The Turner Report
This blog features observations from Randy Turner, a former teacher, newspaper reporter and editor. Send news items or comments to rturner229@hotmail.com
Friday, June 26, 2026
Neosho man killed in motorcycle accident near Granby
Millions already pouring into Missouri ballot fights over Amendment 4 and Amendment 5
Missouri voters are being flooded with ads over two constitutional amendments that would reshape how the state taxes income and how citizens amend the constitution.
The campaigns for and against Amendments 4 and 5 have already raised $14.5 million. Through Tuesday, ballot measure radio and television spending had topped $3.3 million — roughly four times what primary candidates in all other contests have spent so far, according to Federal Communications Commission records.
The names in the disclaimers may tell voters what the committees buying the ads want to do. But finding out who is providing the money can require digging through campaign finance reports, corporate records and federal advertising files.
One early example is a Missouri Promise PAC ad attacking “big tech” and data centers as a reason to pass Amendment 5.
“That hum is the sound of big tech making money from online gambling, from porn,” the ad states over images of computer servers. “Data centers are money machines making millions every minute. And Missouri’s 1917 tax code means they make all that money and get away tax free.”
The ad says Amendment 5 would “fix the big-tech loophole,” phase out individual income taxes and cut property taxes.
Judge keeps Missouri plan to replace income tax with expanded sales taxes on Aug. 4 ballot
But the tax exemptions for tech company purchases of materials and equipment to construct and run data centers do not date to 1917. The Republican-controlled Legislature voted in 2015 to exempt from sales tax the computer equipment and construction materials used in data centers, plus the energy they consume.
And Amendment 5 would not repeal those exemptions. That would be up to the Legislature, which will decide what will be subject to sales tax — and what will not — if Amendment 5 passes.
Amendment 4 would alter how majorities are tallied for constitutional amendments proposed by initiative petition. Amendment 5 would direct lawmakers to phase out the personal income tax and grant the General Assembly authority to increase or expand the state sales tax to accomplish it.
Republican backers of Amendment 4 and Amendment 5 have organized one committee for each measure to raise money and operate a campaign. There are long-established conservative groups like Americans for Progress that are organizing events or pushing the message on social media, but only one main campaign committee on each proposal.
“We’re not trying to control every single group and what their mission is,” said Mike Hafner, the Republican political consultant coordinating the pro-Amendment 4 campaign. “But there is a common alignment of priorities that a lot of groups have identified as a priority for them in recent years, and this is our opportunity collectively to get it done.”
There are four committees opposing each measure, including one that opposes both. That isn’t a handicap because each committee is taking a slice of the job, said Mark Jones of the Missouri National Education Association.
“Everyone opposing these ballot initiatives is coordinating incredibly well together,” Jones said. “We have different communities that we have access to and are trusted messengers in, and so sometimes it’s just easier and faster to move with your own committee, and as much as the law allows, coordinate and cooperate where possible.”
Amendment 4 committee names and funding
Backers of Amendment 4 use the name Protect Election Integrity for their campaign, but they are far behind the four opposition committees in fundraising.
Through Tuesday, it had only one reported donor, giving $20,000.
The single donor is MCR PAC, funded by St. Louis businessman Michael Rayner, who is part of the family that owns Cargill. Rayner is one of the state’s biggest donors, giving $6.3 million to Republican candidates and causes since the start of 2023.
Meanwhile, the three opposition committees have raised $5.5 million, and one, Missourians for Fair Governance, has spent $716,000 on broadcast ads that began May 16.
“I don’t even have a media buyer yet signed up where I can track those,” Hafner said. “I would imagine they’re going to outspend us.”
Amendment 4 would require constitutional amendments placed on the ballot via initiative petition to win majorities in all eight of Missouri’s congressional districts. The current standard, a majority of all votes cast statewide, would still apply to constitutional amendments proposed by the General Assembly.
If passed, as few as 5% of Missouri voters could defeat an amendment proposed by initiative. If it had been in place in recent elections, a sales tax cap that won 57% of the statewide vote in 2016 would have failed. And no amendment proposed by initiative since 2020, including marijuana legalization and expanded access to Medicaid for working-age adults, would have passed.
The television ad produced by Missourians for Fair Governance tracks the central mechanics of Amendment 4 and describes the result if passed as a “minority veto” over measures popular throughout the state.
