Man allegedly killed mother of his children in Long Beach, smuggled body to Mexico, prosecutors say

By Anabel Munoz

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    TIJUANA, Mexico (KABC) — A man has been taken into custody in Mexico after he allegedly killed the mother of his children in Long Beach and crossed the border in an attempt to hide her body in Baja California, where she was found deceased, Mexican prosecutors said.

The victim’s 26-year-old son identified her as Aracely Romero Acevedo in a brief interview with ABC7.

According to the Baja California state attorney general’s office, about 8:30 p.m. Saturday a report was received of a deceased person inside a vehicle in the El Centenario district in La Paz.

Emergency responders confirmed that the victim was found in the passenger seat with no vital signs and with visible indications of violence, including possible strangulation.

A man identified only as “Erik N,” the victim’s alleged romantic partner, was taken into custody at the scene, the attorney general’s office said in a statement. He is suspected of committing the crime in Long Beach and then crossing the border into Tijuana to hide the woman’s body.

“Erik N.” was transferred to the custody of the attorney general’s office as the investigation continued.

Erik Almanza told ABC7 that his father called him Saturday night around 8 p.m. and told him he had killed Erik’s mother. By then, he says, his father was already in Tijuana. According to Almanza, during the phone call the father said he would hide the mother’s remains and turn himself in to authorities.

According to Almanza, his parents had argued that afternoon and his mother was taking his father to work around 3 p.m.

According to preliminary information, the suspect had been living in the U.S. illegally for more than 20 years, prosecutors said. In a statement, the attorney general’s office said it was in contact with authorities in Long Beach, with the aim of gathering additional details that may help clarify the case.

A meeting was also held with FBI agents and Los Angeles Police Department officials to exchange information relevant to the investigation, Mexican authorities said.

“Although the crime was committed on U.S. soil, the State Attorney General’s Office will continue with the corresponding legal actions, as the man has an open investigation file in Tijuana,” Mexican prosecutors said in a news release.

Long Beach police said it is investigating the killing, and detectives are working with Mexican authorities to determine where the murder occurred.

Almanza says his mother was born and raised in Tijuana before moving to the U.S. where she graduated from a trade school to work in medical billing before doing tax-related work.

Almanza says his mother cared about her five children – ages 16 to 26 – and would help pick them up through life’s ups and downs.

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Molotov cocktail thrown at apartment door in Watts, police say

By Web Staff

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    WATTS, LOS ANGELES (KABC) — An investigation is underway after someone threw a Molotov cocktail at an apartment door in Watts overnight.

Police responded to an apartment complex on 92nd Street just after 2 a.m. Thursday and managed to extinguish the fire before it spread in the apartment or other units, according to the Los Angeles Police Department.

Only the apartment door was damaged by the fire. No injuries were reported.

Police could not provide information on a possible suspect or motive behind the incident.

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CBP officers intercept pavement ants found in undeclared imported plants at Detroit Metro

By Paula Wethington

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    DETROIT, Michigan (WWJ) — A colony of exotic pavement ants was found amid the root balls of two small Lebanon trees recently intercepted at Detroit Metro airport.

The U.S. Customs and Border Patrol, Detroit Field Office, said an inspection of the ant colony found a queen ant. The inspection by CBP agriculture specialists started with the interception of two undeclared trees from Lebanon. The ants were within the root balls of the live trees.

“Don’t pack a pest – declare all plant/food items upon arrival,” Detroit Field Office director Marty C. Raybon said Thursday.

A list of prohibited and restricted items can be found on the CBP website. The intention of many of those restrictions is to limit the spread of invasive species and exotic pests.

Previous reports of unwelcome agricultural pests intercepted amid imports at DTW include African bushmeat brought by travelers from Togo and Gabon, caper fruit fly larvae amid fresh flowers from Italy, and European fruit fly maggots found among fresh cherries arriving from Romania.

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Father of 3 Michigan boys missing since 2010 charged with murder, tampering with evidence

By Paula Wethington, Joseph Buczek

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    MORENCI, Michigan (WWJ) — John Skelton, the father of three Morenci, Michigan, boys who have been missing for 15 years, has been charged with murder.

This step happens about two weeks before his expected release from prison on earlier charges stemming from the investigation of the whereabouts of his children.

