Monday, July 13, 2026

Former golf superintendent sues current, former Carthage city officials, alleges conspiracy


A lawsuit filed in U. S. District Court for the Western District of Missouri by former Carthage Golf Superintendent Aaron Borland today accuses current and former city officials of wrongfully dismissing him from his job, engaging in a conspiracy against him and defaming his character.

Listed as defendants in the lawsuit are City of Carthage, former Parks Direcor Abi Almandinger, HR Director Michael Miller, City Administrator Traci Cox, former City Administrator Greg Dagnan, former City Attorney Nate Dally, former Mayor Dan Rife and the law firm of Keenan and Bhatia, LLC, which represented Almandinger and Dagnan in lawsuits against the city.







Count One of the lawsuit alleges all defendants except the law firm deprived Borland of "his rights to liberty, property and due process." The second count alleges conspiracy involving Almandinger, Miller, Dagnan, Dally, Cox and Rice, who are also cited in the third count, which alleges interference with his job.

The fourth count alleges that Almandinger, in her wrongful dismissal lawsuit against the city and the law firm representing her defamed Borland. Almandinger is being sued as a private citizen on the fourth count.

Borland, who is represented by Gregory W. Aleshire of Aleshire Robb P. C., Springfield, is asking for damages, punitive damages and a jury trial on all counts.

From the petition:

On or about March 25, 2019, Plaintiff Borland was hired as Defendant City’s Municipal Golf Maintenance Supervisor.

In January, 2021, Plaintiff Borland was promoted by Defendant City to Golf Superintendent.

Not until his promotion did Plaintiff Borland assume the duty and responsibility for purchasing chemicals used at the Carthage Municipal Golf Course (“the Golf Course”).

Unbeknownst to Plaintiff Borland, on or about December 20, 2022, (with a report date of December 27, 2022), a complaint was initiated with the City of Carthage Police Department accusing Plaintiff Borland of stealing over $25,000 and “Acceding to Corruption.”








Upon information and belief, this accusation was initiated by Defendant Greg Dagnan, who was at that time serving as City Administrator for Defendant City. These accusations were always false.

Plaintiff Borland did not learn most of the information set forth below until he finally obtained copies of the Carthage Police Department’s “investigation” reports until on or about January 13, 2026. Plaintiff Borland had sought this information numerous times over a 3- year period from various City officials but was denied access as referenced below.

On December 27, 2022, Carthage City Police Department Detective (hereinafter “Detective I”) I met with Plaintiff Borland and questioned him about fuel and chemicals used at the Golf Course. Records indicate that this interview was audio recorded and saved as digital evidence.

On December 28, 2022, Defendant Almandinger was hired as the Parks Director by the Defendant City. Upon information and belief, Almandinger had no experience or background in serving as a Parks Director.

Upon information and belief, Defendant Dagnan was the primary driving force behind Defendant Almandinger being hired as Parks Director. Prior to this, Defendants Dagnan and Almandinger had become close friends.

On or about December 29, 2022, Defendant Almandinger alleged to Detective I that she was told by a chemical vendor’s sales person that another chemical company “had offered [Plaintiff] Borland a $1,900.00 kickback” and Borland told them “we don’t do that anymore.”

The only conversation between Plaintiff Borland and the chemical sales

representative was that the Golf Course no longer participated in “rebates” from the chemical

Case 3:26-cv-05062-MBB Document 1 Filed 07/13/26 Page 5 of 28suppliers. Plaintiff Borland specifically stated that the Golf Course had changed its method handling rebates, in that rebates were formerly provided in checks payable to the City. 

After becoming Superintendent, Plaintiff Borland had the chemical vendors switch from providing
rebate checks made payable to the City to simply providing the City with credit on its accounts
with the chemical vendors in the amount of each vendor’s rebate.

Plaintiff Borland made this change purely to make the rebate process more transparent and easier from the City’s accounting standpoint.

In a supplementary report dated January 4, 2023, Detective I notes on December 29, 2022, he told the chemical vendor’s sales representative what Defendant Almandinger had claimed. The chemical vendor’s sales representative specifically told Detective I that there was nothing criminal about the chemical vendor’s rebate programs and the rebates were an industry standard. The sales representative then stated he had nothing more to say in the matter.

A Carthage Police Department report prepared by another Detective (hereinafter “Detective II”) in a supplemental report dated January 24, 2023, notes that on January 5, 2023, he and Detective I met with Dagnan in his City Administrator’s office. Detective II “asked [Defendant] Dagnan if he had any suspicions of thefts due to a large amount of fuel missing.”

Detective II notes: [Defendant] “Dagnan was adamant that something was going to come up missing.” When the Detective asked Dagnan how he came to that conclusion, Dagnan asserted:

“Mark Peterson and [Plaintiff] Borland would be stealing money together if anything.”

Dagnan also falsely claimed that Plaintiff Borland had been spoken to “several times about [City] policy violations for purchases that had been made.”

Defendant Dagnan never spoke to Plaintiff Borland about any alleged “policy violations” and Plaintiff Borland never received any verbal or written warnings about any alleged “policy violations.” It should be noted that three years later, when Plaintiff Borland reviewed his City employee file with Defendant Miller, no such disciplinary actions were noted in Borland’s City personnel file.








In the same report, three hours later, Detective II writes that he and Detective I spoke to Defendant Almandinger, in her office seeking information “due to concerns about a possible theft.” Almandinger then claimed she received a phone call from the same chemical vendor salesperson referenced above. 

Among other things, all Almandinger recalled was the salesperson allegedly told her about a random envelope that contained $1,900 cash but admitted she could not “recall when or who was in the same room as the [alleged] envelope…”.

On or about January 11, 2023, (with a report date of January 25, 2023), Detective II interviewed the then City’s Director of Parks and Recreation Mark Peterson (“Peterson”). Peterson explained to Detective II that the checks from chemical vendors were made payable to the City of Carthage and constituted rebates. 

Peterson then explained that Plaintiff Borland began ordering from a different chemical vendor and shortly thereafter another rebate check arrived.

Plaintiff Borland specifically left the check on Peterson’s desk and asked what he was supposed to do with it. In the same conversation, Detective II notes that he explained to Peterson the entire matter appeared to be more of an issue of sloppy recording keeping by two employees other than Peterson and Plaintiff Borland.

Plaintiff Borland did not feel comfortable handling checks because he did not have check cashing authority. He only received two rebates checks during his time as superintendent and turned both over to Peterson before Peterson was forced to resign when threatened and pressured by Defendant Dagnan.

As to the rebate checks, Plaintiff Borland improved the process by specifically having chemical vendors issue credit to the City’s account for the rebates versus issuing a check so that Borland did not have to deal with checks.

A report by Detective II, dated January 12, 2023, (with a report date of January 25, 2023), indicated Borland’s receipt of the prior checks was not in violation of City code or policies in the employee handbook.

Detective II then notes false information in the report. Specifically, he claims that Plaintiff Borland said he received an “unknown amount of cash in his office.” Borland never made such a statement. Further, the report claims that Borland said he received a check for $448 fand that he used it to purchase a new golf mat. Instead, Plaintiff Borland told Detective II that a credit had been issued to the City’s account by a chemical vendor, furthermore Plaintiff Borland could not cash the check because he did not have check cashing authority. 

