Saturday, July 18, 2026

Four establishments fail Joplin Health Department inspections

Four establishments failed Joplin Health Department inspections this week, according to information posted on the department website. 

Soul's Harbor Food Pantry, 817 S. Main Street; Los Primos, 2207 W. 7th Street; Food 4 Less Bakery/Deli, 2800 E. 32nd Street; and Hunan Garden, 2830 S. Main Street; received failing grades.

Twenty establishments passed their inspections.

Soul's Harbor Food Pantry

Soul's Harbor Food Pantry received a priority violations for having roaches in hard to reach areas in dry food and single item storage area.

Los Primos

Los Primos received a priority violation for having food items in the prep cooler being cold held above 41 degrees and seven core violations. The core violations can be found at this link.








Food R Less Bakery/Deli

The bakery and deli at Food 4 Less received a priority violation for having cheesecakes in the cake cooler being cold held above 41 degrees and two core violations. The core violations can be found at this link.

Hunan Garden

Hunan Garden received two priority violations and seven core violations.

The priority violations were for having employee drinks on top of the prep table and for having chicken in the buffet line being hot held below 135 degrees. The core violations can be found at this link.

***
The following establishments passed inspection:

Royale Cinema Lounge, 715 E. Broadway Avenue (re-inspection)

Soul's Harbor Kitchen, 915 S. Main Street

Landmark Hospital, 2040 W. 32nd Street (re-inspection)

Food 4 Less- Meat, 2800 E. 32nd Street

Food 4 Less- Produce/Retail, 2800 E. 32nd Street

Sal-Tea Sloth (mobile)

Red Onion Expressoria, 1007 E. 32nd Street

Latin Fusion, 1520 S. Main Street

Walmart Supercenter Produce/Retail, 1501 S. Range Line Road

Walmart Supercenter Meat, 1501 S. Range Line Road

Walmart Supercenter Deli, 1501 S. Range Line Road








Taco Bell, 2601 S. Main Street

Wendy's @ Road Ranger, 2101 S. Prigmor Avenue

Glamour Nails and Spa, 320 S. Geneva Avenue

Quik Trip, 6601 E. 32nd Street

Cash Saver- Meat, 811 W. 7th

Joplin 44 Petro, 4240 S. 43 Highway

Best Western Breakfast, 3508 S. Range Line (re-inspection)

Tiffany Nail Studio, 2705 S. Range Line Road




Missouri ballot measures dominate fundraising for primary


By Rudi Keller

Ballot measure fights are consuming the big money in Missouri elections this summer, with more than $27 million raised for proposals on the Aug. 4 ballot, according to reports filed this week with state and federal authorities.

There’s no hotly contested statewide candidate race on the primary election ballot, but there are four constitutional amendments, with two drawing by far the most attention and money.







There are three competitive congressional primaries and contests in 12 of the state’s 17 state Senate districts, but the combined fundraising in those races does not equal the amounts being raised and spent for the major ballot measures, Amendment 4 and Amendment 5.

Ballot measures

Amendment 4 would change how majorities are calculated for constitutional amendments being proposed by initiative petitions. It would mean all such initiatives would have to pass in all of the state’s congressional districts instead of with a majority of all votes statewide.

Amendment 5  would require lawmakers to set revenue triggers for lowering the income tax and allow an expanded or increased sales tax. 

In reports to the Missouri ethics commission, the committees fighting over Amendments 4 and 5  reported  $12.9 million in contributions from April 1 to June 30 and new large donations reported this month have brought in $14.6 million more.

The cash campaign is very lopsided toward opponents on Amendment 4. The leading fundraiser, Missouri Realtors-backed Missourians for Fair Governance, has taken in almost $6 million. Protect Majority Rule Missouri, which is working with the Realtors group, has raised $5.3 million.

Missourians for Fair Governance has spent $1.6 million on a statewide ad campaign that began in June, tracking by The Independent shows. Protect Majority Rule Missouri has spent $257,000 on ads that began this week.

Protect Election Integrity, the campaign committee promoting Amendment 4, has raised $51,000.

On Amendment 5 fundraising is skewed heavily toward supporters.

