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Missouri Senate Chamber (Credit: Mo Senate)
Missouri has a storied history of…complicated US Senate races. In 2000, then-Governor Mel Carnahan (a Democrat) was vying for the Senate seat held by John Ashcroft (a Republican, who would subsequently be appointed as Attorney General by George W. Bush.) Tragically, Mel, his son, Randy, and his chief of staff, Chris Sifford, were killed in a plane crash on October 16, 2000. Just three weeks before the election (set for November 7, 2000), there arose an immediate question as to what would happen with the Senate race.
Under Missouri Law, Carnahan’s name could not be removed from the ballot. Carnahan’s Lt. Governor, Roger Wilson (full disclosure I interned for Roger my final semester in college), became governor and promised to appoint Carnahan’s widow, Jean, to the seat in the event that Carnahan won which he did, by two points. (As an aside, anyone who contends Missouri voters were goobers who unwittingly elected a dead man to
By TOMMY REZAC
St. Joseph Post
Criminal charges have been filed against a St. Joseph Police sergeant who allegedly assaulted a suspect in handcuffs.
Buchanan County Attorney Ron R. Holliday says charges have been filed against St. Joseph Police Sgt. James W. Langston for assaulting a suspect identified as Navada M. McEvoy.
The assault apparently happened while McEvoy was under arrest, handcuffed and not physically resisting officers, according to Holliday.
Langston is charged with fourth-degree assault against a “special victim.” It’s alleged McEvoy was a special victim under Missouri Law, because he was handcuffed and thus a “vulnerable person,” as specified by state statute.