After he was terminated without cause and was provided no post-termination due process to clear his name, Plaintiff Borland was able to obtain a copy of the chemical vendor’s records showing the $448
was credited to the City. Plaintiff Borland used this record later, in a separate unemployment benefits hearing, with the Missouri Division of Unemployment Security.

In a later portion of Detective II’s report, dated January 12, 2023, (with a report date of January 25, 2023), Detective II writes that he spoke with Defendant Dagnan and Defendant Dally “separately.” Defendant Dagnan is specifically noted as the person who brought up that City policy does allow all department heads and City employees to accept checks.

Detective II also notes that he received a copy of the policy and “attached it to crime scene 1. This is specifically addressed in paragraphs 71 and 74-78 of this Complaint.








Detective II also specifically notes: “Dagnan advised that the checks were kickback checks, and not rebate checks regardless of what Peterson and Borland called them.”

Defendant Dagnan’s statement was false and there was no evidence to support such a claim. It is particularly disturbing given that Defendant Dagnan was, at the time, City Administrator having transitioned from Carthage Police Chief, and having been Detective II’s boss.

Defendant Dagnan leveled these false allegations against Borland (and Peterson) with malice and in bad faith to cost Borland his job and to harm his good reputation in the Carthage (and wider) community.

Although Detective II’s report indicates he spoke with Defendant Dally about this issue, he does not record any comments made by Defendant Dally. Upon information and belief, Defendant Dally let Defendant Dagnan’s false allegations against Borland stand without objection.

The day after, on January 13, 2023, between 2:00 and 4:00 pm, Defendant Almandinger (who had just been made the City’s Parks and Recreation Director on or about December 28, 2022), met with Plaintiff Borland to discuss an alleged “a lack of transparency and truthfulness.”

Defendant Almandinger began questioning Plaintiff Borland, asking him where “all the contracts were for the “free” rounds of golf.”  Plaintiff Borland then asked Defendant Almandinger if she had a contract to store Christmas ornaments related to Defendant Almandinger’s work with “Vision Carthage”, a non-City, not-for-profit organization, for which Almandinger was a board member prior to being appointed Parks Director. Plaintiff Borland questioned how storing her Vision Carthage ornaments in his work area for the Golf Course was advantageous to the City. 

Shortly prior to this meeting, Almandinger had given her keys to others so that they could access a Golf Course building to store Almandinger’s ornaments. This building was where the Golf Course stored its fuel. Specifically, it should be noted that under City Code Section 604.02.1 “Standard of Conduct”, it states that “Unlawful or Illegal Conduct” includes: “unauthorized use or the use of City property in a manner or for a purpose for which the property was not designed or intended.” When Plaintiff Borland raised this issue, Defendant Almandinger got upset and cried.

In retaliation for Borland exercising his First Amendment free speech right by raising Defendant Almandinger’s potential misuse of City property, on or about January 17, 2023, Plaintiff Borland was summoned to a meeting with Defendant Almandinger and Defendant Miller in Almandinger’s office. 

In the meeting, Almandinger and Miller told Borland he was being placed on paid administrative leave and that they would contact him once they had finished their investigation.

Not only did Almandinger’s and Miller’s actions violate Borland’s First Amendment rights, they likewise violated the City’s Code, Section 604.02.10 under “Standard of Conduct”, “Unlawful or Illegal Conduct”, which provides: “Any act or conduct which violates established duties or rights of employees or the public, including but not limited to rights of privacy, sexual harassment, racial prejudice, defamation and physical safety.”

No right is more clearly established than freedom of speech. It is also clearly established that the City may not discharge on a basis that infringes on an employee’s constitutionally protected interest in freedom of speech.

That same day, Defendant Almandinger handed Plaintiff Borland a written letter indicating he was a suspect in a criminal investigation for “kickbacks” and he was being placed on paid administrative leave effective January 18, 2023, while the Carthage Police Department completed their investigation. The letter indicated further disciplinary action may occur as a result of the investigation. Plaintiff Borland was instructed not to have any contact with anyone at the City during his administrative leave. Borland was instructed by Almandinger to sign the letter, which he did. A true and correct copy of the letter is attached as Exhibit A and incorporated herein by reference.

There was NO EVIDENCE obtained by the Carthage Police Department that indicated that Plaintiff Borland ever received any “kickbacks”. The only thing prompting the “investigation” up to this point were the false accusations by Defendant Dagnan, City Administrator and former Carthage Police Chief, who precipitated and drove the “investigation.”








Upon information and belief, Defendant Dagnan was also simultaneously exercising his influence over Defendant Almandinger, prompting her and others’ unlawful actions toward Plaintiff Borland.

Upon information and belief, Plaintiff Borland’s exercise of Free Speech under the First Amendment by questioning Defendant Almandinger’s improper use of City property was a substantial or motivating factor in the City employees named herein taking adverse employment action against Plaintiff Borland. This, combined with the defamatory statements and lack of due process referenced throughout this Complaint, resulted in Plaintiff Borland’s damages as further alleged in this Complaint.

On January 26, 2023, Detective II notes that he tried to contact Plaintiff Borland by phone and left a voicemail. Detective II notes that he contacted a couple of chemical vendors.

One vendor indicated that rebate checks come from manufacturers and that such checks would be made payable to the City. This relates to, and is supported by the same documentation Plaintiff Borland obtained to support his appeal for unemployment benefits denial after he was forced to resign without a hearing and due process referred to in paragraphs 57-59 below.

On January 26, 2023, at 3:30 p.m., Defendant Almandinger contacted Plaintiff Borland by phone and told him that he needed to contact Detective II the next morning at 8:30 a.m. Plaintiff Borland replied that this would be a violation of his administrative leave conditions and his rights under the Fifth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution, since he had been identified as a suspect in a criminal case. 

At 5:27 p.m., Plaintiff Borland received a text message from Defendant Almandinger instructing him that “[he] still need to contact Detective [II] tomorrow at 8:30 a.m.”

The next day, January 27, 2023, Plaintiff Borland contacted Detective II. Plaintiff Borland then explained he had been put on administrative leave and was instructed not to contact anyone with the City, which is why he had not initially returned Detective II’s phone call. Detective II then told Borland that he [Detective II] was not going to speak with Borland about anything that had to do with administrative discipline. 

Detective II then began to question Borland. Plaintiff Borland replied that he had retained legal counsel and had been instructed to say nothing further about his job in the City. Detective II concluded by saying that he was not going to speak to him involving anything in the City, just “my current investigation.”

Upon information and belief, the information in paragraph 54 above is the last Carthage Police Department report entry that makes any reference to Borland.

Four days later, on January 31, 2023, Defendant Almandinger contacted Plaintiff Borland along with Defendant Miller on speaker phone. Defendant Almandinger informed Plaintiff Borland that he needed to come to her office and sign personnel documentation for violating City policy that would result in his termination or he could resign.