Missouri Promise, which is funded almost entirely by not-for-profits that do not disclose their sources of money, has raised $12.7 million to promote Amendment 5. Missouri Promise has spent $4.8 million so far on its broadcast ad campaign.

Opposition fundraising is split among four committees, with the Missouri Realtors-backed Missourians for Fair Taxation raising $1.9 million and a second committee, No Everything Tax, raising $327,000 more. The two other committees, Parents for Missouri Public Schools and Protect Freedom and Democracy, have raised $13,000 and $153,000, respectively.

Only Missourians for Fair Taxation is running broadcast ads, spending $838,000 so far.







The November ballot issue campaigns promise to be as expensive, if not more so, than the August campaigns.

Amendment 3, which would ban abortions except in limited circumstances for rape or incest, will be an expensive election. The groups that supported the 2024 ballot measure that made abortion legal in the state raised $39 million for that campaign and have raised just under $5 million for this year’s vote under the name Stop the Ban.

Backers of Amendment 3, using the campaign committee name Her Health, Her Future, have raised just under $1 million.

Missouri could also see a referendum on the congressional map forced through the Legislature in 2025 by Republicans. People Not Politicians raised almost $1 million during the second quarter of the year as it fought court battles over its petition. 

A decision on the referendum is due from Secretary of State Denny Hoskins on the day of the primary. 

Opponents of the referendum, Put Missouri First, raised $13,788 in the second quarter and have raised $3.1 million overall.

Congressional primaries

In the three hotly contested Congressional primaries, Democratic voters will choose whether to oust a one-term incumbent in the 1st District, while Republicans will nominate candidates to challenge an incumbent and run for an open seat in the 5th and 6th districts.

In the 1st District, where former U.S. Rep. Cori Bush is seeking to regain her seat from U.S. Rep. Wesley Bell, the man who took it from her in 2024, Bell holds the fundraising edge. He raised $1.4 million in the second quarter of the year and has raised $3.3 million overall. 

Bush raised $310,000 in the quarter and has brought in $816,000 total.

Bell has benefited from outside spending by two groups, the United Democracy Project, aligned with the American Israel Political Action Committee, and New Democrat Majority. They have spent almost $2.5 million on his behalf.

The 5th District, where incumbent Democratic U.S. Rep. Emanuel Cleaver is in danger of losing his seat due to gerrymandering, six Republicans are vying for the nomination. They have combined to raise $1.8 million, with $1.2 million from personal loans.

That is almost as much as the reported spending by outside groups who have chosen sides between the two candidates seen as the frontrunners in the race. More than $2.2 million — four times what the candidates themselves have reported — has been spent by super PACs, most of it on broadcast ads and direct mail.







Taylor Burks of Boone County loaned his campaign $900,000 early on and has raised almost $250,000 more. Three friendly outside groups, Show Me Valor, Patriotic Fund Inc. and Conservatives for American Excellence, have spent almost $1.4 million. State Sen. Rick Brattin has raised $312,000, about one-fourth of the $1.2 million that Win It Back PAC has reported spending on his behalf.

Of the other candidates — Brett Hueffmeier of Kansas City, Brad Patty of Fayette, Berton Knox of North Kansas City and Micah Beebe of Lee’s Summit — only Hueffmeier has substantial funding. He loaned his campaign $275,000 but has raised only $50,000 otherwise.

In the contest for the Republican nomination in Missouri’s 6th District — the only seat open among the eight districts — the two candidates seen as the most likely nominees are almost even in fundraising.

Radio host Chris Stigall, who has the endorsement of incumbent U.S. Rep. Sam Graves, has raised $546,000 and Kansas City Councilman Nathan Willett has raised $509,000. Outside spending has favored Stigall, with Come and Take It PAC spending $974,000 on his behalf while Conservative Future Fund, backing Willett, has spent $235,000.

Among the other three candidates — Jim Ingram of Kansas City, Cody Oshel of Maryville and Nathanael Schultz of Bowling Green — only Ingram has substantial resources. He loaned his own campaign $137,000 and has raised an additional $31,000.