According to Lenawee County District Court records, Skelton, 53, was charged Wednesday with three counts of open murder and three counts of tampering with evidence. The dates listed as the dates of offense are Nov. 25, 2010, the last known date that the boys were seen alive. The Michigan State Police, Monroe post, is listed as the investigating agency.

This is the latest development in a case that had lingered for years over the deaths of Andrew, 9, Alexander, 7, and Tanner, 5, who were last seen in November 2010. The boys have never been found, despite repeated searches in Michigan and Ohio.

A judge formally declared the three dead in March 2025, upon the request of their mother, Tanya Zuvers. But at that time, Lenawee County Judge Catherine Sala rejected a request to declare that John Skelton murdered the children.

“To make such a finding, the court would only be joining those voices offering such speculation and theory given the lack of information,” Sala said at the time.

Skelton’s previous conviction in the case involved a plea of no contest to three counts of unlawful imprisonment over failure to return the boys after a court-ordered visitation in the Lenawee County community of Morenci. He was issued a 15-year sentence. The Michigan Department of Corrections scheduled Skelton to be released from the Bellamy Creek Correctional Facility on Nov. 29.

In response to the latest criminal charges, the family issued the following statement:

“It has been fifteen long years since our three boys – Andrew, Alexander, and Tanner- went missing. Throughout this time, our family has lived with unimaginable pain, unanswered questions, and the constant hope that one day we might learn the truth about what happened to them.

“Today, we have been informed that an arrest warrant has been issued for John Skelton, who has been incarcerated for the past fifteen years and was scheduled for release in just over two weeks. This latest development has left us shocked and heartbroken all over again.

“Our priority has always been – and continues to be – finding out what happened to Andrew, Alexander, and Tanner and seeking justice for them. We ask that the investigation be allowed to proceed thoroughly and without interference so that the truth may finally come to light.

“We also ask for privacy and respect during this incredibly difficult time as we process these devastating developments and await further information from law enforcement.

“We remain deeply grateful to all who have supported us, prayed for us, and kept our boys in their hearts over these many years.”

CBS News Detroit has reached out to the Lenawee County Prosecutor’s Office for additional details.

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Civil lawsuit alleges NC school officials ignored student’s sexual abuse by teacher

By Deanna Sipe

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    BURKE COUNTY, North Carolina (WLOS) — A civil complaint accuses several Burke County public school officials of failing to protect students after a third-grade teacher was sentenced for sexually abusing dozens of children over the course of a decade.

The complaint comes after former third-grade teacher Michael Andrew Alexander was arrested and convicted of sexual offenses involving children in 2012. According to the North Carolina Department of Adult Correction, he’s serving a 49.5-year sentence for first-degree sexual offense with a child and indecent liberties with a child.

The civil complaint, which was filed on Oct. 24, 2025, by one of Alexander’s victims (Ms. Jane Doe), accuses former Hildebran Elementary School principal Wendi Craven, the school board, and former school administrators David Burleson and Kathy Amos of having knowledge of the abuse and not investigating.

Amos is the current superintendent of Yancey County Schools. As previously reported, Amos was named in a federal civil suit from 2013 filed by parents but was later dropped from the case. Since being dropped by the previous lawsuit, she continued teaching at Burke County Schools until she accepted the position of Yancey County Schools Superintendent in 2019.

In 2019, Amos was met with opposition as parents did not want her to take office. Parents created a petition that circulated online to prevent Amos from taking office.

The complaint says that Amos and Burleson knew about complaints from a student’s mother during the years of 2004-2005, alleging that Alexander “had taken unauthorized, deviant photographs of her child while in school at Glen Alpine, requiring her to pose alone, pull back her blouse, roll up her pant legs, and wear a wig.” The complaint said Alexander would film and upload images of the abuse online for “other sexual deviants around the world” to see.

The complaint also says Amos and Burleson chose to remain indifferent to the claims, conducted no investigation, placed none of the complaints into Alexander’s file, and continued to let Alexander teach and transfer to Hildebran Elementary School in the 2005-2006 school year.

According to the civil case, Alexander was placed under the supervision of Hildebran Principal Wendi Craven, and Craven allegedly ignored Alexander’s affection for the female students at Hildebran.