At 2:00 p.m. that day, Plaintiff Borland met with Defendants Almandinger and Miller. They handed Borland a Notice of Disciplinary Action memo, attached hereto as Exhibit B and incorporated herein by reference. The memo specifically refers to City Policy Manual 604.01.4: “Misuse of any office or employment position for the purposes beyond the reasonable scope of duties of that office or position or for any personal gain directly related to the employment by the City” and 604.01.5: “Acceptance of gifts, personal services, or other remuneration of value, other than ordinary compensation, benefits and awards approved or sanctioned by the policies of the City Council or by a recognized professional or occupational group or organization for the performance of job duties." The memo sets forth no facts regarding how Plaintiff Borland allegedly violated these City Policy Manual provisions.

Neither Defendants Almandinger, Miller, Dagnan, Rife, Dally nor Cox ever provided Plaintiff Borland with an actual “Appendix D Notice of Disciplinary Action” form and/or “Appendix E Notice of Hearing” form as required by the City’s Personnel Policy Manual, Section 700.12 under “Employee Relations”, depriving Plaintiff Borland of his substantive due process rights under the U.S. Constitution. Blank forms of the Notice of Disciplinary Action and Notice of Hearing are attached as Exhibits C and D, respectively and incorporated herein by reference.

Instead of letting the “investigation” proceed and instead of providing Plaintiff Borland with any pre-termination or post-termination due process rights in the manner prescribed by the City’s Personnel Policy Manual so that he could defend himself against the false accusations, Defendants Almandinger and Miller forced Plaintiff Borland to resign. Specifically, Defendants Almandinger and Miller only gave Plaintiff Borland two options: 1) Sign the Notice of Disciplinary memo, admitting that he was guilty of the City’s false accusation; or 2) Resign in lieu of termination and the City would not put the false accusation in his personnel file.

Plaintiff Borland vehemently denied the false accusation that he received “kickbacks” from City vendors.

Defendants Dagnan, Dally, Cox and/or Rife knew that Plaintiff Borland was being stripped of his rights to due process and they, along with Almandinger and Miller, acted with malice or in bad faith for the improper purpose of taking away Plaintiff Borland’s job and harming his reputation in the Carthage (and wider) community.

Upon information and belief, Defendant Dally, in his official and individual capacity as City Attorney, specifically instructed Defendants Almandinger and Miller how to handle Plaintiff Borland’s termination. Defendant Dally did nothing to ensure that Plaintiff Borland was afforded his substantive and procedural due process rights.

Given the Hobbesian choice presented to him as referenced above, and the fact that he was afforded no due process, Plaintiff Borland provided the City on or about January 31, 2023, with his handwritten forced resignation (constructive discharge), a copy of which is attached hereto as Exhibit E and incorporated herein by reference. Nowhere did Plaintiff Borland expressly waive his pre-termination or post-termination rights to due process.

By failing to provide Plaintiff Borland with any name-clearing due process during his termination Defendants Almandinger, Miller, Dagnan, Dally, Cox, and Rife acting under of color of state law, deprived Plaintiff Borland of his rights and liberty interest in his reputation under the Fourteenth Amendment (Section 1) of the U.S. Constitution. Even though Plaintiff Borland was an at-will employee with the City, he still had the right to hold his continued employment free from unreasonable governmental interference, bringing his claim within the “liberty” and “property” rights under the Fifth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution.

When state actors in their official and individual capacities deprive a person of a significant right or status conferred by state law based upon their public determination that the person was guilty of dishonesty, immorality, criminality, and the like, that person, such as Plaintiff Borland here, is entitled to procedural due process.

Plaintiff Borland’s claims for his reputational damages combined with his due process claims under §1983 are subject to Missouri’s personal injury five-year statute of limitations under §516.140(2) RSMo. See, Owens v. Okure, 488 U.S. 235, 240 (1989).

Prior to Plaintiff Borland’s tenure with the City, since 1997, the City had a policy or custom of not charging greens fees to Golf Course Superintendent Association of America (“GCSAA”) members and Professional Golfers’ Association (“PGA”) members when they played the City’s Golf Course.

Because Plaintiff Borland is a member of the GCSAA, he was not charged greens fees to play on the City’s Golf Course.

However, on or about February 4, 2023, Plaintiff Borland, accompanied by Danny Curry (“Curry”) (who did not work for the City), went to the City’s Golf Course Pro Shop.

Plaintiff Borland wanted to schedule a tee time the next day and spoke to the City’s Associate
Head Golf Professional Tyler Markham (“Markham”). Markham confirmed the tee time and told
Borland how much it was going to cost. Markham said he would take care of the other GCSAA
members, but Borland would have to pay. When Borland questioned why he had to pay,
Markham responded, in front of Curry, “Abi [Almandinger] instructed me due to kickbacks and the ongoing investigation. You and Mark will have to pay; every other GCSAA & PGA member will be handled the same as it always had been.”

Defendant Almandinger knew or should have known that her false accusations told to Markham would be repeated to, or in the presence of, third-parties like Curry. These false accusations repeated to, or in the hearing of third-parties outside of the City’s internal structure, constitutes publication of Almandinger’s defamatory statement about Borland.

Plaintiff Borland then filed a claim for unemployment benefits with the Missouri Department of Labor and Industrial Relations (“the State”). On or about March 31, 2023, Plaintiff Borland’s claim for unemployment benefits with the State was denied due to false claims by the City. The denial specifically states as its reason: “The claimant was discharged because he was taking kickbacks from vendors. This was a violation of the employer’s policy #604 standards of conduct.” This official statement by the City was false and defamatory and was nearly identical to the one Markham repeated in his meeting with Plaintiff Borland and Curry. Both instances were made in connection with the City terminating Plaintiff Borland’s employment.

By Defendants Almandinger and Miller (and possibly others) falsely accusing Borland of a crime and transmitting it to third-parties outside the City, as well as the City, Almandinger, Dagnan, Dally, Cox and Rife denying Plaintiff Borland any due process in connection with his termination, Borland has a “stigma plus” claim under §1983.

Defendant City is liable for Plaintiff Borland’s constitutional violations under §1983 because it had official policies or a widespread custom of depriving persons like Plaintiff Borland of their due process and other rights granted under the U.S. Constitution and elsewhere.

On or about May 14, 2025, it was reported that the City’s insurance carrier warned that the City’s
rates would be raised or coverage dropped altogether due to risky employment practices of elected officials. Specifically, the City’s insurance carrier stated that terminations by the City were not following employment law.

On or about April 23, 2023, Plaintiff Borland appealed the State’s decision to disqualify him from unemployment benefits. A true and correct copy of Plaintiff Borland’s appeal and supporting evidence is attached as Exhibit F and incorporated herein by reference.

On or about May 15, 2023, Plaintiff Borland’s appeal of the States’ decision was heard by a State referee. She heard under oath testimony from Defendants Almandinger and Miller, who claimed that Plaintiff Borland resigned in lieu of termination. Miller further stated that Plaintiff Borland was a suspect for taking kickbacks and that he [Defendant Miller] consulted with the City’s attorney, Defendant Dally, on how to proceed. Miller claimed that Defendant Dally said to terminate Plaintiff Borland or that Borland could resign. 

Defendant Miller also noted that Plaintiff Borland had never received any prior warnings for his behavior or misconduct. The State Referee also heard under oath testimony from Plaintiff Borland.

