Thursday, July 09, 2026

Appeals court rules Joplin child molester should receive life sentence, not 99 years


A Joplin child molester whose first appeal was rejected by the Missouri Southern District Court of Appeals, did better the second time, but it's not quite what he wanted.

Robert William Shields wanted Jasper County Circuit Court Judge Dean Dankelson removed from his case after Dankelson didn't allow him to change lawyers during his resentencing hearing

The appeals court rejected that idea, but agreed that Dankelson's written sentence of 99 years for first degree statutory sodomy needed to be tossed in favor of the life sentence he gave from the bench.

Shields was also sentenced to 15 years for child molestation, a life sentence for statutory rape and seven years on a second statutory rape charge with the sentences to run consecutively.







The crimes were committed over a 9-year period beginning when the girl was five years old.

From the opinion:

A jury found Appellant guilty of one count of first-degree child molestation, one count of first-degree statutory sodomy, one count of first-degree statutory rape, and one count of second-degree statutory rape. 

Appellant was released pending sentencing.

Appellant failed to appear for his scheduled sentencing hearing after removing his electronic monitoring device and fleeing to Colorado. He absconded for more than one year before being arrested in Colorado and extradited to Missouri for sentencing. Judge Dean Dankelson presided over the sentencing hearing following Appellant’s return.

At that hearing, Appellant informed the court that he had discharged trial counsel, had filed a federal lawsuit against trial counsel, counsel’s law firm, and the Jasper County Prosecutor, and requested appointment of substitute counsel. 

During the ensuing discussion, Appellant asserted trial counsel’s ineffective assistance contributed to his decision to abscond before sentencing. Judge Dankelson rejected that assertion, stating Appellant’s decision to abscond was his own and commenting that trial counsel was “one of the finest attorneys this Court has ever seen.” 

Judge Dankelson did not appoint substitute counsel and proceeded to sentence Appellant to consecutive terms of fifteen years’ imprisonment for first-degree child molestation, ninety-nine years’ imprisonment for first-degree statutory sodomy, life imprisonment for first-degree statutory rape, and seven years’ imprisonment for second-degree statutory rape.

Appellant appealed. In that appeal, this Court concluded Appellant had not waived his constitutional right to counsel at sentencing. The Court affirmed Appellant’s convictions, vacated the sentences, and remanded the case for resentencing. 

Following remand, the case was again assigned to Judge Dankelson for resentencing. Appellant moved to disqualify Judge Dankelson, alleging the judge’s comments during the original sentencing hearing created an appearance of partiality and impropriety. 

Judge Dankelson requested that another judge hear the motion, and the Supreme Court of Missouri assigned Judge Stephen Carlton for that purpose. After conducting a hearing, Judge Carlton denied the motion to recuse, concluding the record did not establish grounds requiring Judge Dankelson’s disqualification.

Judge Dankelson thereafter conducted the resentencing hearing and imposed consecutive sentences of fifteen years’ imprisonment for first-degree child molestation, fifty years’ imprisonment for first-degree statutory sodomy, life imprisonment for first- degree statutory rape, and seven years’ imprisonment for second-degree statutory rape. This appeal followed.

Discussion

Appellant claims the circuit court abused its discretion in denying his motion to disqualify Judge Dankelson from presiding over the resentencing hearing. Appellant contends the comments Judge Dankelson made during the original sentencing hearing demonstrated an appearance of partiality arising from the judge’s favorable opinion of Appellant’s trial counsel. We disagree.








We review the denial of a motion to disqualify a judge for abuse of discretion.
Burgess v. State, 342 S.W.3d 325, 328 (Mo. banc 2011). 

 trial court abuses its discretion when its ruling is clearly against the logic of the circumstances and is so arbitrary and unreasonable as to shock the sense of justice. Prince v. State, 390 S.W.3d 225, 230 (Mo.App. 2013). A judge is presumed to act impartially, and the party seeking disqualification bears the burden of overcoming that presumption. Rule 2-2.11(A) requires recusal when a judge’s impartiality “might reasonably be questioned,” including when the judge possesses a personal bias or prejudice concerning a party.1 But “[a] disqualifying bias or prejudice must be one emanating from an extrajudicial source and result in an opinion on the merits on some basis other than what the judge learned from participation in the case.” Burgess, 342 S.W.3d at 328.