The Missouri Association of Realtors, which backed the 2016 sales tax limitation, is the main funder of Missourians for Fair Governance, contributing $2.5 million. The other donor is another one of the opposition committees, Protect Majority Rule Missouri, which gave an in-kind donation of $714,820.
The two campaigns are sharing a website.
Missouri voters passed a sales tax cap. Under Amendment 4, it would have failed
Money from the Realtors is accumulated from payments made by association members, said Scott Charton, spokesman for Missourians for Fair Governance and the Amendment 5 opposition committee Missourians for Fair Taxation.
“Missouri Realtors have 26,000 grassroots members,” Charton said. “All of them have connections in every community because they’re trusted community members. They worship and play and attend school and live on the same street as their neighbors who are voters.”
Protect Majority Rule is a committee organized by liberal-leaning advocacy organizations. The committee has raised $2.6 million.
Of that amount, a little more than half is from Missouri-based groups. The Health Forward Foundation of Kansas City contributed $700,000; MOVE Action St. Louis gave $400,000; Missouri Jobs With Justice donated $300,500; and Missouri Workers Power contributed $300,000.
Another $1.1 million has come from The Fairness Project, a Washington, D.C., nonprofit that has backed ballot measures in 19 states.
None of the organizations contributing to Protect Majority Rule are required to disclose their donors.
The new majority requirements have been a top priority for Republicans for more than a decade, Hafner said. The Realtors’ opposition will be remembered by the GOP-led Legislature, he said.
“I would say that it’s disgraceful that an organization, a Missouri organization, filled with good, hardworking folks, has been hijacked by the far left to advance a political agenda that is aiming to minimize the voices of rural Missourians,” Hafner said.
The attack on the Realtors shows that backers of Amendment 4 don’t want to talk about the proposal, Charton said.
“Amendment 4 is a politicians’ power grab from the people of Missouri, and it is deeply unpopular with citizens across the political spectrum,” Charton said. “Missourians are learning that the politicians’ Amendment 4 will let one urban congressional district veto the will of rural Missourians from across the state, and value your vote based on where you live.”
“Opposition to Amendment 4 is uniting voters from every corner of the state around one simple belief: Missourians — not politicians and their special interest donors — should decide what becomes law,” she said.
The final group opposing Amendment 4 is called Protect Freedom and Democracy. It has reported a single donation of $150,000 from MOVE Action.
Amendment 5 committee names and funding
In a television ad that began running Tuesday opposing Amendment 5, Missourians for Fair Taxation uses a version of the children’s game musical chairs to illustrate what the amendment would do to taxes.
With the tune “All Around the Mulberry Bush” playing in the background, and graphics that say “Politicians’ Amendment 5 Tax Shift Plan Bad Odds For You,” the ad shows 10 people circling a set of chairs, with only two slots available when the music stops.
“Amendment 5 opens your family to being hurt by new taxes on services, doctor visits, childcare, even apartment rent, and higher sales taxes that could rise to over 20%,” the announcer states.
The ad points to authority included in Amendment 5, which says lawmakers could create a sales tax “on transactions involving any goods and services.”
If nothing is added to the tax base, raising enough revenue to replace the income tax would add up to 8.5% to the current state rate of 4.225%. Stacked local levies would bring the rate to 20% in some locations.
So far, all the money raised by Missourians for Fair Taxation has come from the Realtors.
Missouri Realtors pour $1.9 million into campaign to defeat Amendment 5 tax plan
“The Missouri Realtors have set up campaign committees focused on each issue, but the common connection is that we want to protect the power of Missourians from both Amendment 4 and Amendment 5,” Charton said.
The first week of broadcast ads for Missourians for Fair Taxation cost about $350,000, FCC records show.
Missouri Promise started its broadcast campaign for the Aug. 4 election at the start of June and has spent $1.9 million. Before the PAC was created May 5, a not-for-profit corporation organized in October 2025 in Delaware called Missouri Promise spent $210,000 on ads that ran in November, December and April advocating for lawmakers to pass the measure that became Amendment 5.
Of the $3.4 million raised so far by Missouri Promise PAC, almost $2 million was donated by the Missouri Promise nonprofit. The rest came from a not-for-profit corporation named Secure Missouri, organized in March 2025 by Jefferson City attorney Marc Ellinger, to “support Governor Mike Kehoe’s vision of a stronger, more competitive Missouri where businesses thrive, families prosper, and communities grow.”