After hearing the evidence, the State referee found: “The claimant has not been charged with a crime by the police. There is no substantial evidence indicating that the claimant engaged in willful misconduct as he was never warned about any substantial policy violation prior to his discharge”. Further, “…the discharge of the claimant [Plaintiff Borland] on January 31, 2023, was not for good cause as claimant’s actions did not constitute willful misconduct.” A true and correct copy of the “Decision of Appeals Tribunal” is attached hereto as Exhibit G and incorporated herein by reference.

The State referee’s “Decision” was: “The deputy’s determination is reversed. The claimant [Borland] is not disqualified for benefits by reason of the claimant’s discharge from work on January 31, 2023.” (Exhibit G).

The City never appealed the Appeals Tribunal’s decision. Plaintiff Borland was afforded no similar due process hearing by the City to clear his name.

During this same general timeframe, Plaintiff Borland contacted Defendant Miller, Defendant Cox and Chad Dininger, the Captain and Assistant Chief of the City Police Department (“Dininger”), to see if he could find out what was going on with “the investigation” and to obtain access to his City personnel file. Plaintiff Borland was denied access each time by the above individuals, each claiming that the matter was still under investigation as the basis for each denial.

On or about September 10, 2024, Plaintiff Borland requested a City Council member to email Defendant Cox to request Plaintiff Borland’s City personnel file. Later that evening Defendant Cox again denied the request, citing an ongoing investigation. This was approximately 588 days after Plaintiff Borland’s constructive discharge by the City.

On or about May 12, 2025, Plaintiff Borland again met with Defendant Cox, who was now the City Administrator to find out if she had any updates on the ongoing “investigation." She said she had talked to the Police Department and couldn’t find anything “ongoing” with respect to Plaintiff Borland. She then instructed Plaintiff Borland to contact Defendant Miller to review his City personnel file. Plaintiff Borland emailed Defendant Miller to schedule an appointment the next day to review his City personnel file.

On or about May 13, 2025, Plaintiff Borland met with Defendant Miller to review his City personnel file. After his review, Defendant Miller asked” “Is everything in there that you thought?." Plaintiff Borland replied: No, I don’t see the Tribunal Decision where I won my unemployment case. Wouldn’t that make me rehireable?”. Defendant Miller stated: “I don’t see why not. I’ll look into it.”

Shortly thereafter, Plaintiff Borland went to the Police station. He spoke to Dininger again to seek investigation materials. He told Plaintiff Borland that the investigation was still “ongoing” as it was linked to Peterson and none of the information would be public until they went to trial.” It should be noted that the “case” against Peterson was dismissed 3 years later because there was no evidence that Peterson committed any crime.

Approximately 20 minutes later after leaving the Police station, Defendant Miller called Plaintiff Borland. Defendant Miller now claimed that Plaintiff Borland had broken another City policy because he did not give enough notice when he resigned in lieu of being terminated.

Defendant Miller’s statement was non-sensical: How could Borland have provided adequate notice when he was constructively discharged by the forced resignation and was told it was effective immediately?

On or about October 10, 2025, Plaintiff Borland hand delivered his resume to Mayor Bren Flanigan and Defendant Miller at City Hall. Plaintiff Borland applied for his prior position with the City because he had learned that his successor had accepted a position at a private golf course. Plaintiff Borland also left his resume with the Operations Supervisor at the City Golf Course, since Richard Bonine (“Bonine”) was out of the office. Bonine had recently replaced Defendant Almandinger as the Parks and Recreation Director, after she was terminated by the City on or about June 24, 2025.

On or about November 8, 2025, Plaintiff Borland met with Bonine to follow up after submission of his resume. Bonine told Plaintiff Borland that he [Bonine] had received an email stating Plaintiff Borland was not eligible for rehire because he took “kickbacks.” 

When Plaintiff Borland asked if Bonine had the email, Bonine’s demeanor changed and he stalled Plaintiff Borland by never answering Borland’s question.

On or about November 17, 2025, Plaintiff Borland met with Defendant Cox to determine why he was not eligible for rehire. Defendant Cox stated that Defendant Miller had sent an email to Plaintiff Borland explaining why. When Borland indicated he had never received

such an email, Defendant Cox said she would forward it to Borland.

On or about November 18, 2025, Defendant Cox forwarded the email that Defendant Miller allegedly sent on May 14, 2025, to Borland. The email states: “after looking into your question of whether you are rehireable or not, I found since you resigned in lieu of termination, you are not considered rehireable.” Defendant Miller’s email claimed that Borland violated City policy by not giving adequate notice. Specifically, “Employees who are not given the option to fulfill a 2-week notice are considered non-rehireable as well.”

On or about December 23, 2025, Defendant Almandinger filed a lawsuit against the City claiming she had been wrongfully discharge for a multitude of reasons. It was filed in Jasper County Circuit Court, Case No. 25AP-CC00032 (hereinafter “Almandinger’s lawsuit”), a copy of which is attached hereto as Exhibit H and incorporated herein by reference.

Almandinger’s lawsuit states, in part, the following:

a. “Ms. Almandinger replaced Mark Peterson as the Director of Parks and Recreation”. (Exhibit H, ¶ 12);

b. “Around January 2023, Greg Dagnan, the City Administrator at the time, discovered accounting irregularities related to Mr. Peterson’s operation of the City of Carthage’s Parks Department. Mr. Dagnan reported his findings to the City Council and law enforcement.” (Exhibit H, ¶13);

c. “Upon starting her position, Ms. Almandinger immediately discovered extensive corruption throughout the Parks Department, including kickbacks, impropriety, and systemic policy violations that her predecessor left behind.” (Exhibit H, ¶ 15);

d. “Ms. Almandinger took decisive action to address these problems. She placed Golf Superintendent Aaron Borland on administrative leave after police confirmed he admitted to taking vendor kickbacks.” (Exhibit H, ¶ 16).

By claiming that Plaintiff Borland admitted to taking vendor kickbacks, Defendant Almandinger defamed and libeled Plaintiff Borland because she knew her statement was false; entertained serious doubts as to its truth; relied upon inherently unreliable sources; ignored obvious contradictory evidence; fabricated “facts” and/or acted with reckless disregard for the whether her statement was true or false, any of which singularly or in combination show her actual malice, evidence of bad faith or recklessness.

Defendant Almandinger’s statements, particularly by naming Plaintiff Borland and accusing him of serious crimes, were not pertinent to her claim for wrongful termination and far exceeded what was necessary to state her cause of action for wrongful termination. As a result, neither she nor the defendant law firm (named below) can rely on any alleged privilege applicable to judicial proceedings.

Specifically, Plaintiff Borland was a complete stranger to Defendant Almandinger’s lawsuit for her alleged wrongful termination against the City. Identifying him by name served no litigation purpose; the defamatory statement served no litigation purpose; his name and the defamatory statement were unnecessary to any of Almandinger’s claims; the defamatory statement and Borland’s name were solely inserted to disparage Borland; and it bore no legitimate relation to the issues before the court in Almandinger’s lawsuit.

Almandinger’s lawsuit was filed by Defendant Keenan & Bhatia. As Almandinger’s attorneys, Defendant Keenan & Bhatia, were at all relevant times acting as Defendant Almandinger’s agents and acting within the course and scope of said agency. (Exhibit E, p. 16).

