Justice Department report alleging bias in the police department and court.

————–

JIM SALTER, Associated Press

FERGUSON, Mo. (AP) — St. Louis County Police Chief Jon Belmar says two officers were shot around midnight at a Ferguson, Missouri, protest.

He said a 32-year-old officer from Webster Groves was shot in the face and a 41-year-old officer from St. Louis County was shot in the shoulder.

He says both are conscious.

Belmar says he did not know who shot the officers.

The shots were fired as protesters had gathered following the resignation of Ferguson’s embattled Police Chief Thomas Jackson on Wednesday.

Jackson was the sixth employee to resign or be fired after a Justice Department report cleared a white former Ferguson police officer, Darren Wilson, of civil rights charges in the shooting of black 18-year-old Michael Brown in Ferguson last summer. Wilson has since resigned.

Sen. McCaskill Responds to Shooting of Ferguson Police

McCaskillWASHINGTON – U.S. Senator Claire McCaskill today released the following statement after two police offers were shot overnight in Ferguson, Mo.:

“This shooting is a criminal act that jeopardized the lives of police officers and protesters both. I hope the officers have a full recovery and pray for them and their families. It’s time for healing and reform, and acts of violence have no place in this process.”

Mo. Senate endorses pilot to forgive child support debt

Capitol Mo.JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) – The Missouri Senate is moving forward with a measure creating a pilot program to forgive a portion of non-custodial parents’ debt to the state for child support.

The Senate on Wednesday approved the bill that would forgive up to $2,000 of debt to the state if a non-custodial parent participates in job readiness or parenting training.

Republican Sen. David Sater, of Cassville, says the pilot program would help parents without custody of their children find gainful employment and become more involved with their children.

The bill would not affect child support owed to custodial parents.

It would only reduce debts owed to the state for when the state stepped in to care for children.

Man sentenced for scamming Mo. high school band program

Prison JailSPRINGFIELD (AP) – A Utah travel agent has been sentenced to five years in federal prison for taking money for a southwestern Missouri high school band trip to Hawaii that never happened.

Forty-year-old Calliope “Ope” Saaga also was ordered to pay more than $780,000 in restitution related his theft involving the Willard High School band and similar schemes that victimized two Arkansas school districts.

Saaga pleaded guilty last October in the Missouri case to one count of wire fraud.

Saaga, of Saratoga Springs, Utah, was hired to book airfare, lodging, transportation and meals for more than 300 Willard High School students and chaperones for a planned June 2012 Hawaii trip.

The band program’s boosters paid him about $360,000. But prosecutors say he spent the money on Las Vegas gambling and other personal expenses.

Former Fed Reserve programmer admits to stealing software code

CourtKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) – A former lead software programmer for the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City faces July sentencing after admitting in court that he stole software code in his waning days with the Fed.

Fifty-four-year-old Hamid Reza Tahmasebi of Leawood, Kansas, on Wednesday pleaded guilty in federal court in Kansas City, Missouri, to a charge of theft of government property.

A statement by the region’s U.S. Attorney’s Office did not specify why Tahmasebi had taken the code.

The U.S. government says both sides recommend that Tahmasebi receive five years of probation when sentenced. Tahmasebi also agrees to pay the Fed more than $246,000 in restitution. That’s the amount of the Fed spent to investigate the theft and extensively review the security of its coding.

St. Joseph woman hospitalized after truck hits ditch, embankment

Missouri Highway Patrol  MHPSAVANNAH – A St. Joseph woman was injured in an accident just after 3 p.m. on Wednesday in Andrew County.

The Missouri State Highway Patrol reported a Ford F 250 driven by Dana J. Clark, 39, St. Joseph, was traveling north on Route CC five miles west of Savannah.

The vehicle traveled off the east side of the road, struck a ditch and hit an embankment.

Clark was transported to Mosaic Life Care.

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

FAA investigating Mo. small plane crash

FAAOSAGE BEACH, Mo. (AP) — A fire chief says the three occupants of a plane that crashed near central Missouri’s Lake of the Ozarks survived.

Osage Beach Fire Chief Jeff Dorhauer tells KRCG-TV (http://bit.ly/1FbPVVO) of Jefferson City that the single-engine 1976 Beechcraft B-19 crashed about 12:30 p.m. Wednesday.

Dorhauer says the survivors are all related and were headed home to St. Louis when the plane went down.

Those people were found on the shoreline, rescued by boat by firefighters and were later listed in stable condition at a hospital.

The Federal Aviation Administration is investigating.

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