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, July 03, 2026
Three businesses fail Joplin Health Department inspections
Missouri Attorney General investigating ESPN NFL Draft analyst Matt Miller
ESPN NFL Draft Analyst Matt Miller, a Webb City resident, is being investigated by the Missouri Attorney General's office, according to a report on the website Awful Announcing.
The website said the attorney general's office said it has "an open investigation into this issue."
The investigation was confirmed by USA Today, which received the following statement from the attorney general's office:
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.
Miller was flown to Mercy Joplin where he was treated for numerous fractures and had to have an arm amputated.
After the accident and a subsequent Go Fund Me page was established for Miller's expenses, Awful Announcing, Reddit and other social media sites were bombarded with complaints about fantasy sports leagues and charities operated by Miller.
From Awful Announcing:
Much of the scrutiny of Miller centers on the framing of these leagues and other ventures as being tied to his charitable efforts. Miller has said his 417 Foundation started in 2013, inspired by his mother’s work with low-income preschoolers in Joplin.Miller’s exceptional knowledge and expertise on all aspects of the NFL draft will continue to provide fans with informative information year-round on ESPN.com and ESPN+, specifically in the form of prospect and position rankings, multiple mock drafts and the latest draft intel from scouts around the league. As he has done for the past four years since joining ESPN, Miller will appear across SportsCenter, Get Up, NFL Live, mock draft specials and on ESPN+ exclusive specials during NFL draft season.
For the third year in a row, Miller will have a seat at the desk on day three of the 2025 NFL draft (Sat., April 26, 12 p.m. ET, ESPN/ABC), joining Mel Kiper Jr., Louis Riddick, Field Yates and Rece Davis, for the entirety of ESPN’s coverage of the final day of the NFL draft (rounds 4-7). Further details on ESPN’s coverage of the 2025 NFL Draft will become available in late March on ESPN Press Room.
Before joining ESPN in February 2021, Miller served as the lead NFL draft analyst and insider at Bleacher Report from 2010-21, where he helped launch The Draft Scout. Prior to Bleacher Report, Miller worked as Director of Scouting for New Era Scouting from 2006-10 and a coach and recruiting coordinator for the CFL’s Joplin Crusaders (2006-08).
Audit finds former Gov. Mike Parson’s state flights often lacked public purpose
Former Gov. Mike Parson’s office spent $375,000 flying him around on state aircraft without keeping flight records showing why, and for a third of those flights auditors could not identify any state business purpose.
For Parson, who spent much of his six and a half years in office fending off questions about his travel habits, the audit lands as an official coda to a familiar controversy: a governor whose air travel had already drawn years of scrutiny, and a paper trail that rarely explained what public business he was conducting or why taxpayers were paying for it.
Parson, in a written response included in the report, strongly disagreed with what he called “so-called findings,” saying none of the issues cited “constitute unethical conduct” and reflect “differences in interpretation or perception — not wrongdoing.”
The audit covered 174 trips Parson took on state aircraft, primarily during the final 18 months of his term. For every one of them, flight records listed only a generic purpose — typically “Flight for Governor Parson.”
Two moments that explain Mike Parson’s six years as Missouri governor
Because the governor’s office never archived Parson’s official calendar and his press releases were removed from the state website when his term ended, auditors were forced to reconstruct his itinerary using the Wayback Machine, an internet archive. Even then, they could not identify a state business purpose for 58 of the 174 flights.
Fifty-three trips — 30% — included a stop in Bolivar, where Parson lives. Eight of those flights went to Bolivar and nowhere else. Parson told auditors he often stopped there for personal business, so auditors excluded the Bolivar legs from their analysis entirely.
The audit also flagged 16 flights Parson took around the state in 2024 for trips that included signing events for “No Turnin’ Back,” his commemorative biography. On most of those trips, Parson also conducted other business. But one flight — to Marceline, home of the book’s publisher — had no purpose other than kicking off the book tour, according to the governor’s own media advisory.
The flight cost taxpayers $1,386.
And a December 2023 flight to Arlington, Texas, where Parson watched the University of Missouri play in the Cotton Bowl, carried the spouses of his chief of staff and deputy chief of staff — a violation of state policy, which bars everyone but state employees, officials and the first family from state aircraft.
