A state-wide endangered person advisory has been issued for a missing teen in Mercer County.
15-year-old Corrisma Jean Cook was reported missing from her home in Princeton, Mo. around 7:15 a.m. Wednesday.
The Missouri State Highway Patrol said she was discovered to not be home when she was supposed to be picked up for work. No explanation for being gone has been discovered. Authorities believe Cook could be in the company of a man nicknamed Money who is from Eagleville, Mo. It’s also possible she could be en route to Lufkin, TX.
Cook is described as a white female of around 5’6 and 135 lbs with blonde hair, blue eyes and a fair complexion.
Anyone seeing the missing person, suspect, associate, or anyone having any information related to the endangered missing person should immediately dial 911 to contact the nearest law enforcement agency or call the Mercer County Sheriff’s Department at 660-748-3165.
A northwest Missouri man has been arrested in connection with allegedly stealing a vehicle from a person being held behind bars.
49-year-old Curtis Scott Taylor of Hopkins was arrested by officers Wednesday at a residence in Hopkins.
The Nodaway County Sheriff’s Office said it received a call Wednesday afternoon around 4:30 from Maryville Public Safety about a 1996 Nissan Altima that had been stolen from a residence in the 100 block of N. Buchanan in Maryville. The actual owner of the vehicle is currently behind bars in the Nodaway County Jail.
Authorities located the vehicle abandoned in front of a business in Hopkins. The Investigation led officers from the Sheriff’s Office and Maryville Public Safety to a home in the 600 block of E. Warren in Hopkins where a male suspect was taken into custody.
The department said Taylor is being held in the Nodaway County Jail pending criminal charges.
Plans are in the works once again for a Civil War mural that was pulled from downtown St. Joseph earlier this year after controversy.
“They’ve just redesigned it an tweaked it a bit,”said Rhabecca Boerkircher, St. Joseph Downtown Partnership Executive Director. “They added a picture of President Lincoln on there and Fort Smith as opposed to the controversial picture of Jeff Thompson taking down the American Flag,”
A music themed mural will be painted on the east side of the building located at 615-619 Felix St. A Native American Themed mural with be located on the east wall of the building at 518 Felix St.
Spencer Mural Design
“I think it’s going to be great for downtown,” Boerkircher said. “The ambiance, will clean up those buildings and make them look nicer and that’s what we always strive for to make downtown a better place to live, visit and work.”
All the murals have been privately funded and will be painted by mural artist, Sam Welty.
Boerkircher said she expects work on the murals to start in August after the mural will go before the Downtown Review Board at the August 5th meeting. Work on the Civil War mural is anticipated to begin first since the wall has already been prepped for artwork prior to being pulled the first time.
A Gallatin man is charged with more than 30 counts for allegedly possessing hundreds of photos and videos of child porn and showing a Juveniles images of nude minors.
32-year-old Cameron Curtis Wilson was charged Tuesday with a misdemeanor for Furnish Pornographic Material Or Attempt To Furnish To A Minor, a Felony for first degree Promote Child Pornography To A Minor and 30 felonies for Possession Of Child Pornography.
According to the Probable Cause Statement Wilson allegedly invited a 12-year-old Juvenile into his apartment in the 100 block of East Elm Street in March to look at a knife collection.
“While in the apartment, Wilson showed the Juvenile numerous adult pornographic magazines. Wilson then showed Juvenile images of nude minors, ranging from the age range of 6 to 12 years of age, via his cellular telephone,” said David Vaughn, a law enforcement officer with the Gallatin Missouri Police Department.
After searching Wilson’s residence in Gallatin officers found numerous media storage devices which were seized. The Heart of America Regional Computer Forensics Laboratory examined the devices and allegedly found 1483 images. 197 of those images were identified as minors, 12 years of age and younger engaged in sexually explicit conducts and an undetermined number of minors 12-17 engaged in sexual acts. There were also 48 child erotica images of females ranging in age from 5 to 10.
The investigation found 123 videos identified as minors ranging in age of infants to 12 years of age engaged in sexually explicit acts.
“Also contained on the electronic storage/media devices is images/videos of Wilson in representations of a pornographic nature of himself, sexual role playing communication which includes promotion of child pornographic materials via electronic correspondence and social media,” Vaughn said.
Wilson is being held in Daviess County on $200,000 cash bond.
Acting on a tip from parents, Livingston County authorities are investigating a messy keg party held by teenage members of the area’s Amish community.
Sheriff Steve Cox says Amish leaders and parents are united in their desire for these young people to learn from their experience.
The minors are being required to clean the entire area, apologize to the land owner, and to the business where the alcohol was purchased.
Sheriff Cox says the incident report notes five (mostly empty) beer kegs, which were seized. The sheriff says nearly $1,000 was paid for kegs and deposits.
The investigation began when parents reported learning that minor children had allegedly been involved in a youth alcohol party on private property without landowner consent to even be there. Cox says the party location in a remote area of northwestern Livingston County was “significantly littered” with various alcohol beverage containers and other items.
The sheriffs of Daviess and Grundy counties met with Cox and the Amish leaders in regard to this incident to discuss cooperation to prevent future problems. Cox said all three sheriffs commended the parents and leaders “for their proactive and positive involvement with the young people in this incident.”
Cox says he has a suspect identified for alleged supplying the beer, but by Wednesday morning no charges had been filed.
Severe weather overnight caused no serious damage or injury, but left behind enough rain to cause some dangerous driving conditions. The storm produced pea-sized hail and 40 mile per hour winds near Tarkio last night.