“Defendant Craven also failed to supervise Alexander’s presence at the school before, during, and after school hours, giving him free rein to isolate and abuse students,” court records said. The civil case claims that Amos and Burleson “did nothing to inform Defendant Craven” and that Craven “did not inquire into Alexander’s history when he was hired at Hildebran, performing no interview, background check, reference check, nor inquiry with either.”

The complaint says that Amos, Craven, and Burleson were obligated by law and the school district’s regulations to protect students, and that despite complaints and their own observations, they chose not to investigate, report, document, or follow up on complaints of misconduct about Alexander, creating a dangerous situation for students under his care.

According to court records, the complaint states that the school board also refused to offer counseling, assistance, or information to Ms. Doe following Alexander’s arrest in 2012.

“Before the sexual assaults and abuse began, Ms. Doe was a bright and eager young student who was academically advanced relative to her peers. Ms. Doe has been severely traumatized by physical, psychological, and sexual abuse. She suffers ongoing emotional distress and post-traumatic stress that has had a pronounced effect on her relationships, academic performance, career, and daily life,” the complaint said.

The complaint claims the school board is in violation of the following:

Violation of the Educational Amendments of 1972 (Title IX) Violation of the Educational Amendments of 1972 (Title IX) Deprivation of Educational Property Rights – Special Relationship Deprivation of Educational Property Rights – State-Created Danger Deprivation of Educational Property Rights – Failure to Train Deprivation of Right to Bodily Integrity – Special Relationship Deprivation of Right to Bodily Integrity – State-Created Danger Deprivation of Right to Bodily Integrity – Failure to Train Violation of North Carolina Constitution, Article I, 19 Deprivation of Educational Property Rights Violation of North Carolina Constitution, Article I, 19 Deprivation of Right to Bodily Integrity Violation of North Carolina Constitution, Article I, 15 Deprivation of Right to Education Amos, Craven, and Burleson are accused of violating the following:

Violation of 42 U.S.C. 1983 Deprivation of Educational Property Rights – Special Relationship Violation of 42 U.S.C. 1983 Deprivation of Educational Property Rights – State-Created Danger Violation of 42 U.S.C. 1983 Deprivation of Educational Property Rights – Failure to Train Violation of 42 U.S.C. 1983 Deprivation of Right to Bodily Integrity – Special Relationship Violation of 42 U.S.C. 1983 Deprivation of Right to Bodily Integrity – State-Created Danger Violation of 42 U.S.C. 1983 Deprivation of Right to Bodily Integrity – Failure to Train Violation of North Carolina Constitution, Article I, 19 Deprivation of Educational Property Rights Violation of North Carolina Constitution, Article I, 19 Deprivation of Right to Bodily Integrity Violation of North Carolina Constitution, Article I, 15 Deprivation of Right to Education State Law Claims The civil complaint accuses Alexander of the following: Violation of 42 U.S.C. 1983 Deprivation of Educational Property Rights Violation of 42 U.S.C. 1983 Deprivation of Right to Bodily Integrity State Law Claims

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Measles cases confirmed at N.O. airport; health expert points to immunization decrease

By Rylee Curry

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    SHREVEPORT, Louisiana (KTBS) — Louisiana health officials confirmed a new measles case in New Orleans on Monday, marking the state’s third case this year. While that number may not seem significant, neighboring states are seeing far higher activity — Texas has reported more than 700 cases, with 17 in Oklahoma and 8 in Arkansas. Since the start of the year 45 measles outbreaks have been counted in the U.S. Measles can spread through the air and is considered highly contagious, with potential complications that include hospitalization and, in severe cases, death. Dr. Joseph Bocchini with Willis-Knighton Children’s Health says today’s outbreaks are largely preventable. The age group hit hardest in 2025 has been children and teens ages 5 to 19, though Louisiana’s most recent case involved an adult. “We’re seeing more cases this year than we have in the last 30 years, primarily because people are not being immunized. The mortality of measles is very high — about one to two children in every thousand who contract measles will die,” he said. High-risk exposure sites include airports and airplanes.