Auditors noted the same travel documentation failures had appeared in the previous four audits of the office.
A familiar controversy
The findings fit a pattern that has trailed Parson for nearly his entire tenure.
Within his first two years in office, the St. Joseph News-Press documented 130 trips on the state-owned Beechcraft King Air 250 — including 20 to Bolivar. When state aircraft wouldn’t do, Parson turned to private planes supplied by donors and paid for by Uniting Missouri, the political action committee formed to support his 2020 campaign.
In December 2019, Parson flew to Washington, D.C., on the private plane of Rick DeStefane, a nursing home executive whose company had paid $8.3 million to settle a federal Medicare fraud investigation and whose facilities had racked up health and safety citations. DeStefane rode along, joined Parson at the White House and posted photos of the trip on Snapchat. Weeks later, Parson flew to the Super Bowl in Miami on the plane of an Independence businessman.
A Democratic official filed an ethics complaint arguing the flights amounted to illegal coordination between Parson and the PAC. The Missouri Ethics Commission dismissed the coordination allegation but fined Uniting Missouri $2,000 in 2020 for failing to properly report the value of the two flights.
Pro-Parson PAC has spent $110K on private plane expenses so far in 2023
The private travel never stopped. In the first three months of 2023 alone, Uniting Missouri spent more than $110,000 on private planes, most of it paid to an aviation company connected to lobbyist and longtime Parson adviser Steve Tilley — even as Parson insisted he was done with elected office.
The new audit examined only state-funded travel. But it identified the same underlying problem that dogged the private flights: no one could say, on paper, what the public was getting for the money.
Auditors also found the state paid $594 for two nights of lodging in Hawaii for Parson and the First Lady during an October 2023 trip his staff described as a vacation. Parson personally reimbursed the other three nights, saying a battleship visit and crew luncheon that justified the charge appeared reasonable but was never documented.
Payments ‘in violation of state policy’
The travel findings were one item on a longer list.
The audit found the office paid $28,058 in compensatory time to four of its highest-paid employees — the chief of staff, deputy chief of staff, general counsel and legislative director, who earned between roughly $120,000 and $186,000 a year — in violation of a state rule that bars overtime pay for top-level staff except in “unusual circumstances.”
The office kept no timesheets documenting the extra hours. Without them, auditors wrote, the office cannot demonstrate the payments weren’t bonuses — which the Missouri Constitution prohibits for public employees.
Auditors also flagged $30,449 in tuition reimbursements to three employees that violated office or state policy.
That included $18,000 to Parson’s chief of staff for a second master’s degree — pursued while office policy barred reimbursement for duplicate degrees — with the final $3,000 approved after he had stepped down to part-time work in the administration’s waning days. When he began repaying the money after resigning his full-time post, as office policy required, Parson personally waived the remaining balance after $4,200.
The office also used $472,000 of its own appropriations to absorb other agencies’ expenses in fiscal year 2024 — including a bathroom remodel, an HVAC replacement and a mahogany door in the Capitol, plus $50,000 toward a trade mission billed to the Department of Economic Development. There were no written agreements and no documentation explaining the transfers, which auditors said “circumvents the appropriation process” and obscures the true cost of running the office.
Then there are the records that simply cannot be found. State law required Parson’s office to transfer its official records to the State Archives when his term ended. It didn’t. Parson’s calendar, the office’s employee manual and policies, its Sunshine Law request log and its internal control plan are all missing — unlocatable by his former staff, by Gov. Mike Kehoe’s administration and by the archives.
‘We have no knowledge’
Kehoe’s office, in a response signed by chief of staff Adam Gresham, kept its distance. No one in a policymaking role under Kehoe served during the audit period, Gresham wrote, and “we have no knowledge of the facts discussed in the auditor’s report.” He added that most findings don’t reflect current practice: the office pays no compensatory time, handles travel differently and maintains a Sunshine Law log.
Parson was less measured. Beyond disputing the findings, he complained that a departed administration “no longer” has “access to their records,” writing that records “are placed in archive, so you exclusively can construe or neglect what records you decide to review.”
