Friday, May 15, 2026

Probable cause: Mercy athletic trainer sexually abused second Carthage High School student

 A Mercy athletic trainer who was charged a week ago with two felony counts of sexual contact with a student faces charges in connection with a second Carthage High School student.

The Jasper County Prosecuting Attorney filed two more felony counts against Ryan Keith Palmer, 53, Carthage- first-degree sexual abuse and sex with a student.

From the probable cause statement:

On May 6, 2026, the Carthage Police Department conducted an investigation into Ryan Palmer, an athletic trainer assigned to the Carthage R-9 School District. Palmer was employed through Mercy Health, an entity contracted to provide athletic training services to the school district.








After Palmer's initial arrest, Carthage detectives received information regarding additional possible victims. On May 10, 2026, detectives initiated a subsequent investigation and learned of Juvenile Victim 1, a student at Carthage High School who was under the age of 18.

During a forensic interview, the Juvenile Victim disclosed that Palmer removed her from class under the pretense of providing treatment for a reported back injury and took her to the training room, where she was alone with him.

Juvenile Victim 1 stated Palmer then touched her thighs, placed his hand underneath her shorts, and touched her private area/vagina.

Based on the disclosure, the touching described by the Juvenile Victim was not consistent with legitimate or necessary medical treatment that she had previously received or needed to receive, and the circumstances support that the contact was for Palmer's sexual gratification.

The probable cause statement also indicates that more charges may be coming against Palmer.

The defendant Ryan Palmer poses a substantial other person based on the nature and circumstances of the offenses. The defendant Ryan Palmer poses a substantial and ongoing danger to the community, particularly to juvenile students. 








The investigation has developed evidence of a prior victim as well as additional potential victims, demonstrating an apparent pattern of conduct rather than an isolated event. Palmer used his employment-related access to student-athletes to isolate a juvenile victim in a private school training room under the pretense of treatment, and the victim disclosed sexual contact that was not legitimate
or necessary medical care. 

Based on the nature of the offense, the defendant's position of trust, his access to minors, and the existence of multiple victims or potential victims. The defendant is currently being held on a $50,000 cash-only bond in Jasper County in reference to case number 26AO-CR00258.

Jasper County Circuit Court online records indicate Palmer also has a $50,000 bond on the latest case.

The case was investigated by the Carthage Police Department.

Information about the original charge against Palmer can be found at the link below.
 
Mercy Athletic trainer pleads not guilty to sex charge involving Carthage High School student

Lawsuit challenges Missouri ballot plan to phase out income tax, expand sales tax


By Jason Hancock

A lawsuit filed Wednesday seeks to knock a proposed constitutional amendment off Missouri’s 2026 ballot that would give lawmakers new power to expand sales taxes to eliminate the income tax, arguing legislators bundled too many subjects into one proposal and wrote misleading ballot language.

The lawsuit, filed in Cole County Circuit Court by attorney Chuck Hatfield on behalf of a Missouri resident, challenges a proposed ballot question that would ask voters to amend the Missouri Constitution to begin phasing out the state individual income tax.








The measure, approved by the legislature last month, is expected to appear on the November ballot unless Gov. Mike Kehoe moves it to another election. Kehoe has made eliminating the income tax one of his top priorities, arguing it would make Missouri more competitive with states that do not tax individual income.

But the lawsuit argues the proposal is constitutionally defective and should be blocked from any ballot. In the alternative, it asks the court to rewrite the summary statement voters would see.

The lawsuits central legal argument is that the proposal violates constitutional limits on ballot measures by including more than one subject and effectively amending multiple articles of the Missouri Constitution.

“This is precisely the logrolling harm the multi-article rule was designed to prevent,” the lawsuit argues, contending voters who support eliminating the income tax could be forced to also accept provisions they oppose, such as expanding the sales tax or changing how road funds and local taxes are handled.