State Senate

In the 17 state Senate districts on this year’s ballot, candidates and the PACs supporting them raised $4.6 million in the second quarter of the year and $13.9 million since the start of 2025.
The six incumbents seeking a new term have combined to raise $1.26 million, with PACs supporting their campaigns raising another $1.8 million.

The 14 current House members running for a seat in the Senate have raised $3.3 million and their PACs have raised $3.2 million.







The 41 other Senate candidates have collected $3.4 million, including $1.3 million in personal funds.

Republican Jake Vogel raised the most in the quarter, $373,000, partially on the  strength of a $300,000 loan to his campaign, for the 6th District Senate seat.

The 417 PAC aligned with state Sen. Curtis Trent in the 20th District raised $297,000 and Missouri Alliance PAC, set up to support House Speaker Jon Patterson in his bid for the 8th District state Senate seat, was the third-largest fundraiser for the quarter, taking in $266,000.

Missouri Alliance PAC has raised $1.4 million since the start of 2025, making it the top fundraiser for this election cycle. 417 PAC is second, with $645,000 and Vogel is third, raising $629,000 total.

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.

Friday, July 17, 2026

Jasper County Sheriff's Office, Highway Patrol traffic stops lead to meth-trafficking conviction


(From the U. S. Attorney for the Western District of Missouri)

A Springfield, Mo., man was convicted by a federal jury for possessing distributive amounts of methamphetamine on three separate occasions.

Jeremy Whitcher, 45, was found guilty of three incidents of possessing methamphetamine with the intent to distribute. Whitcher represented himself throughout the trial.

On March 17, 2023, Whitcher was the subject of a traffic stop in Jasper County, Mo., where law enforcement located 106 grams of pure methamphetamine under his seat in the vehicle. 








In October 2024, investigators with the Department of Homeland Security and the Louisville, Ky., Metropolitan Police Department intercepted a parcel containing approximately 15 pounds of methamphetamine that was sent from Los Angeles, Calif., to Springfield, Mo. Investigators with the Drug Enforcement Administration identified Whitcher as the individual who shipped the parcel based on surveillance footage and conducted a controlled delivery of the parcel to the address included on the parcel, which was Whitcher’s mother. Whitcher’s mother told investigators that Whitcher informed her he was going to ship a parcel to her address.

On Dec. 23, 2024, Whitcher was again the subject of a traffic stop in Jasper County, Mo., where a Missouri State Highway Patrol investigator located 29 grams of pure methamphetamine in a bag belonging to Whitcher. 








Following the presentation of evidence, the jury in the U.S. District Court in Springfield, Mo., returned three guilty verdicts to U.S. District Judge Megan Blair Benton, ending a trial that began on July 14, 2026.

Under federal statutes, Whitcher is subject to a sentence of at least 10 years and up to life in federal prison without parole. The maximum statutory sentence is prescribed by Congress and is provided here for informational purposes, as the sentencing of the defendant will be determined by the court based on the advisory sentencing guidelines and other statutory factors. A sentencing hearing will be scheduled after the completion of a presentence investigation by the United States Probation Office.

This case is being prosecuted by Special Assistant U.S. Attorney Hannah Lucas and Assistant U.S. Attorney Jessica Eatmon. It was investigated by the Drug Enforcement Administration, Missouri State Highway Patrol, Jasper County, Missouri, Sheriff’s Office, Louisville, Kentucky, Metropolitan Police Department, and the Department of Homeland Security.


Reeds man arrested for 10 felony sex crimes against children


(From the Jasper County Sheriff's Office)

The Jasper County Sheriff's Office has arrested 32-year-old Brian Ayala Garcia of Reeds, Missouri, following an extensive investigation conducted by the Jasper County Sheriff's Office Criminal
Investigations Division.

As a result of the investigation, Detectives developed probable cause that Garcia committed multiple felony offenses against juvenile victims. Garcia was taken into custody without incident and booked intothe Jasper County Detention Center.








