Man charged with murder in 2017 killing faces more gun charges

Ryan Shiner

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A man who was recently arrested in connection with a 2017 homicide case is facing additional felony charges.

David Adams, 44, of Columbia, was charged on Friday in Boone County with illegal gun possession and stealing a gun. He is also charged with first-degree burglary, first-degree robbery, second-degree felony murder and illegal gun possession in the death of Augustus Roberts.

Adams is being held at the Boone County Jail without bond. A hearing for the new set of charges has not been scheduled, while a hearing is scheduled for 10 a.m. Monday, Sept. 29 in his murder case.

Adams was arrested last month along with Julius Cureton, 37, of Columbia. Cureton is also charged with first-degree burglary, first-degree robbery and second-degree felony murder in Roberts’ death.  Cureton is also being held at the jail without bond and has a hearing scheduled for 1:30 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 14.

Jeffrey McWilliams, 33, is also a suspect in the case, and is charged with second-degree murder, first-degree robbery and armed criminal action. Online court records indicate that he has a hearing scheduled for 8:30 a.m. Monday, Nov. 3.

Court documents in Adams’ new case say police found several stolen guns at Adams’ residence while serving a search warrant.

Roberts is the son of a former Northeast Missouri judge. Adams changed his last name from McClain, according to court documents.

Police said Roberts was targeted and killed during a home invasion in the 1900 block of Lasso Circle. A Drug Enforcement Administration investigation alleged in 2019 that the homicide was tied to a drug trafficking scheme and that Roberts was selling “high-grade marijuana.” 

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Jury trial scheduled in 2026 for woman accused in fatal Holts Summit shooting

Ryan Shiner

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A jury trial has been scheduled for the spring for a woman charged with murder in a fatal shooting at a Holts Summit apartment complex in April.

Heather Smith, of Holts Summit, was charged with three counts of unlawful use of a weapon, a count of first-degree of endangering the welfare of a child, second-degree felony murder and armed criminal action. Her trial will be held in Boone County.

A pretrial conference has been scheduled for 1:30 p.m. Friday, Feb. 20. The jury trial is set for 9 a.m. Friday, March 13 at the Boone County Courthouse.

Smith is accused of killing Kara Dills, 37. Court documents in previous reporting say the shooting started with an argument between Smith and Dills at Hunter Lane Apartments. The documents cite nine witnesses to the shooting.

Video surveillance allegedly showed Smith threatening witnesses with a pistol before the shooting. One witness allegedly tried to disarm her after she pointed the gun at several people, but was not successful.

Dills allegedly got a gun and pistol-whipped Smith on the forehead, documents say. The gun went off, grazing a man later identified as Thomas Jones, on his head, according to the probable cause statement. After Dills lowered her gun and started to walk away, Smith shot her in the stomach, the statement says. She later died.

Jones was later charged with fourth-degree assault, a misdemeanor, for failing to listen to deputies. He has a hearing scheduled for 9 a.m. Friday, Nov. 7.

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Road work scheduled for several Columbia streets

Ryan Shiner

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

The City of Columbia announced in a Friday press release that pavement maintenance would begin next week for South Providence Outer Road and other nearby streets.

Affected streets include:

South Providence West Side Outer Road from the Hinkson Creek Bridge and the south end of the street

South Providence East Side Outer Road from Buttonwood Drive (near Buchheit) to the south end of the street

Buttonwood Drive from Green Meadows Road to the Buttonwood Drive roundabout

Madrid Lane from Sieville Avenue to East El Cortez Drive

Sieville Avenue from Monterey Drive to Balboa Lane

Granada Boulevard from Monterey Drive to Bethel Street

Corporate Plaza Drive from the Outer Road to Santana Circle

Santana Circle from North Cedar Lake Drive East to the north end of the street

Carrieridge Drive from North Cedar Lake Drive West to Dorothy Dean Drive

Crews will work from 7 a.m.-7 p.m. each day, and work is expected to be completed by 5 p.m. Friday, Oct. 3. “No parking” signs will be posted on the street 24 hours in advance.

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Storm-damaged Southern Boone goal post replaced

Ryan Shiner

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A new goal post in the south end zone at Southern Boone High School’s football field was installed on Friday morning, according to a school district spokesman.

The goal post broke on Monday from high winds after thunderstorms entered the area. Photos from the district showed the uprights and cross bar were detached from the broken goal post.

District spokesman Matt Sharp wrote in an email that the new post will be fully installed before Friday night’s home game against Boonville. Kickoff is at 7 p.m.

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Boone County first quarter wage growth mediocre among largest Missouri counties

Matthew Sanders

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

Boone County was middle-of-the-pack among the state’s biggest counties in wage gains over the first quarter of the year, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported this week.