As a result, Defendant Almandinger is vicariously liable for all of Defendant Keenan & Bhatia’s tortious acts or omissions as described herein.

As her agents, Defendant Keenan & Bhatia, knew or should have known that expressly naming Plaintiff Borland and falsely claiming he admitted to a crime was defamatory and libeled Plaintiff Borland. In addition, they knew that more likely than not, these statements they set forth in Almandinger’s lawsuit would further stigmatize Plaintiff Borland’s standing, reputation, good name, honor and integrity in the community.

Defendant Keenan & Bhatia also represented Defendant Dagnan in the lawsuit he filed for wrongful termination against the City of Carthage (and others) on or about May 15, 2024, in Jasper County Circuit Court, Case No. 24AO-CC00165 (“the Dagnan lawsuit”). A true and correct copy is attached as Exhibit I and incorporated herein by reference.

98. Interestingly, unlike in Almandinger’s lawsuit, in Dagnan’s lawsuit, Defendant Keenan & Bhatia redacted the names of those Dagnan accused of crimes concealing those individuals’ names from public view. These names were redacted from Dagnan’s original Petition as well as his subsequent First and Second Amended Petitions. True and correct copies of Dagnan’s Original, First, and Second Amended Petitions are attached as Exhibits I, J, and K, and incorporated herein by reference. (Exhibit I, ¶¶ 22, 25-26; 28-29; and 44); (Exhibit J, ¶¶ 22, 25-26; 28-29; and 44); and (Exhibit K, ¶¶ 18-19; 21-22; and 38).

By claiming that Plaintiff Borland admitted to taking vendor kickbacks, Defendant Keenan & Bhatia defamed and libeled Plaintiff Borland because they knew their statement was false; entertained serious doubts as to its truth; relied upon inherently unreliable sources; ignored obvious contradictory evidence; fabricated “facts” and/or acted with reckless disregard for the whether their statement was true or false, any of which singularly or in combination show their actual malice, evidence of bad faith or recklessness.

Defendants Almandinger and Keenan & Bhatia could have easily redacted Plaintiff Borland’s name and/or not directly accused him of admitting to a crime. The publication of Plaintiff Borland’s name was no more relevant to Almandinger’s lawsuit than the redacted names of others accused of crimes were in Dagnan’s lawsuit.

On or about December 24, 2025, Plaintiff Borland and his family began receiving phone calls alerting him and his family about statements being reported by news media outlets based on Almandinger’s lawsuit as described above. As stated above, Almandinger’s lawsuit contains false and impertinent statements about Borland.

Within a day of the filing of Almandinger’s lawsuit, on or about December 24, 2025, The Turner Report, a Joplin, Missouri blog, reported verbatim Defendant Almandinger’s false and defamatory statements from her Petition to the public at large. A true and correct copy of The Turner Report from that day is attached as Exhibit L and incorporated herein by reference.

On or about December 24, 2025, KOAM News (a Joplin television station) posted a full copy of Almandinger’s lawsuit on its website for public consummation. A true and correct copy of KOAM News publication is attached as Exhibit M and incorporated herein by reference.

On or about December 24, 2025, KSN 16 News (a Joplin television station) posted its story on its website about Almandinger’s lawsuit for public consummation. It republished Defendant Almandinger’s statements from paragraphs 15-16 of her lawsuit and added: “He no longer works for the City.”

Investigation continues in Noel after man found dead with multiple gunshot wounds


(From the McDonald County Sheriff's Office)

The McDonald County Sheriff's Office is actively investigating a homicide that occurred during the early morning hours of Friday, July 10, 2026.

At approximately 2:00 a.m. on July 10, 2026, deputies were dispatched to the 500 block of North Cliffside Drive in Noel, Missouri, in response to a report of a shooting.








Upon arrival, deputies located an adult male suffering from multiple gunshot wounds. The victim was pronounced deceased at the scene. Deputies immediately secured the area and requested assistance from the Criminal Investigation Division (CID).

Detectives responded to the scene, processed evidence, and conducted interviews with witnesses who were present at the time of the incident. The investigation remains active, and detectives continue to pursue leads and gather additional evidence.

At this time, no further information is being released in order to protect the integrity of the ongoing investigation.








Anyone with information regarding this incident is encouraged to contact the McDonald County Sheriff's Office. Information may also be submitted anonymously through your local crime reporting resources if available.

The McDonald County Sheriff's Office extends its condolences to the victim's family and loved ones and appreciates the public's patience and cooperation as investigators work to determine the circumstances surrounding this incident.

Kehoe signs health care legislation into law


(From Gov. Mike Kehoe)

Today, Governor Mike Kehoe signed House Bills (HB) 2372 and 2974 and Senate Bills (SB) 878, 999, 1019, and 1233 into law, reflecting Missouri's commitment to improving healthcare access, transparency, and protections for vulnerable populations.

“I was proud to sign six bills into law today that will improve healthcare services for Missourians across our state,” said Governor Kehoe. “From increasing telehealth access to improving the licensing process for healthcare providers, these bills play a critical role in moving Missouri's Rural Health Transformation Program forward. I would like to thank the members of the House and Senate for their work to protect our most vulnerable, hold insurance companies accountable, and change the landscape of healthcare access and outcomes in communities across the state."








SB 999, sponsored by Senator Brad Hudson and Representative Brian Seitz, modifies provisions relating to vulnerable persons. 

Creates the "Born-Alive Abortion Survivors Protection Act," extending legal rights to infants who survive an abortion attempt.

Expands the Pregnancy-Associated Mortality Review Board and tasks the board with tracking mortality patterns within maternity care deserts.

HB 2372, sponsored by Representative Tara Peters and Senator Mike Bernskoetter, modifies provisions relating to health care. 

Increases access to healthcare by allowing patients to establish relationships with physicians through telehealth interactions and by reducing barriers for ambulance services to provide primary and preventative care in underserved communities via community paramedics.

Provides patients with new protections against health insurance practices that limit access to anesthesia services and contrast-enhanced mammograms.








Increases transparency on hospital pricing and on health insurance prior authorization practices.
Authorizes the Department of Health and Senior Services to begin tracking and reporting Alpha Gal Syndrome.

HB 2974, sponsored by Representative Melanie Stinnett and Senator Jamie Burger, modifies provisions relating to licensure reciprocity, including waivers for health care professionals providing for telehealth services and certain interstate compacts. 

Specifies that a healthcare provider who has received license reciprocity in Missouri can provide telehealth services within the profession's scope of practice.

Allows physician assistants to practice across participating states without obtaining additional licenses.

Governor Kehoe also signed:

SB 878, sponsored by Senator Travis Fitzwater and Representative Bennie Cook, modifies provisions relating to pharmaceutical drugs and devices.

SB 1019, sponsored by Senator Sandy Crawford and Representative Jim Kalberloh, modifies several provisions relating to health care.

SB 1233, sponsored by Senator Curtis Trent and Representative Mike McGirl, modifies provisions relating to activities requiring licensure.

For more information on the legislation signed into law, visit house.mo.gov and senate.mo.gov. Photos from the bill signing are available on Governor Kehoe's Flickr page.