Appellant argues Judge Dankelson’s statement that trial counsel was “one of the finest attorneys this Court has ever seen” demonstrates an extrajudicial bias requiring recusal. The argument depends upon the premise that the judge’s favorable opinion of counsel necessarily reflected a personal relationship that impaired the judge’s impartiality toward Appellant. 

The record, however, does not support that inference.

The challenged remark occurred only after Appellant asserted that trial counsel’s alleged ineffectiveness caused him to abscond before his original sentencing hearing and further criticized counsel’s physical condition during trial. Judge Dankelson rejected 
those assertions, reminding Appellant that the decision to flee Missouri was his own and responding to Appellant’s criticism of counsel by expressing his opinion of counsel’s professional abilities. 

Nothing in the record suggests the judge relied upon information obtained outside the judicial proceedings or possessed personal knowledge of disputed facts. 

Rather, the comments arose directly from the sentencing colloquy and the issues Appellant himself injected into the proceeding.

Judge Dankelson’s favorable assessment of trial counsel’s professional abilities does not establish the type of personal bias contemplated by Rule 2-2.11. Nothing in this record suggests the remark reflected anything other than the judge’s assessment of counsel’s professional performance. 

Standing alone, the remark does not demonstrate personal bias against Appellant or an extrajudicial source of prejudice.

The procedural history of this case further undermines Appellant’s claim.

Following remand, Judge Dankelson did not rule upon his own impartiality. Instead, he requested that another judge hear the motion to disqualify. The Supreme Court assigned Judge Carlton to determine the motion, and after considering the parties’ evidence and arguments, Judge Carlton denied the request for recusal. 

Although that ruling is itself the basis of Appellant’s argument, the procedure employed demonstrates
that Appellant’s allegations received independent judicial consideration before resentencing occurred.

Appellant points to remarks made during the course of the judicial proceedings in response to his own accusations against trial counsel. Even accepting Appellant’s characterization of the record, the legal standard for mandatory recusal was not met. 

At most, those remarks may reflect disagreement with Appellant’s characterization of counsel or frustration with Appellant’s attempt to attribute his flight from Missouri to counsel’s representation. They do not, however, establish a personal bias arising from an extrajudicial source or otherwise demonstrate that Judge Dankelson’s impartiality might reasonably be questioned. 

Because Appellant failed to overcome the presumption of judicial impartiality, the circuit court did not abuse its discretion in denying the motion to disqualify. Appellant’s point is denied.








As a final matter, we note the written judgment reflects a sentence of 99 years for first-degree statutory rape, but the oral pronouncement of the judgment at sentencing was life in prison. “The written sentence and judgment of the trial court should reflect the oral pronouncement of sentence.” State v. Turner, 609 S.W.3d 92, 101 (Mo.App. 2020) (internal quotation marks omitted). 

“If the written judgment and oral pronouncement materially differ, the oral pronouncement controls.” State v. Bittick, 727 S.W.3d 166, 173 (Mo.App. 2025). “Sentences of life and 99 years are materially different because, among other things, they have a different effect in determining parole eligibility dates.” State v. Pardee, 700 S.W.3d 42, 54 (Mo.App. 2024). “Errors of this nature are ‘clerical’ and may be corrected nunc pro tunc.

Accordingly, we remand this case to the circuit court for entry of a written judgment which corrects the clerical error and conforms to the oral pronouncement of the sentences. In all other respects, the judgment is affirmed.

