Trail crossing sign posted near site of fatal July crash on Katy Trail

Ryan Shiner

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (KMIZ)

A “trail crossing ahead” sign has been posted near the site of a fatal crash that occurred over the summer.

A 9-year-old boy was killed on July 25, 2025, after he was hit by a pickup truck in the 12000 block of Cole County Road 391, previous reporting shows.

The boy was riding a bicycle with friends and family on the Katy Trail – which intersects with the road — when he was hit by a northbound truck driven by a Holts Summit woman, previous reporting shows.

Residents had told ABC 17 News over the summer that they had wanted better signage and vegetation control near the crash site and that cyclists and other pedestrians regularly use the trail in that area.

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Man wanted for Illinois sex crimes arrested in Columbia

Ryan Shiner

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A man who was wanted for several sex crimes in Illinois has been arrested and charged in Columbia.

Clayton Newlon, 24, was charged Wednesday in Boone County with being a fugitive from out of state. He is being held at the Boone County Jail without bond. A mugshot was not available on Wednesday afternoon and a Missouri court date has not been scheduled.

The affidavit shows a warrant for his arrest was filed in Coles County, Illinois, on Jan. 30. The Coles County Sheriff’s Office told ABC 17 News the case was out of Mattoon, Illinois, which is a town near Interstate 57, about 50 minutes south of Champaign.

The affidavit says Newlon was wanted for aggravated criminal sexual conduct, aggravated criminal sexual abuse, criminal sexual assault, aggravated criminal sexual assault, grooming and traveling to meet a child.

Newlon does not have an address listed in Casenet, but has Columbia listed as his residence in online jail records.  

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Former St. James teacher disciplined after setting student’s hands on fire

Ryan Shiner

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A former teacher from St. James was disciplined by the State Board of Education after he allegedly set the hands of a student on fire in 2022.

A February agenda item for the State Board of Education says Tyler James Glidden – who was a math teacher at St. James High School – “attempted to demonstrate a science experiment by pouring hand sanitizer onto a student’s hands, and lit it on fire.”

Documents in the settlement with the Department of Elementary and Secondary Education say Glidden used hand sanitzer that was in the room during his math class and “borrowed a contraband lighter from a different student to light the hand sanitizer on fire.”

The student allegedly suffered first- and second-degree burns and Glidden did not report the incident to school administration, filings show.

The incident occurred on Dec. 2, 2022, and the student showed Glidden the burns they suffered on Dec. 5, 2022.

Glidden was ordered to surrender his teaching certificate, which appeared to have expired in June 2025. He also held a substitute certification that expired in 2024.

ABC 17 News has reached out to the St. James school district.

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Man arrested in Jefferson City after short standoff

Ryan Shiner

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A 39-year-old man with multiple warrants was arrested Tuesday in Jefferson City after a roughly half-hour standoff, a Wednesday press release from the Jefferson City Police Department says.

The release says an officer saw the man at 12:07 p.m. in the 200 block of Lafayette Street and the man ran away to a building. Police used a PA to tell the man to get out of the building, but he did not respond, the release says.

At 12:35 p.m., a SWAT team arrived, commands were made again by police and the man walked out of the building, the release says.

The man’s identity was not released by authorities on Wednesday.

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Woman who got probation in baby’s death accused of stealing from Conley Road Sam’s Club

Ryan Shiner

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A woman who was sentenced to probation in 2024 in an infant’s 2019 death is facing a felony charge in a new case.

Lavosha Daniels, of St. Louis, was charged on Monday in Boone County with felony stealing. A warrant was ordered on Monday and a $10,000 bond was set. She was not listed on the Boone County Jail roster on Wednesday afternoon.

The probable cause statement claims Daniels stole four Ninja Slushi machines on Jan. 14 from the Sam’s Club on Conley Road in Columbia. She allegedly stole two machines at 3:37 p.m. that day and came back at 4:56 p.m. to take two more, the statement says. Video allegedly showed her taking the items, court documents say.

Daniels had pleaded guilty on Dec. 16, 2024, to abandoning a corpse and first-degree involuntary manslaughter. She was sentenced to five years of probation along with an 11-year suspended sentence for the charges.

Prosecutors on Monday filed a motion to revoke her probation in light of the new charge filed.

She had originally been charged with corpse abandonment and child endangerment causing death after Samone Daniels, who was 4-5 months old, was found dead outside of a tire store in 2019.

The baby died after allegedly being strangled by Staffone Fountain, who was sentenced to seven years in prison.