Wages reported to the bureau increased by close to 3% in Boone County in the first quarter, which covers the period of January to March. St. Louis City, St. Charles County and Jackson County had larger gains.

Greene County placed a distant seventh among the seven largest counties.

Boone County’s average weekly wage for the period was $1,186 — the highest in Mid-Missouri. Cole and Callaway counties ranked No. 2 and No. 3, respectively. Ste. Genevieve reported the highest average salary in the state.

Wage levels in all of Missouri’s 108 smallest counties were below the national average.

Boone County had the largest year-over-year employment increase among the state’s seven biggest counties. Employment statewide was up 0.1% in the first quarter compared to last year.

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Former Pulaski County substitute teacher pleads guilty to child sex crimes

Ryan Shiner

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A former substitute teacher from a Pulaski County school district pleaded guilty on Wednesday to child sex crimes.

Carissa Smith, of Dixon, Missouri, pleaded guilty to first-degree endangering the welfare of a child and two counts of having sexual contact with a student. She was previously charged with 19 felonies, including statutory rape, statutory sodomy, child sex trafficking and paying a child for sex. 

She will be sentenced at 1 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 19.

Previous reporting indicates she previously worked for the Dixon School District, but resigned in August 2024.

Court documents in previous reporting say a victim told law enforcement they were coerced into sex with Smith and that she supplied marijuana, alcohol and money on multiple occasions.

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Jefferson City residents are OK after house fire causes major damage

Alison Patton

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (KMIZ)

Billie Siebeneck and her husband had to evacuate their home Thursday night after their attic caught fire on Rivercrest Court in Jefferson City.

Siebeneck and her husband were watching TV when they heard a loud noise.

“All of a sudden it was just like a bomb went off,” Siebeneck said.

Siebeneck said lightning hit her home. She didn’t feel like anything was different until she ran outside after the bang and smelled something burning.

A neighbor called the Jefferson City Fire Department around 9:10 p.m.

Firefighters saw smoke coming from the roof and gable ends of the two-story home, according to a JCFD press release.

The fire department can’t confirm what caused the fire, but JCFD Division Chief Jason Turner said the can’t rule out a lightning strike.

 “The residents were there at home at the time. They said, ‘hey, we think we had a lightning strike. We can’t confirm, the electricity goes off, we started smelling something that potentially smelled like something burning.’ Things like that is what clues to us,” Turner said.

Heavy storms swept through the area Thursday, and the fire department is checking with the National Weather Service to make sure the Siebeneck’s home was in the area.

The fire was contained to the attic, although firefighters drilled holes in almost every room on the top floor, Siebeneck said.

The storms that rolled through the area starting around dusk Thursday left hundreds without power. Wind damage was reported near Ashland, Bunceton, Franklin and Blackwater, according to the National Weather Service.

Seventeen firefighters were sent to the fire.

While on scene, firefighters used thermal imaging cameras to see heat that might be invisible to the naked eye.

“One of the items that we use is our thermal imaging cameras that helps us detect where those hotspots are in the attic areas, and not just in the attic areas, but anywhere there’s heat,” Turner said.

These cameras light up when it detects heat, indicating to fire fighters where a hot spot is.

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Court orders University of Missouri to allow Students for Justice in Palestine to participate in homecoming parade

Matthew Sanders

EDITOR’S NOTE: This story has been updated to reflect that homecoming takes place Sept. 27.

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A federal judge on Friday ruled that the University of Missouri must let a student group that opposes Israel’s war in Gaza participate in its homecoming parade, with conditions.

Judge Stephen Bough of Missouri’s federal Western District court entered a preliminary injunction forcing UM System President Mun Choi to allow Mizzou Students for Justice in Palestine to participate in next Saturday’s homecoming parade, as long as the group’s entry “complies with the Parade Policy.”

Ahmad Kaki, a staff attorney with The Council on American-Islamic Relations who represented the student group, said MSJP is happy to adhere to any requirements that are equally applied.

The policy says the purposes of the parade are to celebrate MU, cultivate alumni connections, honor university-selected achievements and rally support for the Missouri Tigers in their game against the University of Massachusetts.

The policy also reads:

“It is not an open forum for expression on topics identified by participants, but rather is limited to expression on topics identified by the University for the purposes noted above. The University provides ample other opportunities for participants to express themselves on topics of interest to them.” 

MSJP decisionDownload

Bough’s order opens with a Benjamin Franklin quote:

“Without freedom of thought, there can be no such thing as wisdom — and no such thing as public liberty without freedom of speech.”

CAIR sued on behalf of the student group after its application for a parade entry was rejected for the second straight year. Choi cited “disturbances” associated with the student group, according to records obtained by ABC 17 News.

“When they wanted to join the parade last year, they sought to express specific messages, in large part because the university allowed everybody else to do it,” Kaki said.

Kaki called the move by the University and Choi disheartening for the students of MSJP.