Neither corporation is required to disclose the source of their funds to the Missouri Ethics Commission. Their corporate structure means that if they are recognized as a political corporation by the IRS, any disclosure of funders will be made after the election is over.
Joe Lamie, spokesman for Missouri Promise, declined a request for an interview.
In a statement sent to The Independent, he did not address the identity of the donors who have backed the two nonprofits.
Like Amendment 4, there are four committees working to defeat Amendment 5.
Along with Missourians for Fair Taxation, they are: No Everything Tax, a coalition of left-leaning organizations with Amy Blouin, executive director of the liberal Missouri Budget Project, as treasurer; Parents for Missouri Public Schools, which spokeswoman Molly Fleming described as a volunteer organization that grew out of efforts to support schools on local issues in Kansas City and St. Charles; and a group called Protect Freedom and Democracy.
The only reported donation to No Everything Tax is $250,000 from the Missouri National Education Association. The goal, Blouin said, is to engage voters face-to-face rather than raise millions for broadcast ads.
“This group really is about talking with real Missourians one on one, with a diverse array of coalition partners,” she said. “We aren’t just focused on media. Obviously media is going to be very important for folks to do, but it’s not the only thing.”
Parents for Missouri Public Schools has only reported one donation as well, $10,000 from MOWIN, a St. Louis-based organization, but will report nearly two dozen small donations when the next full reports are due July 15, Fleming said.
“Those mainline campaigns should strategically be really focused on all the things you need to do to try to run a major communications campaign,” Fleming said. “This is trying to engage and develop people in their place to engage in their communities, and it’s just, it’s just a different lane of work.”
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Carthage woman arrested for stealing mail, sneaking meth into jail
(From the Jasper County Sheriff's Office)On June 25, 2026, at approximately 8:15 AM, Jasper County Sheriff deputies were investigating recent mail thefts and made contact with a person of interest in Carthage.
Tabitha Houston Reyes, 39, Carthage, was arrested after determining that she was involved in the recent mail thefts. Numerous pieces of stolen mail and stolen credit cards were subsequently recovered from her vehicle.
Reyes was transported to the Jasper County Detention Center.
Charges for Fraudulent use of a credit device, introduction of a controlled substance into a jail facility and felony stealing have been sent to the Jasper County Prosecutor for review of charges.
Houston Reyes is currently on probation for trafficking in stolen identities.
Pedestrian killed at 32nd and Range Line
(From the Joplin Police Department)On June 25th, 2026, around 8:57 p.m., Joplin Police, Fire, M.E.T.S. and Newton County Ambulance were dispatched to the area of 32nd Street and Range Line Road in reference to an injury crash involving a pedestrian.
During the initial investigation it was determined that an adult pedestrian entered traffic to cross Range Line from east to west when the collision occurred.
This incident is still an active and ongoing investigation.
Thursday, June 25, 2026
Barry County man arrested for statutory rape, statutory sodomy
(From the Barry County Sheriff's Office)On 02/04/2026, the Barry County Sheriff's Office began an investigation regarding an alleged sexual assault against a 15-year-old female.
The victim stated she knew Marquez as they had attended the same church. Francisco Marquez, 22 years old from Seligman, MO, was taken into custody on 06/24/2026 for Statutory Rape 2nd Degree and Statutory Sodomy 2nd Degree. Marquez is currently in the Barry County Jail on NO BOND.
Joplin man charged with kidnapping, domestic assault
The Jasper County Prosecuting Attorney's office filed kidnapping and domestic assault charges today against a Joplin man who allegedly beat and kicked his wife and held her against her will for 14 hours.
An arrest warrant was issued for Charles Thomas Davidson III (DOB 1979) with bond set at $25,000 cash only.
From the probable cause statement:
V1 came to the station to report an assault that took place at 1824 S Harlem Ave. Her husband Charles Davidson came and picked her up in Carterville and took her to where he was staying at his mom's house. There they went into the garage, where Charles then accused the victim of cheating on him andhaving relations with other men.
her leave.
Neosho Christian School closing
Neosho Christian School is closing and will not be open for the 2026-2027 school year.
The announcement was made to parents in a letter sent to parents today.
The letter says the school has been having financial difficulties, fewer donations and lower enrollment.