Wet pavement contributed to a crash in Harrison County that sent an Iowa man to the hospital. The Missouri State Highway Patrol crash report says 61-year-old Thomas Friend of Iowa Falls, Iowa lost control of his vehicle on I-35 south of Eagleville at about 11:25pm Tuesday.
The vehicle hydroplaned off the road, hit an embankment and overturned. Mr Friend was transported to Harrison County Community Hospital with moderate injuries.
Slick driving conditions contributed to another accident in Gentry County just after midnight Wednesday morning. The crash report says Brian J Meyer of Denver, Missouri suffered moderate injuries in the rollover crash south of Stanberry.
The crash report says Mr Meyer lost control of his car along US-169 highway when it started to hydroplane on the wet roadway. The vehicle left the highway and overturned. Meyer was transported to Northwest Medical Center in Albany with moderate injuries.
(July 13, 2015) Navy Diver 1st Class Spencer Puett, a native of St Joseph, Mo., prepares fellow Sailors to dive the waters of the Savannah River in support of the salvage of Civil War ironclad CSS Georgia. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Jesse A. Hyatt/Released)
A St. Joseph native is one of the Navy divers assisting in the salvage of a civil war era ironclad ship from waters in Georgia.
“Right now we are down in Savannah, Ga. conducting salvage operations to recover the CSS Georgia from the bottom of the Savannah River,” said Spencer Puett, Navy Diver 1st Class. “It’s considered a captured enemy vessel, property of the US Navy and we are also recovering it to assist with the Savannah Harbor Expansion project.”
The Navy said the CSS Georgia was built in 1862 in Savannah. The ship was scuttled on Dec. 20, 1864, as Gen. William T. Sherman’s Union troops seized the city she was built to protect.
“On the bottom of the river in the wreck site there’s pieces of un-exploded ordinance that are littered everywhere. We have recovered around a 120 pieces,” Puett said. “We’ve moved into the cannon recovery phase.”
He said it’s hard to see when preforming the operations.
“On the bottom of the river it’s completely black, you can’t really see anything at all. Even with our high-powered LED lights that we put on our dive helmets you can only see about a foot in front of you,” Puett said. “On the bottom there’s not a whole lot to see the beauty of those things. Once it breaks the surface that’s when you really see it.”
Puett helps to prepare fellow sailors to dive into the river for the salvage.
“Before we put divers in the water we always do a brief. It covers everything that should be expected for that dive,” Puett said. “It’s my job overall to ensure number one the safety of the divers and secondly that the job gets done.”
Puett went to school in St. Joseph. He attended Bessie Ellison Elementary, Bode Middle School and graduated from Central High School in 2003. In 2005 he enlisted with the Navy. He is now stationed in Virginia.
“Not many people get to do the kind of things that my team and I am out here doing,” Puett said.
But with family in St. Joseph he said he always looks forward to coming back home to visit.
Gaining their High School Equivalency degree is giving two adult students an opportunity and now they’re speaking out.
Joyce Simpson and John Davidson graduated this year with their HSE through the St. Joseph School District’s Adult Education and Literacy program. The district uploaded video interviews with the two last week on its YouTube account.
“I came back for me,” said Simpson. “I grew up and I had to do this. This was something personal that I wanted to accomplish for me.”
“I couldn’t find the diploma and so I had no other choice but to obtain it again,” Davidson said. He said he went to school many years ago on the West Coast and then somehow lost his diploma somewhere along the way.
Adult Education and Literacy Volunteer coordinator Trish Heath said around 500 people graduate from the program with their HSE each year.
“We have the classes here for free. Our next registration will be August 18th,” Heath said. “They just need to bring themselves and be motivated and let us help them get through the process.”
“I was determined,” Simpson said. “I had to take the test the first time and then I flunked math. I passed everything else. I was kind of really discouraged at that point. I didn’t think I could do it but I kept going.”
Simpson said support from her teacher, family and church helped her keep going and she took it again and passed.
Davidson said he was nervous because it had been a long time since he opened up a textbook.
“I like the fact that it seemed more of a one-on-one basis… I can remember being in class with 20 or 30 other people. You just didn’t get the attention that was given here,” Davidson said. “There’s several opportunities out there now. Now that I have that piece of paper in my possession once again.”
Registration is coming up for HSE classes August 18th. Four days of orientation will be held from either 9 a.m. to noon or from 5 to 8 p.m. Classes start the following week at various times options. Heath said students are asked to take classes for six weeks before trying to take the test.
For more information on the HSE (which replaced the GED test several years ago) contact Webster Learning Center at (816) 671-4020.
In 2014, facing eviction from his Alabama home, John Russell Houser set out to make sure no one else could ever live in that house. The new owners found Houser had it booby-trapped: the gas starter tube in the fireplace was twisted out and ignited, the logs removed.
Houser had grown into someone better known by neighbors and colleagues as an angry provocateur.
In April 2008, Houser’s wife, Kellie, his daughter and others filed court papers seeking a temporary protective order against Houser, saying he had “perpetrated various acts of family violence” and had a history of manic depression and bi-polar disorder.
Police say his anger culminated Thursday night in a slaughter at a movie theater in Lafayette, Louisiana, leaving two women dead and nine other people hurt.
St Joseph police have arrested two people pending investigation into an apparent fight in the Midtown area in which a knife was used.
Captain Jeff Wilson of the St Joseph Police Department tells us they were called to a disturbance in the 500 block of North 19th Street at about 9:30 pm Wednesday. Officers broke up the fight. Two male suspects were taken to Mosaic Life Care. Captain Wilson says one suffered a severe laceration while the other’s injuries were minor. Both were treated and released.
Captain Wilson says they took the 37-year-old St Joseph man into custody pending further investigation. They also detained a 27-year-old St Joseph woman who was at the scene.