“The reason they were excluded was because of messages they’ve expressed in the past. It’s because of the viewpoints that they hold, their viewpoints critical of Israel and supportive of the people of Palestine,” Kaki said.

Bough sided with the student group’s interpretation that homecoming parade entries are “private speech,” as opposed to speech that represents a government entity such as MU. He also ruled there was enough evidence to show a “fair chance” that Choi violated the group’s speech rights based on its views about the war in Gaza.

“In support of this conclusion, the Court notes that, in 2024, Dr. Choi did not require any other student organization to attend a special meeting to discuss their intentions for the event, nor did he request that any other group modify its message,” Bough wrote.

The group’s former president was also charged this week with fourth-degree assault for an incident on campus in March. The University cited this as another reason for MSJP’s denied entry, Kaki said the argument was found to be irrelevant in the courtroom.

“It was very telling that their entire argument revolved around her supposed behavior,” Kaki said. “We were able to put Ms. Atallah up on the stand where she said ‘I won’t even be there’ and so the court made it clear that that wasn’t a sufficient excuse for them.”

“This is an important victory for the First Amendment and the right of students who support Palestinian human rights to fully participate in campus life,” CAIR national deputy director Edward Mitchell wrote in an email response to ABC 17 News. “It is long past time for colleges and universities across the country to stop attempting to silence and sideline students critical of the Israeli government’s genocide in Gaza.”

A spokesman said MU was reviewing the decision, but the university would not comment on pending litigation, per its established practice.

Bough noted that MSJP wanted to display signs in its parade entry that were not included in its application — “Ceasefire Now” and “Stop the Genocide.”

The group will now work with the MU Alumni Association to ensure they are following all parade policies.

“We expect the university to comply with the court and engage in a meaningful the conversations to a meaningful conversation with the students to ensure that whatever they do is protected,” Kaki said. “If the university says that they’re not allowed to put messages on banners and that’s a rule that’s applied to every other student organization equally, then MSJP will happily comply.”

The Alumni Association’s executive director, Todd McCubbin, did not respond to a request for comment.

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Judge rules on evidence in Boone County manslaughter case

Jazsmin Halliburton

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A judge ruled Friday that a victim’s invalid driver’s license will not be allowed as evidence in a Boone County manslaughter trial, but a decision on using a recording of the victim’s voice is yet to be made.

Circuit judge Josh Devine heard arguments Friday ahead of the trial of Walter Montejo, 27, of South Gate, California. Montejo is charged with two counts of first-degree involuntary manslaughter, one count of second-degree assault, misdemeanor driving while revoked and misdemeanor not having insurance. He is being held at the Boone County Jail without bond.

He’s accused of killing Cindy Helms, 54, of Rockwood, Tennessee, and Melvina Colin, 84, of Broomfield, Colorado, during a crash on Interstate 70.

Montejo required an interpreter. The state and defense agreed not to introduce evidence at trial regarding his immigration status.

In Friday’s pretrial hearing, the state argued to dismiss evidence that Helms was driving with a suspended license. Montejo’s defense attorney argued that Helms’ driving status should be mentioned, because Montejo’s driving status will be mentioned. Devine sided with the state.

The defense filed motions to dismiss nine pieces of evidence or arguments, including a graphic and emotional 911 call Helms made while she was trapped in the burning U-Haul. The defense argued that playing the audio would inflame jurors’ emotions and would prejudice them against Montejo.

The prosecution argued that the 911 call should be played for the jury because prosecutors will not show the graphic body camera footage of Helms trapped and screaming in the car, and jurors should hear from a victim.

The judge put off a decision until he has heard the recording.

The jury trial is scheduled to last three days, and the defense is asking for jury sentencing.

Court documents say Montejo was driving a tractor-trailer when it crossed over the median and hit a U-Haul head-on, killing Helms and Colin.

A probable cause statement says that Montjeo’s license was suspended because of an active administrative alcohol suspension. A bond motion claims Montejo’s license was suspended because of a DWI case from Jackson County in 2022.

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QUESTION OF THE DAY: Should people face consequences at work for social media posts about Charlie Kirk?

Matthew Sanders

Charlie Kirk’s death has led to a new climate of scrutiny.

Since the shooting death of the conservative activist, statements made by figures both public and private have been examined for evidence of callous disregard for Kirk’s death or even celebration of it.

First Amendment experts say employers have latitude over some statements by employees, especially on a public stage such as the one Jimmy Kimmel had. But some argue that a concentrated effort is on to chill speech that is critical of conservative politics and politicians.

The issue is felt locally, too. In the Hallsville School District, two employees remain on leave for sharing a social media statement critical of Kirk after his death.

What do you think? Should people face consequences at their jobs for social media posts about Charlie Kirk? Let us know by voting in the poll.

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