The lawsuit also argues the proposal would improperly expand the constitutional role of the state auditor by requiring the office to calculate reduced tax rates triggered by the amendment. The petition contends that duty is not related to auditing the receipt or expenditure of public funds, which the Missouri Constitution says is the limit of the auditor’s authority.

Instead, the lawsuit argues, the amendment would give the auditor a new rate-setting or revenue-modeling role, including authority to calculate changes affecting tax rates set elsewhere in the constitution.








A spokesperson for Secretary of State Denny Hoskins, who was among the named respondents in the lawsuit, did not respond to a request for comment.

If passed, the proposal would direct lawmakers to set a revenue baseline and triggers for phased-in reductions in the top tax rate. It also allows five years for the legislature to write a new sales tax law, which must be directly tied to cuts in the top income tax rate in a manner supporters hope will not increase or decrease revenue.

Currently Missouri has an income tax with a top rate of 4.7% for taxable incomes greater than about $9,200 a year. The sales tax is 3% for general revenue, but earmarked state taxes and local options stack on top of that, creating a rate that is 7% to 8% in most locations and can be as much as 12% in some special districts.

The sales tax applies to physical goods and excludes services. The Missouri Constitution prohibits lawmakers from applying the sales tax to real estate transfers and any goods or services not currently taxed, but those provisions would not apply to any sales tax plan passed as a result of the constitutional amendment.

Missouri gets about 65% of its state revenue from income tax, about 22% from sales tax and the rest from other sources including a corporate income tax. To replace the revenue from the income tax without expanding coverage of the sales tax would increase the tax rate by as much as 8.5%.

State law exempts residential utility costs, prescription drugs and groceries from all or a portion of the current sales tax. There are also dozens of other sales tax exemptions, mainly tied to business operations as an economic development tool.

The lawsuit also challenges the ballot summary approved by lawmakers.








The summary asks voters whether the Missouri Constitution should be amended to “phase-out the individual income tax based on revenue growth,” “reduce personal property and other local taxes when local revenues increase,” “modify the sales and use tax to eliminate income tax and reduce local taxes” and “protect local funding for public schools and other purposes.”

The lawsuit argues that language is unfair and insufficient because it does not tell voters that the amendment would allow lawmakers to tax services now protected from sales taxes, would temporarily exempt certain tax increases from constitutional limits on new annual revenue and would permanently bar lawmakers from reimposing an individual income tax once it is eliminated.

The lawsuit takes particular aim at the word “modify,” arguing it fails to convey the breadth of the sales-tax authority voters would be granting lawmakers.

“A voter reading ‘modify the sales and use tax’ would not be apprised that the resolution authorizes the state to begin taxing services such as haircuts, legal fees, home repairs, medical services, accounting, and any other service currently exempt from sales tax,” the lawsuit states.

It also argues the phrase “protect local funding for public schools and other purposes” is argumentative because the word “protect” encourages support for the measure rather than neutrally describing what it does.

“If the people are allowed to have a fair vote, they’ll vote this amendment down,” Hatfield said in an interview Wednesday. “But the ballot summary the legislature wants to show them is just not fair or accurate.”








The governor called on lawmakers in January to place an income-tax phaseout on the ballot, saying voter approval would allow lawmakers to act next session.

Supporters of the amendment have argued that eliminating the income tax would help Missouri attract residents, jobs and investment. During debate over the proposal, Republicans framed it as a long-term economic growth strategy and a way to let Missourians keep more of what they earn.

Opponents have argued the plan would shift the tax burden toward sales taxes, raising costs for people who spend a larger share of their income on taxable goods and services. They have also warned that the ballot language does not make clear that voters would be authorizing a broader sales tax in order to replace revenue from the income tax.

The lawsuit asks the court to permanently block Hoskins from placing the measure on any ballot. If the court declines to do that, it asks for a new summary statement that “fairly and accurately conveys the central purpose and probable effects” of the amendment.