Charges have been submitted to the Jasper County Prosecuting Attorney's Office against Garcia for the
following offenses:

• Three counts of Statutory Rape in the Second Degree

• Three counts of Sodomy in the Second Degree

• Three counts of Child Molestation in the Second Degree

• One count of Enticement of a Child








The investigation remains active, and additional charges may be filed as detectives continue to review
evidence and pursue additional investigative leads.

The Jasper County Sheriff's Office remains committed to investigating crimes involving the exploitation of children and holding offenders accountable. Anyone with information that may be relevant to this
investigation is encouraged to contact the Lead Detective for this incident, Det. Calvin, at (417) 358-8177.ext 1249

Branson newspaper's closing causes problems for Lamar Democrat


The closing of the Branson Tri-Lakes News this week has caused a ripple effect for newspapers that have been printing in Branson, including the Lamar Democrat, which has printed in Branson for the past five years.

The closing of the Branson facility and the recent decision by the Joplin Globe to shut down its printing presses and move its printing to Tulsa (the Springfield News-Leader is printed in Columbia), there are few options remaining within a reasonable distance.







In a message in the latest edition, Democrat Editor Melody Metzger spelled out the situation for her readers:

It seems like many printers are going under and the ones that are around are inundated. As we attempt to find a permanent printer, we will do our best to get the paper out, even if it means having it printed at our corporate office in Tennessee and being shipped here.




Carl Junction School District mourns passing of longtime teacher, coach


(From Carl Junction Schools)

It is with great sadness that we share the passing of longtime Bulldog, educator, coach, and athletic director, Mike Larson.

A proud member of the Carl Junction High School Class of 1972, Mike dedicated much of his life to the school and community that he loved. As a student, he was a standout three-sport athlete, earning varsity letters in football, basketball, and track & field before returning home to invest in future generations of Bulldogs.







During his 27-year career at Carl Junction Schools, Mike served as a mathematics teacher, coach, and athletic director. He coached football, basketball, and golf before leading our athletic department for 17 years until his retirement in 2009. His commitment to student-athletes and educational excellence earned him recognition as the Southwest Missouri Athletic Director of the Year, and in 2015 he was rightfully inducted into the Carl Junction Athletics Hall of Fame.

Mike's influence reached far beyond wins and championships. He was a mentor, a leader, and someone who cared deeply about the students, staff, and community of Carl Junction. His legacy continues through the countless lives he impacted over the years.








Our thoughts and prayers are with Mike's wife, Julie, their children, grandchildren, and the entire Larson family during this difficult time.

Funeral services will be held at 10:00 a.m. on Tuesday, July 21, in the Carl Junction High School Gymnasium, with visitation from 4:00–7:00 p.m. on Monday, July 20, also in the high school gymnasium.

Once a Bulldog, always a Bulldog.

Rest in peace, Coach Larson.

Family ties create rematch in 32nd District State Senate campaign


By Rebecca Rivas 

Missouri state Sen. Jill Carter considers herself a “poster child” for school choice, having homeschooled her children and spent a decade advocating for parental rights before winning a Missouri Senate seat in 2022.

“I think government has ruined education,” said Carter, whose 32nd District encompasses Jasper and Newton counties, the area surrounding Joplin. “We talk about outcomes for local schools. If there was true local control, you might be able to have an argument against that. But people don’t understand that the state basically holds them hostage through accreditation and their funding.”







Despite her record, she’s now the target of oppositional mailers and radio ads — not from her Republican primary opponent, Dr. Ellen Nichols, a neurosurgeon — but from national right-wing school-choice advocates. 

The American Federation for Children Inc. has sent direct mail messages and bought radio ads pushing the idea that Carter “walked away” from a vote on school choice legislation in 2024. 

Although Carter voted twice to advance the legislation through the Senate, she was absent for the final vote after lawmakers unveiled a last-minute substitute she said she had not fully reviewed. The measure ultimately passed 19-10.

“It was an omnibus bill nobody had read,” Carter said. “I abstained from the vote…and to say you’re not for school choice because you don’t want to vote for one piece of legislation that turned into an omnibus bill is ridiculous, especially when I voted twice for it.”