Joplin City Council to discuss restaurant inspections, camping, pedestrian safety



JOPLIN CITY COUNCIL WORK SESSION
MONDAY, JULY 13, 2026
5:45 P.M., Council Chambers


Bill requiring drunk drivers to pay families for deaths caused by their acts signed into law

(From Gov. Mike Kehoe)

Today, during a bill signing ceremony at the Missouri State Capitol, Governor Mike Kehoe signed House Bills (HB) 1740, 1839, and 2593 and Senate Bills (SB) 975, 1421, 1572 into law, highlighting his commitment to Missouri families, first responders, and military service members.

"The legislation I signed today strengthens the laws that protect our families, supports the men and women who serve our country and communities, and gives our state stronger tools to keep dangerous criminals off our streets," said Governor Kehoe. "Public safety will always be this administration’s top priority."








HB 1740, sponsored by Representative Dave Griffith and Senator Mike Bernskoetter, modifies provisions relating to driving while intoxicated.Establishes Bentley and Mason's Law, creating a court-enforceable mechanism that places long-term financial responsibility on intoxicated drivers whose actions result in the death of a child's parent or guardian.

Enhances penalties for individuals that are criminally negligent of driving while intoxicated (DWI) and aligns with sentencing standards.

Clarifies probation and parole rules for DWI offenses resulting in death.

Requires at least five years in prison for some fatal DWI convictions and 10 years without probation and parole for repeat offenders whose DWI causes a death.

HB 1839, sponsored by Representative Sherri Gallick and Senator Mike Henderson, creates provisions relating to age verification on adult websites.Requires age verification of adult websites containing sexual material that is harmful to minors.

Authorizes the Missouri Attorney General to enforce the new age verification requirement by imposing civil penalties on non-compliant websites.

HB 2593, sponsored by Representative Bill Hardwick and Senator Adam Schnelting, modifies various provisions relating to military affairs.








Modifies provisions relating to the rulemaking process and eligibility for Missouri Military Family Relief Fund grants.

Creates and outlines certain medal and ribbon programs, including counterdrug ribbons, homeland response force ribbons, and armed forces recognition medallions.

Establishes the Cybersecurity Mission Act, authorizing the Missouri National Guard to enter into agreements with certain parties to render cybersecurity aid upon the request of the Department of Public Safety director.

SB 1421, sponsored by Senator Nick Schroer and Representative Mike Jones, modifies provisions relating to public safety.Directs the Missouri Division of Fire Safety to establish consistent, modern, statewide fire standards for state-inspected facilities, including childcare facilities. 

Updates requirements for drug trafficking charges.

Governor Kehoe also signed:SB 975, sponsored by Senator Rusty Black and Representative Jeff Farnan, modifies provisions relating to ambulance districts.

SB 1572, sponsored by Senator Mike Henderson and Representative Barry Hovis, modifies provisions relating to the public employee retirement system

 

Senate Select Committee on Rural Healthcare to hold public hearing in Joplin


(From Sen. Jill Carter, R-Granby)

The Missouri Senate Select Committee on Rural Healthcare, will hold a public hearing on Wednesday, July 15, 2026, at 2 p.m. The hearing will take place in Room 205 of the Ron Richard Athletic Center at Missouri Southern State University in Joplin.

The hearing will feature presentations from leading healthcare organizations on the challenges facing rural healthcare and potential solutions to improve access and outcomes across Missouri. Topics will include the 340B Drug Pricing Program, pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs), rural healthcare data and transformation strategies, and access to primary care in rural communities.








Featured Presentations

Missouri Hospital Association — 340B Drug Pricing Program
Missouri Pharmacy Association and Missouri Pharmacy Business Council — Pharmacy Benefit Managers (PBMs) and their impact on pharmacies and patients
Rural Health Transformation Office — Rural health data and transformation strategy
Missouri State Medical Association and Association of Missouri Nurse Practitioners — Primary care access in rural communities

"Rural Missourians deserve reliable access to hospitals, pharmacies, primary care providers and affordable medications close to home,” said Sen. Jill Carter, R-Joplin, chair of the Missouri Senate Select Committee. 