Police arrested Fountain and Daniels in 2022 after someone found a note apparently from Daniels addressed to police in a different hotel describing what happened. Prosecutors claimed that Fountain may have struck the child and placed her in an unsafe sleeping position when he put the child in a car seat and placed her in the bathtub.

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Fulton police chief says every missing person’s case handled with same importance

Olivia Hayes

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

Federal, state and local law enforcement in Arizona are intensifying their search for Nancy Guthrie, mother of NBC’s “Today” host Savannah Guthrie, who has now been missing for 11 days.

On Wednesday, agents were seen searching multiple roadways near Nancy Guthrie’s home in the Catalina Foothills. Investigators are still looking for other evidence tied to doorbell camera video released Tuesday from the night of her abduction and the person in it.

Authorities released a person early Wednesday morning who was detained for questioning in the case.

In Mid-Missouri, there are currently 619 active adult missing persons cases, according to the Missouri State Highway Patrol database. Five are being investigated by the Jefferson City Police Department and the Columbia Police department is investigating 17 active cases.

The Fulton Police Department currently has no active missing persons investigation, but Chief Bill Ladwig told ABC 17 News that regardless of the person’s status or publicity around the case, FPD treats all missing persons investigations the same.

“We would ask for the help of the FBI, the Missouri State Highway Patrol, anybody that could come in and assist us with things, especially electronic data, that we don’t have the capability to do in-house,” Ladwig said of the agency’s process. “That would happen for anybody, whether it is Miss Guthrie or Mr. Smith down the street that went missing.”

Ladwig explained in the missing person cases FPD handles, the person often tends to show back up on their own.

“They’ve just wanted to be gone for a few days and come back and they’re found,” Ladwig said.

He also said typically in missing persons cases, there is not a lot of evidence for law enforcement to go off of, initially.

“You’re looking at their cellphone data, their computers or tablets looking for history,” Ladwig said. “Little breadcrumbs that’ll lead you down the right path in a situation like that.”

Investigators in Nancy Guthrie’s disappearance did not release stills of the suspect in the doorbell camera video or the video itself until 10 days into her disappearance. Ladwig said while the doorbell cameras can be helpful, sometimes they can cause problems in an investigation.

“It can complicate things if there’s not a cloud storage or a DVR that it goes to,” Ladwig said.

Ladwig called multi-agency joint investigations, like the one into Guthrie’s disappearance, a team effort.

“The FBI could come in to Fulton, but they’re still going to need to know things about this municipality and our people that only we are going to know,” Ladwig said. “It’s not so much taken out of somebody’s hands. It just becomes a much larger, more diverse team that’s going to make this work.”

Sgt. Kyle Green, with the Missouri State Highway Patrol, said all missing persons cases are handled by the local jurisdiction unless it asks for assistance. He explained that if MSHP was asked to assist, the Division of Drug and Crime Control for that area would help.

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Wisconsin sex offender arrested in Holts Summit charged with being fugitive from out of state

Ryan Shiner

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A sex offender from Wisconsin who was arrested Tuesday in Holts Summit has been charged in Callaway County.

Donavan Ducane, 26, was charged on Wednesday with being a fugitive from out of state. He is being held at the Callaway County Jail without bond. An initial court appearance was scheduled for 8:30 a.m. Tuesday, Feb. 17.

Ducane was wanted out of Marinette County, Wisconsin for an alleged parole violation for a sex offender registry offense, according to court documents and previous reporting.

The Holts Summit Police Department on Tuesday had asked the public to avoid the 900 block of Halifax Road while law enforcement searched the area. The Missouri State Highway Patrol had used a helicopter to assist HSPD in the search.

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Montgomery County school bus towed from scene after crash

Matthew Sanders

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A staff member suffered minor injuries when a Montgomery County school bus was hit by a car Wednesday morning.

The Montgomery County R-2 bus was hit at about 7:30 a.m. on Highway 19 near Route WW just north of New Florence, according to a Missouri State Highway Patrol crash report. A Hyundai Elantra driven by a 35-year-old Wellsville woman hit the bus after crossing the center line, the patrol reported.

The Hyundai driver was taken by ambulance to Lake St. Louis Hospital with moderate injuries. The injured school employee, 63, of High Hill, was taken to the Hermann Area District Hospital with minor injuries.

The one student on the bus was not hurt, said Superintendent Brian White.

Both vehicles were towed from the crash site.