The national school choice organization injected an issue into the race that up until now has been most notable because it represents a rematch of sorts from 2022. Carter was the only Republican primary candidate that year to unseat an incumbent, then state Sen. Bill White, and he accompanied Nichols to Jefferson City on filing day.

The race is not about revenge, Nichols said. She’s been interested in public office for a long time, she said, and she now has the opportunity to go for it. 

“It’s time for me to leave medicine,” Nichols said, “and so for the first time – because I’ve been the primary breadwinner for the family – I’ve been able to have the ability to run for political office.” 

However, Carter isn’t convinced.

“If it’s not revenge, then what is it?” Carter said.

Carter said she ran a grassroots campaign in 2022, and her endorsements show she’s kept her promises, particularly touting her exclusive endorsement from Missouri Right to Life.

“I’m the only candidate endorsed by the Missouri Sheriff’s Association, Missouri FOP Association, Missouri Farm Bureau and cattlemen’s association,” she said. “I have an A-plus rating with the NRA. This is a word kept, and so my community knows I’m very engaged in trying to solve problems for them.”

There are no campaign reports showing how much the American Federation for Children has spent in the 32nd District. But it is not the first time the organization has gone after Missouri Republicans before for stepping a toe out of line, as well as Republicans nationwide.

Nichols also supports expanding educational options, while arguing Missouri must continue investing in public schools.

“Public schools serve the majority of Missouri families, and they should be well-supported, transparent, and focused on teaching core subjects—not promoting radical political ideologies,” Nichols states on her campaign website.







Both Nichols and Carter support statutory bans on teaching critical race theory and diversity, equity, and inclusion in Missouri public schools. However, the mailers and Nichols criticize Carter for voting against a ban in 2023, alongside hard-right state Sen. Mike Moon. 

Like the school-choice bill, Carter said it was “a process vote, not a content vote” because it was a “multi-subject bill that hadn’t been vetted.”

Although the 32nd District is overwhelmingly Republican, it also includes two of Missouri’s largest Hispanic communities — Carthage and Neosho — giving its next senator a constituency that is more diverse than many rural districts.

State Rep. Lane Roberts, who represents the Joplin area, says the district needs a senator who is not only a strong conservative but also highly accepting and accommodating to all viewpoints.

“I think it’s important for representatives to recognize that if they represent everybody, whether they agree with us or not. You can’t just ignore them,” Roberts said. “You need to take into account what they’re saying. I believe both Jill and Ellen are the kind of people who will not forget that they represent everybody.”

The two candidates share many of the same views on conservative issues. Both are cautious about data centers and artificial intelligence, and both want to see property tax reform. They both say video gaming has no place outside of casinos, though Carter’s campaign has received large donations from video gaming groups. 

Carter said she’s not a proponent of gambling. She voted for legislation that would’ve asked voters to approve regulating the gaming machines in gas stations, instead of continuing to allow them to exist without any regulations.

Nichols’ campaign is largely self-funded. Of the $288,000 she raised through June 30, Nichols provided $250,000. 

Carter’s campaign committee has raised $261,000 and a political action committee that supports her, Show Me Values, has raised $333,000, reports filed with the Missouri Ethics Commission show. 

Nichols has spent $34,865 on television ads in the Joplin market, tracking by The Independent shows, while Carter has spent $51,990 on broadcast ads. Show Me Values has spent about $25,000 on ads, most of it on radio promotions.

The winner of the Republican primary on Aug. 4 will face Democratic candidate Imma Curl, who jumped in the race in March. Curl said she has not raised enough money to report and has largely been helping the Democratic Party campaign against the constitutional amendments regarding making the initiative petition process more restrictive and eliminating the income tax. 

“Southwest Missouri probably can’t lose,” said Roberts, who isn’t endorsing in the race. “Ellen White is just a completely decent person, she will do a good job regardless because that’s her nature. Jill Carter has proven to be a pretty effective senator. I don’t know of anybody who could legitimately criticize her, so I mean it’s just a no lose for southwest Missouri.”

Jill Carter

The roots of Carter’s legislative agenda can be traced to her upbringing. Raised in poverty in a New Mexico trailer park, she said she was largely on her own by age 12 while her truck-driver parents were away for work. 