“This hearing is an opportunity to hear directly from experts on the front lines about challenges facing rural communities and explore practical, data-driven solutions that strengthen healthcare access and improve outcomes for families across our state and right here in southwest Missouri."

The hearing is open to the public, who are encouraged to attend. Members of the media are invited to attend and cover the proceedings.

Governor signs legislation strengthening oversight of high school athletics


(From Gov. Mike Kehoe)

Today, Governor Mike Kehoe signed Senate Bill (SB) 863 into law, ensuring good governance and consistent standards for student programs and activities in the State of Missouri.

“As we talk about improving education and student outcomes, we must not overlook the role athletics and other extracurricular activities play in building leadership, teamwork, and resilience,” said Governor Kehoe. “I would like to thank the members of the General Assembly for supporting our efforts to ensure that the organizations overseeing student activities operate with transparency and accountability.”








SB 863, sponsored by Senator Jason Bean and Representative Bennie Cook, establishes the Interscholastic Athletic Oversight Commission within the Department of Elementary and Secondary Education (DESE). The five-member board will be appointed by the Governor.

“As I said in my State of the State address, unelected bureaucrats cannot act like kings, and the decisions of the Missouri State High School Activities Association should be held to a higher standard of oversight," continued Governor Kehoe. "This Commission will allow for a more transparent appeals process and ensure the taxpayers who fund MSHSAA have a say in the decisions affecting students and their futures."








The Commission will primarily hear appeals involving contest procedures and student transfer eligibility. Its decisions will be final and binding on state activities associations, with the Attorney General representing the Commission in any legal challenges to its final rulings.

Information on applying to be a member of the Interscholastic Athletic Oversight Commission will be available at boards.mo.gov.

For more information on the legislation signed into law, visit house.mo.gov and senate.mo.gov. Photos from the bill signing will be uploaded to Governor Kehoe’s Flickr page. Additional bill signings will take place today through Tuesday, July 14, 2026.


Kehoe asks Trump for major disaster declaration for Jasper, Newton, Dade counties


(From Gov. Mike Kehoe)

Today, Governor Mike Kehoe requested that President Donald J. Trump approve a major disaster declaration to provide federal assistance to 34 counties in response to dangerous flash flooding, several tornadoes, and intense straight-line winds that heavily impacted several regions of Missouri from June 4-18.

"Missourians have shown incredible resilience in the face of repeated severe weather, but the damage from this two-week storm system extended across nearly one-third of the state and has placed a tremendous strain on local communities," said Governor Kehoe. "Federal assistance will provide critical support as communities continue repairing essential infrastructure and recovering from these devastating storms."








Based on the documented damage and emergency response costs, Governor Kehoe is requesting FEMA Public Assistance for the following 34 counties: Adair, Andrew, Callaway, Camden, Cape Girardeau, Dade, Daviess, Gasconade, Gentry, Grundy, Harrison, Hickory, Holt, Jasper, Knox, Lewis, Linn, Macon, Marion, Mercer, Miller, Moniteau, Morgan, Newton, Nodaway, Osage, Polk, Putnam, Scott, Shelby, Sullivan, Vernon, Webster, and Worth.

If approved, Public Assistance would allow local governments and qualifying nonprofit agencies to seek federal assistance for reimbursement of emergency response and recovery costs, including the repair and replacement of damaged roads, bridges, and other public infrastructure.








Joint damage assessments conducted by FEMA, SEMA, and local officials estimate more than $32.3 million in emergency response costs and damage to public infrastructure.

For more information on the federal disaster declaration process, visit the SEMA website. For additional resources and information about disaster recovery in Missouri, please visit recovery.mo.gov.

Wednesday, July 08, 2026

Neosho man charged with fourth DWI


A felony driving while intoxicated  charge was filed Tuesday against a Neosho man with three previous DWI convictions.