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Highway Patrol investigating Moniteau County elected official; northern district commissioner resigns

Matthew Sanders

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A Missouri State Highway Patrol division is investigating allegations of theft and/or fraud by an elected official in Moniteau County.

The Moniteau County Sheriff’s Office made the request on Jan. 28, according to MSHP Sgt. Brad Germann. The Division of Drug and Crime Control is leading the special investigation, Germann said.

No other details will be immediately released “to maintain the integrity of the investigation,” Germann wrote in an email. Between 2017-22, that division handled 498 investigations involving allegations of stealing.

ABC 17 News left messages with the sheriff and county commission seeking comment.

A social media post from Presiding Commissioner Joe Lutz says Northern District Commissioner Doug Naros had submitted a letter of resignation on Tuesday.

Naros won the seat in 2024 over then-incumbent Clint Hoellering during the county’s Republican primary. Election results from the time show Naros edged out Hoellering by five votes.

Lutz wrote in the post that information on replacing Naros “will be forthcoming.”

Check back for updates.

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Open enrollment bills move through Missouri legislature for sixth straight year

Alison Patton

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

Gov. Mike Kehoe has promised $7.5 million to pay for students to attend classes outside their school districts, if the state legislature can pass an open enrollment bill.

“Again, open enrollment is not about weakening public education, it’s about strengthening it,” Kehoe said in his State of the State Address in January. “Because when families have choices, schools are pushed to innovate, improve, and respond to the needs of the students they serve.”

Two bills in each chamber would make open enrollment between districts possible, but the bills differ on how many transfer students can be accepted.

State Rep. Brad Pollitt (R-Sedalia) is sponsoring House Bill 2604, which would allow schools to cap transfer students at 5% of the previous school year’s student enrollment. If passed, Pollitt’s bill would take effect July 1, 2027.

Pollitt’s bill hasn’t been assigned to a House committee.

State Sen. Curtis Trent’s (R-Greene County) bill, Senate Bill 971, would start all schools on a 3% cap of the previous year’s enrollment. If a school hits its transfer student total after the first year, it can bump the cap to 4%. Schools would be able to bump the cap again by 1% if it hits the transfer student total. However, 5% is the highest cap the bill would allow.

Trent’s bill would take effect July 1, 2028, if it can pass both chambers. It was passed out of the Senate education committee on Tuesday.

This is the sixth year the General Assembly has tried to pass an open-enrollment bill.

Kehoe also stated in his State of the State Address that public schools will not receive any additional state funding for the next school year, and the Department of Elementary and Secondary Education is tasked with updating the base formula for public school funding.

The Missouri National Education Association opposes the Senate bill.

“The Association believes that public school choice plans with state funding may harm students and our public schools unless essential criteria are in place for implementing, monitoring, and evaluating their effectiveness,” MNEA’s legislative update reads.

“Our goal is to ensure that every student has access to a great public school,” Mark Jones, MNEA public affairs director, said. “Unfortunately, the open enrollment bill doesn’t meet the criteria.”

Jones said the policy could make open enrollment an option for only some families they have to find their own transportation to the new district.

“What we think will happen is that you’ll have two groups of students, one that have access to the potential to go to the new district and others that don’t,” Jones said. “We’d rather put efforts into ensuring that every public school is a great place that welcomes students and meets their needs.”

The Missouri State Teachers Association also opposes the policy because of potential financial impacts and strains on school districts.

MSTA Policy Director Matt Michelson said open enrollment could cause some school districts to condense, as students leave their districts for another, and it could overwhelm well-performing districts.

Both bills would allow state funding to follow the students who leave, essentially adding students to the count of the new school district.

“For some districts, having an extra student could mean substantial state dollars in addition to what they’re getting, and for other districts, it’d be a very minimal amount,” Michelson said.

Michelson said the state estimated the program would cost about $80 million back when the policy was introduced for the very first time.

“We are now in what is probably going to end up being substantially similar bill to the one from a few years back,” he said. “How did the program go from being $80 million to $7 million without any real kind of substantial changes?”

The Missouri Charter Public School Association supports open enrollment, as long as it includes charter schools, which both bills do.

“At the end of the day, Missouri families are really seeking the best public school fit for them,” executive director Noah Devine said.

He said there are some challenges that the legislature will have to work through, like how funding will work once the state updates the public school funding formula and what happens when a student transfers to a school district that has a different levy or wealth disparity.

“I don’t know the right answer or where it’s going to land,” Devine said. “I’ve seen different iterations over the years, but it’s a worthy problem to work through, but I think we can do it.”

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