After moving to Granby, she stayed behind at 16 when her family relocated again so she could finish high school and work her way through college. She married her high school sweetheart, and now has five children and two grandchildren. 

“I was born very poor,” she said. “When I was a teenager, we didn’t have electricity…so I know what it means to not know how to connect to the system. You don’t always know how to turn your life around and how to change things.”







That’s why one of her biggest legislative priorities, if she wins, is connecting Missourians in need with community resources. This spring, Carter nearly got legislation passed that would’ve directed the state to build a case management system for residents in need.

Carter’s proposal would create a statewide referral system connecting families with churches, charities and nonprofit organizations that can provide essentials such as food, beds and other emergency assistance. She said the idea was modeled after a Florida system that helps prevent children from entering foster care because of poverty rather than abuse.

The bill died when Carter was unable to get Senate agreement on House changes to the legislation.

“I don’t think we have a resource problem,” she said, “I think we have a connectivity problem.”

Education remains Carter’s signature issue. She has sponsored a bill called the  Educational Freedom Act that would fundamentally change how Missouri measures school performance by allowing districts to seek accreditation through nationally recognized organizations, like those used by private schools, instead of relying solely on state standards.

The statewide standardized test, the Missouri Assessment Program, would only be used to meet federal requirements.

“Why doesn’t that rural community have the flexibility to meet the needs of those students and teach the kind of education that makes them competitive?” she said.  “What I’m fighting for is for my local school to have the same flexibility you’re willing to give to a private school, but using taxpayer dollars.”

Veterans are another top priority, she said, pointing to passing legislation to stop taxing survivor benefits.

In her role as majority whip, Carter said she has proved she can bring unity to the severed party. This was the first session since she arrived, she said, that they made it to the constitutional deadline. In previous years, infighting led to the legislative session ending early.  

“As part of leadership, I was pulling senators off the floor and asking if they had any concerns with the bills that were coming up on the floor,” she said. “The goal is to alleviate the concerns that we have and we’re able to work more as a caucus.”

Ellen Nichols

Nichols spent more than three decades making life-and-death decisions as a neurosurgeon. She says that experience — not politics — prepared her for the Missouri Senate.

Nichols grew up in Olathe, Kansas, just across the stateline near Kansas City. Her mother was a teacher, and her father was a newspaper editor. She and her brothers attended public school. 

“They encouraged hard work and encouraged us to do well in school, which we all pretty much did,” she said. “It was a great childhood and a great place to grow up.”







Nichols married her childhood sweetheart, former state Sen. Bill White, shortly after high school. After completing her neurosurgery residency at the University of Chicago Hospitals, they set down roots in Joplin in 1992. 

She has four children, two of whom joined their family through foster care and adoption, and four grandchildren. If elected, one of her top issues would be supporting foster and adoptive parents. 

Nichols has served her community in some of its most critical moments, including as president of the medical staff at Freeman Health System during the devastating 2011 Joplin tornado.

Through the various executive roles on the Missouri State Medical Association, she said she has advocated for “responsible healthcare policy, decreased bureaucracy, and tort reform to reduce costs and protect patients.” 

Expanding affordable, accessible healthcare is among Nichols’ top priorities.

“I think we need to improve price transparency,” Nichols aid. “I actually think that everyone should pay the same amount for procedures and tests, and should know what they’re paying for ahead of time.”

Nichols said prior authorization requirements consume hours of physicians’ time while delaying patient care, and she wants Missouri to revive legislation reforming the process.

“Prior authorization process is horrendous for both patients and for any healthcare providers having to deal with it,” she said.

Nichols said restoring Missouri’s abortion restrictions if Amendment 3 on the November ballot is approved would be her top legislative priority.

“There were years and years of effort that got us to the point where we were four years ago,” she said, “and now we’ve lost a huge amount of ground.”

Nichols said she supports economic development but wants lawmakers to carefully examine the potential effects of large data centers on nearby neighborhoods, natural resources and public health. 

“I think that we need to be very cautious how we proceed and make sure that we’re doing the right thing for the community,” Nichols said, regarding the data centers.  “I’m not against economic development or technology. I think that’s great, but we just need to make sure we’re not having an adverse impact on our community, especially residential areas.”