MoDOT offers update on MO 66/7th Street project


(From MoDOT)

Progress Update for Route 66 Improvement Project for Week of July 13

A project to make pavement, sidewalk, traffic and safety improvements along Missouri Route 66 (7th Street) in Joplin is underway. Here is an update of the work scheduled for the week of July 13.

Work scheduled:

-Contractor installing new sidewalk, curb and entrances between Florida Avenue and Ozark Avenue
Preparing for new roadway pavement between Ozark Avenue and the Canadian Pacific Kansas City (CPKC) Railroad tracks








-Placing hardware and pole bases for new signals at intersection with St. Louis Avenue

-Continue relocating sanitary sewer on south side of Route 66 (7thStreet)

-Liberty Electric continuing layout for new utility poles at intersection with St. Louis Avenue and supporting existing poles between St. Louis Avenue and Ozark Avenue as needed

-Missouri American Water relocating service tie-ins to new water line between Florida Avenue and McConnel Avenue

-Additional Missouri American Water crews working between Patterson Avenue and Florida Avenue and working on additional water line crossings as needed

-Spire continuing utility relocation work at intersection with Main Street

-AT&T coordinating with other utilities and the contractor for relocation of the pole at the southeast corner of intersection with St. Louis Avenue and planning for additional relocations between Pearl Avenue and Wall Avenue

-Bluebird Fiber continuing to bore new conduit between St. Louis Avenue and Murphy Boulevard on north side of Route 66 (7thStreet)

-Lumen Fiber continuing utility relocation work at Florida Avenue








-Allo Fiber coordinating with other utilities on additional crossings of Route 66 (7th Street) west of Main Street

-Sparklight Internet coordinating transfers onto new Liberty poles as they are installed

Traffic Impacts

At least one lane of Route 66 (7th Street) OPEN in both directions

Access to all business will be maintained at all times

Signs and message boards will alert drivers approaching the work zone








No signed detours

Drivers should find alternate routes around the work zone

Check MoDOT’s Traveler Information Map for road closings/traffic impacts

Weather and/or scheduling conflicts could alter the work schedule.

Project Details

The project will make improvements along the Route 66 (7th Street) corridor in Joplin between Jasper County Route P (Schifferdecker Avenue) and Loop 49 (Range Line Road).

As part of this project, the contractor will rebuild the pavement, bring sidewalks up to Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) standards, and upgrade and replace several traffic signals along the corridor.

This contract also includes a project to rehabilitate the Oak Street bridge over I-49 in Carthage. That project is likely to start in 2027.

Project Information:Prime Contractor: D&E Plumbing & Heating LLC, Nixa
Construction Cost: $61.6 million
Contract Completion Date: December 1, 2028

Stotts City schedules Board of Aldermen meeting


(From Stotts City Mayor Tracy Knight)

Mayor Tracy Knight has announced that the Stotts City Board of Aldermen will hold its upcoming meeting on Friday, July 17, 2026, at 7:00 p.m. in the First Baptist Church Library, the meeting location designated by city ordinance.

The meeting will address several important items concerning the operation and administration of the City of Stotts City, including:

* Appointment of an individual to fill the vacant Board of Aldermen seat.
* Consideration of the City Clerk position.
* Review of the Collector’s Report.







* Budget and financial discussions.
* Banking and financial access matters.
* Other items necessary for the conduct of city business.
* A closed session, as permitted under Missouri law, to discuss personnel matters.

Mayor Knight encourages residents to attend and remain engaged in the decisions affecting their community.

“The future of Stotts City depends on an informed and involved community. I encourage residents to attend, observe the meeting, and remain engaged as we continue working toward greater transparency, accountability, and responsible stewardship of public resources,” said Mayor Tracy Knight.








The meeting agenda is being released concurrently with this announcement and has been posted in accordance with Missouri’s Sunshine Law requirements.

Individuals needing reasonable accommodations under the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) are encouraged to contact the Mayor or the City Clerk prior to the meeting so appropriate arrangements can be made.


Jason Smith: Democrats' Communist values will destroy the American dream


(From Eighth District Congressman Jason Smith)

It’s no secret that the Democrat Party has been moving further and further to the left, proudly backing outrageous ideas and propping up socialists like New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani as its new face. This isn’t a fringe wing of their party anymore. These radicals are in control, and it should concern every American.

You don’t have to believe me — look no further than the votes Democrats are taking in Congress. In November of 2025, 98 House Democrats opposed a simple resolution denouncing socialism. In May, 173 Democrats voted against a simple resolution expressing support for our nation’s law enforcement and opposition to policies that undermine public safety. This is on top of nearly every House Democrat voting to defund the entire Department of Homeland Security unless the Trump administration eliminated the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency.








These are radical policies, and the Democrat Party has been undergoing a rapid shift to the left in recent years. Under President Biden, we saw $10 trillion in reckless spending, a cost-of-living crisis that hollowed out family budgets across Southeast Missouri, and a southern border so open it could hardly be considered a border at all. Americans rejected all of that in 2024 by overwhelmingly electing President Trump. Yet, instead of learning that lesson, the left-wing activist base is doubling down.

The contrast with Republicans couldn’t be clearer. Democrats have spent years defunding police departments, refusing to prosecute basic crimes, and vilifying the men and women who enforce our laws — including and especially the CBP officers keeping criminal illegal immigrants out of our communities. Republicans have done the opposite, consistently standing behind law enforcement and fighting to give them the resources they need to keep our communities safe.







Every single Democrat in the House and the Senate voted for what would’ve been the largest tax increase in American history. Republicans, on the other hand, passed the largest tax cutin American history with the Working Families Tax Cuts. Signed into law last Independence Day, that legislation permanently doubled the Child Tax Credit, eliminated taxes on tips and overtime, brought real relief to seniors, and delivered additional tax cuts to tens of millions of Americans. To put it all into perspective, a family of four making $73,000 or less is now completely free of federal income taxes. In fact, one House Democrat even suggested last week that the party’s platform would include repealing No Tax on Tips, No Tax on Overtime, and No Tax on Social Security.

No matter which way you slice it, Democrats are now voting for policies that are anti-American, mock those who serve our country, and embrace communist policies that would destroy the American Dream. Southeast Missourians don’t need a lecture on socialism from people who’ve never made a mortgage payment, plowed a field, or clocked in for their second shift of the day. We already know what works: lower taxes, law and order, and a strong belief in our nation’s greatness and opportunity. I’ll keep fighting to make sure Washington reflects those values, not the ones the Democrat Party is so proud to support.

Amendment 4 puts rural Missouri at center of fight over ballot power


By Jason Hancock

Supporters of Amendment 4 say it would give rural Missouri a stronger voice.

Antwann Rhodes says it would take one away.

Rhodes lives in Waynesville, a Pulaski County town of about 5,600 just outside Fort Leonard Wood, where he settled after retiring from the U.S. Army. He is a Realtor in south-central Missouri and treasurer of the Missouri Association of Realtors, the organization bankrolling the campaign against the Aug. 4 ballot measure.