Robert Guarino, 62, was cited by the Missouri State Highway Patrol following a crash May 25 on Iris Road near Whispering Pines Road.

From the probable cause statement:

During my contact with Guarino, I formed the opinion that he was intoxicated. This opinion was based on the following:

1) He was involved in a crash. (He crossed the center line of the roadway and traveled off the left side of the road, resulting in overturning.)








2) He admitted to having a few drinks.

3) He displayed physical traits of someone who was intoxicated. His speech was very slurred.

4) He had a very strong odor of intoxicants coming from his breath.

5) Trooper Coleman located a bottle of alcohol. (Known as an airplane shooter.)

6) The odor of alcohol was strong, where he had crashed and inside the ambulance.

7) Guarino was using vulgar language while in the ambulance.








8) He was falling asleep while I was reading his Miranda rights.

Guarino was processed and released at Freeman Hospital. He was assigned a court date of July 22, 2026, at 10:00 a.m. in the Associate Circuit Court of Newton County, in Neosho, Missouri.

According to the complaint, Guarino pleaded guilty to a DWI in 1984 in Jasper County and to two DWIs that occurred one month apart in 2019.

Seneca woman charged with harassment

The Newton County Prosecuting Attorney's Office charged a Seneca woman with harassment Tuesday after the woman allegedly would not stop texting her, threatened to use a voodoo doll on her and sent her information on how to hide a dead body from the police.

The allegations against Krisnie L. Morrow (DOB 1954) are detailed in the probable cause statement.








On 6/12/26 at approximately 10:30 am I, Officer William Housley met with Victim 1 who advised me that she sent a message to Krisnie Morrow stating "I will inform you as soon as we are finished. Please do not text me again,” after Morrow had repeatedly messaged her. 

After Victim 1 sent the text to Morrow to stop communicating with her, Morrow later responded that she would not stop texting Victim 1 because it was not against the law. 

Victim 1 then stated that Morrow continued to text her multiple times despite her request for the communication to stop. While reporting this to me, Victim 1 became visibly upset and began crying stating that Morrow had started sending threatening messages including a message stating that she
"might have a voodoo doll" and that Victim 1 was "chopped." 

Victim 1 then stated that Morrow had then later sent her a video that referenced how to hide a dead body from the police and how to conceal a weapon.








Victim 1 then showed me the video Morrow had sent referencing how to hide a body from the
police as well as the text messages including the message stating "I might have a voodoo doll."

Morrow also verbally stated to her that she intends to find the new residence that Victim 1 is moving to and that she also verbally stated to her that she intends to find the new residence that Victim 1 is moving to and that she intends to continue to harass her.

Victim 1 stated that she feels in fear for her life as well as the well-being of her family and that she is emotionally overwhelmed.

The case was investigated by the Seneca Police Department.

Tuesday, July 07, 2026

Springfield senator who sponsored Amendment 5 faces stiff primary challenge


By Jason Hancock

Before Curtis Trent can try to run the Missouri Senate floor, he has to win reelection in southwest Missouri.

Trent, a Springfield Republican seeking his second term in the state Senate, is also running for majority floor leader — one of the most powerful jobs in the Capitol and a position that could shape the 2027 legislative session. But his path to leadership now runs through Lori Rook, a Springfield elder law attorney casting him as exactly the kind of Jefferson City insider Republican primary voters have punished before.

So the Aug. 4 contest in Senate District 20 isn’t just an incumbent-versus-challenger primary. It is a test of whether Trent’s growing power in Jefferson City is his strongest argument for reelection — or Rook’s strongest argument against him.







Rook shows up with a sharper edge than the usual long-shot bid against an incumbent. She has personal money, statewide campaign experience and a team led by Sophia Shore, who managed Jill Carter’s 2022 upset of incumbent Republican state Sen. Bill White — the last time GOP primary voters tossed a sitting senator in southwest Missouri. Shore also helped run Bill Eigel’s campaign for governor in 2024.