“With the common circulation on an airplane, if anybody around that person was not immunized there is a reasonable chance they were exposed to the virus,” Bocchini said. Shreveport Regional Airport Director Larry Blackwell says they have not been notified of any cases connected to the facility. “During COVID, standards for custodial sanitary measures were increased greatly at that time and the airport has maintained those standards are exceed the standards over time,” Blackwell said. According to the CDC, the disease lingers in the air up to two hours after the infected person has left. Most common symptoms appear as a fever, rash, cough, runny nose and watery eyes. Experts say the best precaution to stay health is to ensure you are vaccinated with MMR and MMRV. If you don’t know your status, then ask a physician.

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Man dropped off at hospital with gunshot wound; police investigating attempted murder

By Kayli Pascal-Martinez

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    EWA BEACH, Hawaii (KITV) — Police are investigating an apparent attempted murder incident after a man was dropped off at a hospital with gunshot wounds early Thursday morning.

According to police highlights, on Thursday morning at approximately 2:56 a.m., a 20-year-old man was dropped off at a medical facility with a gunshot wound to his lower extremity.

Currently, the Honolulu Police Department (HPD) doesn’t know how or where the incident occurred due to the complainant being uncooperative.

As a result of the incident, HPD initiated an Attempted Murder in the Second-Degree case.

Police said that the 20-year-old man was last reported to be in good/stable condition.

No arrest has been made at this time, investigation pending.

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‘We want responsible regulations, not prohibition’: Milwaukee business owners concerned after federal hemp-THC ban passes

By Jenna Wells

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    MILWAUKEE (WDJT) — While the government spending bill ended the longest shut down in history, part of the legislation also federally bans the majority of hemp-derived THC products, starting next year.

In Wisconsin, that means most CBD, and Delta 8 or Delta 9 THC products sold in the state would be illegal, and that is leaving business owners concerned about their future.

“People are looking for an alternative to alcohol, people are having a hard time sleeping, people want an alternative to narcotics for pain, and they just want to feel good, and that’s not a crime,” said Erin Kelly, the owner of Kelly’s Greens in Wauwatosa.

Since 2020, Kelly’s Greens has produced and sold hemp plant-derived CBD and THC products, like edibles, tinctures, and beverages.

The sale of those products was legalized federally in the 2018 Farm bill. Since then, it became a thriving industry.

Just in Wisconsin, the hemp industry has been supported by thousands of stores and 300 thousand jobs.

“There are farmers who invested in fields, there are manufacturers who invested in facilities, there are stores that have opened up,” said John Kashou, owner of Kind Oasis on Milwaukee’s east side.

The new federal ban puts those businesses in jeopardy.

“A lot of people are going to lose their jobs. A lot of businesses are going to shut down. A lot of farmers are going to be devastated,” Kashou said.

Business owners fear the consequences of the ban will also extend to consumers.

“Are they going to turn to the black market? Are going to try to seek products similar to this elsewhere that may not have the same safety assurances that we display on our product?” Kashou said.

The federal ban puts THC legislation in the hands of individual states.

Kashou and Kelly are calling on Wisconsin lawmakers to save the hemp industry before the ban takes effect next year.

“We want these products to be sold right here in Wisconsin. We want responsible regulations, not prohibition,” Kelly said.

Kelly said some of those regulations could include age restrictions and reasonable taxation. Ideally, she said regulations would be set with input from those in the cannabis industry.

Right now, Wisconsin has very few regulations on the books regarding hemp sales, so individual companies set their own. Many established businesses, including Kelly’s Greens and Kind Oasis, choose not to sell to individuals under 21 years of age.

Kelly said having state regulations would essentially exempt Wisconsin from the federal ban.

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Bookstore faces city action over homeless encampment

By Corey Howard

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    ALBUQUERQUE, New Mexico (KOAT) — The city of Albuquerque is seeking to declare Quirky Used Books & More a public nuisance due to a homeless encampment on the bookstore’s property. The store, located on Jefferson Street just off Central, opened about three years ago. Owner Gillam Kerley said he has gotten to know some of the unhoused people in the area and decided to help them.

“When the city began escalating its encampment sweeps and criminalizing the presence of unhoused people on public property, we felt we needed to do something for these people who we had gotten to know, so we did allow a few people to camp at the back of the parking lot,” Kerley said.

Some business owners in the area are pushing back against the encampment, claiming it is hindering their business. These claims are detailed in a civil complaint issued earlier this month, which states that neighboring property owners have complained about a “terrible environment of garbage, human excrement, graffiti, campfires, and property damage.”