To Rhodes, Amendment 4 is not rural Missouri’s answer to urban political power. It is a proposal that would make it harder for Missourians in small towns and big cities alike to use the initiative process when politicians in Jefferson City refuse to act.

“You basically are giving it up,” Rhodes said. “If you give up your constitutional right, your voice would not be heard.”

That argument is emerging as the central fault line in the final weeks before voters decide Amendment 4: Who actually speaks for rural Missouri and the small towns outside the state’s largest cities?

Missouri voters passed a sales tax cap. Under Amendment 4, it would have failed

Supporters, including rural Republicans and the Missouri Farm Bureau, argue the initiative petition process has allowed expensive campaigns powered by out-of-state money and urban voters to rewrite the state constitution over the objections of much of rural Missouri.

“When something only passes in St. Louis, Columbia, Kansas City and Springfield, that should tell you something,” said Doug Kerr, chairman of the Knox County Republican Central Committee. “And look at what it’s got us in the rest of the state.”

Recent citizen-led initiatives have expanded Medicaid, legalized recreational marijuana, approved sports betting and added abortion rights to the Missouri Constitution. Each passed statewide. Each was opposed by much of rural Missouri.

“Our voices are not being heard,” Kerr said. “We’re not just a democracy. We are a democratic republic, and the rights of the minority should at least be heard. And right now, they’re not.”

Opponents, including some small-town Realtors now campaigning against the measure, reject the idea that Amendment 4 protects rural voters. They say it would do the opposite — making it harder for them to use the initiative process when they disagree with lawmakers.

The proposal would require citizen-led constitutional amendments to win not only a statewide majority, but also a majority in each of Missouri’s eight congressional districts. That means an amendment could carry the state, win seven of eight districts and still fail if voters in a single district rejected it.

The requirement would apply only to amendments proposed by initiative petition. Constitutional amendments placed on the ballot by the legislature — including Amendment 4 itself — would still pass by simple statewide majority.







To supporters, that higher bar is the point. To opponents, it is the problem.

“You want to continue to maintain your right as a person that has a voice to be heard,” Rhodes said. “That’s what we’re here for.”

An underdog with a supermajority

State Rep. Ed Lewis, the Moberly Republican who sponsored Amendment 4, has spent months making the case that constitutional amendments should require broader geographic consensus.

He thinks the campaign is going to be buried in opposition money.

“If it’s going to be decided by who spends the most money on advertising, we probably will lose,” Lewis said, “because we know that the big-money donors have donated to fight it, because they want to still play with the constitution.”

Lewis said he is not running ads for Amendment 4. He cannot afford to.

“I barely have enough money to run ads for myself,” said Lewis, who is running in a crowded primary for a seat in the Missouri Senate.

It leaves the measure in an unusual position: a proposal placed on the ballot by Missouri’s Republican supermajority, endorsed by the state’s most powerful agricultural lobby and framed as a defense against big money in politics — preparing to be massively outspent.

On its most recent disclosure report, the main campaign backing Amendment 4 reported around $16,000 cash on hand. Opposition committees had raised millions, led by the Missouri Association of Realtors, which had contributed $4.1 million to Missourians for Fair Governance.

Lewis and his allies are betting on a different playbook.

“If we win this, it will be by grassroots efforts,” Lewis said. “It’ll be by people talking to another person and explaining why Amendment 4 is necessary.”







Amendment 4 was placed on the ballot last year during a special legislative session. Gov. Mike Kehoe moved it from the November ballot to the August primary, when turnout is expected to be smaller and more Republican.

The measure would also make the full text of initiative petitions available to voters with their ballots and add language to the Missouri Constitution related to foreign spending and petition fraud. But the campaign has centered on the district-by-district approval requirement.

The 2020 playbook

Lewis compared his campaign to the 2020 fight over a Republican-backed amendment that repealed key portions of Clean Missouri, the 2018 redistricting and ethics measure voters had previously approved.

In that campaign, supporters of the repeal were dramatically outspent. The Missouri Farm Bureau Fund for Real Representation spent about $45,000 supporting the measure, while the Clean Missouri campaign spent more than $7.1 million opposing it.

Voters narrowly approved the repeal.

“It’s going to be a lot like what the Farm Bureau did with Cleaner Missouri,” Lewis said. “Local representatives, local senators and the Farm Bureau, and the grassroots efforts, were able to explain to people why we needed a change.”

For Lewis, Amendment 4 is about forcing campaigns that want to alter the constitution to talk to more of Missouri.

“I think people understand why, at least in northern Missouri, in southern Missouri, in rural Missouri, why you’d want to vote for that,” he said.

Who speaks for rural Missouri

Missouri Farm Bureau, one of the state’s most influential agricultural groups, has endorsed Amendment 4. Its president, Garrett Hawkins, previously told The Independent the organization’s members have pushed for decades to overhaul the initiative process because they believe constitutional change has come to reflect money concentrated in cities rather than consensus across Missouri.

“These significant measures that ultimately are enshrined in the constitution, that have tremendous societal and budgetary implications, don’t start in rural communities,” Hawkins said in an interview last month.“We’re left out of the conversation until we start seeing multimillion-dollar ad campaigns on TV, or until we walk into the ballot box to take a position on them.”

Jason Soseman, chairman of the Adair County Republican Central Committee and the 18th Senatorial District Republican Committee, supports the measure — though he said he would have preferred a lower threshold, perhaps requiring an amendment to pass in six of eight districts rather than all eight.

“I would have liked to have seen at least a six-two majority instead of an eight majority,” Soseman said.

But Missouri, he argued, needs to respond to the money pouring into ballot campaigns.

“We have to do something to stop all of this out-of-state money that pours in on different subjects,” he said.

Derek Schriewer, a Realtor from Washington, Mo., said that argument misses what Amendment 4 would actually do.

Schriewer has lived in the Franklin County city of about 16,000 his entire life. He is the immediate past president of the Missouri Association of Realtors, and he views the initiative process as a way for citizens to hold lawmakers accountable when the legislature refuses to act.

“I view it as a politician’s power grab,” Schriewer said. “They are trying to take away a typical function that we have had for over 100 years for citizens to be able to hold politicians accountable.”

Because the measure’s district-by-district math cuts both ways, Schriewer argues, it would hobble rural voters the moment they wanted to use the initiative process themselves.

“When rural Missourians really have an issue that they want to bring to the initiative petition, all it would take is one district — whether it be urban or another rural district — to override all of the other rural districts,” he said.

The result, Schriewer said, would be the opposite of what supporters are promising.







Rhodes hears the rural framing and rejects it, too.

“Me being in central Missouri, not being from a big city, the impact is tremendous,” he said. “It will hurt us.”
Rhodes grew up in Memphis, Tennessee, joined the Army at 18 and served for 20 years. He retired near Fort Leonard Wood, started a family in Waynesville and entered real estate.

He said he stayed there because he loved the schools, the pace of life and the ability to see the effect of his work in a smaller community.

“When you’re really there to help them, you can see your impact, and they can see the impact,” Rhodes said. “And we support one another.”

That is why, he said, Amendment 4 concerns him.

He sees the initiative process as a tool for people who may not have power in Jefferson City but still deserve a way to act when they believe lawmakers are ignoring them.