All tuition that has been paid for the 2026-2027 school year will be refunded, the letter said.
"Please know that you are in our prayers as you seek God's direction and make decisions regarding your child's education. We also ask that you keep our faculty and staff in your prayers, as this decision has brought significant changes to their future as well."
McDonald County, Nevada newspaper owners suing Microsoft, Open AI for stealing copyrighted material
Owners of 400 newspapers, including WEHCO Newspapers, owners of the McDonald County Press, the Little Rock Democrat-Gazette and the Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette in Fayetteville and Rust Newspapers, which owns the Nevada Daily Mail and Fort Scott Tribune, sued Microsoft and Open AI Wednesday claiming their work product is being used without permission.
From the petition:
This lawsuit arises from Defendants’ systematic and willful theft of hundreds of thousands of copyrighted articles belonging to the Publishers, who collectively own and operate nearly 400 local and regional newspaper outlets across the country, all of whom have spent decades—and in some cases over a century—investing in the journalists, editors, and infrastructure required to produce the trusted, original reporting on which their communities depend.ingested that content to build and commercialize their generative artificial intelligence (“GenAI”)
products, including ChatGPT and Microsoft Copilot.
Using automated systems, Defendants systematically and secretly crawled the Publishers’ websites—including content behind paywalls and other access restrictions—and copied the Publishers’ articles, stories, and other original works onto their own servers without authorization.
That Defendants’ conduct was willful is beyond dispute. OpenAI’s founder, Sam Altman, acknowledged as much in testimony before the British House of Lords, conceding that it would be “impossible to train today’s leading AI models without using copyrighted materials.”
Defendants made deliberate engineering choices to copy the Publishers’ content and strip its CMI, knowing it would obscure the origins of the works they were taking and impair the Publishers’
ability to detect and prove the theft. And even as litigation from other publishers mounted, and as
courts began to recognize the validity of these claims, Defendants pressed forward undeterred.
Defendants’ data scraping processes, their products’ storage and reproduction of “memorized”
content, and therefore their violations of the Copyright Act and the Digital Millennium Copyright
Act, continue to this day.
On the backs of the Publishers, Defendants built some of the most valuable businesses in human history. OpenAI, once styled as a nonprofit, now commands a valuation worth nearly one trillion dollars.
The Publishers are generally independently-owned newspaper companies. Many are family-owned small businesses. They are the lifeblood of the communities they serve. They send reporters to city council meetings and school board hearings. They investigate corruption and hold local officials accountable. They are the outlets that cover the latest high school football game, the new restaurant opening downtown, or the storm bearing down on the coast. They publish obituaries, job listings, and apartment notices. They convey to their readers everyday stories of local civic life that national outlets do not cover.
The Publishers have spent billions of dollars to sustain this work. Defendants helped themselves to all of it—without providing a cent of compensation.
The U.S. Constitution has, since the nation’s founding, charged Congress with protecting authors’ and publishers’ exclusive rights in their work. Congress has exercised that authority to implement robust protections against copyright theft, including through enacting the Copyright Act and the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, and authorizing substantial penalties for willful violations of both.
In bringing this action, the Publishers seek to hold Defendants to the same standard they insist
upon for themselves.
Novel as the technology at issue may be, this is not a case of first impression. The Publishers, along with other news publishers, authors, and other copyright holders across the country have brought these same claims against these same Defendants, and those cases have survived motions to dismiss largely intact. Defendants have chosen to continue their unlawful conduct rather than rectify it. This lawsuit seeks to hold Defendants fully accountable for every violation—past, present, and ongoing.
The three-count lawsuit alleges copyright infringement, vicarious copyright infringement and violation of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act and asks for compensatory damages, that the use of their material be stopped and that all copies of their material be removed from Chat GPT.
The plaintiffs are asking for a jury trial.
Go Fund Me page launched to support ESPN NFL Draft analyst Matt Miller
A Go Fund Me page has been launched to help ESPN NFL Draft analyst Matt Miller, a Webb City resident, as he recovers from a June 17 accident that left him with broken ribs, multiple fractures and forced an amputation of his left arm.
A $30,000 goal has been set and as of this writing, $23,250 has been raised.
From the Go Fund Me page:
On Wednesday, June 17, Matt's life changed in an instant.He was involved in a devastating accident with a semi-truck, was ejected from his vehicle, and airlifted to the hospital with life-threatening injuries. Despite the severity of the crash, Matt has shown incredible strength every step of the way.