Thursday, May 14, 2026

Agenda posted for Joplin City Council meeting



 JOPLIN CITY COUNCIL REGULAR MEETING AGENDA
MONDAY, MAY 18, 2026
5th FLOOR COUNCIL CHAMBERS
602 S. MAIN ST. JOPLIN MO
6:00 P.M.


1.

Call To Order

Invocation
Pledge of Allegiance of the United States of America
2.

Roll Call

3.

Presentations

1.

Historic Preservation Month Proclamation

2.

National Public Works Week Proclamation 

4.

FY 2025 Audit Presentation 

4.

Finalization Of Consent Agenda

5.

Reports And Communications

1.

News From The Public Information Officer 

6.

Citizen Requests And Petitions

1.

Maurice Filson 

2.

Frank Thompson 

3.

Chris Stockton

4.

Amanda Bearden 

7.

Public Hearings

8.

Consent Agenda

1.

Minutes Of The May 4, 2026, Joplin City Council Meeting 

2.

COUNCIL BILL NO. 2026-006

AN ORDINANCE repealing and replacing the Joplin City Code, Chapter 114 - Traffic, Article III - Operation of Vehicles; Division 1. - Generally; Section 114-171 - Driving while intoxicated; driving with unlawful blood alcohol content, and repealing Section 114-172 - Driving while under the influence of drugs; and establishing a time for such ordinance to become effective.   

Documents:
  1. CB2026-006.PDF
3.

COUNCIL BILL NO. 2026-266

AN ORDINANCE amending Ordinance No. 2022-119, passed by the Council of the City of Joplin, Missouri, August 1, 2022, by removing from District M-2 (Heavy Industrial) and District C-1 (Neighborhood Commercial) and include in District C-3 (Commercial) property as described below and generally known as 730 N Schifferdecker Ave, Jasper County, Missouri.

Documents:
  1. CB2026-266.PDF
4.

COUNCIL BILL NO. 2026-268

AN ORDINANCE providing to vacate right-of-way for property known as Old McIntosh Cir., lying near property described as 3201 McIntosh Cir., City of Joplin, Newton County, Missouri.

Documents:
  1. CB2026-268.PDF
5.

COUNCIL BILL NO. 2026-609

 AN ORDINANCE approving the applications of Tuff Bull Productions and Bright Futures/Safe and Sound Schools for utilization of FY2026 Festivals and Celebrations support pursuant to Ordinance No. 2000-148, as authorized by the voters on November 7, 2000; authorizing the City Manager to execute appropriate agreements with each such organization for the utilization of such funds.

Documents:
  1. CB2026-609.PDF
9.

Resolutions

10.

Ordinances - Expedited

1.

COUNCIL BILL NO. 2026-511

AN ORDINANCE approving the Second Amendment to the 1717 Market Place Tax Increment Financing Plan; and containing an expedited clause. 

11.

Ordinances - First Reading

1.

COUNCIL BILL NO 2026-128

AN ORDINANCE approving the execution of an Occupancy License Agreement between Missouri & Northern Arkansas Railroad Company Inc. (MNA) and the City of Joplin, as it pertains to construction of an underground sanitary sewer pipeline crossing related to the 7th Street Sanitary Sewer Relocation Project across railroad right-of-way; establishing certain obligations for the continuation of the occupancy, including payment of an annual fee of Nine Hundred Sixty and 00/100 Dollars ($960.00); and authorizing the City Manager or his designee to execute the same by and on behalf of the City of Joplin; and, setting a date when this Ordinance shall become effective. 

2.

COUNCIL BILL NO. 2026-261

AN ORDINANCE amending the Joplin Development Code, Ordinance No. 2022-119, passed by the Council of the City of Joplin, Missouri, August 1, 2022, being Appendix 29-A of the Joplin Municipal Code.

3.