Trent is no easy target. He enters with a large financial edge, years representing the area and backing from much of the Republican establishment.

Daniel Ponder, a Drury University political scientist who lives in the district, said Trent starts with advantages Rook will have to overcome, namely money and name recognition in southwest Missouri.

Trent has “been on the yard signs and on the ballot for coming up on 10 years,” Ponder said. Recent mailers, he said, have urged voters to thank Trent for supporting President Donald Trump’s agenda — a sign the incumbent is already working to blunt any argument he’s insufficiently conservative.

Fate of Missouri bill on gas station slot machines could turn on GOP primary results

What makes this particular primary matter beyond southwest Missouri is the prize waiting for Trent if he survives it.

If he is reelected and chosen by his Republican colleagues as majority floor leader, Trent would help decide which bills come up for debate, when they move and how Gov. Mike Kehoe’s agenda is managed in 2027. The job is opening at a moment of turnover: Term limits are removing President Pro Tem Cindy O’Laughlin and Majority Floor Leader Tony Luetkemeyer.

The floor leader controls the calendar, which means controlling what reaches a vote — power that touches taxes, energy, education, the budget and the long-running fight over whether to expand gambling in Missouri.

Rook rejects the argument that the district benefits from sending one of its own into leadership — a case she says her own party often frames as “sit down, shut up, wait your turn.”

“None of that benefits Senate District 20,” she said. “People outside the echo chamber of this establishment group just want somebody that’s going to go up to Jefferson City and fight for them and come back and talk to them and show up at their local meetings.”

The challenger

Rook is making her second run for office.

In 2024, she ran for state treasurer in a crowded Republican primary and finished third, with 127,970 votes — 19.4% — behind incumbent Vivek Malek and former state Sen. Andrew Koenig.

She ran stronger in the counties that make up Senate District 20, finishing second in Greene, Dade and Webster counties and winning Barton County, according to official election results.







Rook lost that race but built name recognition among conservative activists and showed she would spend her own money. She has put $100,000 of it into her Senate campaign.

The treasurer’s race, she said, opened her eyes to “dysfunction” and “corruption” in both parties. She said she decided to run after looking at Trent’s record and seeing someone in “lockstep with the things that bothered me.”

A self-described Republican outsider, she has run squarely against the Capitol’s governing class.

“I am running for state Senate because southwest Missouri deserves actual conservative fighters, not more go-along-to-get-along lobby corps lackeys,” she said in announcing her candidacy.

Rook grew up in Springfield, graduated from Nixa High School and earned a criminal justice degree from Missouri State University before law school in Oklahoma City. After several years as a trial attorney, she shifted into elder law in 2012.

Her argument against Trent is that his record is a catalog of favors to corporations and insiders.

She points to the 2025 utility law Trent supported, which opened a path for electric companies to bill customers for power plants while they are still under construction. Rook ties that law to rising utility bills and to the data centers seeking to plug into Missouri’s grid, including a proposed project in Webster County that led county officials to approve a six-month moratorium.

She also opposes Amendment 5, the tax overhaul Trent sponsored, arguing it ignores the state’s spending problem and will result in higher costs for families. To her, Trent’s sponsorship of the measure reflects his alignment with lobbyists and Jefferson City insiders — who she believes will benefit the most if Amendment 5 passes.

And then there is gambling.

For years, Missouri lawmakers have fought over whether to legalize and regulate video lottery terminals — slot machines that have spread into gas stations, convenience stores and bars. House-backed bills have repeatedly died in the Senate.

Video lottery supporters believe a friendlier Senate is within reach in 2027, and an analysis by The Independent found gambling interests have poured more than $4 million into Missouri legislative campaigns since the start of 2025 — money concentrated in the primaries that could clear the path.

Trent’s committee has taken a share of it.