Matt suffered a compound fracture of his left femur, a shattered left kneecap, multiple broken ribs, and lost a significant amount of blood. To save his life, doctors performed an emergency amputation of his left arm. Remarkably, his head, neck, and spine were spared serious injury.
Matt remains in the ICU, where he continues to make inspiring progress each day. He has had additional surgeries, including a procedure on his left leg and a shoulder surgery to evaluate his future prosthetic options. While the road to recovery will be long and challenging, his determination and positive spirit have never wavered. In true Matt fashion, he's already joking that he plans to become "the best one-armed bartender ever."
As Matt focuses on healing, his family and friends are focused on being by his side. The months ahead will include extensive medical care, rehabilitation, travel to appointments, prosthetic planning, and countless unexpected expenses.
This GoFundMe has been created to help ease the financial burden on Matt and his family so they can focus on what matters most—his recovery. Your generosity will help offset medical and rehabilitation costs, travel and lodging for family members, daily living expenses, and other unforeseen costs that come with such a life-altering injury.
If you're able to give, no matter the amount, thank you. If you can't donate, sharing this page and keeping Matt and his family in your thoughts and prayers means just as much.
On behalf of Matt and his family, thank you for your overwhelming love, support, and generosity. Every message, prayer, and contribution reminds us we are not facing this journey alone.
State audit of Jim Otey's time as Newton County Collector receives "good" rating
(From State Auditor Scott Fitzpatrick)An audit report released this week by Missouri State Auditor Scott Fitzpatrick gives the Newton County Collector's Office a rating of "good." Pursuant to Section 52.150, RSMo, the State Auditor is required to conduct an audit once notified of a vacancy in the office of county collector. The audit was triggered by a vacancy that occurred in the office when James Otey resigned on July 12, 2024.
"The people of Newton County can feel confident the county collector's office is being run in a transparent and accountable manner. However, there are improvements that can be made in that office and a few others as they work together to administer the county's property tax system. Our report contains recommendations that can help county officials to make needed improvements and I'm glad to see they are already working to put them into place," said Fitzpatrick.
The report finds the financial activities of the County Collector were not being adequately reviewed by the County Clerk, County Auditor, and County Commission. Neither the County Clerk nor the County Auditor maintained an account book or other records summarizing property tax charges, transactions, and changes as required by state law. The report notes an account book would help the County Clerk and County Auditor ensure taxes charged and credited to the County Collector are complete and accurate, and could also be used by the County Clerk, County Auditor, and County Commission to verify the accuracy and completeness of the County Collector's annual settlements and delinquent tax books.
The report also finds the County Clerk does not prepare or verify the accuracy of the current or delinquent tax books. The County Collector reviews the tax books for accuracy, but the report notes this effectively amounts to reviewing her own work. Because the County Collector is responsible for collecting property tax money, good internal controls and state law require someone independent of the collection process be responsible for generating and testing the accuracy of the tax books. Additionally, the County Collector, County Assessor, and County Clerk do not always retain records of changes (e.g., additions and abatements) entered into the property tax system.
The audit report also highlights the fact the county budgeted a deficit fund balance for the Tax Maintenance Fund (TMF) for the year ending December 31, 2024. When considering the beginning fund balance and the budgeted receipts and disbursements, the county projected an ending fund balance for the TMF of negative $39,323. The Missouri Constitution, Article VI, Section 26(a), and Section 67.010.2, RSMo, require political subdivisions to ensure expenditures do not exceed revenue plus any unencumbered fund balance.
The final finding in the report addresses the failure by the County Collector's office to maintain the change fund at a constant amount. A cash count of the County Collector's office completed in June 2025 indicated the change fund was $1,800, split among the 5 cash drawers held within the office. An additional $197 was also found in a bank bag locked in the County Collector's desk drawer and the County Collector stated she was not sure of the purpose of the money, but it may have been part of the change fund. According to a memorandum of understanding dated November 16, 2016, the Newton County Commissioners established a cash fund for the County Collector to be set at $900. The report notes maintaining change funds at a constant amount and periodically counting and reconciling to the authorized balance is necessary to safeguard against possible loss, theft, or misuse of money.
The complete audit of the Newton County Collector and Property Tax System can be found here.