COUNCIL BILL NO. 2026-611

AN ORDINANCE authorizing the City of Joplin to enter into an agreement with The Interlocal Purchasing System (TIPS) for the purchase of a 2019 Freightliner M2 4x4 Diesel Terex Hi-Ranger Aerial Device Bucket Truck through IEG Infrastructure Equipment Group for the not to exceed price of One Hundred Fifty-One Thousand Seven Hundred Seventy-Four Dollars and Fifty-Nine Cents ($151,774.59) and authorizing the City Manager to execute the same by and on behalf of the City of Joplin.

4.

COUNCIL BILL NO. 2026-612 

AN ORDINANCE authorizing the City of Joplin to enter into an agreement with Weatherproofing Technologies Inc. for the Roof Restoration and Repairs of the Joplin History and Mineral Museum through the Omnia Partners Cooperative in the amount of One Hundred Twenty-One Thousand Three Hundred Forty-Eight Dollars and Forty Cents ($121,348.40) and authorizing the City Manager to execute the same by and on behalf of the City of Joplin; and, setting a date when this Ordinance shall become effective.

12.

Ordinances - Second Reading And Third Reading

13.

Unfinished Business

14.

New Business


Webb City R-7 Board accepts 3 teacher resignations, hires 4 teachers

During its meeting this week, the Webb City R-7 Board of Education accepted resignations from three teachers and hired four teachers.

Teachers who submitted resignations were:

Carmi Hinman, first grade, Webster Primary Center

Dawn Cullmber, seventh grade science, junior high

Joseph Decker, physical education teacher, junior high.







Teachers hired were:

Roger Doman, sixth grade, middle school

Ella Gardner, sixth grade, middle school 

Jacobi Adelizzi, math, junior high

Lucas Hatfield, science, junior high


Agenda posted for Carthage R-9 Board of Education meeting

 







































Wednesday, May 13, 2026

Bill requiring porn sites to verify user ages headed to governor


By Steph Quinn

A bill requiring pornography websites to conduct age checks before granting access is headed to Missouri Gov. Mike Kehoe.

Commercial websites and platforms must already verify that users are at least 18 if more than a third of their content is sexually explicit as part of a rule enforced by Missouri Attorney General Catherine Hanaway since December.

The bill, sponsored by Republican state Rep. Sherri Gallick of Belton, would codify that rule in state law, requiring websites to use third party age verification providers. 








“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 told The Independent. “It’s very demeaning to women and to children.”

Sites that don’t comply would be subject to civil penalties, including fines up to $10,000 per day in violation of the law and an additional $250,000 if at least one minor accessed sexually explicit content. Sites could be charged $10,000 per violation of a provision prohibiting age verification providers from retaining users’ identifiable information.

The House passed the bill 112-25 Wednesday, with 20 Democrats and 5 Republicans in opposition and 11 Democrats voting “present.” The Senate passed the bill 32-0 on Tuesday, sending it back to the House for approval of a minor amendment.

The bill got initial House approval last year but was dropped from the calendar before getting a formal vote due to a challenge in the U.S. Supreme Court to a similar Texas law.

“The fear was, ‘Okay, what if they don’t uphold that? Then we would have to make some changes,’” Gallick said.

The court sided with Texas in July 2025, ruling that the state’s requirement that users prove their age by showing government-issued identification did not violate adults’ right to access constitutionally protected content.

During House debate in March, Democratic lawmakers questioned the potential effectiveness of the bill and raised the possibility of unintended consequences.








Democratic state Rep. Eric Woods of Kansas City said young people are likely to find ways around age verification requirements.

“Kids are smart,” Woods said. “There are VPNs. There are browser settings that allow you to skirt around some of this stuff.”

House Minority Leader Ashley Aune, a Kansas City Democrat, argued that age verification requirements could lead more prominent porn websites to block access in Missouri, driving traffic to less scrupulous sites with fewer content safeguards.

“The websites that are less inclined to follow the rules also tend to be the types of websites that are filled with child sexual assault material, that include nonconsensual sex acts,” Aune said.