Four days after lawmakers adjourned in May, J&J Ventures, an Illinois company that operates video gambling terminals, gave $50,000 to 417 PAC, a political action committee aligned with Trent. More recently, PACs tied to former House Speaker Steve Tilley, who lobbies for Torch Electronics, donated a combined $30,000 to 417 PAC.

“It’s pay to play,” Rook said of that money. “It’s completely corrupt, and none of it surprises me.”

The incumbent

Trent’s case for himself is that he’s a conservative willing to do the complicated work of moving major policy through the statehouse.

He grew up on a small farm in southwest Missouri, graduated from Missouri State University and earned his law degree from Saint Louis University. Before winning the open 20th District seat in 2022, he worked as deputy chief of staff to former U.S. Rep. Billy Long and served three terms in the Missouri House.

In the Senate, he has risen fast, serving as assistant majority floor leader and chairing the General Laws Committee. He has drawn endorsements from business-oriented conservative groups, including Americans for Prosperity Missouri.

Trent did not return calls seeking comment for The Independent’s earlier story on gambling money, and his campaign did not respond to requests for comment for this article.

On gambling, he argued during Senate debate that Missouri needs legal clarity around games already operating in much of the state. He questioned whether a crackdown led by Attorney General Catherine Hanaway — her push to shut the machines down as illegal — would succeed, and pointed to cities that have passed ordinances against the machines as a sign the law is less settled than opponents claim.

“If it’s already illegal, you don’t pass an ordinance outlawing it or prohibiting it,” Trent said, arguing lawmakers would do better to “create a deliberate framework.”

On energy, Trent has been outspoken in support of the 2025 utility law, arguing in a January op-ed that it did not cause recent rate increases and that its construction-financing provisions are tightly restricted.

James Harris, a veteran Republican consultant and Jefferson City lobbyist who has known Trent since Billy Long’s 2010 congressional campaign, said Trent is routinely underestimated.

“He is really smart, he’s a good campaigner,” Harris said. “If I was going to go with who fits the district, I’d say Curtis.”

Harris said Trent’s southwest Missouri roots, prior wins in the district and low-key style make him harder to caricature than other incumbents. He did not quarrel with the description of Trent as a deal-maker popular with Capitol insiders. But he treated it as an advantage.

The “swamp” attack Rook is running, Harris argued, is easy to throw and hard to land against a well-funded incumbent.

Trent “will have more resources,” he said, “so he can define himself and withstand some slaps of swamp.”







The clearest example of Trent’s approach this year was Amendment 5, the plan to give lawmakers a temporary window to broaden the sales tax in order to phase out the individual income tax.

At an April Springfield Area Chamber of Commerce event, Trent argued the state risks falling behind if it does not move faster.

“The states around us are being very aggressive about lowering their income tax rates, even more aggressive than we have been,” he said.

The cause has a longtime patron, and in late June he surfaced in Trent’s own finance reports.

Rex Sinquefield — the retired financier who has spent years and tens of millions of dollars trying to abolish Missouri’s income tax — gave $125,000 to 417 PAC, by far the largest donation the committee has reported this year.

A familiar fight

The contrast is one Missouri Republicans have grappled with for a decade: Trent’s governing model, built around experience and leadership, against Rook’s insurgent model, built around hostility to lobbyist influence and the way business gets done.

“In current politics, personal ambition and ideological preferences trump traditional party loyalties,” said Peverill Squire, professor emeritus of political science at the University of Missouri-Columbia. “As a result, across the country we see incumbents in both parties being challenged by politicians on their ideological flanks.”

The last time disgruntled voters tossed a sitting senator in southwest Missouri was 2022, when Carter beat White — the race Rook’s campaign manager ran for the challenger.

Whether that precedent translates is another question. Harris said White lost in part because he had alienated voters with an abrasive style — a personal vulnerability he does not see in Trent.

“Curtis is not a villain,” Harris said.