Nichols pointed to lawsuits nationwide alleging that increased health problems, including hearing problems, due to the centers. 

“There may be increased toxins related to generator use,” she said, “and then, of course, there’s our natural resources… We have to be able to gather all the information we need to make measured decisions that protect our population.” 

She believes her 33 years listening to patients putting a plan into action to correct the problem has given her a road map to being a senator.

“I think that’s what we need to do in the Senate,” she said. “Same process: evaluate the information, formulate a plan, and then put that plan into action, and hopefully correct the problems.”

The race ultimately presents Republican primary voters with two conservatives who agree on many of the party’s priorities but argue their life experiences best prepare them for Jefferson City — Carter as a legislator who built influence inside the Capitol, and Nichols as a physician accustomed to making high-stakes decisions in the operating room.

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.

Ellen Nichols puts another $100,000 into her campaign; Medical PAC contributes another $100,000 to PAC supporting Nichols


One day after Ellen Nichols put $100,000 of her own money into her 32nd District State Senate campaign, saying she had to do because her primary opponent, Sen. Jill Carter accepted money from gambling and labor interests, the Stand For Truth PAC that supports Nichols' candidacy received a $100,000 contribution from the Missouri State Medical Association PAC.

The source of the money from the medical association PAC won't be available until the PAC files its quarterly disclosure report in October.

In its most recent report, which was filed July 7, the PAC contributed the maximum $2,400 to the Nichols campaign but ended the quarter with only $65,483 in the bank, indicating the $100,000 likely came from a single source and was designated for Nichols' support PAC.







Nichols loaned her campaign $250,000 earlier.

The following news release was issued by the Nichols campaign Thursday:

Dr. Ellen Nichols announced today that she is contributing $100,000 of her own money to her campaign for State Senate, responding to a surge of $217,000 in out-of-district special interest money that has poured into Sen. Jill Carter's committees in just the last two weeks.

Missouri Ethics Commission records show that of the $635,239 raised by Carter's two committees — Friends of Jill Carter For Senate and her personal Show Me Values PAC — $496,849, or 78 cents of every dollar, came from PACs, corporations, and special interest groups rather than individual voters.

No industry has given Carter more than gambling. Her single largest business donor is an Illinois video gambling company, that has written her PAC $55,000 since February — including two $25,000 checks in June alone. Close behind are St. Louis labor unions: the Mid-America Carpenters Regional Council PAC gave $50,000 on June 30 — the largest single check in her file — four days after the Laborers PAC gave $10,000. None of it came from Jasper or Newton County.

“I have been humbled by the support of my fellow Republicans, my friends, and my former patients,” Nichols said. “But there is no way the citizens of Joplin and Newton County can write checks fast enough to match $217,000 in out-of-district special interest money in two weeks. "So I'm investing in my own campaign to make sure voters hear my vision for this district — freezing property taxes, giving parents a real say in their children's education, and protecting the unborn and private property rights." Just like President Trump funded his own campaign, I will never be beholden to special interests. The only people I'll be beholden to are the voters of this district.”








The gambling money arrives as Carter publicly distances herself from the industry. Appearing on KSN/KODE's “On the Record” this week, Carter said of the video gambling machines her son noticed at a gas station: “Gambling, I'm not a proponent of gambling either. I think as a Christian, that's not something that we really want infiltrated in our communities.”

Her voting record says otherwise. On April 5, 2023, Carter voted for Senate Amendment 11 to Senate Bill 30 — the amendment that would have legalized video lottery terminals statewide and authorized up to three VLT machines per location in truck stops, gas stations, and other retail establishments. The vote is recorded on page 939 of the Senate Journal.

“Jill Carter is in trouble because voters are learning her record — votes to fund billionaires' stadiums, to keep parents out of their kids' education, and against cutting property taxes,” Nichols said. “Now an Illinois gambling company just sent $55,000 to keep a pro-gambling friend in the legislature. Voters can look at the checks and look at her votes and draw their own conclusions.”