The porn industry’s largest website, Pornhub, blocked access in Missouri after Hanaway announced her office’s rule, issuing a statement calling the new rule ineffective and raising data privacy concerns.

Gallick said that while she realizes some young people will still access sexually explicit material, putting age verification requirements in state law is an important step to protect children. She said pornography can be used by bad actors to “groom” children to engage in sexual activity.

“When there’s a leak in your house you turn the water off,” Gallick said. “When there’s pests that come into your house, an exterminator comes in and cuts off the source. This is the source. Children do not need to view pornography.”


New principals named at Noel and Southwest City elementary schools


(From the McDonald County R-1 School District)

A familiar face is stepping into a new leadership role at Southwest City Elementary! 

McDonald County Schools is proud to announce that Dr. Sherry Patterson will serve as the new Principal of Southwest City Elementary for the 2026-2027 school year! 

Dr. Patterson has served as Assistant Principal at Southwest City Elementary for the past two years, building meaningful relationships with students, staff, and families while helping support a positive learning environment each day. 

Before moving into administration, she spent several years in the classroom at SWC, making a lasting impact on students as a teacher.

In addition to her experience at Southwest City, Dr. Patterson has also served as superintendent in two school districts in Missouri and Arkansas, bringing a wealth of leadership experience to her new role.










McDonald County Schools is excited to announce that Toby Conrad will serve as the new Principal of Noel Elementary for the 2026-2027 school year! 

Mr. Conrad has spent the past 3 years serving as an assistant principal at McDonald County High School, where he has built strong relationships with students, staff, and families while helping support student success each day. 

Before joining McDonald County Schools, he served as principal at Decatur High School in Decatur, Arkansas.


Honduras native charged with illegal re-entry after Neosho domestic assault arrest

A Honduran native was charged with illegal re-entry today in U. S. District Court in Springfield.

The charge against Angel Fabricio Barahona, 33, stemmed from an April 21 domestic assault arrest by the Neosho Police Department.

From the probable cause statement filed in Newton County Circuit Court:

On April 21, 2026, I was dispatched regarding a child abuse investigation. It was reported that the defendant struck Victim One, a juvenile, with a belt.

Initial information indicated that Mr. Barahona struck Victim One, who is 12 years of age, on the legs above the knee with a belt, causing injury. A report was made to school authorities, and Victim One was located at school. A school official observed bruising on Victim One's legs above the knee.








Victim One was later forensically interviewed. Victim One disclosed that on April 20, 2026, Mr. Barahona confronted her in a bedroom and struck her three times on the legs with a belt, causing pain. Victim One further stated Mr. Barahona retrieved the belt and intentionally struck her above the knees. 

Victim One stated Mr. Barahona did not fold the belt in half and stretched it out long ways.

Victim One reported that Witness One attempted to intervene, at which point Mr. Barahona pushed Witness One out of the room and continued the assault. Victim One stated she was in fear during the incident.

Witness One intervened again and Victim One reported hearing Mr. Barahona subsequently strike Witness One with the belt while Witness One yelled for the defendant to stop.








Victim One was medically examined. Bruising was documented on both legs consistent with being struck by a belt. Photographs were taken. The bruising on Victim One's leg showed the belt path, and impressions of the belt. Victim One had three separate belt mark bruises.

A second juvenile, Witness Two, reported hearing Mr. Barahona strike Victim One and Witness One with a belt and hearing Witness One yelling for the defendant to stop. Witness One further stated the defendant has struck Victim One on prior occasions. 

During interviews with ICE agents in Springfield, Barahona said he had come into the U. S. illegally through Mexico in 2022. He had been deported in 2021 after being arrested by the Duenweg Police Department for driving while intoxicated and endangering the welfare of a child.