Senate District 20 is heavily Republican, and the August primary will almost certainly decide the seat. Democrat Sean Falconer has filed but faces long odds. Trent won the 2022 general election unopposed after taking the GOP primary with more than 58% of the vote.

Squire expects Trent’s money to matter, but said the outcome of the race will turn on who actually shows up in August and “whether they remain comfortable with the incumbent or are anxious to try something different.”

Ponder, the Drury University political science professor, said the race has been relatively quiet so far. But in the closing weeks before the primary, he doesn’t expect that to hold.

“Usually, in campaigns like this,” he said, “particularly state elections and especially state legislative races, which don’t tend to be very high profile, the last month is really when you see the push.”

Missouri Independent is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Missouri Independent maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Jason Hancock for questions: info@missouriindependent.com.

Missouri governor to sign porn site age verification bill


By Jason Hancock

Gov. Mike Kehoe has announced he will sign legislation Thursday requiring pornography websites to verify that users are adults before allowing them to access sexually explicit content.

The bill, which will take effect Aug. 28, applies to commercial websites and social media platforms that knowingly and intentionally publish or distribute content in Missouri if more than one-third is “sexual material harmful to minors.”

It was included in a list of 22 bills Kehoe’s office said he plans to sign on Thursday.







Covered sites would have to use a third party to conduct “reasonable” age verification, confirming that a user is at least 18 through digital identification, government-issued identification or a commercially reasonable system relying on public or private transactional data, such as records from mortgage, education or employment entities.

Third-party age verification providers would be barred from retaining identifying information about users.

The bill is designed to put into state law a policy Missouri Attorney General Catherine Hanaway has already begun enforcing through an administrative rule under the Missouri Merchandising Practices Act. That rule took effect in December and prompted Pornhub, the largest adult-content website, to block access in Missouri rather than implement site-level age checks.

New age verification rule causes Pornhub to shut down access in Missouri

“This is the source. Children do not need to view pornography,” state Rep. Sherri Gallick, a Belton Republican who carried the bill, told The Independent in May.

Gallick argued that easy access to online pornography distorts minors’ understanding of sex and relationships and can be used by predators to groom children.

“One of the things that was really compelling to me is that a lot of people growing up in today’s age look at a phone or they look at a computer, and they think that is reality,” Gallick said. “It’s very demeaning to women and to children.”

Under the bill, the attorney general could sue commercial entities accused of knowingly violating the law. Courts could impose civil penalties of up to $10,000 for each day a website operates without the required age checks and $10,000 per violation if an age-verification provider retains identifying information.

If at least one minor accesses sexual material harmful to minors because a covered website failed to comply, the court could impose an additional penalty of up to $250,000.

The bill includes exemptions for bona fide news and public-interest broadcasts, website videos, reports or events, and says it should not be interpreted to affect the rights of news-gathering organizations. Internet service providers, search engines and cloud service providers would also be shielded from liability when they merely provide access or connection to content they did not create and do not control.







The measure passed the Senate 32-0 in May before returning to the House, where it won final approval on a 112-25 vote. Twenty Democrats and five Republicans voted against it, while 11 Democrats voted “present.”

Supporters say the law is needed to make it harder for minors to encounter explicit material online. Opponents questioned whether the requirement would work, warning that teenagers could bypass age checks through virtual private networks and that privacy concerns could push major adult sites out of Missouri while driving traffic to less regulated websites.

“Kids are smart,” state Rep. Eric Woods, a Kansas City Democrat, said during House debate in March. “There are VPNs. There are browser settings that allow you to skirt around some of this stuff.”

The legislation advanced after the U.S. Supreme Court upheld a similar Texas law last year. In a 6-3 decision issued last year, the court ruled Texas could require pornographic websites to verify users’ ages, saying the state had an important interest in shielding minors from sexually explicit content.

Missouri Independent is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Missouri Independent maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Jason Hancock for questions: info@missouriindependent.com.