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AP-US-RACIAL-INJUSTICE-MISSOURI
Parson: Trump ‘focused’ on situation with St. Louis couple
O’FALLON, Mo. (AP) — Missouri Gov. Mike Parson said President Donald Trump is focused on and concerned about the possibility that a white St. Louis couple could face criminal charges for displaying guns as they defended their home during a racial injustice protest. Parson said during a news conference Tuesday that he had just been on the phone with Trump and U.S. Attorney General William Barr. The phone call came amid reports that St. Louis Circuit Attorney Kim Gardner, a Democrat, may file charges against Mark and Patricia McCloskey, who wielded guns as protesters marched by their Renaissance palazzo-style mansion on June 28.
VIRUS OUTBREAK-MISSOURI
Missouri reports 936 confirmed new coronavirus cases
ST. CHARLES, Mo. (AP) — Missouri’s health department has reported 936 confirmed new cases of the coronavirus, by far the largest number reported in the state in a single day since the pandemic began. State data on Tuesday also shows that hospitalizations are rising. Around Missouri, 932 people were hospitalized for COVID-19 as of July 10, the most recent available date. That is the highest total since 984 people were hospitalized on May 5. One expert believes people were “lulled into a false sense of security” about the virus. Republican Gov. Mike Parson says the state is in a better position than four months ago.
DILUTED DRUGS-FORMER PHARMACIST
Victims’ lawyer: Drug-diluting pharmacist set to be released
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — An attorney for victims of a man who diluted tens of thousands of prescriptions says the former Missouri pharmacist is being released from prison early because of the coronavirus. The Kansas City Star reports that Michael Ketchmark called on officials to reverse their decision in the case of Robert Courtney. The 67-year-old former Kansas City pharmacist was sentenced to 30 years in prison in December 2002 after admitting to diluting the drugs to boost profits. But Ketchmark told the newspaper he was informed that Courtney could be released as early as this week to a halfway house and then to home confinement. The Bureau of Prisons didn’t immediately return messages from the AP seeking comment.
VIOLENCE-KANSAS CITY
Mixed response to federal crime fighting help in Kansas City
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — A new effort to combat violent crime in Kansas City through an infusion of 100 agents from the FBI and other federal agencies has been greeted with a mixture of praise and concern from community leaders. KCUR reports that supporters of the program that the White House announced last week said the city needs help as its homicide count for the year soars. But others want funding to focus on community investment and repairing the relationship between police officers and Black residents. A police spokesman said the federal agents will be involved with investigations and prosecution of violent crime as opposed to routine street patrols.
DOUBLE HOMICIDE-GREITENS
Missouri ex-governor rushes to scene of double homicide
ST. LOUIS (AP) — Police say two men have died in a shooting near Saint Louis University, as former Missouri Gov. Eric Greitens rushed to the shooting scene to help. St. Louis television station KTVI reports that Greitens and a friend were in the area having dinner when a barrage of gunshots rang out just after 8 p.m. Monday. Greitens and the friend rushed to the scene and rendered first aid to the victims until medics arrived. Police say a 20-year-old man died at the scene, and a 21-year-old man later died at a hospital. The names of the victims have not been released.
CASINO LAYOFFS-BOYD GAMING
Casino company Boyd Gaming laying off workers in 10 states
LAS VEGAS (AP) — A U.S. casino company with 29 properties in 10 states is laying off thousands of employees, citing a slow restart to business following closures due to the coronavirus pandemic. Las Vegas-based Boyd Gaming Corp. said in a statement Monday that an unspecified number of furloughed employees will not return to work. The Las Vegas Review-Journal reported 2,500 company workers in Nevada could be affected. The publicly traded company had about 10,000 employees in Nevada and another 14,300 nationally, according to its last annual report. It also has properties in Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, Ohio and Pennsylvania.
RACIAL INJUSTICE-MISSOURI STATUTES
Jackson County voters to decide whether to remove statutes
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Voters will decide in November whether to remove the statutes of President Andrew Jackson from the downtown Kansas City courthouse and the Historic Truman Courthouse in Independence. The Kansas City Star reports that the seven white members of the Jackson County legislature voted Monday to put the local question on their general election ballot. Its two Black members voted against it, urging their colleagues to have the courage to make the decision themselves. Andrew Jackson, for whom Jackson County is named, was both a slave owner and oversaw the forceful removal of Native Americans from their homes.
KANSAS CITY SHOOTING DEATH
Police: Man found shot in Kansas City dies at hospital
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Police say a man found with gunshot wounds on a Kansas City street has died. Police say in a news release that officers were called to the area north of Independence Plaza just after 9 p.m. Monday for a report of gunshots and a person lying in the street. Arriving officers found the man unresponsive, and he was taken to a hospital, where he died. Police say they have no information on suspects in the killing and have asked the public to call police with any information on the crime. Data compiled by the Kansas City Star shows the death was the city’s 105th homicide this year.
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