Missouri Supreme Court upholds gerrymandered congressional map for August primary


By Rudi Keller

A congressional map drawn last year in a special session is constitutional and will be used in the August primary because it is uncertain whether a referendum petition seeking to repeal it will succeed, the Missouri Supreme Court ruled Tuesday.

The court was unanimous in the two decisions delivered just a few hours after oral arguments. It was being asked in one case to toss the gerrymandered map entirely as a violation of the constitutional provisionthat districts be “compact and as nearly equal in population as may be.”

In the other, the court was asked to suspend the map because 300,000 signatures seeking to force a referendum were delivered to Secretary of State Denny Hoskins on Dec. 9, two days before the law was to take effect.








While the judges heard arguments, opponents of the gerrymandered map gathered outside to rally in support of a referendum. About 300 people showed up to chant, carry signs and maintain their enthusiasm for a summer and fall of campaigning.

As a result of the decisions, Missouri Republicans have won every argument over the legality of the map and the effect of the referendum petitions. The high court decided two threshold issues on redistricting in rulings issued March 24. The court said Gov. Mike Kehoe had the authority to call lawmakers into special session to write the bill and lawmakers were within their constitutional power to enact it.

The Missouri gerrymandering process is playing out against a national battle for control of Congress. On April 29, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that a section of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 mandating that states draw districts where minority voters hold the majority of votes is unconstitutional.

Since then, Alabama, Tennessee and Louisiana have moved to eliminate districts that were drawn to align with the law. In Louisiana, the governor has suspended the state’s primary elections for the U.S. House, while in Alabama the U.S. Supreme Court ruled the state could use a 2021 map that had been thrown out for violating the Voting Rights Act.

Writing for the unanimous court in the case over whether the map is constitutional, Chief Justice W. Brent Powell noted that drawing district maps is a political process and the courts should not second-guess those decisions.

“This court’s review of the Missouri residents’ appeals is limited to determining only the legality – not the prudence or popularity – of the map,” Powell wrote.

The fight over the map began last summer when President Donald Trump pressured Missouri Republicans for help to maintain the slim Republican majority in the U.S. House.

Republicans hold six of Missouri’s eight seats in Congress and the partisan goal of the new map is to oust 5th District U.S. Rep. Emanuel Cleaver, a Kansas City Democrat, by splitting Kansas City and adding voters in 14 counties along the Missouri River.

Cleaver’s current district includes most of Kansas City and a portion of Jackson and Clay counties outside the city. Cleaver filed for re-election in February and said he will stay in the race regardless of which district is used in this year’s elections.








Five Republicans have filed for the nomination to oppose Cleaver in hopes of exploiting the partisan advantage in the map passed last year.

After the court ruling, state Sen. Barbara Washington, a Kansas City Democrat, lashed out at Republicans for passing the new map and attacked Hoskins for delaying certification of the petitions.

“Appeasing a tyrant is not going to make Missouri better,” Washington said.

Washington used a bill sought by Hoskins with changes to the way he regulates and registers businesses to make her points. She was joined by Democratic state Sen. Stephen Webber of Columbia, who said Hoskins should not get what he wants until he explains why he hasn’t issued a certification of the signatures.

“If the answer is they’re just not going to certify them, then I think we should probably find out why that is before we agree to give him more money,” Webber said.

The primary election day is Aug. 4, the same day Hoskins is supposed to determine whether the referendum petitions filed by the political action committee People Not Politicians meet the threshold for placement on the Nov. 3 ballot.

During comments to reporters after Tuesday’s hearing, Hoskins said he intends to use the entire time available. The new map will be used for the primary, he said.

“If we went back to the old maps or to a different map other than the Missouri First map, we’d be in disarray,” Hoskins said. “It would be disarray for the people that would be going to town halls and listening to the candidates. It would be a disarray for the candidates that are running and going out meeting voters in the districts.”