“I’ve always been a person that’s going to be on the team and be in the fight,” Rhodes said, “and to go for people who are small that are afraid to voice their opinion.”

What would have failed

The debate follows a string of ballot measures in which Missouri voters approved policies opposed by Republican lawmakers.

Voters expanded Medicaid in 2020, legalized recreational marijuana in 2022 and approved sports betting and abortion rights in 2024, along with a minimum wage increase and paid sick leave requirement lawmakers later repealed.

A review of certified election returns by The Independent found Amendment 4 would have blocked every citizen-led constitutional amendment Missouri voters have approved since 2020. Each passed statewide. None carried all eight congressional districts under the maps in place at the time.

But the proposal would not only affect measures associated with progressive causes.

The Independent found that a 2016 amendment barring state and local governments from imposing new sales taxes on most services — backed by business groups, funded by the Missouri Association of Realtors and approved with nearly 57% of the vote — would also have failed. It won statewide by more than 375,000 votes but lost the St. Louis-anchored 1st Congressional District by roughly 31,500.

Nationally, states have used different rules to make ballot measures harder to pass, including supermajority requirements for some measures and geographic requirements for signature gathering. But no state currently requires voter approval in each congressional district.

Soseman said he regularly hears the criticism that Amendment 4 applies only to citizen-led amendments while lawmakers’ proposals still pass by simple majority. His answer is that legislators already answer to voters everywhere.







“They’re elected by the people already,” he said. “Their representatives in each and every district all across the state, they are elected, so there doesn’t have to be quite the threshold.”

‘Standing with my ancestors’

Missouri’s initiative and referendum process dates to 1908, when voters approved a constitutional amendment giving citizens the power to propose laws and constitutional amendments themselves.
That history is where Schriewer plants his flag.

“I like saying I’m standing with my ancestors,” he said. “We’re Missourians all of our lives, and I’m standing with everything they’ve decided in the past. I’m standing with the way we’ve been handling ourselves in Missouri for over 100 years.”

Lewis, for his part, is standing on the same ground — rural Missouri, suspicious of big money — and asking voters to reach the opposite conclusion.

“If we win this,” he said, “it will be by grassroots efforts. It’ll be by people talking to another person.”

The Independent’s Rudi Keller contributed to this story.

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.

Saturday, July 11, 2026

Matt Miller on leave from ESPN after successful surgery to remove left arm

Matt Miller is taking a leave from his job as an NFL draft analyst for ESPN after a successful surgery to remove his left arm, according to a statement posted on his X account Friday.

A quick update: The surgery to remove my left arm was successful with hopes of an eventual prosthetic replacement. 

Similarly, the femur and patella surgeries were also successful and the fantastic surgery team was able to save my left leg. 

 To best focus on my healing and recovery, I’m stepping away indefinitely and will be placed on leave from ESPN. Thank you to all for the prayers and thoughts; please keep them coming.







Miller, 42, Webb City, was injured in a June 17 crash on MO 96 a mile and a half west of Oronogo that occurred when the 2023 Ford Bronco Miller was driving crossed the center line and was struck by a 2024 International driven by a 28-year-old Springfield man.

The Missouri Attorney General's office confirmed last week that it is investigating Miller's involvement with numerous charities and fantasy football leagues.

The Missouri Attorney General’s Office encourages consumers who believe they have been misled to contact us. Attorney General (Catherine) Hanaway takes consumer protection very seriously, and we will work diligently to uncover the facts.
Missouri Attorney General investigating ESPN NFL Draft analyst Matt Miller

 

Slip on freshly mopped floor leads to lawsuit against Neosho McDonald's


Neosho McDonald's is at a fault after a Neosho woman was injured when she fell on a "freshly mopped floor," according to a lawsuit filed Thursday in Newton County Circuit Court.

Elizabeth Teonna Plappert, Neosho, who is represented by Keegan Tinney of the Joplin firm of Dreyer & Tinney, LLC, is asking for "fair and reasonable damages" and is asking for a jury trial.

Listed as defendants are LBJ-Neosho LLC doing business as McDonald's and two Jane Doe defendants, the manager and the mopper.







From the petition:

On or about January 27, 2026 Plaintiff was on the premises as a customer and invitee of the Defendants.

As Plaintiff entered the lobby, she fell backwards on the freshly mopped floor that had become slippery from the soapy water.

Defendants knew, or by exercising ordinary care, could have known of this dangerous condition.

The fall of Plaintiff, and her resulting injury as below described, was the direct and proximate result of the negligence of the Defendants in failing to use ordinary care, to wit:

a. Defendants failed to instruct employees on properly mopping floors;

b. Defendants failed to put up signage to alert others of the slippery conditions;

c. Defendants knew, or in the exercise of ordinary care should have known, that by not completely clearing the parking lot and sidewalk would create a dangerous and hazardous condition and that patrons such as Plaintiff would fall and be injured as a direct result; and








d. Further, Defendants, as operators of the premises, knew or should have known, that the type, kind, and condition of the area would create a dangerous and unreasonable risk of harm to Defendants’ patrons, yet the Defendants failed to keep the area free of hazardous conditions.

As a direct and proximate result of the aforesaid negligence, carelessness, faults, and omissions of Defendants, as set out above, Plaintiff sustained bodily injuries that included a fracture to her sacral vertebrae, extreme pain and suffering, past, present and future, mental anguish, humiliation, and inconvenience.

Plaintiff has incurred and will continue to incur a substantial sum for injury-related medical care and treatment.

Plaintiff has also suffered a loss of enjoyment of life in that her activities have and will continue to be limited by the injury.

Four businesses fail Joplin Health Department inspections

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

Los Primos, 2207 W. 7th Street, Landmark Hospital, 2040 W. 32nd Street, Royale Cinema Lounge, 715 E. Broadway Avenue and Microtel Inn & Suites Breakfast, 4101 S. Richard Joseph Boulevard.

The failed inspection for Microtel Inn & Suites Breakfast was a followup to a failed inspection last week.

Nine establishments passed their inspections.







Los Primos

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

Landmark Hospital

Landmark Hospital received a priority violation for having the cooler running above 41 degrees.

Royale Cinema Lounge

Royale Cinema Lounge received two priority violations and four core violations.

The priority violations were for having rice in the prep cooler with missing or improper date marking and for having milk in the display cooler being cold held above 41 degrees. Core violations can be found at this link.








Microtel Inn & Suites Breakfast

Microtel Inn & Suites Breakfast received three priority violations.

The business was cited for having eggs on the buffet being hot held below 135 degrees, having eggs, gravy and cream cheese spread in the upright cooler being cold held above 41 degrees and for having orange juice on the buffet being cold held above 41 degrees.

***
Establishments passing their inspections were:

QuikTrip, 3214 S. Main Street

Kentucky Fried Chicken, 2601 W. 7th Street (re-inspection)

La Hacienda Mexican Grill, 825 S. Maiden Lane

Food Mart, 3308 E. 32nd Street (re-inspection)

Joplin Senior Center, 2616 S. Picher Avenue

Fred & Red's, 1719 S. Main Street

Domino's, 1701 W. 7th Street

Blackthorn Pizza and Pub, 510 S. Joplin Avenue

Panera Bread, 2101 S. Range Line Road