Fitzpatrick — whose statewide career began when Parson appointed him treasurer in 2018 — answered that argument directly in the report. The problem, the auditor noted, is that the records were never placed in the archive at all.
Parson’s response “does not indicate any specific inaccuracies or misinterpretations in the report,” Fitzpatrick wrote, and the findings are “supported by sufficient and appropriate evidence.”
Financially challenged Joplin Globe dropping Peanuts, Garfield, Beetle Bailey from comics lineup
In a column in today's Joplin Globe, Editor Andy Ostmeyer announced the newspaper is eliminating some of its comics, including Peanuts, Garfield and Beetle Bailey.
The reason, as you might expect, is money.
“Peanuts,” which has been appearing in reruns, and “Garfield” are being dropped from our weekend lineup. Both are among our most expensive comics at a time when we are having to pay careful attention to our budget.
While Peanuts and Garfield are being completely removed from the print edition, Beetle Bailey, which was inspired by cartoonist Mort Walker's experiences while stationed at Camp Crowder in Neosho, will continue to be included in the weekend edition.
Ostmeyer notes that all of the comics remain available on a link on the Globe's website.
What he doesn't mention is that many of the older readers, the ones who are most loyal to newspapers, don't ever visit the Globe's website and may never see their favorite comics again.
Bolivar woman charged with stealing from veterans' bingo proceeds
(From Missouri State Highway Patrol)Captain Kevin J. Hunter, commanding officer of the Missouri State Highway Patrol's Gaming Division, announces the results of an investigation into a theft from the Disabled American Veterans (DAV) Memorial Chapter 66 in Bolivar, MO.
The investigation was conducted by members of the Gaming Division’s Investigations Section, which is responsible for criminal and regulatory investigations related to sports wagering, fantasy sports, and charitable games. The Patrol was assisted by the Missouri Gaming Commission (MGC).
During a routine audit of the DAV Memorial Chapter 66, regulatory auditors from MGC’s Charitable Games Division identified numerous improper and unreported transactions from the DAV’s charitable bingo account. The auditors' findings were reported to Gaming Division investigators. These audit findings prompted an additional investigation into the use of charitable bingo proceeds.
As a result of these investigations, on Tuesday, June 30, 2026, the Polk County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office formally charged Anna Theresa Greene, 59, of Bolivar, MO, with Stealing - $750 or more (class D felony).
The above charge is a mere accusation and is not evidence of guilt. Evidence in support of this charge must be presented before a court of competent jurisdiction, whose duty is to determine guilt or innocence.
Thursday, July 02, 2026
Springfield Police investigate murder-suicide in Mercy Hospital parking garage
(From the Springfield Police Department)Early this morning, Russell Ecton, 60, shot and killed Jacqueline Ecton, 59, before he died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound.
This incident is Springfield’s 7th homicide investigation for 2026.
INCIDENT DETAILS
On July 2, 2026, at 4:50 a.m., the Springfield Police Department responded to a report of a shooting in a parking garage at 1235 E. Cherokee, Mercy Hospital.
Officers arrived and located a deceased man, 60-year-old Russell Ecton, in the parking garage and an injured woman, 59-year-old Jacqueline Ecton, who was transported to the hospital, where she died.
Detectives continue to investigate and are asking anyone who has information about this incident to contact the Springfield Police Department at 417-864-1810 or make an anonymous call to Crime Stoppers at 417-869-TIPS (8477)
Joplin man indicted for four felonies in connection with February 28 murder
A Joplin man who was already being held on a federal weapons charge was indicted on that charge and three others Tuesday in U. S. District Court for the Western District of Missouri.
Andre E. Swindell, 41, was charged with possession of cocaine with intent to distribute, possession of marijuana to intent to distribute, possessing a weapon in furtherance of drug trafficking and for being a felon in possession of firearm.
The initial complaint against Swindell was filed June 5 alleging Joplin Police Department officers found weapons during a search warrant execution at his home February 28. The new charges also stem from that search.