In the opinion written by Judge Ginger Gooch, the court said it is impossible to know whether there are enough signatures to force the referendum vote. The plaintiffs in the case, two voters who were moved between districts as a result of the legislature’s revisions, prematurely brought the lawsuit arguing that the submission of signatures is enough to suspend the operation of new legislation.

State law describes the process for verifying signatures and the timeline for making a determination of whether a petition has sufficient signatures, Gooch wrote. The plaintiffs incorrectly interpreted a 1914 ruling on referendums that upheld suspension of a law upon the filing of a petition.

While plaintiffs argued that the filing was enough, Gooch noted that the 1914 decision required petitions that were “legal, sufficient and timely.”

So far, she wrote, it is unknown whether the petitions are sufficient. People Not Politicians has been tracking the signature verification process and believes it has succeeded but there is no way to get Hoskins to decide before Aug. 4.








“Because the secretary’s certification process…is ongoing and has not been finally determined, it is impossible to say as of this opinion whether the Dec. 9 referendum petition filing was ‘legal, sufficient, and timely’ and, therefore, whether (the 2025 map) went into effect on Dec. 11 or whether (the map) was referred to the people as of Dec. 9 and can only go into effect when approved by a majority of the votes cast thereon,” Gooch wrote.

Allowing the signature verification process to proceed without suspending the effect of a new measure is a prudent protection against fraud, Gooch wrote in a footnote to the decision.

“Under appellants’ argument, the suspension is automatic, regardless of whether the boxes contained petitions consisting only of invalid signatures, signatures of unregistered voters, or even blank pieces of paper,” she wrote. “Appellants’ argument would permit legislation truly agreed to and finally passed by a majority of Missouri citizens’ elected representatives to be automatically suspended based on nothing more than the delivery of boxes purporting to contain signed referendum petitions…”

Put Missouri First, the political action committee created to campaign for the map, said the rulings were “a complete and decisive victory for the rule of law, the Missouri Constitution, and the legislature’s lawful authority to enact congressional maps on behalf of the people of this state.”

In a statement reacting to the decisions, People Not Politicians called on Hoskins to immediately declare that the petitions have sufficient signatures. Enough reports have come in from local election authoritiesto show that it has the required signatures in six of the state’s eight congressional districts, the PAC contends.

Holding the August election using the new map if the petition is sufficient would silence the voters who signed it and make the August election illegal, the statement read.

“A sufficient petition suspends the law the day it is turned in,” said Richard von Glahn, executive director. “Unnecessary delays by politicians do not change this fact. If he continues to delay then he is moving forward under a map that has been suspended by the people.”

The opinions issued Tuesday afternoon did not refer specifically to the oral arguments heard in the morning. For more than an hour, the judges sat in silence as they heard the two cases.

The day in court was structured so judges first heard arguments over whether the map meets the state Constitution’s requirements for districts to be compact and contiguous before considering the question of whether the map is in effect.








“Compactness isn’t optional,” said Asseem Mulji, attorney for the ACLU of Missouri as he opened the case challenging the constitutionality of the map.

In response, Kathleen Hunker of the attorney general’s office said the map passed last year meets every constitutional test. The 5th District isn’t the least compact district ever used in Missouri, she said.

“There is no such thing as a perfect map or a perfect district,” she said.

The case over the effect of the petitions drew the only questioning from the bench.

Judge Zel Fischer asked who would be harmed if the map from 2025 is used in the Aug. 4 primary.

Everyone would be injured, replied attorney Jonathan Hawley, representing the people suing to suspend the law.

“It would dilute the referendum process if not destroy it altogether,” Hawley said.

While he was speaking to reporters, Hoskins said he would be interested in another round of redistricting in 2027.

Missouri’s 1st District is the only one in the state that was drawn to meet the requirements of the Voting Rights Act. Hoskins said lawmakers should revise Missouri’s map to eliminate the Black-majority district.



“The definition of racism,” Hoskins said, “is drawing districts based on the color of one’s skin. We don’t want that in this state.”