Plea agreement calls for no prison time for Aurora teacher charged with sex with student


Former Aurora High School industrial arts teacher Kyle Doss, 33, won't be spending any time in prison after pleading guilty Monday in Lawrence County Circuit Court to an amended charge of harassment in the first degree.

Doss, a Monett resident, was initially charged with sex with a student.

Under a plea agreement with the Lawrence County Prosecuting Attorney's office, Doss was sentenced to four years in prison, the sentence was suspended and he was placed on supervised probation for five years.







The agreement specifies that Doss is to have no contact with his victim and must "surrender all teaching certificates from any state and do not apply for a teaching certificate in the future."

The case against Doss was detailed in the probable cause statement:

On 01/30/2025, I received information from the administrators of the Aurora R-8 School District regarding a teacher having a past inappropriate sexual relationship with a student.

The administration received a report from the victim's mother which prompted the investigation. The teacher was identified as 32-year-old Kyle Doss.

The victim was a student in his industrial arts class from 2021-2024. Doss met with administrators that morning and was placed on administrative leave. During his conversation with school administrators, Doss admitted he had made a mistake.

I interviewed CV on the afternoon 01/30/2025. CV stated she was a sophomore when she first start taking Doss' classes. She and Doss developed a friendly relationship, which eventually became romantic in 2024 during her senior year.

CV explained she and Doss began communicating outside of school, first messaging on Tik Tok, then by phone, then by other social media applications, including Snapchat, Instagram and Facebook. CV stated once she turned 18 during the second semester of her senior year, she and Doss began exchanging sexually explicit photos and videos of one another.








CV explained she began staying after school to visit Doss in his classroom/shop. They would go to a back storage room where they would kiss. CV explained on one occasion, she allowed Doss to put his hands under her shirt and feel both of her breasts over her bra. She stated Doss frequently groped her buttocks and he would press his erect penis into her vaginal area as they embraced one another. CV explained she and Doss planned to have sexual intercourse after she graduated but it never actually happened.

During the interview, CV showed me several messages she exchanged with Doss on Tik Tok. These specific messages began on 04/11/2024. They discussed their romantic fantasies with one another. Doss asked about CV's sexual history. Doss fantasized about taking CV to the back storage room. Doss provided his phone number and asked CV to save his number under a girl's name. They began communicating through text message.

CV explained she and Doss exchanged most of their nude photographs through Snapchat, but she did show me a text message where Doss sent her a shirtless photo.


Thursday, July 16, 2026

Probable cause: Former girlfriend slashes Barry County man's tires, labels him a rapist on Tik-Tok

The Barry County Prosecuting Attorney's office charged a Galena woman with first-degree harassment after she allegedly slashed her ex-boyfriend's tires, threatened to file a report saying he raped her and then posted a Tik-Tok video calling him a rapist.

The initial appearance for Hope E. Daines (DOB 2004) in Barry County Circuit Court is scheduled for 8:30 a.m. August 27.









On 06/29/2026, I, Detective Meyers, interviewed V1 at the Barry County Sheriff's office in reference to harassment.

In the interview, V1 disclosed that he had a relationship with Hope Elizabeth Deines. V1 stated that when he stopped speaking with Hope, she threatened self-harm if he stopped talking to her, and he believes she slashed all four of his tires in December 2025 because of her actions. 

Hope would also arrive at various places that V1 was at uninvited between December 2025 and February 2026.

On 02/04/2026, Hope went to V1's residence and told him that if he did not stay in a relationship with her, she would file a report claiming that he raped her. 








A short time later, Hope filed a report with the Barry County Sheriff's Office accusing V1 of raping her (Refer to case number A26-0163).

On 04/25/2026, Hope began randomly messaging a girl that V1 was speaking to.

In the messages, Hope was inquiring about V1. V1 stated he did not know how Hope obtained the other individual's phone number.

On 05/22/2026, V1 presented a video that Hope had made on TikTok. In the video, it shows a picture of {V1]with the caption "He's a rapist."

V1 stated that because of Hope's actions, he filed for a protection order against her, which was granted.

V1 also stated that Hope caused him emotional distress because of her actions.