Kerley said, “The city’s case they brought against us concerns unhoused people generally in the neighborhood. They don’t link it to the people who are camping here.”

While the city offers safe space programs that allow people to camp in designated areas, Kerley believes the approval process is too expensive and complicated, prompting him to take matters into his own hands. Jeremy Ryan, who lives at the encampment, expressed uncertainty about where he would go if the city cleared the area.

“I don’t know…. we need something,” Ryan said.

The city provided a statement regarding the situation, saying, “This has been an ongoing issue, and the court action is the next logical step for the city. If anyone needs help, city resources are available.”

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Missouri man fights to free his mother from public guardianship

By Matt Flener

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    PULASKI COUNTY, Missouri (KMBC) — Greg Lee wants to see and free his mom.

Lee believes his mother, Shirley Butler, has remained trapped in Missouri’s public guardianship system for more than six years.

Courts have ruled multiple times against his attempts to end his mother’s guardianship.

But he won’t stop fighting to visit her more often and eventually remove her from the care of a county elected official.

“It’s a story that needs to be told,” Lee said. “When I hear the word ‘guardian,’ it makes me cringe.”

Public guardians, meanwhile, at the state level, believe their work is vital to Missouri and often delve into extremely complex family situations with very few resources.

Lee’s story about his mother is part of a new KMBC 9 investigation called “Paper Prisons,” highlighting the difficulties of wards of the state and their families under Missouri’s system of public guardianship.

KMBC is investigating ways to systemically improve the care of those under guardianship by highlighting stories of people struggling to navigate a tangled system of legal paperwork, medical records and court orders. KMBC is also seeking answers, perspective and context from those in charge of keeping wards of the state in their care for their recommendations on how to improve the system. Missouri had more 11,000 wards according to a 2020 report. That same report mentioned several opportunities for improvement, saying a “lack of state funding and coordination leaves Missouri with a fragmented public guardianship system.”

SHIRLEY BUTLER’S GUARDIANSHIP

Butler, 78, has been under public guardianship since Lee and his sister signed paperwork in 2019, asking the Pulaski County public administrator to be a temporary guardian for their mother after Butler’s boyfriend fell sick with cancer.

Every Missouri county has a public administrator.

Public administrators in Missouri are mostly elected, sometimes appointed, to serve as public guardians when people cannot care for themselves or lack family support.

Lee was caring for his mother but needed more help, he said.

Lee and his sister, whom courts have found have a strained relationship, signed the guardianship agreement together, asking Pulaski County’s public administrator to oversee their mother’s estate.

Lee believes asking the public administrator in Pulaski County for help was the biggest mistake of his life.

“I threw my mom in the fire,” he said. “I thought I was helping her and all I did was make her life h***, so, I can’t stop fighting now.”

Under guardianship, Butler became a ward of the state, with the public administrator’s office gaining control over her finances, home and life decisions.

This month, a Missouri appeals court just ruled his mother’s guardianship is valid after Lee, his sister and the public administrator have gone back and forth for years over its legality.

KMBC 9 Investigates has not heard back from Lee’s sister after multiple attempts to reach her.

Lee also alleged that a previous public administrator kept him from seeing his mom.

But a judge ruled the public administrator was “working in her best interests.”

A court also denied Lee his plan to move his mom into his home, issuing judgments three times since the original guardianship placement finding that Lee was unable to care for his mother and that the guardianship in place was needed.

One judgment from 2021 also says his conduct when he visited his mom was “upsetting to Ms. Butler and disruptive to other residents and staff members,” saying there were 20-30 disruptions during visits.

Lee denies that he caused any disruptions during any visits or that his visits were upsetting to his mother.

QUESTIONS ABOUT SHIRLEY BUTLER’S CARE

Lee has documented his mom’s injuries, including multiple falls and a fractured pelvis, while she has remained under guardianship.

He believes Pulaski County’s current public administrator, Becky Allen, is not providing proper care. Lee has also complained about the public administrator’s handling of his mom’s case to various state and federal authorities.

KMBC 9 Investigates recently asked Allen for an interview about Butler’s case.

Her attorney sent a statement asserting that a court had ruled the public administrator’s office had performed its duties “in an exemplary, professional and efficient manner.”