The Jasper County Prosecuting Attorney's office charged Swindell with first-degree murder, armed criminal action and felon in possession of a firearm in connection to the shooting death of Anthony Campbell February 28.
Swindell's arraignment on the federal charges is scheduled for 11:15 a.m. July 9 in U. S. District Court in Springfield.
Guatemalan national indicted for illegal reentry after Barry County arrest
(From the U. S. Attorney for the Western District of Missouri)A Guatemalan National was indicted by Grand Jury on June 30, 2026, for illegal re-entry into the United States after being previously deported.
Julien Cristobal-Perez, 62, was indicted for an offense that occurred on May 25, 2026, in Barry County, Mo., related to his illegal re-entry after being previously deported from the United States.
This case is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Patrick Carney. It was investigated by the Department of Homeland Security-Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Removal Operations, and the Monett, Missouri, Police Department.
The charges contained in this indictment are simply accusations, and not evidence of guilt. Evidence supporting the charges must be presented to a federal trial jury, whose duty is to determine guilt or innocence.
Joplin man killed in motorcycle accident on Reinmiller Road
Agenda posted for Joplin City Council meeting
MONDAY, JULY 6, 2026
5th FLOOR COUNCIL CHAMBERS
602 S. MAIN ST. JOPLIN MO
6:00 P.M.
Call To Order
Pledge of Allegiance of the United States of America
Roll Call
Presentations
Finalization Of Consent Agenda
Reports And Communications
News From The Public Information Office
Citizen Requests And Petitions
LaLanya Boothe
Frank Thompson
Public Hearings
Public Hearing Procedures
COUNCIL BILL NO. 2026-270
AN ORDINANCE amending Ordinance No. 2022-119, passed by the Council of the City of Joplin, Missouri, August 1, 2022, by removing from District C-1 (Neighborhood Commercial) and District R-1 (Single-Family Residential) and include in District R-2 (Two-Family Residential) property as described below and generally known as 2601 S Joplin Ave, Jasper County, Missouri.
COUNCIL BILL NO. 2026-271
AN ORDINANCE amending Ordinance No. 2022-119, passed by the Council of the City of Joplin, Missouri, August 1, 2022 to adopt specific use standards for data centers.
RESOLUTION NO. 2026-014
A RESOLUTION granting a Special Use Permit (1st Request) for a boutique, located at 612 West E Street, City of Joplin, Jasper County, Missouri.
Consent Agenda
Minutes Of The June 15, 2026, Joplin City Council Meeting
COUNCIL BILL NO. 2026-129
AN ORDINANCE approving the City of Joplin to enter into an agreement with Emery Sapp & Sons (ESS) in the amount of One Million Two Hundred Nine Thousand One Hundred Eighty-Seven Dollars and 74/100 ($1,209,187.74) for the North Perimeter Road Reconstruction at the Joplin Regional Airport, and authorizing the City Manager or his designee to execute this agreement by and on behalf of the City of Joplin, and amending the Annual Budget of the City of Joplin for the Fiscal Year 2025-2026 as adopted by Ordinance 2025-143 on October 20, 2025; and, setting a date when this Ordinance shall become effective.
COUNCIL BILL NO. 2026-130
AN ORDINANCE approving the City of Joplin to enter into an agreement with Sprouls Construction Inc. in the amount of Five Million Three Hundred Forty-Five Thousand Four Hundred Twenty-Five and 65/100 dollars ($5,345,425.65) for construction of the Main Street Streetscape 8th Street to 15th Street project and authorizing the City Manager or his designee to execute the same by and on behalf of the City of Joplin; amending the Annual Budget of the City of Joplin for the Fiscal Year 2025-2026 as adopted by Ordinance 2025-143 on October 20, 2025; and setting a date when this Ordinance shall become effective.
COUNCIL BILL NO. 2026-132
AN ORDINANCE approving the City of Joplin to enter into an agreement with Crawford, Murphy & Tilly (CMT) in the not to exceed amount of One Hundred Seventy-Nine Thousand One Hundred Eighty-Six Dollars and 03/100 ($179,186.03) for construction management services for the North Perimeter Road Reconstruction at the Joplin Regional Airport, and authorizing the City Manager or his designee to execute this agreement by and on behalf of the City of Joplin, and amending the Annual Budget of the City of Joplin for the Fiscal Year 2025-2026 as adopted by Ordinance 2025-143 on October 20, 2025; and, setting a date when this Ordinance shall become effective.