“There have been accusations which perpetuated investigations pertaining to Ms. Butler, from the Department of Health and Senior Services, the Attorney General’s Office of the State of Missouri, the Social Security Administration, and the Board of Nursing,” said the attorney’s statement. “Further, the annual settlements are reviewed and approved by the Court. Each entity has confirmed the performance of duties of the Public Administrator to be appropriate and pursuant to all laws and regulations.”

But the attorney’s statement left out any answers as to whether Butler needed to remain under guardianship and why Lee has such trouble seeing her.

After multiple written attempts to ask for an interview, KMBC 9 Investigates recently asked Allen questions outside the Pulaski County Courthouse.

She remained silent, declining to comment, and walked away. Later, she turned out the lights and walked out of her office as KMBC 9 Investigates was videotaping the exterior of her office.

Public administrators across the state of Missouri are often assigned complex guardianship situations with broken family dynamics. Judges appoint them as guardians for people with severe mental and physical health issues. They can have heavy caseloads and staffing in their offices remains challenging.

Leaders with the Missouri Association of Public Administrators, who are not involved in Shirley Butler’s case, recently spoke to KMBC 9 Investigates to underscore how important their work is to the public in Missouri. They reiterated that public administrators do not actively seek out guardianship cases and are working to help people get restoration into the community, especially when they are in restrictive environments like nursing homes.

“Public administrators are some of the most caring people that I know,” said Cher Caudel, Moniteau County public administrator since 2003 and current MAPA president. “They truly do want to make a difference for the people that they are appointed to, and they do the best that they can with what they have, and a lot of times what we have isn’t much.”

They also believe more funding and support from the state of Missouri would help their increasing caseloads.

A 2020 report commissioned for the Missouri Association of Public Administrators highlighted how public administrators often do not have enough resources, “while navigating complex systems to provide care for their wards – while also facing increased pressure from the state and stakeholders to ensure all wards are placed in their least-restrictive alternatives.”

Former MAPA President and current Webster County Public Administrator Danielle Boggs said the individuals in her caseload who are not happy about what’s going on in their case are vastly outweighed by the individuals who are satisfied with service from her office.

Boggs also said she does not see public guardianship as some sort of power grab from public administrators.

“We’re not prowling the streets for people to serve as their guardian,” she said. “And I think that’s the most common misconception.”

Boggs and Caudel also said they work with wards of the state and their families by aiming to help restore people into the community.

“I can’t speak for other counties because I don’t operate in their courts,” Boggs said. “I know restoration, it is not difficult in Webster County.”

St. Louis County Public Administrator and MAPA Vice President Tim Weaks echoed that he also works to restore people into the community or into family situations.

“We’ve had some successful restoration, no doubt about that. But not nearly as many as I’d love to see here,” Weaks said. “Unfortunately, it just, it takes a lot of time to get somebody to that point.”

Weaks said it is ultimately up to judges and courts on how guardianship cases proceed toward restoration.

All three also said they have seen cases where people’s rights are restored, only to return to public guardianship in the future.

They agree more education is needed about the role of guardians and said issues within Missouri’s public guardianship system should not be attributed solely to public administrators.

Private guardians, multiple state agencies and courts all have a role to play, they said.

GREG LEE ARRESTED

Butler’s guardianship case recently took another turn. Lee was arrested for trespassing after a nursing home worker in Lowry City, Missouri, at Truman Lake Manor called a deputy during his visit to see his mom. Lowry City is more than two hours away from Lee’s home. Lee believes his mom is kept far away to discourage his visits.

But he wants to see her.

Lee believes a court order from four years ago gives him the right to see his mom. He tried to explain to the deputy on his August visit, but he ended up with a trip to the St. Clair County jail.

Lee is currently facing two misdemeanor trespassing charges in St. Clair County.

Truman Lake Manor Administrator Tim Corbin declined to comment on Butler’s care to KMBC 9 Investigates, citing HIPAA medical privacy laws.

“In them fighting so much to keep me from seeing my mom, they’ve made it to where everybody’s going to know,” Lee told KMBC 9 Investigates.

“I won’t quit,” he said. “I’m not going to stop until I can save at least one person. I hope it’s my mom.”

Throughout the next year, KMBC will continue to explore the challenges and opportunities for improvement in Missouri’s public guardianship system.

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