COUNCIL BILL NO. 2026-133
AN ORDINANCE authorizing the City of Joplin to enter into an agreement with Signature Dirtworx, LLC for the 32nd Street and Quail Ave. Sewer Extension Project in the amount of One Hundred Forty-One Thousand Three Hundred Thirty-Five and 65/100 DOLLARS ($141,335.65) and authorizing the City Manager or his designee to execute the same by and on behalf of the City of Joplin; and, setting a date when this Ordinance shall become effective.
COUNCIL BILL NO. 2026-615
AN ORDINANCE approving a Lease agreement with Heart of America Tournaments, LLC. the land and improvements commonly known as Joe Becker Baseball Stadium with Clubhouse; and Wendell Redden Stadium, and the Gene Bassman Softball Complex; authorizing the City Manager to execute said Lease Agreement by and on behalf of the City of Joplin.
Resolutions
Ordinances - Expedited
COUNCIL BILL NO. 2026-352
AN ORDINANCE approving the contract by and between the City of Joplin and Prime Contracting Inc. for the demolition of the structure(s) and clearing of a lot located at 2027 S. Bird Ave providing how the cost thereof shall be paid; how the assessment thereof shall be made; and containing an expedited ordinance.
Ordinances - First Reading
COUNCIL BILL NO. 2026-131
AN ORDINANCE approving the City of Joplin to enter into an agreement with Blevins Asphalt in the amount of One Hundred Eighty-Four Thousand Six Hundred Sixty-Five and 40/100 Dollars ($184,665.40) for the Mill and Overlay of a portion of the General Aviation Terminal Parking Lot at the Joplin Regional Airport, and authorizing the City Manager or his designee to execute this agreement by and on behalf of the City of Joplin; and, amending the Annual Budget of the City of Joplin for the Fiscal Year 2025-2026 as adopted by Ordinance 2025-143 on October 20, 2025; and setting an effective date.
COUNCIL BILL NO. 2026-135
AN ORDINANCE approving an agreement with Cunningham Investment Properties, LLC, to provide sanitary sewer service to a tract of land located East of Coyote Drive and north of I-44 HWY in Newton County, Missouri, authorizing the City Manager, or his designee to execute the same by and on behalf of the City of Joplin; and setting a date when this ordinance shall become effective.
COUNCIL BILL NO. 2026-136
AN ORDINANCE approving Work Authorization OLS-OC-26-03 with Olsson in the not to exceed amount of Three Hundred Nine Thousand Five Hundred Ten and 00/100 dollars ($309,510.00) for professional engineering services for the Davis Boulevard Improvements project and authorizing the City Manager or his designee to execute the same by and on behalf of the City of Joplin; and setting a date when this Ordinance shall become effective.
COUNCIL BILL NO. 2026-272
AN ORDINANCE establishing grades and accepting the Final Plat of the Prospect Village Addition located near the Southeast corner of Geneva Ave and 20th St, in the City of Joplin, Jasper County, Missouri
COUNCIL BILL NO. 2026-450
AN ORDINANCE authorizing a Program Services Contract, by and between the State of Missouri, Department of Health and Senior Services, and the City of Joplin, Missouri, for the City of Joplin Health Department to receive compensation, for Thirty Nine Thousand, Nine Hundred Fifty Four Dollars, no cents, ($39,954.00); and, authorizing the City Manager to execute the same by and on behalf of the City of Joplin, Missouri; and, setting a date when this Ordinance shall become effective.
COUNCIL BILL NO. 2026-613
AN ORDINANCE approving a Purchase Order to be issued to SHI/Microsoft, to cover the annual support payment for the financial software and related systems the amount of $247,932.42, was budgeted and approved for FY2026 by Council during the budget process and finalized by Ordinance 2025-143 on October 20, 2025; and establishing a date when it shall become effective.









